NKR Authorities Receive Congratulations On The Occasion Of The 15th

NKR AUTHORITIES RECEIVE CONGRATULATIONS ON THE OCCASION OF THE 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARTSAKH’S INDEPENDENCE

ArmRadio.am
31.08.2006 12:37

NKR authorities have received a number of congratulations on the
occasion of declaration of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic.

Particularly, words of congratulation have been conveyed by the first
US Ambassador to Armenia Hurry Gilmore. "I wish peaceful, safe and
free future to the Artsakhi people and convey my congratulations on
the occasion of the 15th anniversary of Artsakh," the Ambassador noted.

"I heartily congratulate the brave people of Artsakh, the NKR President
and the whole government on the occasion of the 15th anniversary of
Artsakh’s independence and wish all the best," says publisher and
editor of "The California Courier" newspaper Harut Sasounian.

NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs told "Armenpress" that the flow of
congratulations from social and political figures from a number of
countries continues.

Will Turkey Take Part In The War On The Side Of Georgia?

WILL TURKEY TAKE PART IN THE WAR ON THE SIDE OF GEORGIA?
by Vadim Novikov
Translated by Pavel Pushkin

Source: Severny Kavkaz (Nalchik), No. 33, August 22-28, 2006, p. EV
Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
August 30, 2006 Wednesday

Can The Turkish-Georgian Military Cooperation Lead To Participation
Of Turkey In The Abkhaz-Ossetian Or Ossetian-Georgian Conflict?

As a rule, when these or those authors touch on the topic of
Turkish-Georgian military cooperation they very seldom cover the
aspect of "involvement" of Turkey into the Abkhaz-Georgian and
Ossetian-Georgian conflicts. The explanation is very simple. This
is practical absence of information that can through light at this
aspect of Turkish-Georgian relations at least indirectly. Meanwhile,
Turkey is broadly represented in Georgia, to a big extent in the
military field. Practically everyone who have visited Tbilisi in the
last four to five years say that there are many Turkish military and
various Turkish citizens in general in the Georgian capital.

As a rule, when these or those authors touch on the topic of
Turkish-Georgian military cooperation they very seldom cover the
aspect of "involvement" of Turkey into the Abkhaz-Georgian and
Ossetian-Georgian conflicts. The explanation is very simple. This
is practical absence of information that can through light at this
aspect of Turkish-Georgian relations at least indirectly. Meanwhile,
Turkey is broadly represented in Georgia, to a big extent in the
military field. Practically everyone who have visited Tbilisi in the
last four to five years say that there are many Turkish military and
various Turkish citizens in general in the Georgian capital.

Turkey is represented in Abkhazia too and this has begun a long time
ago. We need to say a few words explaining why the Turkish party
cannot ignore the Abkhaz problem. This circumstance is connected with
history of the 19th century and results of the Caucasian War won by
Russia. There was exodus of Moslem Abkhaz people, so-called muhadzhirs,
from Abkhazia after that. Now there are from 500,000 to 800,000 people
considering themselves descendants of Abkhaz mukhadzhirs living in
Turkey, whereas about 100,000 Abkhaz people being mostly Orthodox
Christians live in Abkhazia. The Abkhaz Diaspora in Turkey is very
active. The Committee of Solidarity Caucasus-Abkhazia was established
immediately after beginning of the war in August of 1992. The center
is located in Istanbul and the committee is accredited by official
Ankara and lobbies Abkhaz interests. During the war the committee
provided humanitarian, human and financial aid to Abkhazia.

In various years the Abkhaz community of Turkey also tried to organize
repatriation of Turkish Abkhaz people to their native land.

Thus, according to Turkish information, up to 2,000 repatriates
already moved to Abkhazia and established Turkish college Basharan
in Gagra. The Abkhaz community of Turkey enjoys support on the part
of the emigrants from the North Caucasus living there, of which there
are about 6-7 million people.

Turkish businessmen are also very active in Abkhazia. The major part
of Turkish businessmen works in coal production. Turkey is one of the
main trading partners of Abkhazia. The sea is the main trading route.

Georgia has always tried to hinder this trade. Thus, Georgian border
guards frequently arrested Turkish ships near the coasts of Abkhazia
according to accusations of trespassing of territorial waters.

In the period of combat operations in the zone of the Georgian-Abkhaz
conflict the Turkish Abkhaz people provide a certain support to the
Abkhaz party. For instance, approximately 200 volunteers from Turkey
fought on the side of Abkhazia. Former President of Abkhazia V.

Ardzinba even visited Turkey and called on Ankara to develop relations
with Abkhazia. Such loyal stance of Turkey towards the authorities
of Abkhazia was conditioned by pressure on the part of the Abkhaz
Diaspora of this country and representatives of other Caucasian ethnic
groups living in Turkey, namely Circassian and Adyg people. However,
starting from the second half of the 1990s geopolitical aspect started
prevailing in the stance of Turkey. Due to the closed border with
Armenia Georgia became the only way for Turkey for communication with
Azerbaijan and Central Asian republics.

Interests of Turkey were also connected with Georgia because of the oil
pipeline Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, gas pipeline project Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum
and railway Baku-Tbilisi-Kars. According to Turkish analysts, the axis
Turkey-Georgia-Azerbaijan also contributes to breaking of strategically
opposite axis Russia-Armenia-Iran.

Georgia is also the shortest way for Turkey to the North Caucasus, for
instance, to Chechnya. It was known that the "corridor" Turkey-Georgia
was very often used by members of illegal armed forces that fought
against Russian federal troops in the North Caucasus and by the
bandit formations of international terrorists that helped them. That
is why in official statements Turkey started supporting territorial
integrity of Georgia and emphasizing importance for resolving of the
Abkhaz-Georgian conflict by a peaceful way in the framework of this
territorial integrity.

