Iranian president visits Armenian genocide complex

Iranian president visits Armenian genocide complex

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
9 Sep 04

[Presenter] The second day of the Iranian president’s official visit to
Armenia started with a visit to Tsitsernakaberd, the Armenian genocide
memorial complex. The Iranian president paid tribute to the genocide
victims and laid flowers on the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex.

[Correspondent over video of the ceremony of laying flowers on
the genocide memorial] Iranian President Mohammad Khatami visited
Tsitsernakaberd this morning and paid tribute to the victims of
the 1915 genocide. The director of the genocide museum said that
the Iranian president’s visit to Tsitsernakaberd is a historical
event. The director presented the Iranian president with books on
the history of the Armenian genocide.

[Passage omitted: The report lists the leaders of Muslim countries
who visited the genocide complex in the past and the countries that
have recognized the genocide]

In violation of the established rule, the Iranian president was allowed
to travel around the complex by car due to his poor health. A similar
exception was made only for Pope John Paul II.

Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II will receive the Iranian
president at the Holy See of Echmiadzin today.

Tatevik Nalbandyan, “Aylur”.

State-Owned Bank to Stock Up

The St. Petersburg Times
#1002, Friday, September 10, 2004

State-Owned Bank to Stock Up
By Sveta Skibinsky, STAFF WRITER

Photo by Alexander Belenky / SPT

An agreement on a two-step purchase deal was signed this week
between the state-owned Vneshtorgbank and the St. Petersburg-based
Promstroibank.

According to an official announcement from Vneshtorgbank, or VTB, this
week, the bank signed a memorandum which provides for its purchase
of 25-percent stock share of Promstroibank, or PSB, by the end of
September. VTB will then look into the possibility of purchasing
another share package of 51 percent of PSB’s shares, which would
bring its holdings to 76 percent.

The second part of the deal should be completed before the end of 2006,
according to a statement from the VTB press office.

VTB’s senior vice-president Vasily Titov said the deal was broken up
into two stages to allow for “additional research of PSB’s financial
position,” business daily Vedomosti reported Tuesday.

Titov said the banks will sign an agreement to define VTB’s rights
during the transitional period. He said that VTB will get a veto
right in questions concerning PSB’s major deals and key appointments.

The value of the deal has not been disclosed, but price estimates have
ranged from $250 million, from Moody’s Interfax banking department,
to $500 million, from Alfa bank senior economist Natalya Orlova,
Vedomosti reported.

VTB’s official statement said that purchasing the controlling
package in PSB “will allow the bank to strengthen its position in the
Northwest, allowing further development of the VTB group to become
a European-level bank chain.”

Business daily Delovoi Peterburg said that by allocating resources
for the acquisition of private retail banks, the state is trying to
create a second monopoly, similar to state-owned Sberbank.

Meanwhile, VTB, which has its main offices in St. Petersburg on
Bolshaya Morskaya ulitsa, has been looking for another location for
its regional branch because it needs more space to accommodate its
expanding activities.

VTB is the largest bank in the country, with a base capital of about
42.1 billion rubles or $1.4 billion. It has a wide chain of subsidiary
branches, with five branches abroad – in Switzerland, Cyprus, Austria,
Luxembourg and Armenia. VTB is also an associated bank in Germany
and has representative offices in Italy, China, Ukraine and Belarus.

Seoul hopes to boost economic relations with Russia soon

Seoul hopes to boost economic relations with Russia soon
By Vladimir Kutakhov

ITAR-TASS News Agency
September 8, 2004 Wednesday 3:01 AM Eastern Time

SEOUL, September 7 — South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun supports the
proposal for further advancement of Russian-South Korean cooperation
within the framework of the bilateral Business Council, Head of
the Russia-South Korea Business Council Ara Abramyan, who is also
President of the World Armenian Congress and Deputy Chairman of the
Russian-Korean friendship society, said in an interview with Itar-Tass.

He said the South Korean Roh Moo-hyun would pay an official visit to
Russia from September 20-23 at the invitation from Russian President
Vladimir Putin.

The head of the Republic of Korea believes that it is necessary
to enhance the significance of the Business Council and intensify
cooperation between the business communities of the two countries.

With this in view, the South Korean president plans to meet the
business leaders of the two countries during his visit to Moscow.

