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  • ARMENIANOW.COM July 15, 2005

    ARMENIANOW.COM July 15, 2005
    Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
    Phone: +(374 1) 532422
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.armenianow.com
    Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact to Babken Juharyan)
    Email: [email protected]

    ICQ#: 97152052


    PLAYING CARDS WITH GOD: MINISTRY MAKES CONCESSION ON SOCIAL IDS TO APPEASE CHRISTIAN ZEALOTS

    By Suren Deheryan
    ArmeniaNow Reporter

    As it was promised by the Armenian government last week, a few
    changes were introduced this week into the law "On Social Security
    Cards". Changes in the appearance of the card -- including removing a
    bar-code -- were made after a considerable number of citizens refused
    to be issued cards, considering them to be anti-Christian. Religious
    fundamentalists believe the cards to be fulfillment of prophecy from
    the New Testament book of Revelation (and connected to the "satanic"
    number 666).

    In an effort to make the cards more acceptable, the Ministry of
    Social Affairs agreed to changes in the law "On Social Data" and
    "Social Security Cards" and altered the design of the cards.

    (To see previous coverage of the issue, go to:
    http://archive.armenianow.com/archive/2004/july09/features/cards/index.asp.htm,
    http://www.armenianow.com/eng/? go=pub&id=505&issue_id=60)

    For citizens who refuse to be issued cards of the current design for
    religious reasons, a new design of social cards will be created on
    which there will be no bar-code and no symbol of the Ministry. It
    will be written on the card: "Card number", which, it is hoped,
    will pacify the angry and devout believers.

    Former member of Parliament Khachik Stamboltsyan, who is an advocate
    of those citizens refusing to be issued social cards and is currently
    the chairman of the "Christians Against Human Numbering" NGO, gives
    assurances that due to the changes the card will now serve only as a
    card of the social sphere and will contain information only regarding
    social issues (wages, pension, profit and income).

    "The threat was the figure of 666, which was not acceptable. The
    threat was that this database was to be attached to the databases of
    foreign countries, which was prevented in this case. We agree that
    there should be such cards, but on condition that they are used within
    the country," says Stamboltsyan.

    According to Stamboltsyan, those who have so far received cards against
    their conscience can return them, receiving new ones without bar-codes
    and symbols.

    As a result of such changes delegates elected by the "Christians
    Against Human Numbering" NGO and citizens refusing to be issued
    social cards signed an agreement that these conditions satisfy the
    nonconformists and that no new demands will be made to the government.

    Nevertheless, even such changes do not satisfy some who claim to
    devoutly follow what they consider Biblical precepts.

    "With the proposed draft, the withdrawal of 666 changes nothing in
    terms of religion. A Christian cannot tolerate his sign of belonging
    to God being replaced by another sign, in this case by any number,
    therefore it is not even important whether this number contains
    three 6 digits or not," Constitutional Court member and Mother See
    of Holy Echmiadzin Supreme Council member Rafael Papayan told one
    local newspaper.

    And ordinary citizens explain their indignation the following way:

    "If a person loses his or her passport, in case of receiving a new
    one the number of the passport is changed. And in this case, in fact,
    the card number is invariable," says Christian education teacher,
    35-year-old Margarita Hovhannisyan. "When I buy goods from the store,
    which also contain bar-codes, and in some cases also the figure of
    666, we are not afraid, as it is the number of the product. In this
    case, regardless of whether it is called the 'card number' or not,
    it is an unchangeable number and in fact a person's number."

    Emma Petrosyan, 80, who has not been paid her pension for seven
    months because she refused to get a card, says excitedly: "We will
    not betray God. They want to steal our souls with this. I refuse to
    receive a social card, let them allow us to sign and get our pension
    the way we did before. This card frightens me and if I get it I will
    not sleep at night, I will feel ill at ease. It is God, Christ and
    the Cross that are my card."

    Stamboltsyan, who has not received his pensions to date because of
    having no card, says he will now apply and hopes to pacify those who
    were left unsatisfied with the changes.

    "Be sure, if there were a threat from the amended law I would be
    afraid as much as you are, but now we say that it is safe. The threat
    of God's anger has been removed."

    TRADERS SANS FRONTIERES?: RESEARCH SAYS ARMENIA AND TURKEY WOULD
    BENEFIT FROM OPENED BORDERS

    By Julia Hakobyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    What will Armenia gain if the border with Turkey is opened?

    "The decline of transportation costs in the external trade, growth of
    exports, GDP and employment, better opportunities for EU integration"
    says the study of the Armenian European Policy and Legal advice
    center. (AEPLAC)

    This week the AEPLAC, an EU funded research center, introduced its
    scenario "Study of the economic impact on the Armenian economy from
    the re-opening of the Turkish-Armenian borders: Implications for
    external trade." The investigation was conducted on three models:
    short-run (one year) mid-term (five years) and long-run (over five
    years) and also includes gains for Turkey. (For more information,
    visit www.aeplac.org)

    During the presentation of the study Tigran Jrbashyan, the Director
    of the Yerevan office of AEPLAC said that open borders would first
    of all allow Armenia to reduce its transport expenses. Importing and
    exporting goods through the Mediterranean Sea, would be incomparably
    cheaper then through Georgia.

    At present more than 90 percent of Armenia's imported and exported
    goods go through Georgian ports, with more than 1,000 freight cars
    of food and fuel per month coming from Batumi.

    The AEPLAC experts say that Mediterranean seaports are of greater
    interests for Armenia than those of the Black Sea, as the Black Sea
    ports do not allow the use of ocean container carriers.

    "For example the cost of freight forwarding from Poti to Marseille
    is $700-800 per container while from Beirut to Marseille it's about
    $100, since ocean ships have large capacity and therefore a lower
    cargo transportation cost price," says Jrbashyan.

    Besides as a result of re-opening of Armenian-Turkish borders Georgia
    will be forced to reduce its charges for freight forwarding service.

    According to the short-term model with opening of the Armenian-Turkish
    border the GDP will make 10.65 billion drams, ($24,482,758) the
    number of jobs will increase by 1.500 and the growth of import will
    make 4.71 percent while export will increase by 5.23 percent.

    The mid-term-scenario suggests that the GDP growth will reach about
    $99 million the employment will grow by 4,808 people, the export will
    make 17 percent and import 12.95 percent.

