Olympics: BOXING: Martirosyan Steps into the Ring For the First Time

Sports Features Communications (press release), FL
Aug 15 2004

BOXING: Martirosyan Steps into the Ring For the First Time at the
Olympic Games

ATHENS, GREECE – Only nine months ago, welterweight (152 lbs/69 kg)
Vanes Martirosyan (Glendale, Calif.) could not have dreamed of what
he would be doing on Sunday, August 15. After winning four straight
qualifying tournaments in the months of February and March,
Martirosyan earned a spot on the 2004 U.S. Olympic Boxing Team and
his dream became a reality. The 18-year-old will step into the ring
for the first time at the Olympic Games on Sunday to take on Benamar
Meskine of Algeria.

He will be the second U.S. boxer to compete, following middleweight
Andre Dirrell, who recorded a 25-18 victory over China’s Dabateer Ha
on Saturday. Martirosyan will be facing Meskine for the first time on
Sunday afternoon, but the young boxer is confident. He will be the
only U.S. boxer competing on Sunday and will be followed by
lightweight (132 lbs/60 kg) Vicente Escobedo (Woodland, Calif.) and
flyweight (112 lbs/51 kg) Ron Siler (Cincinnati, Ohio) on Monday and
Tuesday respectively.

Martirosyan should enjoy a large cheering section with several
members of family traveling from Glendale to support him as well as
one of his coaches Bobby Lee of Reno. Martirosyan was born in Armenia
but his family moved to California when he was only four-years-old.
He is hoping to use his opportunity to represent the United States in
the Olympic Games to thank the nation for welcoming his family.

Although the bout is his first in the Olympic Games, Martirosyan has
competed in the Peristeri Boxing Hall before, boxing in the Athens
Test Event in May where he won a bronze medal.

Martirosyan will be compete in the sixth bout of the afternoon
session, which will begin at 1:30 p.m. His bout is scheduled to begin
at approximately 2:45 p.m.

For more information, please contact Julie Goldsticker, boxing press
officer at (693) 677-2562.

Athens: Men’s Greco-Roman 84kg : ABRAHAMIAN (SWE) seeking medal

Athens Olympics official website
Aug 13 2004

Men’s Greco-Roman 84kg : ABRAHAMIAN (SWE) seeking medal
ATHENS, 12 August – Ara ABRAHAMIAN (SWE) is ready to compete for his
first Olympic medal.

The Armenian born wrestler, made his international debut for his
homeland at the 1996 European Championships, still competed for
Armenia as late as the 1998 World Championships before moving to
Sweden and representing his adopted country at the 1999 World
Championships.

ABRAHAMIAN, who finished sixth at the Sydney 2000 Games in the now
discontinued 76kg class, has won two world championships since.

In 2001 he claimed the 74kg class title in Patra, Greece before
jumping up to 84kg class the following year and winning again.

At last year’s World Championships in France he won the silver medal.

The Men’s Greco-Roman 84kg competition begins on Tuesday 24 August at
the Ano Liossia Olympic Hall.

EBRD denies coop with NK

ArmenPress
Aug 13 2004

EBRD DENIES COOPERATION WITH NAGORNO KARABAKH

BAKU, AUGUST 13, ARMENPRESS: European Bank of Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) has refuted Azeri media reports saying that EBRD
is funding business operations in Nagorno Karabakh. The bank sources
told Turan that the organization has not financed any operation in
the region. It was noted that EBRD provided 3 mln dollar to Armenian
Copper Factory in 2002 the director of which, Valeri Mejlumian, also
owns a company in Nagorno Karabakh. However, the bank sources assure
Turan agency that EBRD funds have not been directed to Nagorno
Karabakh.

Youth advances leave strong impact on cultural environment

PRESS RELEASE

Public Relations Department
Haigazian University
Beiru, Lebanon

Contact: Loucia Isaac Seropian
Tel: 961-3-647237
E-mail: [email protected]

Youth advances leave strong impact on cultural environment, summer, 2004 yet…

The country, Lebanon, in its summer 2004 cultural events and festivals has
witnessed a great rise and awakening consolidating youth’s role in
organizing local and regional cultural events from inception to
implementation.

Credit goes to enthusiasm of the young and the extra- curricular role of
universities in Lebanon, which have made seeking to cultivate its efforts
for the sake of cultural development and motivation through student
development programs and full-pledged support to academic activities and
life on campuses.

