Company “Baltica” Bears Losses in Georgia

RIA OREANDA
Economic News
September 17, 2004 Friday

Company “Baltica” Bears Losses in Georgia

Saint Petersburg. Saint Petersburg. Events of the last two months
show tendency of changing foreign economic relations with Russia on
part of Georgia, notifies Russias brewing company “Baltica.”

The document informs that there has been developing conflict related
to Russian manufacturers on part of Georgia, including Russian beer
exporters. In particular, cargo with Balticas production addressed
to the distributor form “Royal Express Ltd” has been kept in Georgian
customs without any explanation.

According to preliminary assessment “Balticas” retained proceeds amount
to about $ 850 thousand. The company is unable to sell its product
on Georgian market. It cannot even use transit facilities in Georgia
due to which the company fails to export its production in Armenia.

Brewing Company “Baltica” intended to extend its export in Georgia.
At present its very doubtful that the plan on investment for 2005
amounting to $ 2 million will be concluded.

Cirque du Soleil’s ‘Varekai’ =?UNKNOWN?Q?premi=E8res?=

Cirque du Soleil’s ‘Varekai’ premières tonight at RFK Stadium.
By LISA CHINN

Fredericksburg.com

Cirque du Soleil’s ‘Varekai’ premières

Date published: 9/16/2004

THE FREE LANCE-STAR

pART CIRCUS, part theater, but mostly mystery and mag- ic, Cirque du
Soleil pushes the athleticism of its performers and the imaginations
of its viewers to the limit.

Formed by a group of street performers in 1984, the company’s
presentations are known for their amazing midair acrobatic silhouettes,
human juggling and contortionist acts, and a myriad of incredible
feats.

Cirque du Soleil is “a theatrical blend of circus arts played
out against fairyland sets, awash in magical effects and set to
spellbinding music.”

This, according to a press release touting one of the company’s
nine shows currently being presented on two continents. “Varekai,”
now touring North America, opens tonight at 8 p.m. on the grounds of
RFK stadium in Washington.

The show promises to weave incredible choreography with the strength,
grace and agility of more than 50 acrobats, jugglers, gymnasts and
others from across the globe. Performers hail from 14 countries,
including China, Mexico, Russia and Spain, as well as the United
States.

The story of “Varekai,” which means “wherever” in the Romany language
of the gypsies, is a nomadic tale that takes place deep in a forest–in
a place where anything is possible.

The show’s costume crew spent 33,000 hours creating a collection
of 130-plus outrageous outfits, which are fashioned from Lycra and
special materials, including flexible titanium rods, sponge nylon
and fire-resistant fabrics.

Composer Violaine Corradi concocted a unique blend of sounds from
Hawaii, France and Armenia, as well as some gospel, to create the
unusual effect needed to complement the otherworldly aura of “Varekai.”

A host of fantastical creatures will perform on a set consisting
of more than 300 trees that stretch as high as 35 feet. Audiences
will witness these extraordinary entertainers teetering on canes,
catapulting and catching one another, and soaring through the air
via trapeze, hoops, swings and straps.

Cirque du Soleil’s “Varekai” takes place beneath the company’s
trademark blue and yellow Grand Chapiteau at RFK stadium. The show
will remain in Washington for a limited engagement through Sunday,
Oct. 24, before moving on to Dallas.

To reach LISA CHINN: 540/374-5412 [email protected]

Date published: 9/16/2004

Armenian speaker, top Italian MP discuss ties

Armenian speaker, top Italian MP discuss ties

Public Television of Armenia
15 Sep 04

The speaker of the Armenian National Assembly, Artur Bagdasaryan, and
Italy’s Deputy Senate Speaker Lamberto Dini discussed in Yerevan today
the importance of creating an Italian House in Armenia. They noted that
the opening of the Italian House in Armenia will promote the deepening
of Armenian-Italian scientific-cultural and trade-economic relations.

Bagdasaryan and Dini are sure that cooperation between the regions
will promote the development of small and medium-sized businesses
and increase foreign investments in Armenia.