    If borders are opened Turkey will have a favorable position in EU
    membership negotiating. Besides the re-opening of the borders can
    be attractive for Turkey in terms of transit roads, taking into
    account the opportunity of a re- exploration of the Kars-Gyumri
    railway. (Currently the issue of constructing an alternative railroad
    connecting Akhalkalak to Kars is included in the agenda of economic
    development between Turkey and Georgia.)

    A strong argument in favor of opened borders is the potential for
    Turkey to develop its eastern region (bordering Armenia). The economic
    indicators for this region show that it is five times less developed
    that other parts of Turkey.

    According to estimations in case of Turkey's accession to EU, the
    EU will have to allocate 80 percent of "structural funds" (a fund
    from which the member states are provided means to cover regional
    imbalances) to Turkey for developing the eastern region.

    In 2002, Armenia exported production worth $630 million, while Turkey
    exported that of $52.6 billion.

    Re-opening of the borders will directly require that Armenia and
    Turkey initiate a process of negotiations related to the economic
    trade relations, taking into consideration that when voting for
    Armenia's accession to the World Trade Organization Turkey made a
    reservation by noting that it is not going to apply the WTO rules
    (free trade regime) in its economic relations with Armenia.

    The study says that Armenia can not expect an immediate result of
    the opening of the borders. However in the medium term Armenia will
    manage to set relevant mechanisms for entering the EU markets via
    Turkey with a broad commodity list. In the long-run the Armenia and
    Turkish markets will become interconnected. Armenian producers will
    start to continue the modernization of the Armenian enterprises and
    local producers will have to compete with Turkish producers which
    will positively impact the economy.

    The Armenian government welcomed the study of the AEPLAC. David
    Avetisyan, the deputy minister of Trade and Economical Development
    called it a "unique research"

    "This is in fact the first time Armenia is presented a model which
    has a great potential. This model is based not on political interests
    but deals with trade. We have great expectations."

    SECOND SHIFT FOR SECURITY: ARMENIAN REPLACEMENT TROOPS BOUND FOR IRAQ

    By Aris Ghazinyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Armenia's second detachment of military troops was sent to Iraq
    Wednesday (July 13), following a farewell party in Yerevan in which
    terrorists attacks a few days earlier in London were the common
    topic of conversation, and as general tension intensifies in Baghdad
    and beyond.

    The message of terrorists addressed to the leaderships of countries
    participating in the allied coalition in Iraq was quoted often as the
    troops gathered last Sunday. The message contained a warning to the
    authorities of Italy and Denmark, as well as other "crusader-countries"
    about the need to withdraw their troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

    In seeing off the Armenian contingent, Minister of Defense Serzh
    Sargsyan said Armenia is not a "crusader country".

    "I think it right and appropriate that Armenia should participate
    in the anti-terror coalition," he said. "As for security concerns,
    Armenia's law-enforcement bodies and national security system,
    regardless of terrorist acts in other countries, must constantly keep
    this problem within the center of their attention."

    This week's detachment replaces a 45-member regiment (10 sappers,
    31 drivers, three doctors, one communication officer) attached to a
    Polish division in Iraq since January 18.

    The Chief of the General Staff of Poland called the Armenians' service
    "excellent". No Armenian casualties were suffered.

    "By sending its servicemen to Iraq, Armenia does not set itself
    military tasks, but pursues humanitarian goals," Chief of the
    General Staff of Armenia's Armed Forces, Colonel-General Mikael
    Harutyunyan said in his speech during the send off. "Over the last
    few years Armenia has been actively involved in the international
    integration processes and it cannot keep aloof from the peacekeeping
    and stabilization efforts of the world community."

    A total of 45 Armenian servicemen will go to Iraq as part of the
    shift. Only one communication officer from the previous staff
    in Iraq will remain in Baghdad. His replacement will take place
    in six months. The rest of the peacekeepers will return to Armenia
    soon. According to Harutyunyan, the new composition of the peacekeepers
    will initially be sent to Kuwait for retraining, and then will head
    for the Iraqi town of Al-Hinnu where the headquarters of the Polish
    division are situated.

    Speaking about the terms of the stay of Armenian servicemen in Iraq,
    the Chief of the General Staff of Armenia's Armed Forces said that a
    preparation of a platoon will be conducted simultaneously and this
    platoon will leave for Iraq in another half a year. It is possible
    that this platoon will be manned with service of the first and second
    shifts as well as the contingent now on duty in Kosovo.

    "Participating over the last several years in peacekeeping operations,
    Armenia no longer experiences a shortage of corresponding professional
    personnel," said Harutyunyan. "Armenia already has trained peacekeepers
    ready to accomplish any assignment."

    Armenia's peacekeeping battalion was formed in 2003, and a memorandum
    about the participation of an infantry platoon of Armenia's armed
    forces in the peacekeeping operation in Kosovo within a Greek battalion
    was signed in September of the same year. This document was ratified
    by the Armenian Parliament in December 2003 and the first Armenian
    contingent was sent to Kosovo in February, 2004. The third rotation of
    the personnel of the Armenian contingent deployed in Kosovo took place
    on April 15 of this year. Thirty-four representatives of Armenia's
    armed forces are serving there now.

    Armenia's Deputy Minister of Defense Lieutenant-General Artur
    Aghabekyan said in this connection that the terms of the possible
    prolongation of the participation of Armenian servicemen in
    peacekeeping operations have not been determined yet. (The December
    resolution of the Armenian Parliament that confirmed sending troops
    to Iraq originally was meant for one year.)

    Harutyunyan said that the Parliament will address this issue only at
    the end of this year.

    "However, in any case, whatever decision is made, the Armed Forces
    of Armenia are ready to fulfill it," said the Chief of Armenia's
    General Staff.

    "I think that at the end of this year the National Assembly of Armenia
    is likely to prolong the term of the stay of Armenian peacekeepers
    in Iraq," said military analyst David Harutyunov. "First, a number
    of arguments cited by opponents of Armenian military presence in Iraq
    luckily have not been justified - the circumstance that will no doubt
    simplify the process of the prolongation of the terms as compared
    to the political struggle unfolded during the adoption of the first
    resolution about sending servicemen. Secondly, the participation of
    Armenian servicemen in international efforts in Iraq is the reflection
    of the long-term policy of Armenia's leadership in the sphere of
    security and foreign policy."