The Korean want Roh Moo-hyun’s forthcoming meetings in Moscow to impart
“a serious impulse to the development of economic relations between
Russia and South Korea, Ara Abramyan said.

“I can say that there are no differences on principle between the two
countries. President Roh Moo-hyun has promised to support Russia in
its efforts to join the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The president of the Republic of Korea liked the Russian idea of
bringing together one hundred North and South Koreans for a visit to
Russia, Ara Abramyan noted. This would provide them with an opportunity
to spend two weeks together and communicate at their convenience.

“This idea has been supported in Seoul and it is now up to North Korea
to define its stance. The Russian foreign affairs ministry has also
promised assistance,” Mr. Abramyan said.

“I assess positively the outcome of our meeting with President Roh
Moo-hyun,” he said.

The head of the Republic of Korea had received on Tuesday, September
7, the Russian delegation to the meeting of the co-chairmen of the
Russian-Korean commission for economic, scientific and technological
cooperation. Russian Transport Minister led the delegation and Ara
Abramyan took part in the meeting with the South Korean president.

During the meeting, the project of linking the Trans Siberian railway
line to the Trans Korean railway road was discussed and the head
of the South Korean administration supported the Russian proposal
for running a freight train with containers for the first time from
the South Korean port of Pusan via North Korea and along the Trans
Siberian railway line to Western Europe.

This proposal will be discussed in greater detail at the forthcoming
tripartite meeting in Pyongyang in October at which the North Korean
party is expected to state its position.

Armenia will provide medical aid to victims of act of terrorism in N

ARMENIA WILL PROVIDE MEDICAL AID TO VICTIMS OF ACT OF TERRORISM IN NORTH OSSETIA

PanArmenian News
Sept 7 2004

YEREVAN, 07.09.04. The action of collecting blood for the victims
of the horrible act of terrorism in Beslan town of North Ossetia
will continue in Armenia up to the weekend, Deputy Director of
Yerevan Hematology Center Yuri Karapetian told Arminfo news agency
correspondent. In his words, 80 portions of blood are already
collected, and it will be sent to Vladikavkaz along with 3 mobile
hospitals. Y. Karapetian also noted that Yerevan hospitals are ready
to receive the victims, who need operative intervention. It should
be reminded that the Armenian Government has initiated the action.

No Change in Policy Towards US, Assures President Kwasniewski

No Change in Policy Towards US, Assures President Kwasniewski

Polish News Bulletin
Sep 07, 2004

President Aleksander Kwasniewski claims there will be no change in
Polish-American relations following his recent interview with the
New York Times, in which he criticised the American government for
not being flexible and sympathetic enough. “We remain in Iraq and
are proud of being able to co-operate with the Americans in many
places,”said Kwasniewski. He explained that he only wished to voice
concerns present in the minds of many Poles. “We are not changing our
policy towards the US and I can assure you that America is strong
enough to take my critical remarks,” Kwasniewski told journalists
after his meeting yesterday with his Armenian counterpart. However,
asked about the visa issue which has poisoned Polish-American relations
for some time now, the President admitted being deeply disappointed
with the American attitude.”As a realist I certainly understand the
situation, but as a friend of America I don’t understand the denial
(of a more relaxed visa regime),” he said.

BAKU: Saudi Arabia to render more aid to refugees

SAUDI ARABIA TO RENDER MORE AID TO REFUGEES
[September 06, 2004, 22:55:58]

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Sept 6 2004

With the aim to promote solving the tasks set in the “State Program
on Improvement of Living Conditions and Employment Opportunities of
Refugees and Internally Displaced People”, Ambassador of Azerbaijan
to Saudi Arabia Elman Arasly met with Secretary General of the
League of Islamic World Abdulla Turki and Secretary General of the
Islamic Charity Organization “Nijat” Adnan Pasha, the Embassy press
service said.

Ambassador Elman Arasly informed the Saudi side on the hard
consequences of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh,
negotiations between Azerbaijan President and heads of the world’s
leading states and prestigious international organizations concerning
peaceful resolution of the problem. He stressed that aggressor Armenia
and has been occupying 20% of the Azerbaijani lands for over ten
years, and holds non-constructive position in the peace process. As a
result of the aggression, he said, more than one million Azerbaijani
citizens have become refugees and IDPs and are still living under
very hard conditions. The diplomat handed the Azerbaijani side’s
request to increase the volume of aid rendered by the government and
humanitarian organizations of Saudi Arabia to refugees and IDP to
Mr. Abdulla Turki and Mr. Adnan Pasha.

