Ottawa: Turks mark grim day

The Ottawa Sun
August 28, 2004 Saturday Final Edition

TURKS MARK GRIM DAY

BY LAURA CZEKAJ, OTTAWA SUN

It had all the makings of a funeral complete with remembrance and
prayers for the dead.

But yesterday’s ceremony marking the anniversary of Col. Atilla
Altikat’s assassination on Aug. 27, 1982, at the hands of Armenian
extremists was also an opportunity for Turkish Canadians to look to
the future — a future free of terrorism.

“The good name of Canada was bloodied by Armenian terrorism and the
culprits are still free to this day,” said Prof. Ozay Mehmet, a
member of the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations. “We would
like to see justice done.”

Altikat was driving to work at the Turkish Embassy when he stopped
for a red light at the intersection of the Ottawa River Pkwy. and
Island Park Dr. A man approached the car and shot him dead before
escaping into the nearby bushes.

The killer has never been caught.

Shortly after the murder, the Justice Commandos of the Armenian
Genocide claimed responsibility for the killing.

World leaders must make the fight against terrorism a top priority,
Mehmet said yesterday.

‘DID NOT DIE IN VAIN’

“However, Altikat did not die in vain,” he said. “His sacrifice has
become a symbol of unity and strength for Canadians of Turkish
origin.”

A crowd of about 150 gathered at the intersection where Altikat was
gunned down 22 years ago to pay their respects and demonstrate their
support for putting an end to terrorist acts.

Russia proposes OSCE reform

RIA Novosti, Russia
Aug 25 2004

RUSSIA PROPOSES OSCE REFORM

MOSCOW, August 25 (RIA Novosti) — Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
informed President Vladimir Putin of an address to the OSCE being
drafted by concerned countries.

According to Lavrov, this action is to bring about “constructive
changes,” aimed at making the organization more effective. He said
the issue of OSCE reform would be on the agenda of a summit meeting
between Russia, France and Germany at the end of August in Vladimir
Putin’s residence in Sochi.

Vremya Novostei reported that the concerned countries that the
foreign minister spoke on behalf of, were 9 out of the 11 CIS
countries (Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan). Georgia, Azerbaijan and
Moldova did not join the statement adopted on August 3 during an
informal CIS summit in Moscow, in which unexpectedly tough criticism
was directed at the OSCE for having “failed to adapt itself to the
demands of the changing world and ensure effective settlement of
security and cooperation issues in the Euro-Atlantic area.”

According to Vremya Novostei, even if Jacques Chirac and Gerhard
Schroeder agree in Sochi with the arguments Putin advanced in favor
of reforming the OSCE, the process will be draw out, as the bulky
55-member country organization, in which decisions are made by
consensus, is incapable of rapidly changing.

Armenian-Russian planned exercises started

ArmenPress
Aug 25 2004

ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN PLANNED EXERCISES STARTED

YEREVAN, AUGUST 25, ARMENPRESS: Joint Armenian-Russian planned
exercises started yesterday in Armenian Marshal Baghramian training
ground which will last until Aug 27, Seiran Shahsuvarian, Armenian
defense ministry press secretary told Armenpress. Servicemen from the
102nd Russian military base stationed in Gyumri are taking part in
the exercises from the Russian side. Different branches of heavy
armed forces including fighting and assault aircraft and artillery
will be involved in the exercises. Armenia will come up with enhanced
motorized rifle regiment. Reporters accredited at the ministry of
defense will also participate in summing up of results.
Armenian-Russian planned military games were held in September,
last year. President and chief of armed forces Robert Kocharian,
prime minister Andranik Margarian, government officials, Armenian
chief of staff of armed forces, General-Colonel Michael Harutunian,
military attaches accredited in Armenian embassies participated in
the closing ceremony. Last year the games were described as
“successful and positive.”

Armenian president to visit Poland

Armenian president to visit Poland

PAP news agency, Warsaw
24 Aug 04

Warsaw, 24 August : The president of the Republic of Armenia, Robert
Kocharyan, will pay an official visit to Poland on 5-7 September, the
Presidential Chancellery reported on Tuesday 24 August .

The Armenian president, who has been invited to visit Poland by
President Aleksander Kwasniewski, will be accompanied by his wife.