Over the past six years, I have worked closely with 2 distinguished
institutions of higher learning in Lebanon, with eyes wide open on print
and broadcast media. Both the media and academic institutions in Lebanon
hold cultural oriented events all (all- year- long) tinged with youth’s
stamina and effectively explore youth’s valuable talents in cultural
alteration and cultural exchange.

This leaves Lebanon on a high pedestal in terms of a supportive audience,
public support and, at times a, devoted audience of all generations
attending various cultural events. However, an audience of mixed
generations, is not the norm.

Mixed generations, are sometimes found thanks to advances in technology,
and find mixed generations using the same brand or commodity. This should
persuade us, as the older generation, to provide the young with a
challenging, culturally advanced society.

The next phase, if not well considered, might take us by surprise in the
future. If youth festivals, theatricals, dance, art and music concerts on
Lebanese premises outside University campuses, not only go un-rewarded or
un-awarded but also unevaluated, then those current efforts may become
redundant and will soon loose appeal in terms of sponsorship and audience
demand.

Here is our role and the role of the Lebanese Ministry of Youth and Sports,
which over the past few years has gone into sports and forgotten about the
‘other’ part of its mission ‘Youth’.

Moreover, it would be rewarding to have the ministry, within the coming
years, organize a cultural youth festival with awards at the end of every
summer and keep the fire burning. This would be in addition to the many
sports tournaments. (Life among youth is not only sports, nor is this
limited to the younger generation)…..

At the end of the day, we are all striving not to fall short in the eyes of
our ountry, but if we were ever to neglect the young with their energy,
dedication and efforts we would be impoverishing our own future.

Who should do what? What should be done next?

As a mother, I always turn to the younger generation for acquired learning.
Let’s think of schools that give summer work for their students. Upon
their return, teachers evaluate the amount of work accomplished and assign
recognition accordingly. Children take pride that during their summer they
accomplished school recognition. They come home bragging. This gives them
motivation for the next step ahead.

In the same way provide an incentive by recognizing and rewarding Youth’s
cultural activities at the end of the summer. This would lead to positive
impact and feedback for the organizers and those who attended, let alone
those considering resuming their efforts the next summer with fresh new
ideas with a sense of positive competition leading to impact creativity
avoiding monotonous and repetitive events.

Academic institutions tend to recognize efforts and it’s rewarding. On a
yearly basis universities invite their alumni, honor a few well-known in
society generating many positive purposes. So too do a few Lebanese high
officials; when traveling abroad, they meet with key Lebanese businessmen
in the diaspora and build bridges, which also has a positive impact on
Lebanon as a whole. Also, we often read in the news about certain
individuals being honored or rewarded for purely academic achievements.

Households or big names should go the extra mile and evaluate Youths’
superlative work to Lebanon’s multicultural environment this summer and
every other summer. This would favor renewed cultural activities
future-attempts, as well as reform and change, challenging the youth and
attracting different audiences while gaining national and regional
recognition? This would lead to positive outcomes on many levels. And you
name one.

###

www.haigazian.edu.lb/events

Customs Legalize Consignment of Coffee Imported by Royal Armenia

AT LAST CUSTOMS OFFICIALS LEGALIZE CONSIGNMENT OF COFFEE IMPORTED BY
“ROYAL ARMENIA” COMPANY

YEREVAN, August 6 (Noyan Tapan). The customs officials have already
legalized the consignment of non-processed green coffee weighing 91
tons, 800 kg imported by the “Royal Armenia” company, which according
to the Chairman of the company, they refused to do before without
producing any grounds for this. The company informed Noyan Tapan that
the above-mentioned consignment of coffee was registered in the
“Temporary Import for Procession” customs regime (without customs
payments), which supposes that the processed production will be
exported during a year. It was mentioned that the “Royal Armenia”
company suffered considerable losses because of delay of registration,
as the goods was in the customs strorehouse for 14 days.

The Crusade

American Daily, OH
Aug 5 2004

The Crusade
By Bruce Walker (01/27/2003)

President Bush was sharply criticized for initially describing
America’s war against evil as a crusade. Moslem nations, pundits
warned, would take offense at comparing this war to campaigns by
medieval Christians against Moslem military conquerors of the Holy
Lands. But of course President Bush used precisely the right term.