Along with this, military cooperation of Turkey with Georgia began
between 1992 and 1993. It grew more intensive and closer starting
from 1995-1996 when Georgian authorities started speaking about their
orientation at entrance into NATO for the first time. Since then
Turkey has been actually a "curator" of Georgia in the framework of
its integration with NATO. Hence, Turkey is the most active in this
field. Thus, a part of commanders of the Georgian armed forces have
passed and still pass training in Turkey and Turkish officers train
some divisions of the Georgian army including special forces units.

In February of 2005, Georgian Defense Minister I. Okruashvili was
on a three-day official visit to Turkey dedicated to discussion of
prospects of closer military cooperation.

Turkey also participates in projects for modernization of Georgian
armed forces. Thus, on December 25 of 2005, the military airfield
in Marneuli refurbished by Turkish armed forces was handed over to
the Defense Ministry of Georgia. Approximately $3 million was spent
on construction of the airfield. At the end of 2005, Turkey also
allocated $2.1 million for needs of the Georgian army and the major
part of this sum was spent on purchase of equipment necessary for the
Defense Ministry of Georgia by the Turkish party. A long time before
2005, some Turkish analysts expressed their assurance that some time
after withdrawal of Russian military bases from Georgia their place
would be occupied by Turkish military contingents.

Actually, if we bear in mind that almost immediately after "reception"
the Georgian party "leased" the Marneuli military airfield to Turkish
military pilots and this airfield was located not very far from the
former Russian military base in Vaziani where presence of Turkish
military was also noticed despite that Georgian authorities promised
Russia and Armenia that bases of any foreign countries would not
be deployed on the site of Russian bases and that these bases would
be used only for Georgian army, it is possible to say that Turkish
military have stayed in Georgia for two or three years. That is
why when quite recently it was announced that Georgian authorities
decided to provide the military airfield in Senaki to Turkish military
pilots allegedly for participation of Turkish military aviation in
extinguishing of forest fires in the territory of Georgia this caused
strong suspicions that official Tbilisi simply granted the second
air base in its territory to Turkey under a good pretext.

Besides, there is also information that in the framework of the
American program of military aid to Georgia "Train and equip" Georgian
special forces have been trained not only by Americans but also by
their Turkish colleagues for a long time. Is it necessary to recall
where the Georgian special forces have been found afterwards?

These were not they who tried to surround and storm Tskhinvali,
the capital of South Ossetia, last summer, were they? Authorities
of Abkhazia speak not about their deployment in the Kodori Gorge,
do they? Along with this, Abkhaz authorities do not rule out and even
expect that Georgia may try to restart the war.

The airfield in Senaki, for example, is located very close to
the borders of Abkhazia and Georgia and the flight time from it to
Abkhazia is very short. Nobody controls actions of Turkish military on
this airfield. This means that nobody can know for sure if only the
"fire extinguishing" airplanes of the Turkish Air Force are based
there or purely combat aviation joins them soon and will be able to
participate in "unnoticed" bomb dropping in Abkhazia later.

Along with this, Turkey keeps playing the role of a kind of caring
"curator" Abkhazia. Observers remembered that after each shout from
Tbilisi that Georgian party would soon achieve withdrawal of the
peacekeepers from the CIS from the zone of the Abkhaz-Georgian conflict
various officials from Ankara arrived to Sukhumi immediately. They
tried to persuade both the previous and the incumbent presidents
of Abkhazia that after withdrawal of Russian soldiers forming the
backbone of the peacekeepers of the CIS Turkish military should occupy
their place. To maintain confidence of Abkhaz authorities in Turkey
Ankara sometimes spoke about very serious forms of cooperation. Thus,
on April 19 President of Abkhazia Sergei Bagapsh commented on the
situation related to the project of restoration of a through railway
communication through Abkhazia and said that Azerbaijan, Turkey
and Iran manifested their interest in it lately. Reacting to this
statement of Bagapsh on April 28 the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry,
which probably worried about the future of the Georgian-Azerbaijani
relations, announced that Baku never expressed its interest in
restoration of railway communication through Abkhazia in verbal or
written form because it considered this to be an internal affair of
friendly Georgia and that "Azerbaijan does not have any contacts with
the self-proclaimed republic." It is necessary to say that there has
been official denial of the words of Bagapsh on the part of Turkey
and Iran then.

Of course, it is possible that there will be no open participation of
Turkey in possible combat operations of Georgia against Abkhazia and
South Ossetia. Ankara definitely will not wish to receive internal
instability because various organizations of Caucasian mountain
ethnic groups may achieve a situation when Turkish authorities feel
their discontent. At any rate, it is impossible to rule out that
some Turkish military instructors may appear in this or that conflict
zone. We can recall how many times Russian special services have had
to arrest and even physically destroy "retired" officers of Turkish
armed forces in Chechnya. Naturally, they came to the North Caucasus
through Georgia. Moreover, in Tbilisi there is a kind of headquarters
of special services that does frank espionage against Armenia and
Russia under coverage of some British generals. It is impossible to
rule out that "if necessary" these will be Turkish pilots who take off
from the airfields of Marneuli and Senaki and bomb Abkhazia and South
Ossetia. Mercenaries represent a familiar factor in regional (local)
inter-ethnic conflicts. Turks have already got used to fulfillment
of the role of mercenaries in the Caucasus.

MFA Not Informed Weather Armenian Nationals Suffered In The Result O

MFA NOT INFORMED WEATHER ARMENIAN NATIONALS SUFFERED IN THE RESULT OF THE TERRORIST ACTS IN TURKEY

ArmRadio.am
29.08.2006 11:41

4 were dead and 90 were injured in the result of a series of explosions
in Turkey.