    TRAVELLING AND TALKING ABOUT NKR "PROBLEM": JULY SEES INCREASE OF
    SETTLEMENT ATTENTION BUT SIDES "STILL FAR FROM IT"

    By Aris Ghazinyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The month of July is proving to mark a new stage of boosted efforts
    by the international community for settlement of "the Karabakh
    Problem". Representatives of international structures interested in
    this issue have voiced a number of new ideas each which may have a
    practical continuation.

    The session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) completed its work in
    Washington DC on July 5. During the session it discussed a report
    on Nagorno Karabakh drafted by the special representative of the
    OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Chairman on the Karabakh conflict Goran
    Lenmarker. The Swedish parliamentarian emphasized the need to take
    history into account and said that "the best way of ensuring the
    security of Nagorno Karabakh may be its joining to Armenia."

    Many Armenian political analysts see these talks a significant
    moment which is likely to reflect today's dominant approaches of the
    international community to the most acceptable ways of settling the
    problem. However, in their opinion, it is also evident that these
    approaches also imply a handover of five regions controlled by the
    NKR defense army - Horadiz, Jebrayil, Fizuli, Kubatli and Aghdam -
    to Azerbaijan.

    The same day, the Russian cochairman of the OSCE Minsk Group Yuri
    Merzlyakov introduced the idea of submitting to the presidents of
    Armenia and Azerbaijan in Kazan (Tartarstan, Russia) on August 26 a
    "Working Document" immediately concerning the Karabakh settlement.

    A high-ranking diplomatic source told Radio Free Europe/Radio
    Liberty (www.armenialiberty.org) that this document implies holding
    a referendum in Nagorno Karabakh which should take place within the
    next 10 to 15 years.

    "The variant of a referendum had also been proposed before, but back
    then they spoke about a referendum not only in Nagorno Karabakh, but
    also in Azerbaijan," RFE/RL reports quoting its source. "Under the
    new draft, Azerbaijan recognizes the right of the people of Nagorno
    Karabakh to self-determination, with Lachin remaining under Nagorno
    Karabakh's control."

    On July 13, official Azerbaijan called this report ungrounded: Head
    of the Department of the Press and Information Policy of Azerbaijan's
    Ministry of Foreign Affairs Tair Tagizade told Turan news agency that
    the information about the drafting of a settlement deal providing
    for holding a referendum did not correspond to facts.

    Still on July 5, PACE rapporteur on the Karabakh conflict David
    Atkinson issued a rather surprising statement. He expressed his
    conviction about the need to involve also representatives of the
    parliaments of Armenia and Azerbaijan in the negotiating process
    within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.

    By his statement, Atkinson is suggesting a shake up of the monopoly of
    the executive authorities currently engaged in reaching a solution.The
    last word, in any case, belongs to the heads of state, however,
    the idea of involving the two states' lawmakers in the process
    is objectively oriented to the policy of weakening the dominating
    positions of the OSCE Minsk Group.

    Meanwhile, a visit of the OSCE Minsk Group cochairmen themselves to
    the region of the Karabakh conflict took place this week.

    "We are in a working mood, and I think that the visit will be very
    useful for the further process of settlement," Merzlyakov said in Baku
    on Monday (July 11). "Variants of wordings will be discussed in the
    course of the visit, and we want this work to be completed in Kazan."

    The main accents of the "Working Document" are likely to be well
    known to the presidents of both states, and they are likely to possess
    information about the general trends of the "new" proposal as well. As
    Baku media reported, "the meeting of the OSCE Minsk Group cochairmen
    with Azerbaijan's president was held behind closed doors and nothing
    is known about the reaction of Ilham Aliyev."

    The Minsk Group cochairmen visiting Baku - Steven Mann, Bernard
    Fassier and Merzlyakov, apart from confidential discussions with
    representatives of Azerbaijan's leadership, also held a meeting
    with "representatives of the Azeri community of Nagorno Karabakh"
    - Nizami Bakhmanov ("head of the Shushi administration") and Elbrus
    Takhmazov ("head of the Lachin administration"). During the meeting,
    the sides discussed the issue of the opening of the Aghdam-Khankendi-
    Shusha-Lachin-Goris-Shakhbuz motorway with an exit to Turkey.

    On Wednesday (July 13), the negotiators, who came to the Karabakh
    capital of Stepanakert from Yerevan, held a four- hour talk with NKR
    President Arkady Ghukasyan.

    "The meeting was very constructive and useful," said Merzlyakov. "The
    cochairmen got answers from Nagorno Karabakh's leader to a number
    of questions that emerged in the settlement process and shared their
    vision and ideas with him. As to the settlement agreement, the sides
    are still very far from it."

    "Many aspects on which the sides have not yet come to terms are
    obvious," U.S. negotiator Mann said immediately after the meeting.

    CHANGE IN THE AIR: PARTIES ON BOTH SIDES REACT TO LATEST CONSTITUTION
    DRAFT

    By Zhanna Alexanyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    At a meeting to discuss constitutional reform on Tuesday (July 12),
    Vartan Poghosyan head of "Democracy" Non Governmental Organization
    and a main opponent of earlier constitutional drafts said the latest
    version "is a serious advance that approaches to the European standards
    in many regards."

    Poghosyan, along with Minister of Justice David Harutyunyan, and
    Presidential Advisor (for constitutional reforms) Armen Harutyunyan
    and one member from each coalition party, formed Armenia's delegation
    to the Council of Europe's June 23-24 session in Strasburg, where
    Armenia's latest proposed reforms were reviewed. (Armenia's Parliament
    submitted it's draft to the Council on May 13.)

    The Council's Venice Commission called for amendments in three areas:
    separation of powers, independence of judicial bodies and election
    (rather than presidential appointment) of the Mayor of Yerevan.

    In response to the Strasburg meeting, participating parties have
    written another draft, which was submitted July 7.

    According to Poghosyan, solutions are given for principle questions
    and they should turn into constitutional reform draft; and in terms
    of politics the opposition and the authorities should "make step
    towards each other".

    "The submitted draft is truly a good basis for adopting a draft
    of constitutional reforms in an atmosphere of political consent,"
    Poghosyan said.

