Commission fines Coca Cola

Armenpress

COMMISSION FINES COCA COLA

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 14, ARMENPRESS: A government commission for protection
of economic competition has ruled to fine Coca Cola Hellenic Bottling
Company Armenia in the amount of one percent of its last year’s profits.
The decision followed a complaint from Jermuk Group, the exclusive
representative of Pepsi Cola in Armenia that Coca Cola was threatening trade
kiosks and shop owners to take away its refrigerators if they install also
Pepsi Cola refrigerators.
The commission said today it had asked Coca Cola two months ago to drop
these threats, but its letter remained unanswered. It also said its decision
was backed by findings of a survey among shop and kiosk owners.

AAA: ARAMAC Activists Urge Lawmakers to Support Armenian Issues

Armenian Assembly of America
1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
September 13, 2005
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
Email: [email protected]

ASSEMBLY ARAMAC ACTIVISTS URGE LAWMAKERS TO SUPPORT ARMENIAN ISSUES

Washington, DC – In a push to increase House and Senate support for
Armenian issues, Assembly grassroots activists met with several
lawmakers in their home districts during the month-long congressional
summer recess.

Assembly Grassroots Director Nancy Hiteshue and Western Office
Director Lena Kaimian led community meetings in California, Colorado,
Illinois, Minnesota and New York to encourage legislators there to
support the pan-Armenian genocide resolution, as well as legislation
that would bar U.S. funding for a railroad connecting Turkey, Georgia
and Azerbaijan.

Beginning in California on August 4, activists met with Armenian
Caucus Member Rep. Joseph Baca (D-CA). The Assembly delegation briefed
Baca on current legislation and encouraged his future involvement on
community issues. As a result of the meeting, Baca agreed to
cosponsor both the Armenian Genocide resolution and the rail measure.

The following week, Kaimian had an hour-long meeting with
newly-elected Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) to urge him to join the Caucus
while Hiteshue and activists met with Armenian Caucus Member
Rep. Betty McCollum (D-MN) and her staff. The group thanked the
Congresswoman for backing the Armenian Genocide resolution,
H. Res. 316, which would reaffirm the U.S. record on the crime against
humanity.

“The Congresswoman once again pledged her support for reaffirmation of
the Armenian Genocide and her desire to continue strengthening ties
between the U.S. and Armenia,” said ARAMAC State Chair for Minnesota
Lou Ann Matossian who participated in the meeting. “Congresswoman
McCollum has been a great friend of the Armenian community in our
state.”

Board of Directors Vice Chair Lisa Esayian also led a community
meeting with Rep. Janice Schakowsky (D-IL), who agreed to cosponsor
the Armenian Genocide resolution at the group’s request.

Assembly activists also met with Representatives Susan Davis (D-CA)
and Gary Miller (R-CA), as well as staff members from the offices of:
Senators Wayne Allard (R-CO) and Barack Obama (D-IL) and
Representatives Bob Beauprez (R-CO), Tim Bishop (D-NY), Rahm Emanuel
(D-IL), Jim Ramstad (R-MN), John Salazar (D-CO), Thomas Tancredo
(R-CO) and Mark Udall (D-CO). Armenians of Colorado joined the
Assembly delegation for meetings in their state.

In conjunction with the district meetings, ARAMAC held a Midwest
Regional Issue Briefing and Advocacy Workshop on August 20 at
St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul, MN. Board of Directors Vice
Chair Lisa Esayian shared with participants her impressions of Armenia
from her recent trip and discussed the importance of grassroots
advocacy. Hiteshue also led a workshop on increasing the Assembly’s
outreach efforts in the Midwest. Kansas State Chair Alex Kotoyantz,
along with ARAMAC State Chair for Minnesota Lou Ann Matossian and Vice
Chair Aram Desteian, were among the participants.

On August 23, ARAMAC State Chair for Colorado Pamela Barsam-Brown, and
her husband Stanley, hosted a reception for community activists at
their Boulder, CO home. The event included a legislative update from
Kaimian.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership
organization.