Press and Information Department of RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs
told ArmInfo that the MFA does not possess any information weather
any Armenian citizens suffered in the result of the explosions. There
is information about two victims Russian in origin.

To note, the first explosions occurred Monday night in Istanbul and
Marmaris cities, another one came about in Anthalia yesterday.

The Turkish Police prevented another terrorist act being prepared in
Izmir city.

Art Without Borders

"Art Without Borders", But Within Reasonable Boundaries
By: Garen Mikaelian

"Novoye Vremya" – Russian language bi-weekly
Yerevan, August 5, 2006

On August 4, 2006, a unique and unprecedented exhibition called
"Art Without Borders" opened at the Armenian Center for Contemporary
Experimental Art ("NPAK" in Armenian acronym) in Yerevan. For the
first time works of artists from Armenia, Georgia, Iran and Turkey
(video-art, installation, graphic art, computer art, photography)
appeared together in one venue.

The idea of the exhibition belongs to Edward Balassanian, one of the
founders of NPAK and its C.E.O. It is very simple and clear: To show
through art the brutal reality of the region and to help promote
mutual understanding between various ethnic groups of the region.

History of the region is full of dramatic and tragic events.

Relations are complex, and often non-compromising and inflexible. At
the same time we live in the XXI century, when the situation
in the world is totally different, and demands different modes
of interaction. Mankind, willingly or not is going towards
globalization. All are striving towards bright and civilized future,
for which they need to learn mutual toleration. Artists, the most
democratic and liberal sectors of any society teach lessons of
toleration.

Balassanian has worked on the project for more than 3 years.

Particularly in present conditions it is not so easy to gather
together artists of the region. However, the project succeeded. Only
Azerbaijan’s artists are missing. Apparently during personal contacts
they agreed to partake in the project. However at the end they made it
known that in Baku it is not encouraged. Organizers regret this turn
of events and hope that next time the "quintet" will get together in
its entirety.

Contemporary art in many, if not all respects has lost its national
character and is manifested by international means and methods. This
is why advocates of traditional art are nervous and excessively
agitated. But things are what they are. For contemporary artist what
is important is expression of unique and fresh ideas, in the context
of national identity, awareness and frame of mind.

An outstanding example of this is Sonia Balassanian’s installation.

Many small models of houses are placed on the floor of a dark room
simulating an entire city. Alarming sound of engines of planes flying
over are heard. Suddenly sound of an explosion. Red flashes glow in
the dark. Then silence. Unexpectedly images of human faces appear on
the houses. No need for any interpretation. It is a very passionate
and direct public statement. Everything, the space, the sound,
the color and the video are brought together to a focal point. The
emotional impact is awesome. It could hardly be possible to accomplish
by traditional means. Where could we find a new Picasso for a new
"Guernica", and why?

Iranian artist Khosrow Hassan Zadeh reflects upon brutal murder
of 12 prostitutes in the town of Mashad. The basis of the works is
documentary photos, which have been processed by computer and have
been collaged on the mat. Pain and anger literally burst out of the
huge panels. Aren’t prostitutes God’s creation too?

Nadia Tsulukidze and Sophia Tabatadze [Georgia] presented a performance
piece using plastic and visual art. Sophia had produces a unique
"reportage" of her travels through Armenia and Azerbaijan. Her emphasis
was on human relations. There was also another, very personal layer
consisted of reading personal letters, which were about problems of
Georgian society and their interpretation. We must also speak about
issues which are usually left unspoken, and people do not like to
talk about them in public.

David Kareyan presented a telling and somber view of mans collision
with his living environment. A long line of dusty and muddy,
worn out domestic items was displayed, barren and dark. Feeling of
abandonment. Such is the situation after disasters and wars. Such
was the situation after September 11. But there is also hope. Here
and there small trees have grown. Life is continuing.

Grigor Khachatrian with his characteristic ingenuity uses Leonardo da
Vinci’s "Last Supper" and photographically replaces Christ’s and His
apostles’ faces by his own. "One of You Will Betray Me". Deciphering
Grigorian version of the Supper is difficult, but interesting.

Anyone’s game. He provides such an opportunity. I, you, he? Which
one will betray…?

Farhad and Shirin from Tehran in their panels mock Americanization
of daily routine, by satirically changing writings on daily consumer
goods such as dish-washing liquids and similar products.

Turkish painters Ahmet Ogut and Sener Ozmen have presented
"Coloring Book", which is a children’s book, but the pictures are
social-political images extracted from journalistic photographs. They
ask the audience to color the pictures like children would. It will
be interesting to see the outcome.

Irina Abjandadze shows series of magnificent duplex photographs, of
abandoned industrial buildings of town of Chiatura called "Parallel
Biographies". It id difficult to describe the secret meaning. What is
it? collapse of industry, of the country, or the individual? Which one?

Contemporary art is not as simple as it was thought to be a few years
ago. Today, totally denying it, pushing it back, or trying to ridicule
it is stupid at the least. It exists. Period. Whether it appeals to
one or not is another issue. But it exists and resonates the social
and political events taking place in the world, and it does it by
accessible means. It poses questions, but does not provide answers,
as is the case with the arts in general. It is important to understand
and keep this in mind.

Besides the fact that any nation’s world and its art are multi-faceted,
they are also multi-vectored. "Art Without Borders is a plastic
oratory. Resources of contemporary art are unending.

However, they address logic first and later deal with emotions. One
should not approach it by expressions of "It is beautiful" or "It
is not beautiful". To do so will be accepting defeat. In fact "Art
Without Borders" is a kind of independent public diplomacy. "Art
Without Borders" is common folks’, not "Knights’" concern about the
destiny and the future of the region. The future, which does not
deny the past in any way. This is why it is necessary to meet at art
exhibitions. May be something will come to fruition.