The Italian deputy senate speaker arrived in Yerevan as a member of
a delegation from the NATO Parliamentary Assembly.

[Video showed the meeting]

Beekeeping Center Opened In Armenia

BEEKEEPING CENTER OPENED IN ARMENIA

A1 Plus | 20:13:37 | 16-09-2004 | Social |

Multi Agro beekeeping center was opened Thursday in Armenia. The
center is working with 2,567 beekeepers. This year 14 tones of honey
were produced but half of honey haul was taken to feed bees.

The center director Roza Tsarukyan says honey is to be exported in
the future. She said not only honey but pollen and medicines are
planned to be exported overseas.

Baku will not admit Armenia’s representatives for participation inNA

BAKU WILL NOT ADMIT ARMENIA’S REPRESENTATIVES FOR PARTICIPATION IN NATO-LED EXERCISE

RIA Novosti, Russia
Sept 13 2004

BAKU, September 13 (RIA Novosti) – The Azerbaijani embassy in Georgia
will not issue entrance visas to Armenia’s military for participation
in the NATO-led Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercise in Baku, said
Metin Mirza, head of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry’s press service.

“The Azerbaijani embassy in Georgia has not and will not issue
entrance visas to Armenia’s military for participation in the NATO-led
Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercise”, he said.

In response to the question on the reasons of the refusal, Mr. Mirza
said that “these reasons are well-known and there is no need in
voicing them again”.

The NATO exercise to be attended by representatives of the alliance’s
20 countries and partners within the framework of the NATO program
Partnership for Peace will be held in Baku from September 14 through
26.

Political organizations and public of Azerbaijan as well as the
country’s mass media speak out against participation of the Armenian
representatives in the exercise. In particular, the Azerbaijani
parliament’s address to the NATO Secretary General reads that the NATO
leadership’s decision on invitation of “officers of the occupational
Armenian army” to the military exercise was taken extremely negative
in the republic.

“It is absolutely obvious that this decision, whose consequences has
not been thoroughly considered, may ultimately aggravate the tense
situation in the region”, states the address.

It also points out that the Azerbaijani people voice strong protest
against this decision of the NATO leadership and see it as “a step,
to chose the words carefully, absolutely inconsistent with interest
of our state and hurting feelings of Azerbaijani citizens”.

Addressing the fact that over 20 thousand Armenians currently live
in Baku, the Azerbaijani MPs point out that “the protests against
arrival of Armenia’s officers in Baku are not only ethnically based.
The protests are against arrival in the capital of occupied Azerbaijan
of officers of the aggressive Armenian army, which seized the
Azerbaijani lands and sentenced its residents to incredible sorrows”.

The address of the parliament’s members to the NATO Secretary General
expressed hope that “this ill-considered decision, which may impair the
NATO-Azerbaijani cooperation and threaten the talks towards peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, will be cancelled”.

All capitals of the Southern Caucasus and other countries pinned
their hopes on election of Ilkham Aliev the Azerbaijani president in
terms of intensifying the process of the peaceful settlement of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over belonging of Nagorny Karabakh,
Armenian enclave on the Azerbaijani territory. However, no visible
changes to the better have been seen, despite all endeavours of
intermediaries represented by the OSCE Minsk Group. The reason for
this lies in the irreconcilable position of the sides: Baku has no
intentions to put up with the loss of its territory (alongside with
the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorny Karabakh, a substantial
portion of the Azerbaijani original territories are still under
control of the Armenian troops) and appeals to the international
law, declaring primacy of territorial integrity to nation’s right to
self-determination. Stepanakert’s authorities intend to retain the
current status of an ‘independent’ state and feel Erevan’s support
in this.

Leaders of post-Soviet bloc to discuss heightened terror threat

Leaders of post-Soviet bloc to discuss heightened terror threat
by Nick Coleman

Agence France Presse — English
September 14, 2004 Tuesday 2:02 AM GMT

ALMATY Sept 14 — Leaders of several former Soviet countries meet
in the Kazakh capital Astana on Wednesday to discuss redoubling
anti-terror cooperation in the wake of recent terror attacks in Russia
that sent shock-waves through the region.