The latter stated for their part that governed by the King Fahd
bin Abdul Aziz instructions on providing necessary assistance to
Azerbaijan in its fight for elimination of the Armenian aggression
consequences, the government and donor organizations are ready to
increase the volume of aid.

Leaders Of Azerbaijan, Armenia To Hold Karabakh Talks

Leaders Of Azerbaijan, Armenia To Hold Karabakh Talks

Agence France Presse
Sept 2 2004

NAKHCHEVAN, Azerbaijan, Sept 2 (AFP) – Azerbaijan’s President Ilham
Aliyev said Thursday he would hold talks later this month with his
Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian on the future of the disputed
enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Aliyev said the meeting with Kocharian would take place on the
sidelines of a summit of former Soviet states which opens in
Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana, on September 15.

Under international law, Nagorno-Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan but
since a war in the early 1990s the mountainous territory has been
under de facto Armenian control.

More than a decade of sporadic peace talks has failed to settle the
row and Azerbaijan has threatened to go to war again to drive out
Armenian forces.

“We have not yet been able to reach an agreement, but the negotiations
are continuing, they are dealing with specific issues, and I want
to hope that they will produce results,” Aliyev told reporters on a
visit to the province of Nakhchevan in western Azerbaijan.

Capturing resiliency and hope: Two photo exhibits reveal ….

Daily News Tribune

Capturing resiliency and hope: Two photo exhibits reveal the power of coping
amid war, disease

By Chris Bergeron / News Staff Writer
Sunday, August 29, 2004

WINCHESTER — Peering through their lens, two very different photographers,
Paul Mellor and Sebastiao Salgado, capture hope and humanity in distant
impoverished lands.

As photojournalists, they have little in common except a shared
artistry that transforms the grinding misery of disease and war into
striking images of endurance.

Together, Mellor and Salgado reveal photojournalism’s power to inform
and inspire in two complimentary exhibits at the Griffin Museum of
Photography in Winchester.

Mellor, a 54-year-old Englishman, journeyed to Nagorno-Karabagh, a
Christian enclave in the Caucasus Mountains which broke away from Azerbaijan
in the 1990s.

Salgado, a Brazilian with an international reputation, documented
efforts to eradicate polio in five struggling nations in Africa and the
Indian subcontinent. Now living in Paris, his works can be seen in “The End
of Polio” through Oct. 31.

Museum Director Blake Fitch said both photographers have succeeded in
bringing important stories to the world.

“Both Mellor and Salgado see the sadness people have to live with. But
they both show a glimmer of hope,” she said.

Mellor is exhibiting 20 memorable color photographs that record the
daily struggle for survival in a former Soviet republic where health care
services barely exist. Shown for the first time in the United States, the
exhibit, “Armenia & Karabagh: The Aftermath,” runs in the museum’s Emerging
Artist Gallery through Nov. 5.

By some alchemy of composition and compassion, Mellor’s work puts a
recognizable face on people caught in a conflict consigned to the margins of
public awareness. His photographs range from 20-by-14 inches to 40-by-32
inches.

A father tends his hospitalized young son with hawk-eyed vigilance. A
midwife with raw-knuckled hands waits for her next birth in a drab delivery
room. A family of six makes a home of a metal container. A woman sits in a
street corner market trying to sell a bundle of sticks.

Mellor takes photographs that present artful vignettes of people coping
with dire circumstances. Shooting from an neutral middle distance, he never
condescends to their poverty or reduces them to stereotypes.

“After surviving war and earthquakes, these people are doing the best
they can. They need help,” he said. “But, they have few resources and
there’s very little foreign investment. It’s a story the world hasn’t heard
about.”

Armenia took control of the largely Christian area of 200,000 people in
1994 after a four-year war.

Mellor has put a recognizable face on people struggling for normalcy
after a conflict that severely damaged the region’s roads, hospitals and
economy.

The exhibit’s most evocative image is Mellor’s large format photograph
of a rosy-cheeked child in a dingy room, looking with bright eyes toward a
sunlit window.