NR#2005-088

Photographs available on the Assembly’s Web site at the following
links:

CAPTION: L to R: ARAMAC State Chair for Minnesota Lou Ann Matossian,
Assembly Grassroots Director Nancy Hiteshue, Assembly Associate
Trustee Kathy Cafesjian Baradaran, Representative Betty McCollum
(D-MN) and ARAMAC State Vice Chair for Minnesota Aram Desteian during
their meeting in St. Paul, MN on August 17.

CAPTION: L to R: Dr. Sarkis Broussalian, Western Office Director Lena
Kaimian, Vasken Imasdounian, Diane Cabraloff, Congressman Gary Miller
(R-CA), Rita Topalian, Vahe Charkhutian, Anoush Cabraloff and Assembly
Western Office Deputy Director Nicole Shahenian during their meeting
on August 8.

CAPTION: L to R: Assembly Western Office Director Lena Kaimian, Betty
Ohanessian, ARAMAC State Chair for Colorado Pamela Barsam-Brown,
former Assembly intern Kim Christianian and Stanley Brown during a
community reception hosted by the Browns.

CAPTION: L to R: Board of Directors Vice Chair Lisa Esayian,
Grassroots Director Nancy Hiteshue, Assembly Supporting Affiliate
Vartan Paylan, Rep. Janice Schakowsky (D-IL), Former Assembly Intern
Arpi Paylan and Haiganoush Paylan.

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www.armenianassembly.org

Ukrainian Ambassador To RA Handed Credentials To Robert Kocharian

UKRAINIAN AMBASSADOR TO RA HANDED CREDENTIALS TO ROBERT KOCHARIAN

Pan Armenian News
12.09.2005 05:29

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today newly appointed Ukrainian Ambassador to
Armenia Alexander Bozhko handed his credentials to RA President
Robert Kocharian, President’s press center reported. Robert Kocharian
congratulated the diplomat on the appointment and welcomed him back to
Armenia. A. Bozhko said Armenia underwent a lot of positive changes
during 4 years of his absence from the republic. Touching upon the
Armenian-Ukrainian relations the RA President noted that the efforts
for strengthening economic relations proved fruitful. At the same
time he added that much is still to be done for the development
of political and humanitarian relations. Robert Kocharian voiced
assurance that thanks to the efficient activities of the Ambassador
greater progress will be fixed. To note, Alexander Bozhko occupied
the post of the Ukrainian Ambassador to Armenia in 1996-2001.

Days Of Arab Culture To Be Held In Armenia On Sept 17-23

DAYS OF ARAB CULTURE TO BE HELD IN ARMENIA ON SEPT 17-23

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8. ARMINFO. Days of Arabic culture will be held in
Armenia on Sept 17-23, and the delegation from the emirate Sharzha
of UAE headed by its Minister of Culture Abdullah Muhammad al Uveis
will arrive in Yerevan on an official visit.

ARMINFO was informed in the Ministry of Culture of Armenia, meetings
of the culture ministers of Armenia and Sharzha will be held within
he framework of the arrangements. In the Arab delegation staff – the
ethnographical dance group and company of National theatre of Sharzha,
who will have concerts in a series of towns of Armenia.

BAKU: ICG proposes postponement of Garabagh status discussions

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 9 2005

Crisis Group proposes postponement of Garabagh status discussions

Baku, September 8, AssA-Irada

The International Crisis Group, an organization working to prevent
conflicts worldwide, has made proposals on the settlement of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Upper Garabagh.
The ICG vice-president Alain Deletroz, in an exclusive interview with
Radio Liberty, said the status of the region is the `most problematic
issue in peace talks’, suggesting that discussions on the matter be
postponed for 10-15 years.
Deletroz called on both sides, in particular, Azerbaijan, to put an
end to belligerent statements. `On one hand, Upper Garabagh Armenians
are called Azerbaijani citizens, while on the other – enemies. This
may make the peace process impossible’, he said.
The ICG representative said that first of all, displaced persons
should return home and relations should be established between the
Azerbaijani and Armenian communities of Garabagh.
`This can be done through stationing military contingents of
countries trusted by Azerbaijan and Armenia in the conflict zone.’
Deletroz pledged to submit his proposals to the two countries’
officials.*

Monument For Victims of Armenian Genocide To Be Erected in Larnaca

MONUMENT FOR VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO BE ERECTED IN LARNACA,
CYPRUS

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10. ARMINFO. Armenian Parliamentary Speaker Arthur
Baghdasaryan and PACE President Rene van der Linden discussed the
process of Constitutional reforms in Armenia in New York. Speaker
Baghdasaryan stays on an official visit to the USA.