The attacks that culminated in the deaths of some 339 people at a
school near Russia’s breakaway Chechnya region brought home the need
for more coordination among the 12-member Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS), Vladimir Rushailo, the group’s secretary, said.

“Terrorism knows no borders, no limits and no point at which to stop,”
Russia’s Interfax news agency quoted Rushailo as saying.

Russia has long sought to bring its Soviet-era satellite states into
line with regard to issues such as Soviet-made weaponry that has
fallen into the hands of separatists in Chechnya and neighbouring
Georgia’s historic tolerance of Chechen rebels in its Pankisi Gorge.

On Monday Russia’s President Vladimir Putin reiterated Moscow’s
readiness to strike terrorist targets abroad — a vow taken as most
likely aimed at Georgia, with whom Moscow’s relations are at an
all-time low.

“The terrorists must be eliminated directly in their lair and, if
the situation requires it, that includes abroad,” Putin said.

Whether the fall-out from Beslan will inject new urgency into
Wednesday’s meeting remains to be seen however. Some analysts believe
that Moscow has already accepted the rag-tag nature of CIS meetings,
which have often been poorly attended and produced few formal results.

Nonetheless a number of smaller-scale meetings on the sidelines could
bear fruit, Dosym Satpayev, an analyst at Kazakhstan’s Assessment
Risks Group, said.

Particularly productive for Russia has been the so-called Collective
Security Treaty Organisation that has given Moscow military bases in
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan — countries that Moscow considers a buffer
against unrest in Afghanistan.

“The CIS doesn’t work effectively and isn’t needed — the only use
it has is as a label under which the presidents can get together and
exchange views,” Satpayev said.

Among the most pressing discussions will be two-way talks billed as
“make-or-break” between the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan,
Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliyev, whose countries fought a five-year
war over Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s.

Though a fragile ceasefire is in force, the two sides are still
officially in a state of war and Azerbaijan has threatened to renew
hostilities.

“A lot depends on the meeting in Astana,” Aliyev told journalists in
north-western Azerbaijan recently.

Also likely to be discussed is a document circulated among
the CIS countries earlier calling for reform of the West’s main
democracy-promoting body in the region, the Organisation for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

Moscow recently told France and Germany that it believes the body
that helped end the Cold War concentrates too much on human rights
and too little on security.

The OSCE has in the past been at loggerheads with Russia over Moscow’s
policy in Chechnya.

However Azerbaijan’s Aliyev — himself the object of sharp OSCE
criticism in the past — has already ruled out signing any call for
OSCE reform at Wednesday’s meeting.

Turkmenistan’s reclusive President Saparmurat Niyazov has already
said he will not attend due to a prior medical appointment.

Railway link connects Sokhumi-Moscow

The Messenger
Monday, September 13, 2004, #173 (0697)

Railway link connects Sokhumi-Moscow
In Abkhazia, tension high for pre-election campaign
By Warren Hedges and James Phillips

Tbilisi and Moscow are locking horns over Friday’s restoration of
Sokhumi’s rail link to Moscow while allegations that Tbilisi plans to
interfere in Abkhazia’s upcoming presidential elections have further
soured relations with the separatist region.

Friday afternoon, a four-car train departed Sokhumi for Russia marking
the first regular train route between Abkhazia and Russia in over
eleven years. According to the new schedule, two of the cars will
travel to the southern Russian city of Rostov on the Don, while the
other two will be reconnected to a Moscow bound train.

The restoration of rail service was foreseen by a March 2003 agreement
reached in Sochi between the Abkhazian prime minister, President Putin
and then-President Shevardnadze. But the same agreement included a
package of provisions like the return of Georgian IDPs to their homes,
a process that has seen little progress while the Russian government
and Abkhazia have eagerly pursued the rail link.

Georgia’s First Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Nick Tabatadze
told The Messenger on Sunday that the rail connection represents a
“grave violation of international agreements.”

“We are facing the violation of a number of international and
bi-lateral agreements,” he said, including the 1993 UN regulation
agreement, an agreement by the CIS heads of state and the Sochi
agreement.

