Threat of Civil War Is Turning the Abkhaz Into Russians

The New York Times
August 15, 2004 Sunday

Threat of Civil War Is Turning the Abkhaz Into Russians

By C. J. CHIVERS

SUKHUMI, Georgia, Aug. 10

The men on the seashore announced their citizenship one by one. The
first man, who did not appear Slavic, said he was Russian. Then the
second, then the third. Another produced a new passport bearing the
Russian seal. ”I am Russian, too,” he said.

It was the same among all the men sipping coffee under the oleander
and palm, just as it is throughout this city, the partly abandoned
capital of Abkhazia, a tiny self-declared state.

”You can ask any person here, and they will have the passport of the
Russian Federation,” said Apollon Shinkuba, a retired general in the
military of a nation that officially does not exist.

Abkhazia, a breakaway Georgian republic the size of Delaware, has
been swept by a paper revolution.

As latent civil war with Georgia threatens to flare anew, the Abkhaz
have become Russian citizens by the tens of thousands, declaring
allegiance to Moscow, which they hope will defend them if fighting
breaks out. It is a policy resembling voluntary annexation — not by
force or referendum but by the mass assumption of the citizenship of
a neighboring state.

The Abkhaz have been applying under a provision of Russian law that
grants citizenship under certain circumstances to residents of the
former Soviet Union. They hope their new allegiance will prove to be
insurance in the event of war, although there is no clear guarantee.

”The president of the Russian Federation is the guarantor of
protection of the citizens of the Russian Federation, no matter where
they live,” said Valery Arshba, Abkhazia’s vice president, himself a
Russian citizen. He added, ”Political protection implies military
protection.”

The status of Abkhazia — a republic on the Black Sea that is
adjacent to Russia and has a deep affinity for it but is within the
internationally recognized borders of Georgia — is one of the last
of the sovereignty disputes that followed the dissolution of the
Soviet Union.

The Georgians and the Abkhaz were held together under Soviet rule. In
1992, not long after Soviet rule ended, civil war broke out, ending
in 1993 with the expulsion of the Georgian Army followed by a line of
demarcation that is still patrolled by a United Nations observers.

What remains beyond that line is a place of astonishing beauty and
often eerie stillness, a republic in a state of unsettled suspension.
Abkhazia has been independent for 11 years, able to claim
self-government, but at a cost of isolation and at a high economic
and social price.

No nation recognizes it. Its factories are idle. Its infrastructure
is run down. Its government claims to have a budget of $15 million a
year.

There is little traffic, no postal service, no state currency
(rubles, not Georgian lari, circulate here) and a marginal economy.
Its hospitals depend on aid organizations. Minefields litter its
byways.

Village after village in the former Georgian zone of Gali, near the
Inguri River, across which Georgian civilians fled as their army
collapsed and Abkhaz fighters advanced, remain depopulated and
sacked. Weeds grow from rooftops; horses wander the grounds of gutted
factories; people are few.

And tensions have risen again. Georgia has never given up its claim
to Abkhazia, and the new Georgian president, Mikhail Saakashvili, has
pledged to bring the renegade republic into the national fold, as he
is also trying to do with another separatist region, South Ossetia.

At a briefing for journalists and political analysts this week near
Tbilisi, Georgia’s capital, Mr. Saakashvili said he would be patient,
but spoke with an air of inevitability.

Abkhazia, in his view, will return to Georgia. ”We can do just about
anything short of full independence,” he said, and referred to
possible federalist models for reintegration.

The political rhetoric has been leveraged with force. Late last
month, the Georgian Coast Guard fired on a cargo ship calling at
Sukhumi, asserting that ships sailing for Abkhazia without Georgian
permission violate Georgia’s territorial integrity and international
law.

Here on the western side of the Inguri River, the Abkhaz people, a
tiny ethnic minority whose roots reach to ancient times, see
themselves as besieged. The government suspended talks with Tbilisi,
vowed to remain firm on national status and said it would use force
to counter actions it regarded as hostile.

”Right now we have our forces ready, and if necessary we will
fight,” said the acting foreign minister, Georgi Otyrba, who became
a Russian citizen three months ago.

Abkhazia maintains an army seasoned by civil war. Officials here say
it has more than 20,000 fighters and is organized in the manner of
the Swiss, with reservists who keep automatic rifles at home,
prepared to gather swiftly at predetermined locations for local
defense.

An exercise held last month to test military readiness was a success,
Abkhaz officials said. Several of them added that Mr. Saakashvili,
whom they regard as young and rash, has chosen a course that could
quickly slip from his control.