Mellor has spent nearly 35 years as a professional photographer
focusing on news, sports and commercial projects. His current show grew out
of a weeklong visit to war-torn Nagorno-Karabagh in January 2001.

Initially, he traveled with his wife, Kathy Mellor, a neo-natal nurse,
to take pictures of a hospital construction program for the relief
organization, Family Care.

Over the course of several more trips during the next three years,
Mellor found himself drawn into the lives of people coping with poverty and
neglect.

Rather than shoot digitally, he prefers the “greater latitude” of a 35
mm Canon camera that takes sharp detailed prints. “Film photography does
certain things to the imagination that digital images can’t do,” he said.

Mellor never resorts to “artsy” angles or distorted perspectives,
preferring to compose subtle visual narratives of people coping with their
circumstances. Mellor often frames his images around a single person or
small group in a room or street scene “to give viewers a strong point for
the eye to go to.” He mostly uses natural light to convey his subjects’
“depth of feeling.”

Like an photographic image emerging from a mixture of chemicals,
revealing details coalesce about the central subject, helping viewers
appreciate the complexities of life in a conflict-ridden region.

In one photo, a hospital anesthesiologist waits for her next patient in
a dingy room with outdated equipment. A sad-eyed young boy surrounds his bed
with a barricade of overturned wooden stools. Four children sit on the floor
of an empty room in a swath of sunlight.

Who are these people? Will their poverty crush them? Do they somehow
deserve their fates?

By observing his subjects with a respectful eye, Mellor invites viewers
to share their plights and, by extension, their humanity.

“When photographing these people I tried to record the sense of dignity
that had not only held the families together but was indeed the basic
ingredient for their bleak future,” Mellor wrote in a statement accompanying
the exhibit. “…The pictures are meant to convey their hope as well as
their acceptance of all that life throws at them.”

He hopes his photos raise awareness and support for relief efforts to
help the people of Nagorno-Karabagh. He and his wife are planning to return
this October. They now work with BirthLink, a charity based in England that
provides medical training and equipment to the region.

“This is an ongoing story. It doesn’t stop with this exhibit,” Mellor
said. “We will continue. We’re passionate we can make a difference.”

Salgado has achieved legendary status by creating powerful
black-and-white photographs that are startling in their polemical power and
beauty.

Initially trained as an economist, the 60-year-old global traveler has
spent three decades documenting the lives of dispossessed people around the
world.

In this exhibit, he documents the suffering and hopes of humans ravaged
by polio with an unforgiving realism.

Salgado has documented anti-polio campaigns in India, Pakistan, Sudan,
Somalia and the Congo in images that sear the soul.

An 11-year-old polio-stricken child, wearing sandals on his knees for
protection, crawls into a soccer game in Somalia. A father pours a vial of
vaccine into his son’s mouth in a railroad car in India where they’ve been
confined to prevent the disease’s spread. An emaciated Sudanese child
screams as an aide worker in a ragged shirt with a Disney logo provides
medicine.

In several memorable shots, Salgado photographs his subjects in extreme
close-ups with an immediacy that is, at once, harsh and humanizing.

Fitch said Salgado’s photos “go far beyond promoting public awareness
of a cause.”

“They grab you and force you to face the pain of others with the hope
that you will be motivated to fight for change. (Salgado’s) beautiful
pictures of people in harsh circumstances are designed to encourage us to
engage in what (he) calls ‘essential behavior,’ — doing the right thing.”

In these two impressive exhibits, Mellor and Salgado employ their
considerable artistry to show how conscience and decency can overcome
enormous obstacles.

THE ESSENTIALS:

The Griffin Museum of Photography was founded in 1992 by the late
Arthur Griffin to provide a forum for the exhibit of historic and
contemporary photography.

Mellor will give a lecture about the exhibit Wednesday, Sept. 8, at 7
p.m. Tickets are $7 for museum members and $10 for non-members.

The museum is located at 67 Shore Road, Winchester. The museum is open
Tuesday through Sunday noon to 4 p.m.

Admission is $5 for adults, $2 for seniors and free for members.
Children under 12 are admitted free. Admission is free on Thursday.

( For more information, call 781-729-1158 or visit the Web site
)

www.griffinmuseum.org.