The Armenian Parliamentary press-service reports to ARMINFO that Rene
van der Linden stressed the importance of an extensive propaganda
before the national referendum. He also stressed the importance of the
efficiency of the reforms.

In New York, Arthur Baghdasaryan met with a number of Czech, Swiss,
Japanese, Brazilian and Jordanian colleagues. These official meetings
resulted in agreements on establishment of inter-parliamentary ties of
Armenia and the above states. Arthur Baghdasaryan expressed confidence
in considerable contribution of these ties to developing bilateral
cooperation in different spheres and to the right perception of the
problems concerning Armenia at international organizations. Armenian
Speaker and Head of the House of Representatives of Cyprian Parliament
Demetris Christofias agreed to erect a Monument for the victims of
Armenian genocide in ottoman Turkey in 1915 in Larnaca.

Arthur Baghdasaryan return to Yerevan after his meetings in New York.

Time for Karabakh conflict peaceful settlement may be running out

Pan Armenian News

TIME FOR KARABAKH CONFLICT PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT MAY BE RUNNING OUT

09.09.2005 06:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ All sides in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict need to prepare
their people for peace much better if the seeds of their high-level
negotiations are to bear fruit. Nagorno Karabakh: Viewing the Conflict from
the Ground, the latest report from the International Crisis Group, explores
how the Armenians and Azeris from Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding
districts live and how they view the resolution of the conflict. Despite
signs of progress at internationally mediated negotiations (to be discussed
in a subsequent report), rising military expenditures and increasing
ceasefire violations are ominous signs that time for a peaceful settlement
may be running out. The brutal war over Nagorno Karabakh killed some 18,500
people and displaced over a million before settling into a shaky cease-fire
in 1994. Eleven years on life in Nagorno Karabakh has regained some sense of
normalcy with a developing economy and elected institutions. Yet nothing has
been done to restore rights of war victims. The creation of mono-ethnic
institutions in Nagorno Karabakh, the destruction of Azeri property, and the
privatisation of land and businesses pose significant obstacles to Azeri
return and reintegration. Many displaced persons have become highly
dependent on the Azerbaijani state, with few opportunities to participate
fully in political life and determine their own future. Refusing to allow
dialogue and demonising Armenians through the state-sponsored media and
schools, Baku has hardened anti-Armenian feeling among average citizens. The
Azerbaijanis and Armenians are as separated as they have ever been. “There
is need to counter the hate propaganda and unlock the potential for
confidence building and dialogue between average Azeris and Armenians”, says
Sabine Freizer, Director of Crisis Group’s Caucasus Project. “This has to
happen before the memories of cohabitation fade and the divide becomes
unbridgeable”. Neither community appears prepared to agree to the kind of
settlement being considered by the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign
ministers in the negotiations sponsored by the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). “The vast majority of those affected by the
conflict have been kept in the dark about the details of the negotiations”,
says Alain Deletroz, Crisis Group’s Vice President for Europe. “But there is
no way for any peace process to succeed unless leaders from all sides start
actively selling the idea to their people”.

Agassi proves he’s still a contender

Christian Science Monitor
September 09, 2005
p.html

Agassi proves he’s still a contender

In a surprise upset at the US Open, Andre Agassi defeated James Blake
to advance to the semifinals Saturday.

By Mark Sappenfield | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Like every good Vegas act, Andre Agassi, it seems, has an encore. By
the measure of his hometown Strip, this might seem slight fare indeed
– a bald, 35-year-old father of two sweating in his tennis trunks with
nary a spangle or feather headdress in sight.

But this is New York and the US Open, and during the past fortnight
his racket has been more miraculous than any magician’s wand. Even
before he faces Robby Ginepri Saturday, Agassi has added to a legacy
of eight Grand Slam titles perhaps the most memorable turn of all – an
improbable run to the semifinal in Flushing Meadows.

Like a Madonna of the hard courts, he has once again reinvented
himself in this final – and most intriguing – act of his career. No
longer the floppy-haired heartthrob or even the rededicated pro,
Agassi has become tennis’s conscience as its elder statesman and one
of its most dedicated philanthropists – and this week has not only
been a celebration of the genius of his ground strokes but also an
appreciation of one of the sport’s true gentlemen.