Christians, ever mindful of our own sins, often accept more guilt
than we should. The accusation that the crusaders killed exclusively
Jews in Jerusalem in 1099 has now been disproved by archeology. The
number killed has also been reduced from 70,000 Jews to 3,000 Moslems
and Jews. This is smaller than the massacre of Christians by Moslems
in Acre in 1291, and much less than 1.5 Million Armenians killed by
Moslems in the last century.

The `Golden Age’ of Moorish Spain was a myth: Berber conquest was
horrific for the people of Spain, and Moorish Spain was more often a
land of turmoil than tranquility. Christians were deported en masse
in 1126 to Morocco, and Jews were massacred in Grenada in 1066.

Christophobic Hollywood presents lurid films about the Salem Witch
Trials, ignoring key facts: (1) only twenty people out of the greater
number accused were actually hung as witches; (2) five years after
the trials, the Massachusetts general court offered public repentance
for these actions and deploring the action of the judges, (3) one
judge publicly confessed his sin from the pulpit; (4) the jurors who
convicted the alleged witches signed a statement of regret; and (5)
indemnity was offered to the family members of those who had been
executed.

Christophobes also ignore Christians at the end of the Seventeenth
Century began to oppose slavery. As a result, slavery was abolished
on English soil in 1772. Slavery existed all over the world and among
every religion and race until it was abolished throughout the British
Empire. African nations – Gambia, the Congo, and Dahomey – sent
official delegations to London to protest the British decision to
outlaw slavery.

`Intolerant’ Christians had earlier passed mankind’s first laws
banning cruelty to animals in 1641. Christians like Wilberforce and
Bergh were the world’s leaders in successful campaigns to prevent
cruelty to children, stop domestic violence, and promote equality for
women.

Christians know all too well that people pretending to embrace Jesus
have often failed to act like Christians. But the notion begun by
Marxists, supported by pagan nihilists in jaded Europe, and now
shouted loudly in Moslem countries – that Christians and Jews are the
author of all misery – is completely false. Serious devotion to the
moral and spiritual tradition of Jews and Christians is all that
separates mankind from Hell on Earth.

What is missing from the wretched realms of Iraq, Syria and Iran?
Christians free to preach the Gospel without fear of harm, and – at
least as importantly – without fear of harm to their flock. When Ann
Coulter wrote her `horrible’ column over a year ago, saying that we
should conquer the vicious lands of Islam and convert them all to
Christianity, she was right. The term `convert’ however, needs to be
understood in its true sense.

People are converted to Christianity when they are peacefully
approached and welcomed into the fellowship of Christians.
Missionaries, radical Moslems warn, are the most dangerous forces of
all. Why? Because they come with medicine, food and books. Christians
convert people with love, and Moslems convert people with terror.

Why did the most brutally efficient empire in human history, the
Roman Empire, become Christian? Because the meekness and kindness of
Christians attracted women in a way that no religion which viewed
sons as cannon fodder ever could. Because the spiritual truth of
Christianity inspired wise men in a way that the stale intellectual
systems of Greek philosophy could not. Because Christianity presented
a place to kneel and seek forgiveness for those soldiers who had
spent twenty years murdering and oppressing other peoples.

We need a new crusade. We need armies in Iraq, Syria, Sudan and
Libya, not because the people there should be converted by force to
any faith. We need armies because Christians who try to bring the
Gospel to the desperate peoples of those lands are being brutally
murdered along with their flock by those who cannot accept a God of
Love. Political freedom and market economies are good, but the
treasure that makes all other treasures real is not found in politics
or economics.

In 1940, when Churchill and FDR stood on the decks of HMS Prince of
Wales to announce that Hitler would not conquer the world, they sang
`Onward Christian Soldiers.’ When men huddled around campfires
steeling themselves to face an awful war to end slavery, they sang
`…as He died to make men holy, let us live to make men free.’ We
are in a war, and it is a holy war, but it is a righteous war. It is,
in fact, a crusade.

Bruce Walker has been a dyed in the wool conservative since, as a
sixth grader, he campaigned door to door for Barry Goldwater. Bruce
has had almost two hundred published articles have appeared several
professional and political periodicals.