BAKU: Azeri TV on possible threats to Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline

Azeri TV on possible threats to Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline

ANS TV, Baku
26 Aug 04

[Presenter] Ensuring the security of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan [BTC] oil
pipeline is becoming more important, as the date for its commissioning
approaches.

[Correspondent over video of Baku and pipeline construction sites] The
staff and command exercises of the Azerbaijani, Georgian and Turkish
military are under way in Baku. The exercises that will last until 27
August are related to ensuring the security of the BTC pipeline. The
existence of the forces that do not want the BTC pipeline and the fact
that these forces become active from time to time necessitate serious
measures for the security of the pipeline. Taking into consideration
that most of the work on the BTC construction has been completed and
the pipeline will be commissioned soon, one may suppose that the
forces opposing the pipeline might become more active. Some experts
say that there can be various threats to the BTC pipeline. For
example, one of these threats are possible acts of terror and sabotage
on the pipeline. If we look at the route of the oil pipeline, we can
see that the pipeline is not fully insured against danger.

In Azerbaijan these threats can be in the areas close to Armenia and
to the occupied lands where the pipeline traverses. The expected
threats in Georgia may also come from Armenians. The fact that the
pipeline stretches along the areas densely populated by ethnic
Armenians and the negative attitude of the ethnic Armenian population
in those areas to the pipeline leave no doubt about it.

The forces who want to disrupt the project are realizing their
intention in the form of protests against the construction. The
Prosecutor-General’s Office in Borjomi [Georgia] has brought to book a
group of ethnic Armenians living in the village of Tabatsquri, who
attempted last week to prevent the construction of the part of the
pipeline that goes through that area. The inhabitants of this village
have held three protest actions over the past month, demanding that
the construction of the pipeline be halted.

The third source of danger in the territory where the pipeline is laid
are the activities of the PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] in Turkey,
especially, the PKK’s statement that it will start terrorist acts
again makes one think more seriously about the security of the
pipeline.

But the most serious threat to the BTC pipeline still remains Armenia
and its aggressive policy. Thus, it is necessary that not only the
parties to the security protocol [signed between Azerbaijan, Georgia
and Turkey in July 2003], but also all the countries interested in the
pipeline should curb this source of danger before early oil starts to
flow in the summer of 2005.

On 27 April 2002, Azerbaijani President Heydar Aliyev, Georgian
President Eduard Shevardnadze and Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
signed a document on fighting terrorism, organized crime and other
grave crimes. The present exercises are being conducted on the basis
of that document.

Rasad Isgandarov for ANS.

ASBAREZ Online [08-16-2004]

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1) ARF Rep. Markarian Concludes Visit to Egypt
2) Martirosyan Gets US Boxing’s Second Win
3) Vatican Stirs Debate on Turkish EU Membership
4) Putin To Meet Ukrainian and Armenian Presidents in Sochi
5) Opening of “One Nation, One Culture” Pan-Armenian Cultural Festival
6) Two Dead As Georgia Ceasefire Crumbles

1) ARF Rep. Markarian Concludes Visit to Egypt

CAIROOn Wednesday, August 11, ARF Bureau representative Hrant Markarian
concluded a four day trip to Cairo. During the visit, Markarian had the
opportunity to address the community and meet with local ARF representatives.
He also announced plans for the establishment of a Middle East Hai Tahd
office,
which will work with the offices located in the United States, Russia and
Europe.