”The idea of the new president of Georgia will lead to a new war,”
said Nugzar Ashuba, speaker of Abkhazia’s 35-member parliament. ”It
is absolutely so.”

He added that although Abkhazia regarded its military as a defensive
force, it had aircraft, artillery and tanks, and if the Georgians
continued to test the borders, it might strike first. He said, as an
example, that fighter planes or helicopter gunships could be sent to
sea. ”We can destroy the Georgian ships; we have all the means,” he
said. ”But we don’t want a scandal. Of course, if they keep doing
this, we will reconsider.”

Little prospect for negotiation exists for now. The Abkhaz president,
Vladislav Ardzinba, has been ill and is not visibly in command of the
government. An election to replace him is set for October. The new
president will serve a five-year term.

One Western diplomat, citing the delicacy of the subject and speaking
anonymously, said it was difficult to assess prospects for peace
talks. ”It is really hard to discuss it seriously until after the
Abkhaz presidential election,” he said.

In the interim, residents here have been becoming Russian in waves,
with encouragement of the de facto state. Mr. Arshba, the vice
president, said 170,000 of Abkhazia’s 320,000 residents had become
citizens of Russia, and 70,000 others had applications pending. The
shift started in the late 1990’s. More than 50,000 Abkhaz people had
become Russian by 2002, he said, when a government campaign induced
roughly 117,000 more people to adopt Russian citizenship. The latest
push began this summer.

Numbers here are malleable and impossible to confirm. Mr. Otyrba said
that he had seen new, unpublished census data and that 80 percent of
what he said were 362,000 residents of Abkhazia were Russian.

Mr. Saakashvili insisted that the population is of Abkhazia was much
smaller than Abkhaz officials contended — fewer than 200,000, about
half of whom are Abkhaz and the rest principally Armenian and
Georgian.

One point is clear: given that to obtain Russian citizenship an
Abkhaz applicant must be at least 16 years old, on paper the
Russification of Abkhazia is almost complete.

”We’re at about 80 percent now,” said Gennadi Nikitchenko, chief of
the Abkhaz office of the Congress of Russian Communities, which has
been assisting residents with applications and forwarding bundles of
the documents to the office of the Russian Foreign Ministry in Sochi.

What wartime protections these new citizens might enjoy is anything
but certain. The Western diplomat suggested that their status was not
ironclad. A document, he said, ”doesn’t make them Russian.”

Russia has been ambiguous as well. The Russian defense minister,
Sergei B. Ivanov, told the Interfax news service this week that ”the
protection of the interests of Russian citizens in Abkhazia and South
Ossetia should be done by political and diplomatic methods.”

President Vladimir V. Putin has remained silent on the matter.

As the impasse continues, a sense of lost opportunities pervades.
Abkhazia, subtropical and inexpensive, gorgeous and little known,
seems like a coastal boom waiting to happen.

The republic is breathtaking, a narrow land in which mountains 12,000
feet high tumble in forested hills to the Black Sea. Its farmland is
rich in tangerines and tea.

The republic’s famed beaches at Sukhumi, Gagra and Pitsunda were
formerly vacation destinations for the Soviet elite. Stalin kept
dachas here. Before the Bolsheviks took state holidays, czars lounged
on Abkhazia’s beaches.

Yet for all of its beauty and access to the sea, Abkhazia suffers
from its isolation and reputation as a land that is locked in
struggle. Sukhumi, the seat of the separatist government, remains 60
percent destroyed and is full of gutted buildings and glassless
windows.

Abkhazia still attracts upward of 350,000 tourists a year, almost all
Russian, according to Mr. Otyrba, the acting foreign minister, but
that is down from several million tourists before the war.Those who
visit create weirdly incongruous scenes, like that at the Elbrus
Club, a bustling discotheque between the beach and the skeletons of
buildings destroyed in the last war. On summer evenings, when music
thumps at the Elbrus and beer flows from its taps, Sukhumi seems one
part Grozny, one part Miami Beach.

Pakistan supports Azerbaijan in Karabakh Conflict resolution

ArmenPress
Aug 10 2004

PAKISTAN SUPPORTS AZERBAIJAN IN KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION

BAKU, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS: Pakistani defense ministry military
staff joint committee chairman, General Muhamed Aziz Khan in his
meeting with Azeri defense minister Safar Abiev informed yesterday
about the military political developments in South Asia and expressed
gratitude to Azerbaijan for its disposition in Kashmir issue.
“Pakistani nation has supported and will continue to support
Azerbaijan in Karabakh conflict,” the General said.
Abiev detailed the situation in South Caucasus saying that
channels for dialogue in Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict are not used
up yet. “Up to now we have prefered to solve the issue through
negotiations. When we feel that such opportunities are exhausted we
will liberate our lands. Azerbaijan will not surrender a single cm of
land, ” he said.