After all there is not going to be new migration [relocation] of
people. We need to tolerate one another.

Translated from Russian by EK

T. Torosian: Structures Bearing No Relation To Na Activity Wound Up

T.TOROSIAN: STRUCTURES BEARING NO RELATION TO NA ACTIVITY WOUND UP

YEREVAN, AUGUST 24, NOYAN TAPAN. NA Speaker Tigran Torosian presented
at the August 23 press conference processes existing at the NA
staff. It was particularly spoken about dissolution of few structures,
some structure changes what was recently rather stormily responded
in the press, especially by former NA Speaker Artur Baghdasarian’s
com-partizans. Presenting reasonings for dissolution of every structure
in a rather detailed way, T.Torosian mentioned that he has no wish
"to estimate anybody’s works, steps taken in the past."

"Everything that was done, was done only for one reason: I, as the NA
Speaker, is responsible for the quality of the NA staff’s work, and
steps were taken according to that responsibility and laws," T.Torosian
said, assuring that structures bearing no relation to the NA activity
were wound up. The NA Speaker also stated that in total, 38 people
were discharged. He expressed a hope that in the case of existence of
vacancies at the NA staff, it will be possible to return some of the
above-mentioned employees to the staff. T.Torosian also informed that
he presented reasonings concerning structure changes before the press
conference, during the consultation convened at 11:00 in which heads
of the NA group and factions, except the OYP (Country of Law party)
representative, and Chairmen of Standing Committees participated. The
NA Speaker studied, within border of his commissions, the process
of implementation of the parliament budget as well, as a result of
what he prevented allocation of 10 mln drams, the second part of the
financing from the NA budget, to the Armenian-Russian Interregional
Cooperation center. It was envisaged during the recent two years to
allocate from the NA budget to the center 20 mln drams annually.

The sum was completely allocated in 2005, and only half of it in 2006.
T.Torosian mentioned that the NA may not be a donor organization,
especially for a structure bearing no relation to the NA, irrespective
of programs being implemented by the structure.

Don’t follow the money

Globe and Mail, Canada
Aug. 25, 2006

Don’t follow the money
>>From Friday’s Globe and Mail

George Armoyan has no MBA, no CA, no CFA or any other designation
that would qualify him as the best investor in Canada you’ve never
heard of. "I have a WD-Wheeler Dealer," he says with a laugh.

The fast-talking, Syrian-born Armenian wheels and deals more cleverly
than just about anyone on Bay Street. But he doesn’t work on the
Street, and he invests in businesses that don’t show up on his
rivals’ radar screens. The 45-year-old lives in Toronto, but his
private holding company, Geosam Investments (named after his sons,
George and Sam), is based in Halifax. It controls a public company
called Clarke Inc. that holds transport, warehousing and IT assets.

His investment philosophy is simple: Don’t follow the money. Armoyan
is a value investor who searches for bargains other money managers
have overlooked. Of course, plenty of managers claim they do that,
yet they then stampede like a herd of buffalo to a handful of big
names like Canadian National Railway, Dofasco and the banks.

That’s why true outriders like Armoyan are the wave of the future. He
and his five-man team of accountants and analysts work a niche-they
go after broken, ailing or simply undervalued companies and income
trusts with market values ranging from $50 million to $150 million.
"We’re in the minor league," he says. "Most institutions do not want
to be involved in these illiquid stocks."

The Armoyan team will typically buy no more than 20% of a
business-majority stakes are hard to sell-then obtain a seat or
two on the board and go to work. That often means ousting managers,
selling a division, cutting expenses, merging with a competitor or
just telling a compelling story from near the bottom ranks of the
TSX. The job often requires the help of "operators, visionaries and
sons of bitches," says Armoyan.

The goal is an 18% return on equity on the half-dozen or so
investments the team manages at any given time. One big winner was
Vaquero Energy, a junior oil company. The team bought a stake in
2003, when Vaquero traded at less than $1 a share, and Clarke reined
in the oil company’s risky exploratory drilling program. Soaring oil
prices also helped. Last year, Highpine Oil & Gas bought Vaquero in a
stock swap for about $7 a share.

Clarke itself, a trucking company that had underperformed for years,
also needed a shakeup. Armoyan sacked management and focused
operations. The share price has climbed from about $3 in 2001 to more
than $10 recently. Other holdings have included Halterm Income Fund,
Royal Host REIT, Fishery Products International and Versacold Income
Fund. His worst pick was Hip Interactive, a video game company that
went bust last year.

Although Armoyan runs apart from the Bay Street herd, the herd has
noticed him. Mention of his interest in a stock can send it soaring.
That happened in April, after Clarke disclosed its 11% stake in the
Granby Industries Income Fund. When Clarke sold some units, investors
and analysts got skittish, and the share price sank. "We view [his
sale] as a negative, since Mr. Armoyan may not be bringing his
experience directly to the fund," said a report by Research Capital.

Armoyan won’t reveal his personal net worth, other than to say, "I
don’t have to work for the rest of my life." Clarke is certainly
flush-it has $140 million in cash.

That Armoyan has got this far in finance is unlikely, to say the
least. He and his family emigrated from Syria to Boston in 1976. He
then enrolled in Dalhousie University in Halifax because he couldn’t
afford a U.S. school, earned a civil engineering degree and fell in
love with Nova Scotia. A trader and bargain hunter by instinct, he
bought junk at auctions, from canoes to washing machines, and resold
it through newspaper ads. Then he shifted to land development.