Roger Robinson Doesn’t Understand “Armenian Puzzle”

ROGER ROBINSON DOESN’T UNDERSTAND “ARMENIAN PUZZLE”

YEREVAN, August 3 (Noyan Tapan). Extensive cooperation of state
structures in the sphere of competition is important, since the
economic growth may decline under the unfavorable competition
environment. Roger Robinson, Director of the Armenian Office of the
World Bank, said about it during the August 3 conference entitled
“Competition Problems in Armenia and Intrastate Cooperation”.

According to Mr. Robinson, researches conducted by the World Bank over
the past four years showed that Armenian businessmen assess the
business environment regulation quality as quite low. Thus, in 2000,
71.5% of responded businessmen considered this to be a problem, in
2001 – 55.5%, in 2002 – 50%, and in 2003 – 60.3%. It is noteworthy
that, in parallel with this, an unprecedented economic growth and
export increase was registered in the country during these years.

R. Robinson called the formed situation the “Armenian puzzle”, which
he is unable to comprehend. According to William E. Cowachek, chief
legal adviser of the US Federal Trade Commission, macro-economic
indices registered during the recent years show that the economic
situation in Armenia is improving. He said that although the State
Committee on Economic Competition Protection was established only
three years ago, Armenia has achieved a noticeable success in this
sphere. He pointed out that the development of the institutional
structures and increasing cooperation between them is of importance in
the sphere of competition. He also noted that it is necessary to
ensure the correct application of the law regulating the competition
and to create a relevant information basis.

According to Hrair Aramian, a member of the Commission, American
specialists visited Armenia with the purpose of sharing their
experience in this sphere.

They will present the mechanisms of cooperation between the intrastate
structures that have been successfully used in the US and the EU
countries. It was also noted that Armenia joined the International
Competition Network whose membership includes more than eighty
countries. The conference was organized by the Trade Law and Economic
Regulation Program of USAID and was aimed at discussing measures to
promote competition in the various spheres of the economy.

Leo Hamalian Remembered As a Literary Mentor

AGBU PRESS OFFICE
55 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone (212) 319-6383
Fax (212) 319-6507
Email [email protected]
Webpage

PRESS RELEASE
Tuesday, August 3, 2004

LEO HAMALIAN REMEMBERED AS A LITERARY MENTOR

New York – Friends, family and colleagues of Leo Hamalian attended a
special commemorative ceremony to honor the memory of the longtime
editor of AGBU’s Ararat quarterly. Known as a distinguished writer,
educator and editor, Hamalian had a great impact on Armenian and
American literature not only through his work as an essayist, critic
and anthologist, but also through his ability to recruit new writers
and assist in their literary development. “Leo Hamalian has
demonstrated an unwavering commitment to the role literature plays in
defining the Armenian identity. As editor, he has fostered new talent
and been supportive of Armenian American writers so that they feel
part of a strong cultural community,” AGBU President Berge Setrakian
said about the long-time editor of Ararat.

Emceed by Ararat Board members, Peter Sourian and Nishan Parlakian,
longtime friends and colleagues, including Peter Balakian, Lynne
Kassabian, Harry Keyishian and Valerie Krishna, spoke about Hamalian’s
life at the May 20th event at the New York Society of Ethical Culture
on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. Ararat Chairman and Interim Editor
Aram Arkun welcomed the guests and thanked those that made the event
possible.

Each speaker reminiscenced about the genteel and insightful nature
that was a hallmark of Hamalian’s life and Balakian summarized
Hamalian’s gift to his readers and friends: “Leo’s work as a writer,
editor, scholar, teacher and cultural emissary and friend-meant a
great deal to many people-people in this room tonight-and generations
of his students scattered around the country. He was a true
cosmopolitan; he brought the wider world of literature and culture to
Armenians all over the world, and brought Armenians to that wider
world. His good work made a difference; his kindness, his generosity
touched many of us. We’re indebted to him and we’ll miss him.”

Kassabian refered in her words to Hamalian’s remarkable role, “Leo was
at the center of a giant, turning wheel, and probably the single
vehicle that could contain us all-could carry us all-was the journal
AraratA.” Keyishian remembered Hamalian’s sophisticated sensibility
that easily engaged and celebrated every aspect of human
experience. While Valerie Krishna shared a personal story about
Hamalian’s sensitivity that helped her overcome the sense of loss she
felt from her mother’s death-it was a moment, she said, that gave her
insight into the beauty of his nature.