“If there’s anyone I’m cheering for it’s Andre,” said James Blake in a
press conference early Thursday morning, only minutes after losing to
Agassi in five sets in Wednesday’s quarterfinal match.

Agassi has always had people to cheer for him. Early in his career, he
was James Dean with fantastic hair and a thunderous forehand. Never
mind the actual tennis, his mere appearance made Flushing Meadows feel
like a Skid Row video.

Yet years after he was shorn of his locks and his A-list entourage, it
was still Agassi – not native New Yorker Blake – who worked the crowd
into a lather Wednesday. On one hand, it is an odd sort of love
affair. In the place of the Man With the Mane is an almond-eyed
workaholic with all the on-court enthusiasm of “Rain Man.”

For the first two sets of Wednesday’s match, Agassi slunk around the
court in slump-shouldered meekness as Blake pummeled him. But even
then, there were seeds of the Vegas showman. Agassi lost the first two
sets. He was a break down in the third. He was a break down in the
fifth. He lost the first three points of the tiebreaker. All that
remained was for the ballboy to cover Agassi with a towel at the
changeover, James Brown-style.

Yet since Agassi dropped the rock-star persona in the late 1990s,
Agassi has entertained with his skill – becoming only the fifth man
ever to win all four Grand Slam titles in his career and bringing
Flushing to its feet Wednesday.

In a frenzied fifth set, he uncorked his inhibitions like a backcourt
matador, fending off the Blake’s sizzling shots with his own bolo-whip
strokes.

“This is what you work so hard for,” said Agassi after the Blake
match. “This means as much to me as being in the finals…. There are
few moments that can be this special.”

Clearly, there was an affection for tennis’s Grand Old Man, who became
the fifth-oldest man to make the US Open semifinals. Like Jimmy
Connors, who ignited New York when he made it to the semifinals in
1991 at age 39, and Pete Sampras, who capped his career with a US Open
title three years ago, Agassi is penning a Hollywood script – coming
back from a injury at the French Open at an age when most tennis stars
are honing their gardening skills.

But beneath the romance of the oldest – and most beloved – player at
the US Open making it to the final weekend, there is also an
appreciation of the man that Agassi has become both on and off the
court. Four years ago, he founded a charter college preparatory school
for disadvantaged children in Las Vegas. Earlier this year, he
switched shoe sponsorship deals to bring more money to his foundation,
which supports children’s causes.

In short, he’s just the sort of person that schoolteachers and mothers
say should finish first. This weekend, he will have the chance.

| Copyright © 2005 The Christian Science
Monitor. All rights reserved.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0909/p03s01-als
www.csmonitor.com

OSCE Monitored Contact Line Between Karabakh and Azeri Armed Forces

OSCE MONITORED CONTACT LINE BETWEEN KARABAKH AND AZERI ARMED FORCES

Pan Armenian News
08.09.2005 04:37

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today the OSCE mission held recurrent planned
monitoring of the contact line between the Armed Forces of
Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan. It was held next to Levonarkh
village of NKR Martakert region. Personal Representative of the
OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk and his field assistants
monitored the line from the positions of the NKR Defense Army. The
monitoring registered no breaks of the cease-fire regime, however the
Azeri party, in contrast to the Karabakh one, did not admit the OSCE
mission to the front line.

Outside View: Russia’s Future

OUTSIDE VIEW: RUSSIA’S FUTURE
By Norman Levine

UPI, United Press International
September 6, 2005 Tuesday 11:25 AM EST

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia, Aug. 28

Today people over 65 in Russia are a lost generation, the old
communist welfare state is gone, and besides living in poverty they
are discredited as political mishaps from a bygone era.

World historical revolutions leave the effected country psychologically
traumatized. The sudden lose of customary politico-social environments
creates a state of psycho-social disorientation.

Communism was installed in Russia by the Leninist Revolution of
1917, and Leninism was extinguished by the Yeltsin Revolution of
1991. The Soviet Union lasted for 74 years, a span of time in which
four generations lived their lives, in which the structures of a
communist society were incorporated by individuals as behavioral norms.