2) Martirosyan Gets US Boxing’s Second Win

ATHENS (AP)–Vanes Martirosyan erased any doubts about the legitimacy of his
spot in Athens, battering Algeria’s Benamar Meskine in a 45-20 victory in the
preliminaries Sunday to earn a second-round match with Cuba’s Lorenzo Aragon.
“I finished like a champion,”said Martirosyan, an Armenian-born 18-year-old
from Glendale, Calif. “I could have won another four rounds, to tell you the
truth. I felt so good out there.”
Martirosyan showed the power and flair of a contender, dictating the fight’s
pace with a stiff jab and opportunistic combinations. He also counterpunched
effectively while landing more shots to the head than almost any competitor so
far at the busy boxing venue, which hosts more than 20 fights every day of the
preliminaries.
Tougher fights still loom for a team that’s thought to be among the
weakest in
the United States’ superb Olympic boxing history, but the boxers believe they
can improve on their mediocre four-medal haul four years ago in Sydney.
“We’re a great team, we’re in great shape and we’re going to bring a lot of
medals home,”Martirosyan said.
Martirosyan was one fight from elimination at the US team trials in February
in Tunica, Miss., but the two top contenders were disqualified when Andre
Berto
threw Juan McPherson to the canvas, injuring McPherson’s neck. McPherson was
medically disqualified, and Berto was banned for his actions.
Though he caught a lucky break, Martirosyan made the most of it by earning an
Olympic spot in the ensuing qualifying tournaments. Berto, from Winter Haven,
Fla., made the Olympics anyway on Haiti’s team–but Martirosyan beat Berto
in a
subsequent tourney.
“A lot of boxing fans and people in our organization were very well aware of
Vanes,”US coach Basheer Abdullah said. “There were a lot of predictions
that he
was going to make this team. He was very, very aggressive today. He dictated
what was happening in the fight.”
Martirosyan was cheered at Peristeri Olympic Boxing Hall by his father,
Norik,
a former amateur fighter who moved his family to California when Vanes was 4;
his younger brother, Vatche; his uncle
and his cousin–and a bunch of fans from Glendale who showed up unannounced,
waving Armenian and American flags.
Aragon, whose victory over Greece’s Theodoros Kotakos was stopped on
points in
the third round, will be a stiff test for Martirosyan on Thursday. The 1996
Olympic featherweight is a two-time world champion as a welterweight, and he
beat Martirosyan in the Athens Test Event in May.
But Martirosyan was slugging point-for-point with Aragon until the fourth
round, when Martirosyan says he got overexcited by the prospect of an upset.
“We’re Armenian. We have this thing where we get a little bit out of control
in the ring,”Martirosyan said. “I love this sport so much. The coaches have
told me to calm down, just think about points instead of trying to get the guy
out of there.”
After a slow first minute against Meskine, Martirosyan landed the first of
many shots to the Algerian’s head. Martirosyan then staggered him with a
beautiful left hand early in the third round.
That punch effectively ended the fight. Meskine retreated to full-scale
defense while Martirosyan chased. Martirosyan scored 16 points in the final
round, putting his whole body behind his blows in
a vain effort to flatten Meskine.
Perhaps that Armenian instinct hasn’t completely been coached out of him–and
it will serve him well as a professional.
But first things first: Martirosyan finished third in the Athens Test Event,
and he isn’t keen on keeping that prize.
“I brought that bronze medal back so I could take the gold,”he said.

3) Vatican Stirs Debate on Turkish EU Membership

(EU OBSERVER)–Negative comments by a high-ranking Cardinal in the Vatican
about Turkish membership of the EU have once more stirred the controversial
debate.
In an interview last week with Le Figaro magazine, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
said that Turkey is “in permanent contrast to Europe” and that linking it to
Europe would be a mistake.
To make his point he spoke of the Ottoman Empire’s incursions into the heart
of Europe in past centuries.
Cultural riches should not be sacrificed for the sake of economic riches, The
Cardinal is quoted as saying in Turkish media.
The German, who heads the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, said that Turkey, which is a predominantly Muslim secular republic,
should seek political union with Arab states and not with European countries.
He suggests it “could try to set up a cultural continent with neighboring
Arab
countries and become the leading figure of a culture with its own identity.”
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan rejected the Cardinal’s comments.
“The Vatican is a religious state. We are speaking to and making evaluations
with EU member countries,” said Erdogan, according to Zaman.
All of these comments come ahead of some crucial decision in the EU about
Ankara’s bid to join the bloc.
The European Commission will publish a report in October on Turkey’s
readiness
to join. On the basis of this report, EU leaders will make a decision in
December. But Turkey already has support from some influential countries in
the
EU-including the UK and Germany.

4) Putin To Meet Ukrainian and Armenian Presidents in Sochi

MOSCOW (AFP)–Russian President Vladimir Putin is scheduled to meet with his
Ukrainian and Armenian counterparts this week in the Black Sea resort of
Sochi,
where he is currently on holiday, the Kremlin said Monday.
Putin is due to hold talks Wednesday with Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma
and Friday with Armenian President Robert Kocharian, a Kremlin spokeswoman
told
AFP Monday.
Putin’s meeting with Kuchma comes on the heels of a decision by Ukraine to
sign a three-year contract with the Russian-British oil company TNK-BP to
carry
Siberian oil through the Odessa-Brody pipeline.
The move thwarted European hopes that the pipeline would export oil from
Central Asia and the Caspian Sea to Europe, but was welcomed by the Kremlin.
Analysts said the move was the latest in a series that have seen the former
Soviet republic lurch back toward Moscow, after spending most of the
post-Soviet years reaching out toward the West, ahead of presidential
elections
in October 31.