Ghana Airways Losing Millions By The Day

GhanaWeb, Ghana
Aug 9 2004

Ghana Airways Losing Millions By The Day

It’s been a week of nightmare for the national carrier, Ghana
Airways, as the queue of stranded passengers gets longer with each
flight postponed.

And as the queue grows longer so do the airline’s bills.

Ghana Airways is losing several millions of cedis in cash
compensation for stranded passengers both in Ghana and the US.

At the last count the airline has had to cater for over eight hundred
stranded passengers in hotel and transportation bills.

No official figures are readily available but the advertising manager
of the airline, Mawuko Afadzinu admitted in an interview with Joy
Business Report that the airline’s bills keep increasing as more
passengers continue to be disappointed.

And matters came to a head on Sunday when the airline failed yet
again to fly its passengers to London and Düsseldorf due to some
technical problems.

But underlying the problems of the airline is its lack of
credibility.

Efforts to lease a plane to fly came crashing down as the agent for
the Armenian registered aircraft, Chapman Freemon, demanded a cash
payment of 150 thousand dollars upfront.

This did not please the chief executive of Ghana Airways, Akua
Sarpong.

`It is not possible to do such a thing. We don’t know why he is doing
that because in the past our cheques have not bounced. I cannot carry
thousands of dollars in a bag to him when I have not even seen the
aircraft, it is not possible’, she said.

The airline has been making efforts to replace its two DC-10 aircraft
which have been the bane of some of the airline’s problems.

Modernization of Armenal Plant to be Completed Mid 2005

MODERNIZATION OF FOIL-ROLLING PLANT ARMENAL IN ARMENIA WILL BE
COMPLETED IN MIDDLE OF 2005

YEREVAN, AUGUST 6. ARMINFO. Modernization of the foil-rolling plant
Armenal in Armenia will be completed in the middle of 2005. The plant
belongs to the Russian Aluminum JSC, Minister for Trade and Economic
Development of Armenia Karen Chshmarityan said at a press-conference
today.

He said that modernization was initially planed to be completed within
11 months (by th end of November, 2004, as the minister said), but
then, the plant’s owner asked prolongation of the terms for 5-6
months. The minister said that in conformity with the specified data,
the cost of the investment program grew to $70 mln as against $34 mln
earlier announced by Rusal. Chshmarityan said that the increase in the
investment volume is connected with purchase of additional
equipment. He added that orders for $17 mln will be placed at
enterprises in Armenia and negotiations with them are currently in
process. The minister connected the protraction of the terms of the
investment program’s implementation with lack of an agreement between
the plant’s owner and the General Contractor, the German company
“Achenbach,” which won a tender for modernization of Armenal in
December.

It should be noted that Armenal’s output in 2003 totaled 21 bln drams
($37,1 mln), which is 3.1 times more than the indicator of the
previous year. The plant manufactured 10.5 thous tons of products in
the period under review, which is twice more than in 2002. Armenal has
been suspended since the end of December, 2003 for
modernization. Armenal CJSC was founded in May, 2000, on the basis of
Kanaker Aluminum plant (KanAZ) as a JV with participation of the
companies Russian Aluminum and “KanAZ” OJSC. Since Jan, 2003, 1003 of
Armenal’s shares belong to the Russian Aluminum JSC.

DM Reps visit Striking Freedom Fighters

REPRESENTATIVES OF MINISTRY OF DEFENCE VISIT FREEDOM-FIGHTERS
PARTICIPATING IN SIT-STRIKE

YEREVAN, August 4 (Noyan Tapan). On August 4, at 9:00 am, the
sit-strike of 20 freedom-fighters, participants of 9 detachments of
Artsakh liberation movement, moved to the building of RA
government. To recap, the main demand of the freedom-fighters is
addressed to the government: to carry out allocations for providing
their families with flats. Armen Avetisian, the Head of the Armenian
Aryan Unity, told Noyan Tapan that on the first day of the strike the
representatives of the Defence Ministry visited the participants of
the strike.