Khatami stresses Tehran, Baku joint will to expand ties

Khatami stresses Tehran, Baku joint will to expand ties

IRNA web site, Tehran
7 Aug 04

Baku, 7 August: President Mohammad Khatami here Friday night 6 August
stressed the firm will of Iranian and Azeri officials to expand ties
and promote cooperation in various areas.

During a meeting with Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, the
president referred to the economic, scientific and technical
collaboration and mutual investments of the two countries as the most
important areas of cooperation.

He also pointed to other areas for potential cooperation, saying Iran
is ready to exchange university instructors with Azerbaijan.

Khatami also pointed to the countries’ mutual investments in recent
years in their oil, gas, petrochemical and mineral sectors as well as
the measures taken to strengthen bilateral relations, and said this
very fruitful cooperation ca n be extended to the areas of generating
electricity and building dams as well as power plants.

He urged faster implementation of agreements already signed by Tehran
and Baku to their mutual benefit as well as those of regional
countries.

Mammadyarov described the current visit of the Iranian president to
his country as a turning point in bilateral relations.

He also recalled the historical ties between the two states and
stressed his country’s will to strengthen ties with Iran in all areas.

In a separate meeting with the Azeri Minister of Economic Development
Farhad Aliyev on the same day (Friday), Khatami underlined the
importance of increasing bilateral cooperation in the economic field.

He pointed to IT, ICT, communications, oil, gas and petrochemicals as
areas where the two countries can cooperate profitably.

Aliyev, noting the increasing volume of trade exchanges between the
two countries, acknowledged the deepening ties between the two
countries and said his country was keen to make Iran a transit route
for exports of its crude oil.

President Khatami, heading a high-ranking political and economic
delegation, arrived in Azerbaijan Republic’s capital of Baku on
Thursday for a three-day visit upon the official invitation of his
Azeri counterpart, Ilham Aliyev.

Talks between the two presidents is expected to conclude in the
issuance of separate joint statements on political subjects,
particularly the issue of the Caspian Sea.

The president and his entourage will leave Baku for Tehran on Saturday
after visiting the historical city of Ganja and paying tribute to the
12th century prominent Iranian poet Nezami Ganjavi, who is buried in
the city, and the ancient Shah Esma’il Mosque.

The Azerbaijan Republic is situated in eastern Transcaucasia on the
western coast of the Caspian Sea. To the south, it is bounded by Iran,
to the west by Armenia, to the northwest by Georgia, and to the north
by the Russian Republic of Dagestan.

BAKU: Iranian Leader to Unveil New Karabakh Proposals – Azeri Paper

IRANIAN LEADER TO UNVEIL NEW KARABAKH PROPOSALS – AZERI PAPER

Ayna, Baku
4 Aug 04

During the official visit to Azerbaijan by Iranian President Mohammad
Khatami, the Iranian government is expected to present Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev with its new proposal on a solution to the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

According to information from diplomatic sources, Iran has drafted a
new plan and wants the talks to be held between Ankara, Tehran, Baku
and Yerevan. Details of the plan are kept secret.

At present, Iran wants to use the uncertainty surrounding the
settlement to the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict to get what it has long
been waiting for. Iran has never come to terms with being “sidelined”
from the solution to the conflict and keeps reminding us of that.

During the recent visit to Iran by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, the sides discussed joint mediation in regional conflicts,
Iranian sources have reported. Therefore, it is noteworthy that Iran
has intensified its efforts with regard to the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict. During a meeting with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov, his Iranian counterpart Kamal Kharrazi said that Iran is
ready to help settle the Karabakh conflict. Kharrazi said that a
strong Azerbaijan is of special importance to Iran in this sensitive
region.

In the run-up to his visit to Azerbaijan, Khatami has made a new
statement. He said that Iran supports Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity and deems it essential that the occupied territories be
liberated peacefully. “Iran will do its best to resolve the conflict,”
he said.

(Passage omitted: Visit to Iran by Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan)

Political observers are dubious about Iran’s package of proposals on
the Karabakh conflict.

Iran’s efforts will be in vain, political analyst Zardust Alizada told
Ayna newspaper in an interview. Iran has limited ability to resolve
the conflict. “Iran’s clout in the region is not that strong. The
Iranian government’s mediatory efforts once ended in a
disaster. During the 1992 talks in Tehran, the Armenians, in tandem
with the Russians, invaded Susa. In doing so, Russia let Iran know
that it should not be involved in this issue.”