“The Sochi agreement contemplates the railway construction in parallel
with the refugees return to the Gali region,” Tabatadze said, “They
should have started together – synchronized.”

Now the Tbilisi has sent a letter of protest to the Russian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. In addition the ministry has written to the UN
and the Friends of Georgia and awaits a response.

Georgia’s State Minister for Conflict Resolution Goga Khaindrava
called the move open support for separatism.

“Unfortunately, we cannot take tough steps to prevent these illegal
activities, but we will use every civilized technique in the framework
of international law to put an end to this outrage,” he said according
to Itar-Tass.

“Russia’s activities encourage and support separatism in Abkhazia,”
Khaindrava added.

In a statement released on Friday, the Russian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs said it wanted to “assess the situation in a correct manner.”

According to the ministry, the repair works began in July by the
Joint Stock Company Russian Railways. “There is nothing new in this:
it is necessary to maintain the state of the railway in a working
and secure manner.”

While stating “the main thing is that all this corresponds to the Sochi
agreement reached at the Russian-Georgian summit with the participation
of the Abkhaz side in March 2003,” the ministry said nothing about
the fate of the return of refugees that was also part of the agreement.

The ministry added that the restoration of the railway is in fact
in Georgia’s interests: “We would like to recall that the importance
of the Sochi agreement on bilateral movement of trains via Abkhazia
is in the fact that railway ties will be established between Georgia
and Russia. Thus, the countries of the given region including Georgia
and Armenia are interested in this issue.”

According to railway officials, travelers in Sokhumi will be able to
buy tickets to ‘anywhere in Russia.’

“In the future more cars may be added. It all depends on how many
tickets are sold,” a spokesperson for the Russian Railways told
Itar-Tass.

Rail service was first restored in December 2002 and immediately
raised a strong Georgian protest. Three months later in Sochi,
President Shevardnadze approved the rail link as long as Georgian
refugees were able to return. Meanwhile, On October 3, the voters in
Abkhazia are scheduled to elect a new president and ailing de facto
President Vladislav Ardzinba has already endorsed Prime Minister Raul
Khajimba. Late in August Khajimba had a short meeting and photo-op
with President Putin leaving many to believe that he is Moscow’s
favored candidate.

The election season has put an effective halt on Georgian-Abkhazian
negotiations. After Georgian Coast Guard vessels fired on a ship
illegally docking in Sokhumi on July 30, the Abkhaz representatives
have refused to participate in the weekly quadripartite meetings on
maintaining peace in the region. It is expected that the Abkhaz side
will not return to the negotiation table until after the elections.

Now Abkhaz security officials accuse Georgia of plotting to create
diversions in the weeks leading up to the elections.

“Georgian sabotage groups, who entered Abkhazia from Georgia, were
spotted [in Abkhaz villages]. According to our information, the
objective of these sabotage groups is to destabilize the situation
in Abkhazia in the run-up to the republic’s presidential elections,”
said Mikhail Tarba, chair of the de facto republic’s security services.

Speaking with Interfax, he added that special units from the security
service have begun a search for the alleged saboteurs. “Steps are
being taken to increase the security of candidates for president of
the republic,” he said adding that these people are in danger.

In response, Georgia’s Khaindrava called the statements “absurd”.
“If Georgia wanted to disrupt elections in Abkhazia, it would do this
without acts of sabotage,” Khaindrava told journalists on Friday.
“Despite the illegitimacy of the elections in Abkhazia, the Georgian
authorities understand that they would have to maintain relations
with the candidate who wins for several years,” he said as quoted
by Interfax.