They assured that all the organization work directed to providing the
families of the perished freedom-fighters of disabled freedom-fighters
with apartments are completed: the corresponding commission has
already compiled the list of these families. To recap, the
participants of the sit-strike demand that the RA government and the
National Assembly should adopt a law on conferment of the status of a
freedom-fighter to the volunteers who were at war on the fromt for six
or more months, as well as should restore the privileges and rights of
all the freedom-fighters by the law. One of the demands is equating of
the pension of the disabled freedom-fighters of the third group to the
pension of a warrant officer.

Armenicum widely tested in India

ArmenPress
Aug 5 2004

ARMENICUM WIDELY TESTED IN INDIA

YEREVAN, AUGUST 5, ARMENPRESS: Armenicum is considered the best
medicine against AIDs. One week ago it was massively tested in India,
Armenian defense minister Serj Sargssian said adding that the number
of people using the medicine totals to several dozen thousands in
India.
The minister noted that tests are over in Russia which passed
under the supervision of Russian Health Ministry. He voiced his hope
that by September Russia will also register the medicine. He said the
leading specialists in medical science prove the role and
significance of Armenicum.

OSCE Regular Monitoring of NK and Azerbaijan Armed Forces’ in Agdam

OSCE REGULAR MONITORING OF NAGORNO KARABAKH AND AZERBAIJAN ARMED
FORCES’ CONTACT-LINE IN AGDAM DIRECTION HELD

STEPANAKERT, August 4 (Noyan Tapan). On August 4, the OSCE Mission
held a regular monitoring of the Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan armed
forces’ contact-line in the Agdam direction. From the positions of the
NKR Defense Army, the monitoring mission was led by Personal
Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzey Kasprzyk. The
group comprised Field Assistants of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office’s
Personal Representative Miroslav Vimetal (Czechia) and Yurgen Schmidt
(Germany). The monitoring passed in accordance with the planned
schedule, and no violations of the cease-fire regime were fixed. From
the Karabakh party, representatives of the NKR Ministries of Foreign
Affairs and Defense accompanied the OSCE monitoring mission. On the
eve, Ambassador Kasprzyk had meetings in the NKR Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and the Defense Ministry. On August 2, NKR President Arkady
Ghoukassian received Chief of Armenia’s Armed Forces’ Main
Headquarters, General-Colonel Michael Haroutunian. He is invited to
the NKR as an observer of the command-staff trainings of Nagorno
Karabakh Defense Army’s troops units which took place on August
3-12. Issues, related to the current situation and the prospects of
the development of the cooperation between the military departments of
the two republics, were discussed at the meeting in which NKR Defense
Minister, General-Lieutenant Seiran Ohanian took part.

On August 3, NKR President Arkady Ghoukassian received representative
of the Armenian Evangelic Community of America (AECA) in Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh Rene Levonian. In the course of the meeting,
Mr. Levonian acquainted the state’s President with the course of
realizing social programs, in particular, construction of
kindergartens in the republic’s regions, summer camps in the towns of
Shoushi and Stepanakert, rendering assistance to the old people’s
homes and other projects realized by the community in
Artsakh. Mr. Levonian noted that the mission headed by him intended to
continue its activity in the NKR for contributing to the republic’s
leadership in solving Nagorno Karabakh’s vital problems. The NKR
President positively evaluated the community’s activity in Nagorno
Karabakh. On August 3, NKR President Arkady Ghoukassian received
Vice-Speaker of Armenia’s National Assembly, Member of the Supreme
Body of the ARF “Dashnaktsutiun” Vahan Hovannissian. Issues, related
to the democratic reforms in the NKR, the role of party organizations
in the process, were discussed in the course of the meeting. In this
connection, Mr. Hovannissian noted the necessity of expanding the
cooperation between the “Dashnaktsutiun” party and the republic’s
authorities, solving the existing problems by joint efforts. Arkady
Ghoukassian expressed the NKR leadership’s concern in the constructive
cooperation with all the political forces of the republic, including
the “Dashnaktsutiun” party.

Long-distance relationships: How the EU and CIS work together

EUROPA, Belgium
Aug 3 2004

Long-distance relationships: How the EU and CIS work together

Teleworking – an increasingly popular form of distance working – is
hailed by many as the solution to stressful lives, commuter road
congestion, crowded offices and fragmented families. But it also
offers unique opportunities for workers much further away to telework
for European companies, according to the EU project `Telesol’
promoting this type of working.

Armenia calling, how can we help you?
© Image: PhotoDisc

Telesol’s aim is to provide teleworking solutions that promote EU
co-operation in business and research with the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS), which is a group of 12 former Soviet
countries working together for their mutual economic benefit.