Fourteen years now separates the Yeltsin Revolution from contemporary
Russia, but the population is still disquieted. A gap between pre-and
post Yeltsin generations is easily discernible, and the confusion
between the politico-social rules of communism, and the unexpectedly
triumphant demands of capitalism leapt from the lips of Russians
to whom I talked during my recent visit to Russia. Politically and
psychologically, the aftershocks of the revolution of 1991 reverberates
throughout Russian society.

“Fourteen years ago we were the second-greatest superpower in
the world,” Dr. Elizaveta Isaev, Professor of Russian Politics,
said to me. “Today we fear the expansion of NATO to the east, the
Islamic Revolution on our Southern Flank, and the encirclement by the
United States with its military bases in Uzbekistan, and Krygystan,
or Central Asia.

“Fourteen years ago seniors enjoyed a social safety net that gave them
dignity in later life,” Isaev said. “Today people over 65 are a lost
generation, the old communist welfare state is gone, and besides living
in poverty the are discredited as political mishaps from a bygone era.”

>>From the international perspective, the current Russian malaise
encompasses three geographic pivots: On its Western border Russia
fears European Union and NATO expansion eastward, on its Southern
Flank Russia worries about Islamic Fundamentalist secession, and
on its Eastern border it is concerned about U.S. encirclement from
Central Asian bases.

The Yeltsin Revolution not only denuded Russia of all territorial
gains made by Bolshevism, but also by Czarism, or a Double Imperial
Extinction.

On its Western Pivot the collapse of the Soviet Union extinguished
the Bolshevik empire in Eastern Europe. The fall of the Soviet Union
amounted to the cancellation of the Yalta Agreement, and Red soldiers
evacuated Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria.

But the Double Imperial Extinction also entailed the simultaneous
eradication of Czarist territorial acquisitions. The Baltic States,
Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia gained their freedom from Moscow
in 1991, and the Baltic expansion of 1791 of Peter the Great was
concurrently annulled.

Tsarina Catherine the Great suffered the same affront. This empress
absorbed the Ukraine and Crimea from the Turks in 1783, and by
participating in the three Partitions of Poland moved Czarist Russia’s
Western borders to Warsaw.

However, the collapse of the Soviet Union also involved the synchronic
loss of Catherine’s conquests. Although Russia retained the Crimea,
the Ukraine slowly gained its independence from Catherine’s initial
18th century grasp.

This Double Imperial Extinction meant that on its Western Pivot
post-1991 Russia retreated to the boundaries of 17th century Russia.
Approximately 300 years of territorial annexations were reversed.

“This was Gorbachev’s great failure,” Isaev said. “He did not negotiate
a Second Yalta. When he decided to pull Red troops out of Eastern
Europe he should have bargained for a Second Yalta with the West
setting hard limits to the advance of NATO and the EU into Eastern
Europe. Without a Second Yalta Russia was forced to accept a Second
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk.”

The Double Imperial Extinction is also manifested on the Southern Flank
of Russia. The First Imperial Enlargement in the Caucasus and Central
Asia was carried out by the czars. In the 1880’s in the Caucasus the
czars had seized Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan from the suddenly
collapsing Persian Empire, and in Central Asia in the same decade
the czars took control of these mostly tribal territories. Power
vacuums in the Caucasus and Central Asia opened the way to Tzarist
penetration into the Islamic world.

After the Leninist Revolution the Communists’ Imperial Enlargement
simply absorbed the Czarist Imperial Enlargement in the Caucasus and
Central Asia. Like a carpet the Bolsheviks took the conquests of the
czars and swept them under the Communist rug, which was called the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

Imitating the events in Eastern Europe, the Yeltsin Revolution
witnessed the erasure of the Communist Imperial Enlargement, which
was simultaneously the evaporation of the Czarist Imperial Enlargement
in the Caucasus and Central Asia.

The dismemberment of the Soviet Union in December 1991 led to the
Balkanization of the Caucasus. Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan,
all non-Slavic peoples, followed the Slavic Ukraine into declaring
their independence.

(Norman Levine is a professor of international history and a regular
contributor to the Munich-based World Security network. This article
is reprinted by permission of WSN.)

(United Press International’s “Outside View” commentaries are written
by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important
issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United
Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum,
original submissions are invited.)