    The most recent draft is said to include amendments that limit
    presidential authority (the President does not keep the authority
    to dismiss the Prime Minister and the authority to dissolve the NA
    is limited.)

    Under the new draft, the National Assembly would be authorized to
    form the Government. It would also elect the Prosecutor General,
    the Ombudsman (the first ombudsman was appointed by the President).

    "This does not mean the draft we have is perfect," Poghosyan
    said. "There are many problems that should be referred to during the
    process that will, in my opinion, be fulfilled if no disagreements
    remain between the authorities and the opposition around principle
    issues."

    The political opposition parties have not yet said whether they will
    participate in the reform debates.

    A statement by the "Justice" and "National Unity" parties calls the
    latest draft "significant progress, however the steps made are not
    complete and cannot be viewed as full range adoption of three principle
    approaches publicly presented by the opposition on January 19 2005".

    The oppositional factions did not exclude in their joint statement
    the possibility of cooperation in case of elimination of the
    shortcomings. The statement says also achievement of positive and
    unambiguous results at the referendum needs review of voters' lists
    and Electoral Code, as well as bringing to responsibility those in
    charge of fraud and violence during the 2003 Presidential elections.

    The task group of the Venice Commission will give its evaluation no
    later than July 20th and the Armenian authorities should by that time
    make the required amendments and clarifications. Then the final version
    of the amendments should be submitted to the NA for the second reading.

    On Tuesday President Robert Kocharyan signed a decree for summoning
    an extra session on August 29th and discussion of the constitutional
    reforms in the second reading. In case of approving by the parliament
    the constitutional reform draft will be put on national referendum
    in November.

    OUTSIDE EYE: A NON-ARMENIAN'S VIEW OF LIFE IN HIS ADOPTED HOME

    By John Hughes ArmeniaNow Reporter

    In the middle of the night after 30 days out of Armenia, I am in Pulhov
    Airport, St. Petersburg and send this text message to my colleague:

    "I have reached the gate, and am seeing Armenian faces for the first
    time in a month. If they only knew how I feel."

    If only.

    I sit close to two men, because I want to listen to them talk, even
    though I won't understand a single sentence. But my ears have been
    flooded with Russian for a month, and now I want to hear something
    familiar.

    Familiar? I can't understand a bloody word. But the sound is welcome.

    I recognize "spa se" and "ka zange" and guess that the man on his
    mobile is telling someone to wait for his call. Dropped here without
    so much as a ride to the airport from my Russian hosts, I imagine the
    person on the other end of the line standing with about 50 relatives
    - already with faces pressed against Zvartnots Airport waiting-room
    windows, an hour before the flight even leaves St. Petersburg.

    And I hear the words I've become most familiar with: "bon" and "eli"
    - words I've come to define as "well, nothing". (I've sworn that if
    I ever had a child in Armenia, I'd name him/her "BonEli" - that way,
    the kid would never be lonely, because somewhere an Armenian would
    always be saying his name.)

    After a month in the land of blue eyes and blonde hair, I welcome
    the coffee eyes and midnight hair I am now strangely and comfortably
    surrounded by.

    Men (and some of the women) need shaves. The children are dressed as
    if for church.

    Black, red and white plaid plastic bags - the Caucasus suitcase -
    are bulged and bound.

    A grandmother holds an infant whose head is wrapped like a sausage, as
    if this were winter instead of the middle of summer. She is watching,
    too, a toddler, dressed in pink with a woven, white skull cap framing
    her distinctly Hyastanci features that I am urged to pinch.

    Teenage girls primp, tying shocks of hair behind their dark heads
    where it falls toward counterfeit "designer" jeans that were probably
    not as tight, three or four layers of lavash ago.

    Men smoke. Then they smoke some more.

    I see feet peeking from summer sandals that, if they have walked as I
    did along the canals of this city, have walked first on the rocky soil
    of a land that belongs to them and that is my good fortune to borrow.

    They don't know that I feel a part of them. Why should they? But in
    3.5 hours the plane that holds us all, that gives us some unnatural
    commonality, will land in a place that they'll call "Hyrenik" and
    I'll call "home". And we'll mean the same thing. . .

    I sit among the familiar strangeness and recall what I've been telling
    my Russian acquaintances about the Armenians.

    Turns out the sophisticates in the "Venice of the North" don't have
    such a high opinion of the "Hyes". I've spent a month trying to change
    that - telling that these mountain people have a sophistication of
    their own - if you allow it to reveal itself.

    I've told about the warmth of ancient and tiny Armenian churches
    that is missing from Russia's great cathedrals. I've explained the
    recipe for harisa and the story of its origin. I went to a market
    specifically to buy Armenian apricots for my hosts. I told about the
    difference between Georgian pouri and Armenian mahatnakosh.

    At the splendid Hermitage, I looked for Surenyants' "Salome", because
    I missed seeing the one that hangs in the State Gallery in Yerevan. I
    told about Komitas, and of how the communists painted a businessman's
    suit over his clerical robe on a mural inside an Etchmiadzin seminary
    dormitory.

    I was feeling pretty good about my ambassadorial role when I again
    reached the streets of Yerevan. Feeling at ease, I turned up Nalbandian
    and met two young adult men coming my way. They stared. I hadn't been
    stared at in a month.

    They parted, so that I had to pass between them and then - I swear
    I am not making this up - the one on my right leaned toward my face
    and barked at me.

    I wondered how I might explain that to the "Peter" bourgeoisie to
    counter their opinion of the Caucasians.

    "Eh," I'd probably say, "voch inch."

    MUSEUM OF CONFLICT: DISPUTE OVER DISPLAY SPACE 13 YEARS OVERDUE
    FOR RESOLUTION

    By Vahan Ishkhanyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The personal collection of Diaspora-Armenian artist Marcos Grigorian,
    which is on display in the Museum of Literature and Art, has become
    a subject of conflict.

    The collection is the result of five decades of collection of the
    81-year-old artist that he gathered while living in Iran and later
    transferred it to the United States.

    In 1992, Grigorian donated his collection to the state at the
    request of the Armenian Government on condition that premises would
    be allocated for it. It was temporarily given to the administration
    of the Museum of Literature and Art and displays were organized in
    its four exhibition halls. The museum was opened in 1993 and during
    its opening Vice- President Gagik Harutyunyan expressed gratitude
    to the artist on behalf of the state. The authorities promised to
    allocate permanent premises to the museum within two years.