The speeches were followed by a number of works performed by pianist
Sahan Arzruni and the event concluded with a reading by James
V. Hatch’s of an excerpt from a seven-part poem by Hamalian entitled,
“Suite for Shushanik”.

Over a hundred guests attended the event, and a special memorial fund
has been established in Leo Hamalian’s name to guarantee that the work
of Ararat continues to foster a new generation of Armenian American
writing. Donations can be mailed to: Ararat, c/o AGBU, 55 East 59th
Street, New York, NY 10022-1112.

A special memorial issue is also being prepared for release later this
year that will highlight Hamalian’s life and work for over four
decades. For more information, please call, 212.319.6383, fax,
212.319.6507, or email, [email protected].

Established in 1959, Ararat has for over forty years been a leading
forum for Armenian American literature and ideas. It is published by
AGBU and is part of the organization’s mission to promote Armenian
culture and heritage around the world.

www.agbu.org

Trade: Risks go with growth opportunities

The Union Leader
News – August 1, 2004

Trade: Risks go with growth opportunities

By JERRY MILLER
Sunday News Correspondent

NEWINGTON – Armenia, Kyrgystan, Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus, Azerbaijan,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and Georgia.

These are the once captive nations of the `Evil Empire,’ the name given to
the former Soviet Union by President Ronald Reagan.

Their part of the world is known as `Eurasia,’ because these countries lie
between what is now Russia and China.

When the U.S.S.R. and communism fell in 1990, these nations, along with what
is now Russia, were left with virtually nothing except the desire to get out
from under the yoke of the government that repressed their rights and
desires for more than a half century.

The fall of communism brought with it severe economic dislocation. The
ruble, the Soviet Union’s common currency, was deemed worthless and the
banking systems were as worthless as the currency.

Jobs, once guaranteed by the government, disappeared en mass, with the
wholesale closing of government-owned factories, leaving millions with only
their wits to survive.

The elderly, once assured of government pensions, learned there was no money
to make good on the promises.

The industrial infrastructure, about which Soviet leaders boasted about
incessantly – Nikita Khrushchev once bragged `We will bury you’ – was left
in deplorable condition.

The legal system, which favored the state, had to be replaced.

For these countries, the transition to a more market-oriented economy has
certainly been harsh.

Initially, governmental bureaucracies, which controlled the economy, were
all that was left.

Fourteen years later, these nations, with hard to pronounce names, are still
in an economic struggle to survive.

Banking systems have been slowly recreated and new business laws have been
passed.

Industrial infrastructure is being built, a difficult task, given the
problems in getting international credit.

The ruble crisis, which began in 1998, is still a factor in several places.

Money, know-how

Perhaps the region’s greatest need is for investors, not only for the hard
currencies they bring, but also for their business expertise.

One way to attract investors is to engage in trade – and that’s why
representatives from Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova and Ukraine were in New
Hampshire last month at the International Trade Resource Center looking for
trading and joint venture partners.

`These countries are now all independent. They’re trying to make their way.
They’re in the process of transitioning to market economies and toward
democracy,’ said Ellen House, an international trade specialist with the
U.S. Department of Commerce Business Information Service for the Newly
Independent States in Washington, D.C.

`They’re all struggling with economic development and are trying to create
environments attractive to investors.’

The challenges

Getting to where they want to be hasn’t been easy. Old habits die slowly, if
at all.

In a few countries, what’s left of the former Soviet bureaucracy is still
sucking out the air, although in some places the sucking sounds are less
audible than in others.

Taxes are often confiscatory, while Soviet style corruption is alive and
well.

Banking systems remain weak, credit is limited and financing is hard to come
by, while accounting systems are often basic, if not rudimentary, when
compared to the West.

The demise of government controlled economies and the often painful
transition to market economies have also seen many nations’ Gross Domestic
Product figures plummet. In Moldova, the GDP is only one-third of what it
used to be

A middle class, critical to building consumption, is also hard to come by.

And in other places, there is double-digit inflation, draining what little
disposable income the people have.

The risks

Getting paid can also present challenges for U.S. businesses, according to
House.

`It can be a problem. You should be very cautious. It’s an issue that
requires a lot of attention.’

Some of these countries are still experiencing `political instability,’
according to House. However, there are no major separatist movements in the
region.

Asked about privatization, House responded, `It varies from country to
country.’