To do this, the project coordinates existing tools and research in
the information society technologies (IST) field – and using results
from `Staccis’, a Fourth Framework Programme project – in order to
broadcast more widely the advantages of teleworking both within the
CIS, and between the CIS and the European Union.

`We can help people overcome the barriers that exist in their
countries and set up networks of interested parties,’ notes Serguei
Smaguine of the Telework Competence Centre (TCC) in Moscow, Russia,
one of many centres set up throughout the CIS countries – Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Ukraine and
Uzbekistan – participating in the project.

Open all hours
EU support of just over 300 000, through the IST programme, has
helped the three-year project to set up the series of TCCs, and to
stage workshops and conferences to inform locals of the principles of
teleworking. Winding up later this year, Telesol has faced many
challenges communicating its message to the local communities: a
major hurdle has been translating all of the material into Russian,
the shared language of the partner countries. It has also faced
technical barriers, such as a shortage of Internet service providers
in the region, low access speed and legal complications.

But how can it help the EU? Speaking with IST Results reporters,
Smaguine offers the example of offshore software development as a
growth area where skilled CIS teleworkers can add value to the Union
– similar to the impact that Indian IT expertise has boosted
profitability in the field. `Russian programmers in Moscow [can]
produce software for companies in Belgium, the Czech Republic,
Germany,… [using] the Internet to logon to their clients’ computers
and provide real-time telesupport with screen sharing,’ he explains.

Teleworking is also proving useful within the CIS countries, Smaguine
continues, offering the example of how telemedicine is helping
doctors perform remote diagnostics in the Ukraine, for example. The
project’s success to date has been built around effective
communication and special emphasis on training, where experts from
France and Denmark, for instance, have travelled to the region to
`train the trainers’.

http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/headlines/news/article_04_08_04_en.html

The war to end wars brought collapse of four empires

Agence France Presse — English
July 25, 2004 Sunday 7:54 AM Eastern Time

The war to end wars brought collapse of four empires

PARIS, July 25

World War I, which broke out 90 years ago on July 28, 1914, embroiled
35 countries from every continent and resulted in about 10 million
deaths and 20 million injuries.

The conflict, which brought to a head the rivalries that had torn
Europe apart for half a century, began with the declaration of war on
Serbia by the Austro-Hungarian empire on July 28, a month to the day
after the assassination of the heir to the imperial crown in Sarajevo
by a Serbian nationalist.

One by one, the European powers were drawn into the conflict because
of their territorial and colonial rivalries, and their alliances.

Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Germany and the Ottoman Empire were pitted
against the countries of the triple alliance — Britain, France and
Russia, to which were added Italy in 1915. The entry into the war of
Japan and above all of the United States, in 1917, made this the
first conflict of a truly global nature.

The illusion that the war would be of short duration was shattered
with the failure of the first great offensives on the eastern and
western fronts.

Russia launched a major offensive against Germany’s East Prussia in
August 1914, suffered a crushing defeat at Tannenberg, followed by
lesser setbacks at the first and second battles of the Masurian
Lakes. That was the start of a steady retreat towards the east that
ended with the 1917 Bolshevik revolution and the signing of the
Brest-Litovsk treaty between Germany and Russia.

The conflict spread over four fronts — in the Balkans, in France, in
Russia, and later in Italy.

>From 1915, the western front was established from the North Sea to
the Swiss frontier, and the grinding, interminable war of the
trenches began. Vast human wave assaults into the teeth of cannons
and machine guns annihilated much of a generation.

In 1916, more than 700,000 men on both sides died in the battle of
Verdun, and in 20 weeks of combat on the Somme river, 1.2 million
young men were slaughtered. Some 330,000 soliders were killed in
three years along the road known as the Chemin des Dames, leading to
mutinies in the French army against the wasteful loss of life.

Elsewhere, the allied expedition to gain control of the Dardanelles
straits, the principal access to Russia’s Black Sea coast, ended in
disastrous defeat by the Ottoman empire, and the loss of 260,000 men
killed or missing.

But the Russians pushed the Ottomans back in the Caucasus and in
Armenia and the British, exploiting Arab aspirations for
independence, managed to capture both Baghdad and Jerusalem from the
Ottoman empire.

In 1918, the allied armies, reinforced in men and supplies by the
United States, defeated the Germans at the Battle of the Marne.
Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman empire and Bulgaria suffered crushing
defeats and signed armistice agreements in September and October.