    But a couple of years turned into 13 years' waiting as no premises
    or status have been given to the museum. Now, the administration
    of the Museum of Literature and Art has demanded that its territory
    be vacated, since it had no possibility to put up its own displays
    (which include several thousand items). If the four halls occupied
    by Grigorian are vacated, then the museum will get a possibility to
    present each field of art in a separate hall.

    Griogorian calls his collection the Middle East Museum. However,
    it is much more embracive.

    The Middle East collection includes Iranian faucets of the 12th-19th
    centuries, doorknockers, keys, locks, nails, Iranian-Turkmen silver
    ornaments of the 18th-19th centuries, 3 or 4,000-year-old bronze
    items, etc.

    One section of the museum is devoted to photographs connected with
    Grigorian's biography, works - canvases and earth works that brought
    him recognition (www.marcosgrigorian.com). It also includes carpets
    made with his patterns and looms on which a carpet-weaver makes a
    new carpet for the museum once a year.

    Due to the inaction of the Ministry of Culture, these two museums
    have found themselves in a state of permanent conflict. The Museum
    of Literature and Art demands that its premises be vacated; Grigorian
    says that his museum will move out only if premises are provided to it.

    "Marcos's museum provided by an order of the Ministry of Culture
    was not for exhibition but for preservation," says Director of the
    Museum of Literature and Art Henrik Bakhchinyan. "The Vice-President
    and the Minister of Culture promised at that time that a status of
    a separate museum and premises would be granted in two years' time
    and that the museum would move out, as this museum has nothing to
    do with us by its profile. Later we applied to all five ministers
    of culture for the museum to be removed, and for the exhibition
    dedicated to our culture to be presented at full length. But they
    always replied orally that this exhibition could not be touched as a
    negative opinion towards us would be formed in the Diaspora then and
    that they stop their donations. And now there are no premises. As a
    result, the largest cultural hub has been deprived of the possibility
    to exhibit its values."

    Now Bakhchinyan, bypassing the Ministry of Culture, has applied to
    the Republic's President and Prime Minister.

    The conflict has become so aggravated that either side calls into
    doubt the importance of the other's museum. Grigorian says that the
    territory occupied by him was not fit for use and that he had made
    it fit. Bakhchinyan replies that after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union the museum of outdated communist propagandist literature was
    dismantled and it required time to organize a new exhibition (the
    display of the Museum of Literature and Art became possible due to
    Diaspora-Armenian philanthropists, the Ministry of Culture had not
    allocated any funds), and that part of Grigorian's museum are goods
    brought from a flea market.

    "Marcos is sitting on our throat. How can one hang bells instead of
    (works by artists) Aram Khachaturyan and Vahan Teryan?"

    Grigorian flies into a rage when he hears his collection being compared
    to items brought from a flea market: "A person cannot be that ignorant
    to compare it with items from a flea market. There is no collection of
    such faucets in the world. My concern is that I am not a (billionaire
    philanthropist Kirk) Kirkorian, but what I brought is not any worse.
    This collection is priceless."

    Although some items like the ones in his collection could be purchased
    at a flea market once, for example Russia samovars, still their value
    is set high. Hakob Movses, who served as Minister of Culture in 1993
    and through whose efforts Grigorian's collection was brought in,
    says that at that time the museum was evaluated at $1.7 million and
    now its value has tripled.

    Bakhchinyan also made a proposal to disperse Grigorian's museum among
    different museums, since it is a mix and has no common contents. If
    a precise name is given to the museum then it would be called the
    museum of Marcos Grigorian's lifetime creation and collection. It
    turns out that this was precisely the original name planned:

    "We not simply asked, we begged for the museum to be brought to
    Armenia," says Hakob Movses. "We asked so much, we said that the
    museum would be named after you. We set a task to ourselves to bring
    the collection to Armenia. We didn't think about the premises at that
    moment. There was no territory at that time. But let them give it
    now, there are so many places, they are constructing North Avenue,
    or let them allocate a part of the territory given to Cafesjian."

    According to him, both sides are right and it is the government that
    is to blame.

    Grigorian says that if the Ministry of Culture continues to do nothing
    and the state fails to fulfill its promise, then he will withdraw
    his donation through court action.

    Head of the Cultural Policy, Museums and Libraries Department of the
    Ministry of Culture Anahit Galstyan only says that the Ministry is
    searching for premises and 3-4 times a year discusses the issue of
    the museum with Grigorian. However, she does not give any hope that
    the problem will be solved in the near future. "It is getting more
    and more complicated to buy premises as time passes," she says.

    More than a dozen buildings included in the list of monuments preserved
    by the state were demolished for the construction of North and Main
    avenues. And the Ministry of Culture did not oppose that. Nevertheless,
    the government could submit a draft according to which territory would
    be provided to Grigorian's museum in the area under construction. But
    no such step was made.

    MEMORIES SET FREE: MUSA LER SURVIVOR TRAVELS BACK IN TIME

    By Mariam Badalyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Ninety-three year old Azat Sulikyan greets his visitors at the doorway
    with a business handshake, leading them into the guestroom.

    Family members are surprised that their grandpa has agreed to talk
    about his earliest memories. Earlier he had refused an interview with
    a television station.

    "I do not have much to say. I was only three during the battle and
    I don't remember it, what else can I tell you?" says Azat in a
    low voice.

    What else to tell is that Azat is one of the few remaining survivors
    of one of the most climactic events in the history of Armenia -
    the famous battle at Musa Ler, when a few Armenians held off Turkish
    soldiers until missionary ships saved them. The "40 Days at Musa Ler"
    became legend, especially popularized in the novel by Franz Werfel.

    "Pa, tell whatever you remember. Tell them about our Neneh," says
    Azat's daughter-in-law Mariam. "You should have come some six years
    ago, when our Neneh was alive."

    Mariam Yazirjyan could not wait and started telling about Neneh
    herself.

    Neneh is Haji Sarah - Azat's mother, whom grandchildren called "Neneh"
    as it was common among Western Armenians.

    "Neneh was a very beautiful woman," daughter-in-law Armenuhi Sulikyan
    tells, "she was saying her brother's wife put mud on Neneh's face to
    hide her beauty during deportation."