However, there is a good amount of progress being made, especially among
small and medium sized operations. Still, there is `some reluctance’ to
privatize major industries, including telecommunications, transportation and
oil and gas. Agriculture has also been slow to privatize.

In at least one nation, Belarus, little if any effort has been made to adopt
democratic principles or a market oriented economy, while Turkmenistan was
characterized by House as being `even worse.’

Why try?

So, in light of these difficulties, why do business in Eurasia? The answer
is simple. On the one had, they need everything. On the other hand, they
have a lot to sell.

The region also boasts an inexpensive yet well-educated workforce,
especially in the sciences, many of whom speak English, while literacy is
nearly universal.

American companies now do little business in the region. Between 1992 and
2003, U. S. investments in Moldova amounted to only $790 million.

In Kyrgyzstan, last year, foreign investments totaled only $157 million,
most of it coming from Russia, its largest trading partner, with smaller
amounts from Switzerland, Germany, England and China.

`This may not be the first region you might look at, but there are good
opportunities for experienced exporters who are looking for new markets,’
said House, whose duties include serving as country manager for Armenia and
Georgia. `They have a lot of needs, but not a lot of money.’

Hydro opportunties

`Our imports always exceed our exports,’ said Asel Sulaimanova, who works
for BISNIS in Kyrgyzstan, a nation with 5 million people wedged between
Russia and China, which is looking for places to ship locally made products.

Sulaimanova said her country is actively seeking hydropower investors, given
its number of rivers and the importance of hydroelectricity for
infrastructure development.

Kyrgyzstan is also hoping to attract tourists from the United States and
Europe.

Moldova, a country with 4.3 million residents, sandwiched between Romania
and Ukraine, is putting priority on its infrastructure and is seeking
joint-venture agreements with building equipment suppliers.

`Building equipment is very hot,’ according to Iulian Bogasieru, the BISNIS
representative there.

In Ukraine, a nation the size of Texas, once known as the Soviet Union’s
`bread basket’ because of its rich farm lands, opportunity areas include
agribusiness, food packaging, medical equipment, computers and building
materials.

Andriy Vorobyov, the BISNIS rep working in the capital city of Kiev, said
parts of the Soviet legacy remains. `There is much bureaucracy. It is
strong.’

There is also an `underdeveloped’ legal system that makes it difficult for
foreign investors to protect their interests, according to Vorobyov.

Still, international investments are growing in the Ukraine, led by American
and British companies, followed by The Netherlands, Germany and Russia. An
American chamber of commerce chapter now boasts more than 300 members.

`Business confidence in general is good, especially among small and medium
sized companies,’ Vorobyov added.

Ashland company

While the Granite State remains largely unrepresented in Eurasia, at least
one company, HydroSource, is giving the region a look. The Ashland-based
operation explores for and develops high yield ground water sources,
critical to agricultural, industrial and infrastructure development. Its
clients are primarily foreign governments and U.S. cities and towns.

Joe Ingari, a principal in the company, said while he has concerns about
political stability, worker safety and crime, the region, given its
industrial, agricultural and infrastructure needs, presents a growth
opportunity.

With experience in places such as Trinidad and Tobago, Montserrat, Antigua,
China, Sudan, Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates – countries that include
significant Muslim populations – Ingari said it’s best to `keep a low
profile and don’t announce yourself.’

Given the threat of terrorism directed at foreign workers in several Muslim
nations – as well as Muslim annoyance at this nation’s invasion of Iraq and
its pro-Israeli foreign policy, Ingari said, `In general, we take more
precautions. We must make sure we know what’s going on, before we leap in.’

Risks, opportunities

Despite concerns, Ingari said for any company looking to boost its bottom
line, overseas work – including projects in places less than friendly to
American workers – is vital.

`If you want to find work,’ he said, `you run the risk of encountering
problems.’

Ingari said the former Soviet republics represent new areas for American
companies and, at least for now, may offer serious challenges some are
unwilling to take.

`I would think there would be reluctance on the part of many to go there,
especially if you have markets elsewhere. For us, it’s an opportunity to get
into another area of the world that we’re not yet in.’

Transcaucasus: Politicians Find Lessons At Democratic Convention

Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
July 30 2004

Transcaucasus: Politicians Find Lessons At Democratic Convention

Three leading opposition politicians from Armenia, Azerbaijan, and
Georgia were among the hundreds of international figures invited to
observe this week’s Democratic National Convention in Boston. The
three told RFE/RL’s Robert McMahon that in spite of the convention’s
frequently stage-managed appearance, it offers some useful lessons in
their own struggles to bring democracy to the South Caucasus.