In the 1990s, Geosam started buying non-performing loans from banks
and converting the loans into equity in the borrowers’ businesses.
Since then, he’s been a shake-up artist, moving in and out of
companies quickly. Jim MacDonald, chairman of Enterprise Capital, a
leading activist investment fund, says Armoyan is a "very shrewd
observer of companies and goes where others fear to tread."

What’s next for Armoyan? More-and bigger-deals. He’d like to build
Clarke into a billion-dollar company. "If I had the money, I’d go
hostile after [Bell Canada owner] BCE," he says. "I think the parts
are worth more than the whole."

It’s a nice fantasy, but Armoyan should keep sifting through the
weeds, searching for small, tarnished gems while the big boys look
the other way. That will keep him out in front of the herd.

Armenians Inured to Spiralling Crime

Armenians Inured to Spiralling Crime

ArmRadio.am
25.08.2006 18:42

Armenians Inured to Spiralling Crime
By Tatul Hakobian in Yerevan (CRS No. 354, 25-August-06)

Sergey Safarian, 46, returned from Soviet military service many
years ago an invalid. But his troubles worsened this summer when
his wife Gulnara was killed, leaving him unable to look after their
two daughters.

"I heard shots, ran out to the road, there were two people lying
dead there, one of them my wife, the other – a man. My wife was
hit by four bullets – in her hand, shoulder, stomach and forehead,"
Safarian recalled in his home in the village of Agarak.

"All the villagers flocked to where the shots came from. I took my
daughters and hurried home, so they didn’t see their mother covered
in blood."

The tragic incident occurred on August 8. Businessman Alexander
Givoyev, who also headed the public organisation The Protection of
Children’s Rights, was the assailants’ other victim.

The tragic death of Gulnara and that of another innocent woman in a
similar contract-style shooting has highlighted a disturbing tendency
– the media and the public’s seeming avoidance of any real discussion
about spiralling violent crime.

Officials say serious crime is lower than in other CIS countries,
but recently revealed that figures for the first half of 2006 show
a 100 per cent increase over same period last year – and that 60 per
cent of cases involved firearms.

According to preliminary findings, Givoev, who was heading with his
family for the northern town of Gyumri, had stopped his Grand Cherokee
jeep at a roadside fruit stall. A red unmarked vehicle pulled up beside
him. Those inside it opened fire, killing him in front of his wife and
children – as well as the unfortunate stallholder Gulnara Karapetian.

Now Gulnara’s mother Kalipse Karapetian is worried that there will be
no one to support her granddaughters with their mother dead and their
father an invalid. "Look, the grapes, pears in the garden are ripe
now," she told IWPR. " Their mother was going to pick them and sell in
the roadside stall, in order to buy clothes for her student daughter."

Gulnara was her family’s only breadwinner. Sergei Safarian’s pension
is only 5,000 drams (11 US dollars) a month. His twenty-year-old
daughter Narine, a deaf-mute from birth, gets the same allowance
from the state. His other daughter Marine is a student at Yerevan’s
medical college.

Grigor Zatikian, their neighbour and friend, said he was upset that
the fate of the grief-struck family had appeared to move no one but
neighbours and a few visiting journalists.

"Relatives and villagers helped organise Gulnara’s funeral and
committed her body to the earth with honour," he told IWPR. "Today two
invalids and a student live in this house. It is sure to collapse. Come
here next year and you’ ll see! Gulnara shouldered all the household
chores. She did the work a man is supposed to do – she pruned trees,
dug the earth."

On June 22, in another brazen daylight shooting, the son of a former
parliamentary deputy, Vahan Zatikian Sedrak, 26, was shot dead in
broad daylight in a crowded street in the Malatia district of Yerevan.

Twenty-four spent cartridges were found at the murder scene. One of the
bullets killed passer-by Karine Sargsian, 37, hitting her in the heart.

Karine Sargsian, who had been shopping, had bags of bread and
cabbage in her hands, when she was shot. She left behind three young
daughters. Several days after the murder, her husband Garush Antonian
published an article in the Azg newspaper, in which he said that
Armenian society was living by the law of the jungle.

Nikol Pashinian, editor-in-chief of the Yerevan opposition newspaper
Haikakan Zhamanak, wrote, "What was Karine Sargsian’s and her family’s
fault? Can an average citizen in this country feel he is a person
with rights, or is he just waiting to fall victim to criminals score
settling?"

Sona Truzian, press secretary at the general prosecutor’s office,
said the two murders were being investigated and she could not add
any new information, "I cannot say that these were contract killings
until the preliminary enquiry is completed."

Contract killings are common in Armenia, but they get surprisingly
little coverage on television and radio, which is mostly government
controlled.

Gegham Manukyan, an adviser at the popular Yerkir Media TV Company
and a parliamentary deputy, disagrees that serious crime is overlooked
but admits that producers face problems airing such stories: getting
timely information from the police and the reluctance of victims’
relatives to be interviewed.

Well-known Armenian actor Sos Sarkisian said it was time the public
woke up to threat of violent crime. " The people must stand up to
protest. Our people have become inured to such murders," he said.

Psychologist Karine Nalchajian said the public are concerned about
gangsterism, but feel there’s nothing they can do.

"A family, people in a certain circle, may talk among themselves,
express their outrage at what is going on, but our society at large
is not responsive, it does not believe that it can achieve things by
speaking out. The discussion of these matters generally does not go
beyond the family circle or a group of friends," he said.

Tatul Hakobian is a commentator for the Radiolur news programme on
Armenia Public Radio.