At present, the OSCE is mediating the talks, and Iran is not an OSCE
member. On the other hand, the military and economic potential of
Armenia and Azerbaijan is not linked with Iran, Alizada said.

Talking about the visit’s influence on mutual relations, Alizada
predicted that during the expected meeting, the two president will
resolve some issues which have yet to be agreed on.

The ex-foreign minister of Azerbaijan, Tofiq Zulfuqarov, told Ayna
that several years ago Iran asked the OSCE Minsk Group to include it
in the talks. “The Minsk Group then suggested that Iran be informed
about the developments in the talks process. To this end, Iran
appointed a special envoy who acts together with the Minsk Group.”
These contacts still remain, but there has been no specific result so
far, Zulfuqarov said.

ANC of Wisconsin Endorses Senator Russ Feingold

Armenian National Committee of Wisconsin
4100 N. Newman Road
Racine, WI 53406
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
August 4, 2004
For Immediate Release

Contact: A. Zohrab Khaligian
[email protected]

ANC OF WISCONSIN ENDORSES SENATOR RUSS FEINGOLD

RACINE, WI–The Armenian National Committee (ANC) of Wisconsin is proud to
announce their endorsement of Senator Russell D. Feingold (D-WI) for
reelection to the United States Senate.

“In his two terms in office, Senator Feingold has demonstrated to be a
strong advocate of Armenian-American issues,” stated ANC of Wisconsin
representative Zohrab Khaligian, “which is evident by his support of many
Armenian-related initiatives before the local Armenian community even
contacts him.”

“Additionally, Senator Feingold’s offices in Washington, DC and Wisconsin
maintain regular contact with the Armenian National Committee to ensure the
Senators’ continued support of Armenian-American initiatives,” continued
Khaligian.

The following is a brief look at Senator Feingold’s recent record on
Armenian issues:

* On June 12, 2003, he co-sponsored S.Res.164, which marks the 15th
anniversary of the US implementation of UN Genocide Convention, and calls on
the United States to learn from the lessons of past genocides–including the
Holocaust and the Armenian, Cambodian and Rwandan genocides–to prevent
future atrocities.

* On January 27, 2004, Senator Feingold joined Senators Barbara Boxer
(D-CA), George Allen (R-VA), Jon Corzine (D-NJ), John Kerry (D-MA), and Paul
Sarbanes (D-MD) in co-signing a letter encouraging President Bush to renew
his call for Turkey to immediately lift its decade-long blockade of Armenia.
This letter was sent in anticipation of a meeting at the White House between
President George W. Bush and visiting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.

* On April 20, 2004, Senator Feingold sent a statement to be read at the
commemoration of the Armenian Genocide at the Wisconsin State Capitol. This
year’s statement read:

“Today, we remember the Armenian men, women and children who lost their
lives during the Armenian genocide. 89 years ago between 1915 and 1923, the
Ottoman Empire undertook a policy to isolate, exile and eliminate the
Armenian population. One and a half million Armenians were systematically
murdered in this campaign. Hundreds of thousands more were forced to flee
their homes.

The Armenian genocide must not be denied or forgotten. We have an
obligation to remember and remind others of the horror that occurred. As
seen by the killings in Bosnia, Kosovo and Rwanda over the past decade,
targeting people for their ethnicity is still a frequent occurrence. Its
repetition demands that we speak out and inform others in order to prevent
future atrocities . . .”

* On April 23, 2004, Senator Feingold joined 21 of his Senate colleagues in
cosigning a letter to the President Bush, which urged him to characterize
the Armenian Genocide as “genocide” in his annual commemorative statement.

* On April 27, 2004, Senator Feingold submitted a statement to the United
States Senate in commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. This year’s
statement read:

“People around the world are joining together to solemnly remember and honor
the men, women and children who perished in the Armenian genocide. 89 years
ago, one and a half million Armenians were systematically massacred at the
hands of the Ottoman Empire . . .

Throughout the 20th century, the international community failed to acts as
governments in Germany, Yugoslavia and Rwanda attempted to methodically
eliminate people because of their religion and ethnicity. Minority groups
were abandoned by the international community in each instance to be
overwhelmed by violence and despair. In Armenia, as in Rwanda and the
Holocaust, the perpetrating governments scapegoated their minority groups
for the difficulties they faced as societies. They justified their
campaigns of hatred with political and economic reasons in an attempt to
rationalize their depravity.