The guns officially fell silent on the eleventh hour of the eleventh
day of the eleventh month of 1918 when Germany signed the armistice
at Rethondes, near Compiegne, France.

The map of Europe was totally refashioned by the war. The peace
treaties, principally the Versailles treaty of June 28, 1919 on the
fith anniversary of the Sarajevo assassination, imposed severe
territorial, military and economic clauses on the vanquished. Germany
lost one seventh of its territory and one tenth of its population.

The conflict resulted in the collapse of four empires —
Austro-Hungarian, German, Ottoman and Russian — and brought into
being new states like Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia.

The war also marked the end of European dominance in the political,
economic and military spheres, and created a new world order in which
the United States and Japan emerged as global powers.

The “Great War” was to have been the war to end all wars — and it
gave birth to a League of Nations that was intended to assure world
peace.

But the shock of a conflict that introduced the use of poison gas,
submarines, tanks, and aerial bombardment of civilians was not
sufficient to prevent the outbreak of a second world war 20 years
later that swallowed up five times as many victims.

Refugees’ late son lives on in portrait

The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY)
July 19, 2004 Monday Final Edition

REFUGEES’ LATE SON LIVES ON IN PORTRAIT;
WORKING FROM TINY SNAPSHOT, HAMILTON ARTIST MEMORIALIZES TODDLER WHO
DIED IN RUSSIA.

By Mike Fish Staff writer

Grigoriy and Yelena Bagiryan celebrated their daughter Marya’s fifth
birthday Saturday with gifts and a taste of cake.

But the Bagiryans, refugees from Russia who have lived in Syracuse
almost a year, also received a special gift of their own, one that
gave them a taste of what it feels like to live in a community where
they are loved and welcome.

Susan Naef, chair of the Social Justice Committee of St. Mary’s
Church in Hamilton, one of three churches that have taken the
Bagiryan family under their wings, presented Grigoriy and Yelena with
a portrait of their son, Nerses, who was 18 months old when he died
in an accident in their Moscow home in October 2002.

The portrait, done free by artist Rosita Dickson, of Hamilton, now
supplements their only photo of Nerses, one that’s about the size of
a quarter and fits in a refrigerator magnet in their kitchen on Park
Street.

“I am very thankful,” Yelena said in Russian through an interpreter,
Alex Sukhorukov.

The Bagiryan family, which includes six children and Grigoriy’s
mother, Vartush, came to Syracuse in September. The family is
sponsored by three churches: St. Mary’s in Hamilton, Our Lady of
Lourdes in Syracuse and St. Joan of Arc in Morrisville.

With considerable help from Catholic Charities and others, the
support group has provided furnishings, bicycles for the children, a
washer and dryer, a computer, a sewing machine, many Christmas gifts,
lots of food supplies and dinners, and help with the monthly rent,
when needed.

And St. Mary’s parishioners recently decided to cover the $5,000
travel bill the family still owes the U.S. government, Naef said. The
church so far has paid about four monthly installments of about $100
against that bill, she said.

Nerses died when he stuck his hand in an electrical outlet, and his
parents were able to visit his grave every day in Moscow. But in
Syracuse, their only reminder – until Saturday – was the tiny photo
on the kitchen fridge.

The family several months ago asked Naef for a few favors, including
a portrait of their late son.

Dickson, who is well-known for her pastel portraits, saw a photocopy
of the boy’s snapshot and volunteered to do his portrait.

“Rosita saw the snapshot copy and cried,” Naef said. “She did it from
the heart.”

Lauri Tomberlin, who owns a frame shop in Hamilton next door to
Dickson’s store, agreed to frame the portrait at no cost.

Grigoriy was from Azerbaijan, and when the Soviet empire crumbled and
Azerbaijan regained its independence, Armenian Christians like him
were no longer welcome there, Naef said. The family was forced to go
to Moscow, but because of their ethnic background, they were treated
poorly there, too, and sought refuge in the United States.

Speaking through the interpreter, Yelena said the family is happy to
be out of Moscow, where they were treated like third-class citizens
and lived in a neighborhood full of criminals. Her children, she
said, “may have a future here.”

In Russia, their children’s future looked bleak.

Yelena told one story describing the contrast between life in Moscow
and life in Syracuse.

In Russia, authorities thought their son, Armen, was mentally ill and
treated him that way.

When the family moved to Syracuse, doctors quickly discovered there
was hardly anything wrong. Armen, now 7, simply had a hearing
problem. He now has a hearing aid, and everything is fine.

“He acts so much better here,” his mother said.