This article first was published at IWPR

CIS: Armenia Latest To Agonize Over Anthem

CIS: ARMENIA LATEST TO AGONIZE OVER ANTHEM
By Robert Parsons

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
Aug. 24, 2006

Emblems, flags and national anthems. There are few things, it seems,
more likely to stimulate the energies and passions of legislators in
the fledgling states of the old Soviet Union. Now, it is Armenia’s
turn.

PRAGUE, August 24, 2006 (RFE/RL) — The mood is a little fractious in
the Armenian capital this summer, and the weather isn’t helping. The
mercury has climbed inexorably above 40 degrees Celsius.

But not even the boiling sun can match the heat generated by the
debate over whether Armenia should ditch its national anthem and adopt
something more modern, more attuned to today’s national aspirations.

The very idea, according to the nationalist Dashnaktsutiun Party —
which forms part of the coalition government — is tantamount to
sacrilege. The Dashnaks like things just as they are.

"Mer Hayrenik," or "Our Fatherland," was penned by Mikael Ghazavi
Nalbandian, one of the most revered nationalist figures of the 19th
century, and adopted as the national anthem by the short-lived Armenian
state of 1918-20.

Thereafter it was banned by the Bolsheviks and became a hymn of protest
before being reinstated as the national anthem when Armenia declared
its independence in 1991.

So why change it now?

Take a look on Armenian blogsite blogrel.com and you get an idea why.

The song is too wimpy, complains one visitor — and too gloomy.

Take verse three. None of the usual chest-thumping banality of national
anthems here. But perhaps not calculated, either, to fill the hearts
of young schoolchildren with patriotic joy.

Death is the same everywhere; People die only once.

Lucky are the ones that are Sacrificed for the freedom of the nation.

Armenia is, of course, not the first post-Soviet state to go through
the agonies of this debate.

Russia fretted over it through the 1990s, briefly replacing the Soviet
anthem with a temporary lyric-free piece by 19th-century composer
Mikhail Glinka.

A 22-person commission made up of Armenia’s wisest and best has been
sifting through 85 candidates to come up with a new anthem.

In 2000, it once again reverted to the Soviet-era melody — albeit with
new words to replace paeans to "Lenin’s ideas" and the "unbreakable
union" of the Soviet state.

"Sacred Russia," the new version proclaims, "protected by God."

But divine care was not enough to persuade liberals like Grigory
Yavlinsky, leader of the opposition Yabloko party, who warned that
the reversion to the Soviet tune was a harbinger of terrible things.

Georgia’s Trials

In Georgia, too, the debate was fierce. But no nostalgia there. Two
years ago, it ditched the existing post-Soviet anthem in favor of a
new song.

Legislators said the fresh tune had more appropriate lyrics and —
so they hoped — a catchy new melody.

But many Georgians were unimpressed — like this man on the street
speaking to RFE/RL’s Georgian Service.

"They used to criticize our football and rugby international players
because they didn’t sing the last national anthem," the man said.

"But you tell me how they’re going to sing this one. Very
interesting! Nobody will be able to sing it. Then everyone will ask
again why they’re not singing. Because they won’t be able to sing it!"

Or this man, who clearly thought the old Soviet Georgian anthem
couldn’t be bettered.

"It needs the sort of words that will give you goose pimples," he
said. "I remember how the anthem used to be. ‘Eternal glory to the
nation’ — what do you think of that, eh? Pretty damn good!"

Anthem Tidbits

For every republic of the former Soviet Union, there is a similar
saga. Post-Soviet Moldova briefly adopted the Romanian anthem,
but abandoned it in favor of a new song to reflect the individual
Moldovan identity. That anthem is called "Our Language" — which in
Moldova is virtually identical to Romanian.

In Kyrgyzstan, a debate continues to simmer over its post-Soviet
anthem. The source of contention is a single word, "beikut," which —
according to which Kyrgyz dialect you’re speaking, can mean either
"peace" or "bad luck."

Russia’s Republic of Tatarstan, meanwhile, had no individual anthem
during the Soviet era. But it adopted an anthem after the revival
of its statehood. That song is now played at all official events,
together with the Russian anthem.

But to return to Armenia, where a 22-person commission made up of the
country’s wisest and best has been sifting through 85 candidates to
come up with a new anthem.

It’s a heavy burden, as one of the judges, Culture Minister Hasmik
Poghosian, makes clear in remarks to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

"When we really are no longer ‘wretched’ and ‘forsaken,’ I’ll enter
the anthem competition myself." — Felix Bakhchinian"It’s been very
difficult. When you have to listen to one song after another… And
clearly you can’t feel the same way about all of them," Poghosian
said. "And it would have been wrong to make a quick decision and
immediately announce the winner."

It’s hard work made harder still by some unrelenting criticism of
the whole project.

Felix Bakhchinian, director of the Charents Literature and Art Museum
in Yerevan, is one of many who think this is not the time for choosing
a new anthem.

"I too want to get rid of references to the motherland as ‘wretched
and forsaken,’ like we have in the existing anthem," Bakhchinian
said. "But we need to solve more pressing problems before we begin
talking about the anthem and other state attributes. Right now we
have higher priorities to meet. And when we really are no longer
‘wretched’ and ‘forsaken,’ I’ll enter the anthem competition myself."

Harsh words from a man highly respected in the world of Armenian art.

But not harsh enough to stop the commission. It’s narrowed the field
down to five finalists — and word is that one song is head and
shoulders above the rest.

Its lyrics, based on a poem by early 20th-century poet Yeghishe
Charents, drops much of the grim imagery in favor of praise for the
"sun-baked taste of Armenian words."

Whatever their views on the tune and its lyrics, Armenia’s legislators
would be wise to pay attention. If parliament adopts its planned new
code of ethics, legislators will have to demonstrate that they can
sing all the words.