    Haji Sarah, the family story-teller, died in 1999, at the age of 103.

    Azat listens to his family members talk, and is himself inspired. His
    tightly closed lips suddenly open. He coughs, then begins his sory.

    "I remember Musa Ler better than this Nor Aresh, where I live now. When
    it was decided to annex Musa Ler back to Turkey, we all decided to
    leave, otherwise we would rebel again. I was 27. Every bush, tree,
    cliff, our house, the garden - all are before my eyes now..." Azat
    fell into memories for a moment then continued, "A few years ago
    Aram, the son of one of our villagers, Ruben - went to Musa Ler. I
    had asked him to go and see our house."

    The house of Azat's family was at the edge of the village. Aram found
    it abandoned and shattered. Turks lived in other houses of the village.

    "Turks lived also in Aram's house. They remembered his
    grandfather. They received him with hospitality, accompanied/showed
    him to other villages and then saw him off."

    While the grandfather had started his story, the grandchildren gathered
    in the room to hear it. It was a rare occasion that grandfather fell
    in memories.

    "Our village was Bitias, the farthest from the sea of Musa Ler's six
    villages, but the closest to the town of Antioch," Azat recalls.

    Bunched in mountains and surrounded with thick forests Bitias's land
    resembled a heaven. The soil was fertile and the woods were full
    of wildlife.

    "There was no man who did not know how to shoot, everyone had guns. We
    smashed salt and made gun-powder and went to the forest for hunting,"
    Azat livens up.

    Although the village was very close to the town of Antioch, in order
    to earn a living the villagers could not rely on selling village
    products in the town.

    "Antioch had only 18,000 residents and there were 360 villages
    surrounding it; this was too much for a town of 18,000," Azat says.

    Bitias people, however, had another source of income. In summertime,
    vacationers came from everywhere. Above the village in the mountains
    there was a luxurious rest-house for rich people. But there were
    people who stayed in the village.

    "If a villager hosted a holiday-maker for a week, his whole family
    would live for a whole year on that money," Azat says. "My brothers
    and I worked for a year to earn the amount of money we could get from
    a vacationer, who stayed for a week."

    The whole family - sometimes 10-15 people - would leave the house
    for a family on vacation, and stay outdoors.

    "Ohan Voskeberan's church is in our village," Azat recalls with
    pride. "And the monument, where the 18 heroes of Musa Ler are buried,
    was built high on the mountain in the place of the battle to honor
    the salvation of our people. It is 4 hours away from our village."

    Every September 15 the Armenians from all six Musa Ler villages -
    Kebusie, Vagf, Khdrbek, Yoghunoluk, Haji Habibli, Bitias - made
    a pilgrimage to the monument on the mountain, which was built in
    the form of a ship in honor of the French ship rescuing Musa Ler
    residents. The preacher blessed the harisa (a traditional Musa Ler
    dish made of chicken and wheat) they made on the mountain, then they
    celebrated their liberation.

    According to Azat, in 1920-39, 70 Armenian families lived in Bitias.

    "My friend Aram told me today there are 70 families living there,
    Turk families... " Azat sighed. "When we were leaving three families
    stayed in the village, but they were either old couples or people
    without an offspring so they did not think about the future."

    However, as Azat remembers in 1939 around 70 families stayed in all
    six Musa Ler villages. Whether they have become Turks or left, Azat
    has no idea.

    He does know, however, about one other survivor, Sirak
    Matossyan. Sirak, 99, lives within walking distance of Azat (click
    here to read about Sirak). The men meet occasionally and play chess.

    Azat wonders, though, whether anyone is left now to go to the
    mountain. The question bothers him, and again he is silent.

    DUMPED ON: SUMMER HOMES HAVE BECOME A GARBAGE SITE FOR BYUREGHAVAN
    RESIDENTS

    By Arpi Harutyunyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Garbage from Byureghavan has become a smelly controversy for residents
    on the outskirts of the town, whose Kotayk province summer homes have
    become less than bucolic by air that smells of rotting refuse.

    While town residents are pleased to have regular garbage service,
    some 3 kilometers away, the hope of others for summer retreat is
    literally spoiling. Permanent residents say they are paying with
    their health for others' convenience.

    For more than 10 years, garbage that should have been taken to
    a special landfill 15 kilometers away, has been dumped in an open
    territory two to three times a day, contaminating the environment of
    residents and dacha inhabitants.

    Lyudmila Aghajanyan is among residents whose attitudes are turning
    sour along with the mounting hectares of garbage they have inherited.

    Aghajanyan has been living year-round in the house she bought, in
    hopes that her grandchildren could use it as a summer home. But in
    recent summers, even she leaves the house because the smell and dirt
    have become unbearable.

    "Nobody cares that we live in dust and dirt," she says. "Round the
    year we are surrounded by refuse. Such a terrible smell spreads
    especially in summer that one can't breathe. And when a wind blows
    we close tightly the windows and stay ay home. It's better to choke
    of heat than of the refuse, smell and dust."

    Waste from Byureghavan - a town of 11,500 some 15 kilometers northwest
    of Yerevan - is supposed to be hauled to the Jraber refuse collection
    center.

    But for at least a decade, the garbage trucks have gone no further
    than the edge of town, creating today's problem.

    The smell endured by residents such as Aghajanyan, is the stink of
    insufficient funds, authorities say.

    Almost the same explanation is given to these by the head of
    urban-planning and land tenure at the Municipality of Byureghavan
    Hovhannes Ghukasyan.

    "The Municipality does not have enough finances to take the refuse
    to Jraber refuse collection area," says Hovhannes Ghukasyan, head
    of urban planning and land tenure. He says some 300-400,000 drams
    (about $700-900) is needed per month.

    "How can we provide the expenses when the residents do not pay for
    the refuse collection service?" Ghukasyan says.

    Residents counter, though, that they do pay their utility fees, and
    that it is the municipality that is to blame for the unsightly and
    unhealthy mess.

    "We, the residents, regularly make all the payments, especially for
    refuse collection," says resident Alina Poghosyan. "It is advantageous
    to the Municipality to blame us."

    Throughout the years the increasing garbage has become the symbol of
    the summer housing bloc, which was intended to be an area for rest.