5) Opening of “One Nation, One Culture” Pan-Armenian Cultural Festival

YEREVAN (Noyan Tapan)–On August 15, the opening of the “One Nation, One
Culture” Pan-Armenian cultural festival took place in the National Academic
Theater of Opera and Ballet.
President Robert Kocharian, Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II, Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian, Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs Hovik Hoveyan,
and other officials were present at the ceremony.
Greeting the participants, Oskanian called the festival a historic event and
emphasized: “Every generation living in its homeland or the diaspora should
reveal the depth and wealth of one united culture of the national originality
of his origin, should be newly filled with aesthetic and moral spirit of
national and human real values.”
Among the performers were the State Dance Ensemble of Armenia and the
“Barekamutiun” ensemble, dudukist Jivan Gasparian, singers Hasmik Papian,
Hasmik Hatsagortsian, Svetlana
Navasardian, Ruben Matevosian, actors Vladimir Abajian, Hovhannes Babakhanian,
Zhenia Avetisian, as well as other well-known Armenian artists.

6) Two dead as Georgia ceasefire crumbles

TBILISI (AFP)Two Georgian servicemen were killed and other casualties were
reported, officials said, in clashes that left a three-day-old ceasefire in
the
breakaway region of South Ossetia in tatters.
A spokesman for the Georgian interior ministry said the soldiers died after
coming under mortar and automatic weapons fire from irregular forces from the
South Ossetian territory.
The spokesman, Guram Donadze, also claimed that 15 Ossetian fighters were
killed in return fire from Georgian forces, but a South Ossetian spokeswoman
denied any fatalities.
“Fortunately, no one was killed,” in the overnight fighting, South Ossetia
spokeswoman Irina Gagloyeva was quoted as saying by the RIA Novosti news
agency. She added however that three civilians had been hurt.
RIA Novosti and other Russian news agencies confirmed the deaths on the
Georgian side and said that Georgian forces had also fired shells into a
district of South Ossetia’s main city, Tskhinvali, as well as three other
nearby villages.
A spokesman for the joint Georgian-Russian-Ossetian peacekeeping force in
South Ossetia was quoted by ITAR-TASS news agency as saying that the firing
“came from both sides and involved machine guns, mortars and grenade
launchers.”
The violence came three days after a ceasefire signed by the conflicting
parties as well as Russia and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe went into effect in a renewed drive to defuse the crisis in the
region.
“We can say that the ceasefire has been practically violated,” said
Konstantin
Kochiyev, an adviser to South Ossetia’s self-styled president.
Tensions have soared and clashes have repeatedly broken out in the area over
the past two months as Georgia has stepped up pressure to bring separatist
regions back under its thumb. In June, President Mikhail Shaakashvili won a
local election in Adjara which returned control over the renegade region to
Georgia.
Inhabited mainly by ethnic Ossetians, South Ossetia has enjoyed de facto
independence after an armed conflict with Tbilisi following the break-up of
the
Soviet Union in 1991.
Leaders in South Ossetia have demanded either their own state or else
separation from Georgia and direct governance from Moscow.
Speaking to reporters in Tbilisi, Georgian Defense Minister Georgy Baramidze
warned that the conflict could worsen.
“There is unfortunately a real danger of war breaking out in the region,” he
said.
Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania said Georgia was calling on the international
community to step in and help break the deadlock.
Georgia wanted the OSCE executive to hold an urgent meeting in the coming
days
on the situation in South Ossetia and President Mikhail Saakashvili would talk
with other leaders about organizing an international conference on the
conflict, he said.
“We are looking for a peaceful resolution,” Zhvania said, adding that he was
prepared to sit down for talks with South Ossetian separatist leader Eduard
Kokoity.
Georgian and Ossetian forces had already traded gunfire and shelling during
the night both Saturday and Sunday, when Tbilisi reported seven Georgian
soldiers had been wounded in the clashes.

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