This is why we must remember the Armenian genocide. To forget it is to
enable more genocides and ethnic cleansing to occur . . .

In the shadow of the Holocaust, in 1948, the United Nations adopted the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide . . .
The Convention required its parties to create domestic legislation to hold
perpetrators of genocide accountable for their actions and to place these
perpetrators before domestic courts or international tribunals.

The international community has a long way to go in punishing and
especially, preventing genocide. But we have made the first steps. As we
move forward, we must learn the lessons of Armenia’s genocide. Can we
recognize the rhetorical veils of murderous leaders, thrown up to disguise
the agenda at hand? Have we, the international community, learned that we
must not stand by, paralyzed, as horrors occur, but to work collectively to
prevent and stop genocides from occurring? We owe the victims of the
Armenian genocide this commitment.”

“We are truly fortunate to be represented by Senator Feingold and we
encourage every Wisconsin Armenian American to support the Senator so he may
continue to be our advocate in Washington,” concluded Khaligian.

Russ Feingold began his political career in 1982, when at the age of 29 he
was elected to the Wisconsin State Senate representing the 27th District.
In 1992, after two successful reelection campaigns for State Senate,
Feingold defeated two-term incumbent Senator Robert Kasten to represent
Wisconsin in the United States Senate. Currently he is vying for his third
term in the US Senate.

The Armenian National Committee is the largest Armenian American grassroots
political organization in Wisconsin and nationwide. The ANC actively
advances a broad range of issues of concern to the Armenian American
community.

www.anca.org

CENN in Armenia Bi-Annual Progress Report, Summer 2004

Yerevan, July 30, 2004

Re: Bi-Annual Progress Report, Summer 2004

Dear friends, active NGOs, concerned businesses, and government
agencies:

We are sending this letter to inform you of CENN’s current activities in
Armenia. We are sending an official progress report twice a year to
keep all interested parties informed of CENN activities with a
localized, specific focus on development in Armenia. We are pleased and
excited to report our activities since the opening of our Yerevan office
in March in the Environmental Conservation Research Center (ECRC) at the
American University of Armenia (AUA):

Environmental Panel Discussions at the American University of Armenia
(AUA)

CENN and ECRC have joined to create a series of Environmental Panel
Discussions to present urgent environmental issues and to allow for
public discussion with the panel experts. The first panel discussion
was held in April regarding solid waste management, and the second was
held in July regarding water supply and water quality in Armenia.
Building upon the interest and success of the first two, CENN plans to
continue this program with ECRC indefinitely. Before each event an
invitation will be sent out and the media will be invited. Future
potential topics include deforestation from the regional viewpoint, the
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) in the South Caucasus, and current
agricultural practices in Armenia.

Pre-training Seminar on the Hazards of Metzamor and Emergency Response

CENN, in partnership with Muskee alum Edward Safaryan, has recently
received a grant to present a seminar to leaders from throughout the
regions on the environmental health risks of living near a nuclear power
plant, with a special focus on the particular problems of the Metzamor
plant. The goal of the seminar will be to pre-train these leaders and
to empower them to train their communities to be aware of the issues, to
know the best ways to handle the risks, and to feel more involved in
public affairs regarding the plant. The keynote speaker will be Olga
Denyshchyk, Executive Director of the Ukrainian NGO `Mama-86,’ an
organization devoted to the issues affecting children born after the
Chernobyl accident in 1986.

We are currently seeking 30-40 participants from throughout the regions.
If you know of any NGOs or individuals who may be interested, please
have them contact [email protected]. The seminar will be held in
October.

Kanach Janabarh Foundation
CENN in Armenia has been working directly with other NGOs in the
formation of an Environmental Media Coalition, which has been named
`Kanach Janabarh,’ or `Green Paths Foundation.’ The group has recently
become a project of the Kanach Foundation, and will be launching its
website as well as its first environmental campaign shortly. The latter
offers an alternative to plastic bags, using canvas bags instead.