After the renewal of his mandate President Lahoud…

After the renewal of his mandate President Lahoud: â^À^ØYour support, an
additional responsibility for meâ^À^Ù

Monday Morning headlines/lb
13 Sept 04

It was a parade of well-wishers led by the speaker of Parliament, Nabih
Berri, who went to Baabda Palace to transmit to the president the good news
that
Article 49 of the Constitution had been amended by Parliament to allow an
extension of the presidential term.
Standing during four consecutive hours, President Lahoud received the
congratulations of the countryâ^À^Ùs notables and of ordinary citizens, who had
come to
tell him their social and economic difficulties and hope that conditions would
improve. The president was open to all of them, listening attentively to what
they had to say.
The popular delegations, men, women, children and personalities who went to
the palace did not do so in order to fill the â^À^Ügapâ^À^Ý left by the MPs of
the
opposition — the Democratic Gathering of Walid Jumblatt, Prime Minister Rafik
Hariri and his parliamentary bloc, and the opposition Maronite MPs.
Congratulations
Coming from all parts of the country, the well-wishers were pleasantly
surprised at not being searched at the entrance, according to the usual
practice,
and this on the instructions of the president.
Michel Murr, in the first rank of the loyalists, was one of the first to
shake the presidentâ^À^Ùs hand as he led a delegation from the North Metn,
followed by
his daughter, Mirna Abou-Sharaf, and his son, Elias Murr, the interior
minister.
Also seen at Baabda: former Prime Minister Salim Hoss, ministers Michel
Samaha, Asaad Diab, Karim Pakradouni, Karam Karam, Samir Jisr, Assem Kanso,
Elias
Skaff, Michel Moussa, Ali Hassan Khalil, Sebouh Hovnanian, Bahij Tabbara, Ali
Hassan Abdallah.
Among the MPs, we cite the names of Ali Osseiran, Samir Azar, Ali Khalil,
Wajih Baarini, Abdellatif Zein, Anwar Khalil, Antoine Khoury, Salim Saadé,
Ghassan Ashkar, Hagop Kassarjian, Saleh Kheir, Kassem Hashem, Yassin Jaber,
Nicolas
Fattoush, Sami Khatib, Ali Bazzi, Robert Ghanem, Mohammad Yahya, Faisal Daoud,
Jamal Ismaïl, Kabalan Issa el-Khoury, Gebran Tok, Mohsen Dalloul, Mohammad
Ali el-Meiss, Emile Emile Lahoud, a delegation of the Bloc of Fidelity to the
Resistance led by MP Mohammad Raad and including MPs Ali Ammar, Mohammad
Berjawi, Ibrahim Bayan, Hussein el-Hajj Hassan, Georges Najm, Nazih Mansour and
Massoud el-Hojeiri; as well as MP Antoine Haddad leading a group from the
League of
the Haddad Family.
Former ministers and former MPs were not absent from the gathering, such as
Georges Corm, Samir Mokbel, Sleiman Traboulsi, Shahé Barsoumian, Fawzi
Hobeish,
Nazih Baydoun…
Political parties were also represented: the Baath, Tadamon, Tashnak, Amal,
Kataeb, PSS, Christian Democratic, Arab Progressive, the Cénacle Populaire
Libanais and a Palestinian delegation led by Ossama Hamdan, head of Hamas in
Lebanon, leading a delegation of the movement.
Among the spiritual figures were the Syriac Catholic patriarch, Mar Ignatius
Peter VIII Abdelahad, leading a delegation of prelates of the community; Mgr.
Kegham Khacherian and a delegation of the Armenian Orthodox community; the
Greek Catholic bishops Youssef Kallas and André Haddad; Mgr. Georges Saliba,
Greek Orthodox bishop of Mount Lebanon; the Rev. Salim Sahyoun, president of
the
Evangelical Council of Lebanon and Syria.
Then too, a delegation of sheikhs from Tripoli and Akkar, in North Lebanon,
led by Sheikh Taha Sabounji, mufti of Tripoli and the North, and a delegation
of Druze sheikhs.
There were also congratulations from mayors and local government officials,
trade unionists, presidents and members of orders of liberal professions,
diplomats, judges, senior officials…

Presidential speech
Addressing thousands of people who had come to wish him well, President
Lahoud thanked them for their good will. â^À^ÜThis affectionâ^À^Ý, he said,
â^À^Üplaces an
additional responsibility on my shoulders, that of being up to your hopes and
aspirationsâ^À^Ý. He then called for national reconciliation and the
participation of
all Lebanese in the achievement of the countryâ^À^Ùs sovereignty and
independence, giving priority to the political dialogue â^À^Üso that all sides
will be able to
understand the essential problemsâ^À^Ý.