EDITORIAL: Mideast Fuss Calls For Ban On Junkets

EDITORIAL: MIDEAST FUSS CALLS FOR BAN ON JUNKETS

Toronto Star, Canada
Aug. 23, 2006

Why are some Canadian Members of Parliament allowing themselves to be
squired around flashpoints like the Middle East and Taiwan by lobby
groups with agendas to promote?

The question is worth asking, given the uproar Toronto Liberal MP Borys
Wrzesnewskyj has sparked by accusing Israel of "state terrorism" and
"criminal" activity in defending itself against Hezbollah attacks from
Lebanon. Whatever one’s view of the Mideast, his comments Sunday after
a trip to the area were inflammatory, and embarrassing to his party.

The "fact-finding" trip to southern Lebanon on which Wrzesnewskyj
and two other opposition MPs went was led by the National Council on
Canada-Arab Relations. In Wrzesnewskyj’s case it wasn’t a junket;
he covered his costs. But it illustrates the pitfalls MPs face on
all such trips.

And far too many are junkets, pure and simple. The federal Ethics
Commissioner’s office reports that 44 MPs went on 67 "sponsored"
trips last year, some of them worth well over $10,000.

The Chinese International Economic Co-operation Association sponsored
17 forays to Taiwan, with the Taiwanese government sponsoring still
more. And the Canada-Israel Committee and Quebec-Israel Committee
sponsored 14. A sampling of other sponsors includes the government
of Armenia, the Christian Embassy, the Sikh Organization of New York,
the World Federation of Shooting Sports, the Canada-Sri Lanka Business
Council and the International Committee for a Free Vietnam.

The old Reform party frowned on junkets, and rightly so. Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, having come to office promising clean government,
should canvass for support in Parliament to ban them entirely. And
MPs from all parties should think harder before letting themselves
be squired around by lobby groups on any trips, even at the MPs’
own expense.

There is plenty of opportunity, and money, for MPs to travel abroad
in the course of their work. The Canadian government pays for travel
on official federal business. And Parliament has a travel budget for
parliamentary committees, and for interparliamentary exchanges.

That should suffice. If Parliament or the government feel that
MPs need to know more about the Middle East, Asian politics or the
shooting sports, the taxpayer should foot the bill, not some foreign
government or agency looking to lobby our lawmakers. If Parliament or
the government pay and arrange the trips, the public can have some
confidence that MPs will be exposed to a healthy variety of views,
not a narrow focus.

When others pay, or arrange the travel, the perception will always
exist that MPs will come home beholden to their sponsors, or disposed
to see the world through their sponsors’ eyes. That inspires no
great confidence.

ASBAREZ Online [08-22-2006]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
08/22/2006
TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT <;HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ. COM

1. Azerbaijan Threatens To Halt Visitors to Karabakh
2. OSCE Chairman Against Military Resolution to Karabakh Conflict
3. Karabakh Announces 2005 Census Results
4. Education Minister Rules Out Unprofessional Approach In Admission
Commission’s Work
5. Turkey Bars Aircraft From Flying to Lebanon

1. Azerbaijan Threatens To Halt Visitors to Karabakh

BAKU (Armenpress)Azeri foreign ministry spokesman said in an interview Tuesday
that Azerbaijan will require all visitors to Nagorno-Karabakh to obtain
official permission from the Azeri government.
Evidently, Azerbaijan is concerned about upcoming celebrations for the 15th
anniversary of Armenia’s independence which are going to take place in Nagorno
Karabakh.
The Azeri foreign Ministry spokesperson Tayir Taghizade told the Echo
newspaper that "any person who visits Nagorno Karabakh must know that without
the permission of the Azerbaijan, visits to Azeri territories not
controlled by
the Azeri government may have the most serious consequences, including denial
of entrance visas to Azerbaijan."
At the same time he expressed "assurances" that the guests who are going to
participate in the events will be private citizens and not officials.

2. OSCE Chairman Against Military Resolution to Karabakh Conflict

YEREVAN (Armenpress)In an interview with Armenpress Tuesday, the OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Karel De Gucht said the organization’s Belgian
Chairmanship,
in co-operation with the co-chairmen of the Minsk group, will continue to do
the utmost to move the Karabakh conflict resolution process forward.
"There seemed to be a window of opportunity earlier this year for the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. However, the meetings of the presidents of Armenia
and Azerbaijan in Paris and Bucharest failed to confirm that opportunity. It
will take time and a lot of wisdom and courage on the parts of both presidents
to overcome them," Karel De Gucht said.
Speaking about a military resolution of the conflict, the OSCE Chairman said
"The international community, the OSCE and the co-chairs of the Minsk group,
all want a peaceful resolution of the issue. Statements that go against this
line and call for military solutions are not helpful. I hope parties realize
that a military scenario would be a disaster not only for the parties, but for
the population and especially for the region as a whole. The international
community will judge severely the party that resorts to violence."
Meanwhile in Karabakh, the OSCE conducted a routine monitoring of the
Azeri-Karabakh border Tuesday.
The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Foreign Ministry press service told Armenpress
that the monitoring from the Karabakh side was conducted by the personal
representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk and his aide
Irzhi Aberlen. From the Azeri side the monitoring was carried out by aides
Gunter Folk and Peter Kin.
The monitoring has been conducted according to the planned schedule and no
violation of cease-fire regime has been registered.

3. Karabakh Announces 2005 Census Results

STEPANAKERT (Lragir)According to the October 2005 census, there are 137,737
people living in the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, reported the Census Department
Tuesday when it publicized the final results.
Women comprise 51.7 percent of the population, while 48.9 percent of the
population are men.
According to the census, 70,512 people live in cities, while 67,225 live in
villages.
The regional composition of the population is as follows: Stepanakert:
49,986;
the Askeran Region: 16,979; Hadrut: 12,005; Mardakert: 18,963; Martuni:
23,157;
Shahumian: 2,560; Shoushi: 4,324; and Kashatagh: 9,763.