    "What rest are you talking about when people, one can say, live in
    garbage," says resident Anzhela Manukyan, who lives in the town but
    moves each year to the family summer home. "The resort has turned
    into a refuse collector. Nature opens before one's eyes from the
    windows of true summer houses, and here one can see only smoking
    garbage piles. And in hot weather the total garbage pile can become
    also a reason for illnesses."

    Director of the Byureghavan Health Center, Vartan Avetisyan, also
    says the garbage dump is a health threat.

    "Of course it's unacceptable that a refuse collector exists by
    residences. The piled garbage creates fertile grounds for flies. They
    can spread various infections including dysentery. I also have a
    summer house in the territory and as a resident I am also concerned
    and feel uncomfortable of the existing situation," he says.

    People in the area cannot cultivate the land nearby their houses,
    because on windy days the refuse flies into their gardens. The area
    is rich in blackberry bushes, but the people do not gather the crops:
    the plastic bags from the refuse pile have become the covers for
    trees and bushes.

    In such anti-sanitary conditions people avoid using the fruits of
    the gardens.

    For some residents, however, the garbage pile has become a
    "workplace". Some feed their pigs there, some gather useful things
    and fuel there. But even with that they complain.

    "Of course we provide our large families with the 'goods' of this
    refuse collection area: we gather plastic, bottles and take and sell
    and make a bit of money. But it does not mean we wouldn't like to
    get rid of the dirt. At least we live a bit further, what can the
    people living nearby say who breathe this air every day and enter
    their houses through the garbage," says Suren Gevorgyan.

    According to Byureghavan Mayor Shavarsh Sedrakyan "there is no
    anti-sanitary situation there."

    "We do not do anything wrong, nor do we harm anyone. Simply the
    place is a big pit that is filled with garbage. Instead the town of
    Byureghavan is clean, the garbage taking is realized for 100 percent,"
    he says.

    Contrary to the mayor, residents of the summer houses call the place
    chosen for the garbage not a pit but a ravine.

    "It is not a pit, you see, it is more a ravine. It is funny when they
    say the pit should be filled with garbage. They could at least escape
    explaining it that way. In the coming 10-15 years it will not fill,"
    says Samvel Aghajanyan. "Put aside that much more garbage is poured
    onto the flat area and not into the pit they say. It appears that we
    will pass all our life in the dirt, will eat fruits and vegetables
    grown from the dirt."

    In fact, not only the so called "pit" is used for the refuse pile,
    but also the neighboring flat area. The area is quite large and could
    serve for garden and vegetable cultivation and tree planting. But
    today it is more than useless.

    BOUNTIFUL HARVEST: GOLDEN APRICOT FESTIVAL ATTRACTS 140 FILMS FROM
    45 COUNTRIES

    By Gayane Abrahamyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    On July 12th the Yerevan summer heated up with the sweet-fruit scent
    of the Golden Apricot International Film Festival. In a manner unlike
    many such festivals, the Armenian variant opened with a blessing of
    its symbol - the apricot (this season thankfully plentiful).

    The odor of incense and apricots and the gentle mystic sounds of the
    mass embraced the participants in the Church of St. Zoravor.

    "Here I found warmness I hadn't felt at any other festival, the
    peculiarity of this festival is the manifestation of the national
    spirit and it is also the guarantee of its continuation," said Dutch
    director Jos Stelling.

    >>From the blessing, the opening ceremonies took place at the State
    Academic Theater for Opera and Ballet. An 18-member duduk ensemble
    led by Gevorg Dabaghyan played "Krunk" (The Crane), accompanying a
    slide-show of Atom Egoyan's "Ararat".

    Then accompanied by Anush and Inga Arshakyan's "Tamzara" folk song
    and Armenian dance the blessed apricot was served to the guests in
    the hall. Many pop singers appeared with the soundtracks of Armenian
    films. Singers Nune Yesayan and Artur Ispiryan hosted the opening,
    and spoke only in English, until shouts of protest demanded that they
    also speak in Armenian.

    Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan Oskanian read a greeting from
    President Robert Kocharyan, calling cinema "an opportunity for
    mutual understanding and comprehension, for peace between different
    civilizations, countries and nations."

    After a red-carpet reception on Charles Aznavour Square, guests saw
    this year's first film (of 140, from 45 countries that would be shown
    though the week-long festival), "Mariam".

    The $300,000 film, written and directed by Edgar Baghdasaryan, stars
    Iranian-Armenian actress Janet Hovhannisyan and is about a teacher
    of the deaf and her mystical illusions and loneliness. It also
    represents the first use of computer special effects to be employed
    in an Armenia-produced film.

    The leader of Armenian cinematography, Baghdasaryan is the only
    Armenian director whose documentary "The Country of Holy Rites"
    gathered full halls at the Moscow Cinema two years ago for several
    days, in times when Armenian films are not put for sale usually.

    "In all of my films I try to one question: who am I, why have I
    been born? In 'Mariam' I tried to find answer to one question -
    whether man needs man today, can a man relate right to a man? The
    more civilized the world becomes the lonelier and isolated the man
    becomes - introvert and unhappy," the director said.

    The ending of the film remains mystic, for the director believes the
    audience should become a co-author while watching the film and should
    see the ending of the film in the hall.

    Owing to the Golden Apricot Film Festival Yerevan hosts also Canadian
    Armenian director Egoyan and his wife, actress Arsine Khanjian.

    "I am proud to head the juries of the festival, this is a true
    feast and everyone should take part in it; the festival takes place
    especially owing to the dialogue with the audience," Egoyan said.

    Egoyan praised the festival organization and said it is comparable
    in quality to other such international events.

    "This year truly world cinematographers have arrived in Yerevan -
    Abbas Quiarostami, famous Dutch film director Jos Stelling, Nikita
    Mikhalkov; this is really an achievement," says Egoyan.

    In a short exclusive interview to ArmeniaNow (before he agreed to
    give his first press conference in 35 years) Quiarostami mentioned
    he is quite acquainted wiht Armenian culture.

    "I have many Armenian friends in Iran and different countries of
    the world. Last year my son was in Armenia and I was so interested
    from what he told that I came this year despite my schedule," said
    Quiarostomi.

    This year's Golden Apricot included a retrospect show of Quiarostami's
    films, which the director called a big honor for him.