BAKU: Russia has key to conflict settlement – First Deputy PrimeMini

Russia has key to conflict settlement – First Deputy Prime Minister

Azer News, Azerbaijan
Sept 9 2004

Russia has key to settling Upper Garabagh conflict, First Deputy
Prime Minister Abbas Abbasov told journalists. “Russia is one of the
key countries that can contribute greatly to the peace resolution of
the Upper Garabagh problem.

The role of Russia in these processes is immense.” The attempts taken
by Russia and other co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group have yielded no
fruit thus far. Not a single step forward in resolving the problem
has been taken, Abbasov said. The First Deputy Prime Minister also
pointed out that 20% of Azerbaijan’s lands – Upper Garabagh and 7
regions of Azerbaijan – remain under Armenian occupation.

“Certainly, I would not suggest that Russia scream at the aggressor
to withdraw from the occupied territories. But this country has a
lot of leverage to positively affect the conflict settlement today.”
Abbasov also suggested that Russia needs to alter its approach to the
issue. “Russia has the key to settling the conflict peacefully. But
a different approach needs to be exercised, and only in this case we
can accomplish positive results”, he said.

Louis de Bernieres’ latest novel, “Birds Without Wings”

National Public Radio (NPR)
SHOW: All Things Considered 9:00 AM EST NPR
September 7, 2004 Tuesday

Louis de Bernieres’ latest novel, “Birds Without Wings”

ANCHORS: ROBERT SIEGEL

REPORTERS: ALAN CHEUSE

ROBERT SIEGEL, host:

Readers and moviegoers know Louis de Bernieres as the author of the
story of “Captain Corelli’s Mandolin.” It’s set in a Greek village
during the occupation by Axis forces. His new book, “Birds Without
Wings,” is set earlier and across the Aegean Sea. Alan Cheuse has a
review.

ALAN CHEUSE reporting:

“Birds Without Wings” takes us to the Anatolian coastal village of
Eskibahce at the beginning of the 20th century. It’s a small but
thriving place with a multireligious and multiethnic population,
mainly Turks and Greeks, but also a number of Armenians and Kurds,
Muslims and Christians alike, and a lively market where one of the
main narrators, a potter named Iskander, sells his wares. The potter
is one of a number of multiple narrators telling us about the village
and its inhabitants, his son Karatavuk who grows up to become a
soldier and fights the British at Gallipoli, and the boy’s Christian
friend Mehmetcik, whom he teaches to write. And we also hear about
the village’s richest man, Rustem Bey, whose first wife betrays him
and who buys a concubine in an Istanbul brothel and brings her home
to Eskibahce.

And then there’s the Christian girl Philothei, so beautiful her
father has her put on a veil, and her homely friend Drosoula and
Mehmet, the tinsman, and Abdulhamid Hodja, the local imam, and his
beloved steed Nilafor(ph) and Leonidas, the dissident Greek teacher,
and George Upete Theodoru(ph), a local Greek entrepreneur, and the
disfigured squatter known as Dog who lives in some nearby ancient
caves and–well, this all must sound exhausting. But de Bernieres
portrays everyone in this large cast of characters quite memorably
and illuminates their intertwining lives and fates to make a
marvelously engaging story of a village and a place and a way of life
that’s broken only by a disastrous war, about which we learn a great
deal. It’s also the story of the rise of Kemal Ataturk, who turns his
patchwork country into a nation of some stature.

Among dozens and dozens of lovely chapter-length anecdotes, we hear
the origins of the naming of a character called Ali the Snow-bringer,
who makes a living hauling ice down from the mountains. On the day of
his birth, we learn, snow fell for the first time in nearly a
century, leaving behind a new child and a communal memory that has
the savor of those stories that tell of lost Edens and magical lands.
The entire book has that same savor.

SIEGEL: The book is “Birds Without Wings” by Louis de Bernieres. Our
reviewer is Alan Cheuse.

(Soundbite of music)

MICHELE NORRIS (Host): This is NPR, National Public Radio.