Boston, 30 July 2004 — They represent some of the major opposition
voices in the sometimes turbulent world of transitional politics in
Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia.

But for this week, at least, Stepan Demirchian, Ali Kerimli, and
Davit Gamkrelidze were content to sit on the sidelines and observe
the opposition party convention in Boston.

Demirchian, Kerimli, and Gamkrelidze were among hundreds of
diplomats, politicians, and political activists attending the
convention as guests of the National Democratic Institute for
International Affairs.

In separate interviews with RFE/RL, the three politicians said the
convention held useful lessons for their own countries’ difficult
reform paths. They also gained insight into the foreign policy
priorities of key advisers to Democratic presidential candidate John
Kerry.

Kerimli is chairman of the Azerbaijan Popular Front Party’s (AHCP)
reformist wing and is a lead figure in attempts to reunite the
fragmented Azerbaijani opposition. He said beyond the stagecraft on
view in Boston, he saw the convention as an important
confidence-boosting exercise for the opposition Democratic Party.

“The convention is orchestrated as a big show, [there are] a large
number of participants, they use the stage for propaganda,” Kerimli
said. “The convention itself does not decide anything because all
decisions have already been taken. The convention simply illustrates
the will of the candidate to win, the presentation of his team, of
his program — this was of particular interest to me.”

Gamkrelidze is chairman of the New Conservative Party (formerly the
New Rightists Party) of Georgia — the only opposition party in that
country’s parliament. He said the convention provided a useful model
for organizing an effective campaign. He said it highlighted the
importance of well-trained activists and volunteers, who are the foot
soldiers of major U.S. parties.Davit Gamkrelidze said the convention
demonstrated some of the strengths of multiparty democracy, which he
said Georgia lacks.

Gamkrelidze said the convention demonstrated some of the strengths of
multiparty democracy, which he said Georgia lacks.

“This balance — balance between the Republicans and Democrats — is
first of all a huge benefit for the citizens of the United States and
when you [don’t have] this balance it means that the government and
ruling party, they lose control over themselves and it’s very
dangerous, and we already [have found] out in Georgia that the
government and the new leaders in the Georgian state, they somehow
lost control over themselves,” Gamkrelidze said.

For Demirchian, leader of the Justice Faction in the National
Assembly of Armenia (HZhK), the U.S. convention has helped illustrate
how far his country must travel on its path to democracy.

“We have to learn a lot. So, democracy needs consistent work. Hard
work,” Demirchian said.

Demirchian lost to President Robert Kocharian in a 2003 presidential
runoff. He and other opposition leaders have alleged that Kocharian
falsified that vote and led protests this spring demanding the
president either organize a national referendum of confidence on his
rule or step down.

Demirchian, Kerimli, and Gamkrelidze were eager to hear any mention
of Democratic Party policy on issues such as Nagorno-Karabakh and
Russia’s role in the South Caucasus. But most speeches and panel
discussions focused on Iraq, the Middle East, and the Democrats’
strategy for waging the war against international terrorism.

Kerimli said after a briefing given by top Kerry foreign-policy
advisers that the Democrats favor greater engagement with allies and
multilateral institutions.

“America has now to make a very important choice — how it will
continue to be the leader in the world,” Kerimli said. “Of course,
America does have a leadership role, but the question is how this
role will be [put to use] and how this role will be implemented —
together with the world or alone. The Democratic Convention shows an
inclination toward solving the problems in participation with all
international organizations.”

Gamkrelidze sensed little difference in the main foreign policy goals
of U.S. Democrats and Republicans.

“It’s my impression [there are] not big differences between the two
parties, first of all about the security, about the war against
terror, also such things as values and spreading of the values. It’s
good for me because it’s always dangerous when there is a big shift,”
Gamkrelidze said.

The three politicians were among participants from more than 120
countries who came to Boston under the sponsorship of the National
Democratic Institute. It was believed to be the largest group of
foreign observers ever to attend a U.S. electoral convention.

The institute, a nonprofit organization, aims to establish political
and civic organizations, safeguard elections and promote
accountability in government.

(RFE/RL’s Nikola Krastev contributed to this report.)