    "Of course not all of my films will be shown but those selected will
    give the Armenian audience an opportunity to be familiar with my art,"
    said Quiarostami.

    Quiarostami said he enjoyed "Mariam", and that Baghdasaryan had a
    "very original approach".

    The honored director said he came to Armenia with great interest to
    see how in this newly born state in hard conditions films are created
    and even a festival exists.

    If last year, during the first Golden Apricot, locals and foreign
    guests were tolerantly closing eyes on some shortcomings, this year
    improvements are noticeable.

    "Both the opening ceremony, and the number and quality of presented
    films . . . this is a big step forward for one year that speaks
    of the possibilities this festival has," says Peter van Buren (The
    Netherlands), president of the fiction films juries last year.

    The head of the documentaries juries Ruben Gevorgyants believes the
    two-year-old festival has started "walking": "This is the toddler
    that just starts walking, but is firm, walks for the sake of Armenia
    and will soon tell the whole world about our country."

    The best films of the festival will be announced during final
    ceremonies on July 17.

    EUROPEAN CHALLENGE: WILL INTERNATIONAL CLUB FOOTBALL STAY IN ARMENIA
    LONGER THAN USUAL?

    By Suren Musayelyan ArmeniaNow Reporter

    European club football arrived in Yerevan again this week after a long
    year of waiting, but few fans and specialists believe that it will
    actually stay here until autumn when the crucial stages of European
    Cup tournaments begin.

    Armenia, which boasts a mid-70s team, Ararat, competing as an equal
    with grand European sides, has yet to see its first club progressing
    to the late stages of European competitions in the post-independence
    period.

    Armenia's champions FC Pyunik from Yerevan played against Finland's
    Haka in the first qualifying round of the Champions League on Wednesday
    losing 0-1 in Valkeakoski and complicating the task of reaching the
    next qualifying round (drawn against another Scandinavian stalwart
    Valerenga from Norway) in a return match in Yerevan on July 20.

    The task for Pyunik will look even tougher given that it will lose
    two leading young players, goalkeeper Apula Bete and midfielder Karl
    Lombe, who will be on international duty with Armenia's U-19's in
    Northern Ireland.

    FC Pyunik and national team coach Henk Wisman said before the match
    that he hoped his charges would "make the fans happy". Meanwhile,
    his Finnish counterpart, Olli Huttunen, said he hoped for "a good
    contest" in the two-leg tie.

    Before the match in Finland international bookmakers highly evaluated
    the chances of the Finnish team to win: 1.58, against 4.5 for Pyunik
    and 3.4 for a draw and they are likely to tip Haka as winner on
    aggregate.

    It is the third time that Pyunik (participating in the Champions
    League qualifying round for the sixth time) meet a Finnish team. On two
    previous occasions, they first lost 5-6 on aggregate to HIK in 1996 and
    in 2002 the Armenians manage to overcome Tampere - 6-0 on aggregate.

    To reach the last 32-team group stage Pyunik have to outplay their
    opponents in three qualifying rounds - a task that seems next to
    impossible given that there is a chance Pyunik will have to meet
    Champions League titleholders Liverpool in the final third round if
    they manage to progress that far.

    Before the start of the Champions League matches coach Wisman, who
    had always spoke about the need to recruit good strikers, had invited
    forwards from Argentina, Brazil and Mexico to the team.

    The Dutch specialist was earlier criticized for the national team's
    setbacks in the 2006 World Cup qualifying campaign and Pyunik's
    underachieving in the national championship. Now he hopes his
    attack-minded strategy will pay off soon.

    Last year, still with their young top marksman, now Ajax man Edgar
    Manucharyan, Pyunik first rekindled hopes for reaching the group stage
    in the Champions League by beating Macedonia's FK Pobeda (Skopje)
    in the first qualifying round only to lose to Ukraine's Shakhtar
    (Donetsk) and failing to clear the double Slavonic barrier.

    Now only a few loyal fans believe that the Yerevan side will manage
    to overcome the double Scandinavian hurdle and a surely tougher
    third round.

    Sergey Petrosyan, 66, remembers the times of football glory for
    Yerevan's Ararat, as well as the decline in the 80s when the best
    team of Armenia would finish far behind the top six in the Soviet
    championship that allowed a place in a European competition.

    "Many thought then that an independent championship would mean big
    European football every season. But it didn't happen," he says. "I
    think the level of club competition in the Soviet Union was higher
    than Armenian clubs can get on the international level playing only
    in qualifying rounds."

    Petrosyan remembers that Ararat played at least 30 competitive matches
    during a season in the USSR championship, plus several Cup matches,
    against strong teams from Moscow, Kiev, Tbilisi and others.

    "Now they play a couple of matches against mediocre European teams
    and even then drop out often without putting up any resistance,"
    says the veteran football fan and former referee.

    Armenian football legend of the 1950-60s Sargis Hovivyan thinks that
    it is already more than two decades that Armenia has had no football.

    "Of course, it is more than a decade that Armenia has had its own
    championship, Cup competition, with one team becoming a champion,
    winning the Cup or being relegated to the lower league. But until
    we succeed in the UEFA competitions against teams of our or lower
    standing, I consider that we have no football," Hovivyan said in a
    recent interview with the Iravunk weekly.

    Football analyst Arman Karapetyan thinks that to be competitive on the
    international level Armenian footballers need to play "intellectual
    football".

    "Our footballers have reached a certain level of technical skills,
    but lack intellectual mechanisms of applying these skills. They need
    intellect that would act approximately as an internal combustion
    engine, which turns thermal energy into mechanical one. That is,
    intellect is needed to convert football skills into result," the
    analyst argues.

    Banants from Yerevan and the League's runners-up and Cup holders
    Mika from Ashtarak played the first of their two-leg matches in the
    UEFA Cup on Thursday night against neighboring Georgia's Lokomitiv
    (at home) and German Mainz (away), respectively (see this week's
    Sport Digest for results).

    Before their return matches on July 28, both clubs bear in mind the
    humiliating experience of Lernagorts Kapan routed by Switzerland's
    Xamax (1-3 and 0-6) in the Intertoto Cup last month.

    It is clear that apart from intellect, Pyunik, Banants and Mika will
    need to score goals (the more, the better) in their next matches to
    stay on in the competition for any longer.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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