4. Education Minister Rules Out Unprofessional Approach In Admission
Commission’s Work

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)With higher school entrance examinations in Armenia over, the
education minister has praised the work of the admission commission, putting
down some complaints and dissatisfaction from applicants to its ‘strict
criteria rather than unprofessional approach.’
"Perhaps they were a bit strict in their criteria, but these criteria were
universal for all applicants," Levon Mkrtchian told reporters on Tuesday.
Entrance examinations to higher schools ended in Armenia this week, with many
teenage applicants and their parents feeling unhappy with the way they were
handled.
In particular, people complain that at certain examinations officials helped
hand-picked entrants with prompts, in other cases they put psychological
pressure and subjectively graded applicants, especially during oral exams.
Ruzanna Hovannisian is convinced that her daughter, Mariam Ohanian, was
treated unfairly at the oral English language examination.
"She had high marks from the two previous examinations and was subjected to
psychological pressure from the admission commission at her oral examination.
Perhaps her high marks annoyed some people," Hovannisian told RFE/RL, adding
that she had addressed a letter of complaint to the minister.
Minister Mkrtchian admits that it is difficult to find a means of effective
struggle against subjectivity in oral examinations.
"I feel that the parent is perhaps right, but we have no solution. The degree
of subjectivity in oral examinations is very high," he said.
As was expected, the threshold for entering an institute or university
faculty
has lowered a little this year as compared to the previous years, with the
exception of competitions for the law departments at the Yerevan State
University, Armenia’s biggest and most prestigious higher school.
To gather 57.5 points (out of 60) is likely to be enough for an applicant to
become a student at the University’s law department studying free of charge.
To be admitted to the paid section of the department one is likely to
score at
least 55 points.
The sufficient points for the free sections of the University’s English
language, economics and history departments are likely to be 58, 57.5, and 55,
respectively.
The highest score for the world economics department of the University of
Economics is expected to be 55. And for the Medical University’s therapy
department it is likely to be 36.5.
The minister expressed his concern over the dropping competition for some
departments of the Engineering University. Competition is particularly low for
natural sciences departments, where satisfactory marks from two examinations
are enough for admission.
"Sending their children to train as economists, lawyers or diplomats parents
in fact condemn them to future unemployment, as, for example, our small
country
hardly needs more than a hundred diplomats every year," Mkrtchian stressed.
The final results of the entrance examinations will become available on
August
24.
Earlier this month, the education minister met with President Robert
Kocharian
to discuss the entrance exam process.

5. Turkey Bars Aircraft From Flying to Lebanon

ANKARA (UPI)Five Iranian and one Syrian aircraft were barred from flying into
Lebanon by Turkey, which claimed they were ferrying arms for Hezbollah
militants.
The Turkish Hurriyet newspaper reported Monday the last flight diversion was
Thursday when an Iranian airlines Parsair flight was forced to land at
Diyarbakir military airport in eastern Turkey. The newspaper said US
intelligence reports indicated the plane carried three missile launchers and
containers with Chinese C-802 land-to-sea missiles, and it was ordered to turn
around.
Meanwhile in Damascus, Syria, Turkey’s Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said
Tuesday that the recent war in Lebanon could help create the conditions for
Middle East peace.
"After this catastrophe there is an opportunity to achieve peace. Every one
must learn a lesson from the recent events," Gul said after meeting Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad.
Gul added that Assad shared his view.
The Syrian leader said last week that Israel must return all Arab land it has
been occupying since 1967 or face more hatred from the Arab populations
surrounding it.
NATO member Turkey, which hopes to play a larger role in the region, has good
ties with both Israel and with Syria, which is a key supporter of Lebanon’s
Hezbollah movement.
Last month, a Turkish envoy held talks in Damascus with members of the exiled
leadership of the Palestinian movement Hamas and Ankara is also mulling
whether
to send troops as part of an expanded UN peacekeeping force in south Lebanon.
"Turkey has not made a final decision regarding troops, but the Syrian side
welcomes such a decision if we take it," said Gul, who has also visited Israel
and Lebanon in recent days.
Turkey says it will not send any combat troops or take part in any operations
to disarm Hezbollah, which fought Israeli forces for over a month before a
truce took effect on Aug. 14.
Israel invaded south Lebanon after Hezbollah fighters captured two Israeli
soldiers and killed several others in a cross border operation on July 12.
The Istanbul-based Marmara Armenian newspaper reported that the Turkish
Security Council Monday has drafted clear guidelines regarding the troops that
might be sent to Lebanon. Per the decision, the Turkish troops will be
forbidden to engage with any grouping in Lebanon. The troops also cannot
engage
in disarming of Hezbollah forces.
According to the Security Council, the Turkish troops should also be involved
in providing assistance in reconstruction, relief, education and healthcare
efforts, as was the case in Bosnia and Kosovo.
Gul visited Israel Sunday and was in Lebanon last Wednesday where he
discussed
possible Turkish participation in an enhanced United Nations peacekeeping
force.
Gul was scheduled to brief Monday’s session of National Security Council.
It is reported that the Government will clarify its final decision on troop
deployment after Gul’s visits and the NCS meeting. However, Ministry of
Foreign
Affairs wishes the immediate announcement of the decision on the grounds that
it might help Turkish troops assume the task that Ankara prefers.
Israel wants Turkish troops to join the international peace force. Defense
Minister Peretz, who met with Gul, expressed the Israeli view, saying that "I
want Mr.. Gul to send Turkish troops to the region."

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