Kanach Janabarh Foundation plans to use media tools such as television,
radio, and print ads as well as the internet to advertise environmental
problems in Armenia and to encourage and foster public awareness on
these issues. The first issue chosen was waste management, and will
focus on individual behavior patterns that can be modified to be more
sustainable and environmentally-friendly. We are currently seeking
funding for this project, and new partners are always welcome. You can
contact [email protected] or alternatively
[email protected] for more information.

Expect an announcement of the Kanach Janabarh website and further
activities soon!

CENN in Armenia Website

In recognition of the rapidly expanding nature of the CENN Armenia
office, it was decided to create a website specifically devoted to the
Armenian projects of CENN. Here will be hosted many interactive
activities of CENN, such as the internship program for local university
students and the environmental panel discussions presented in
partnership with the Environmental Conservation and Research Center
(ECRC) at AUA. This website is still under construction but should be
active within the next few months.

CENN in the future

In addition to the projects listed above currently being implemented,
future projects include the Caucasus Explorer Video Magazine project in
partnership with Bars Media Documentary Film Studio in Yerevan
(described in the last Bi-Annual progress report), an internship program
in the environmental field for local university students, a student
exchange program between Georgian , Armenian and Azeri students, and a
newsletter in each Caucasus country presenting both national and
regional environmental issues. If you have any ideas or would like to
collaborate with CENN on a project, please contact us at
[email protected]!

We look forward to hearing from you!

Best wishes,

Ursula Kazarian – CENN Armenia Country Director
[email protected]

Irina Kitiashvili – CENN Regional Coordinator
[email protected]


*******************************************
CENN INFO
Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)

Tel: ++995 32 92 39 46
Fax: ++995 32 92 39 47
E-mail: [email protected]
URL:

www.cenn.org

Trip teaches lesson on jobs

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
August 1, 2004 Sunday Home Edition

Trip teaches lesson on jobs;
CEO: Offshoring costly, arduous

by TAMMY JOYNER

Sometimes the answer is right in your own back yard.

Dustin Crane traveled tens of thousands of miles from home to learn
that business lesson.

The Alpharetta executive had a decision to make: Set up shop overseas
or team up with an overseas company. Either way, clients of his
Alpharetta technology firm were pressuring him to cut costs by
sending his company’s work to overseas software developers and
programmers.

“This offshoring juggernaut wasn’t going to let up,” said Crane, 45,
who founded Aelera Corp. 10 years ago. “We said we can’t ignore it.
The pressure’s going to be so great, we better have a solution
available.”

Crane traveled to three countries to get a firsthand look at the
overseas production craze.

He had every intention of setting up shop abroad, perhaps in India
first, followed by expansion to China. Many businesses have touted
offshoring as the cheapest way to go when faced with global
competition. For some industries and in certain circumstances, it is
a money-saver.

What Crane found, though, was a lot of hidden costs and problems not
typically associated with overseas outsourcing.

“I was constantly going, ‘My gosh, this is more costly [than I’d
expected],’ ” Crane said.

It wasn’t just the unexpected extra financial costs. Sending work
overseas can be culturally and linguistically challenging, and
workers there face harsh living and working conditions.

Crane says some U.S. tech companies have to deal with on-the-job
communication mix-ups. It’s not unusual for overseas information
technology projects to arrive stateside and have to be recoded by
American workers.

“When we started adding up all of the risk factors associated with
this offshoring,” Crane said, it didn’t pay off.

So instead of sending work abroad, Aelera recently announced it will
create 250 jobs in Savannah and Fitzgerald, where software
developers, programmers and support staff will design systems that
help Aelera clients’ customers order goods and services online,
schedule appointments and meet other technological needs.

Aelera isn’t alone in rethinking the merits of outsourcing. Last
week, Delta Air Lines announced it had dropped one of three
offshoring contracts that supply call-center services overseas.

“We’re not touting this as a political move or to save U.S. jobs,”
said Crane. “This just makes business sense.”

A survey on outsourcing recently done by Aelera mirrored Crane’s
views. The survey of 216 top-level U.S. executives indicated that
half of the respondents that had overseas projects were likely to
bring the work back to the United States. The survey found the
companies didn’t realize the cost savings they had expected.

Many had expected 30 percent to 40 percent in savings by going
overseas, but the average savings were about 20 percent. One in 10
didn’t see any savings at all. One in five of the information
technology projects sent overseas ultimately failed. The biggest
culprits: poor transfer of knowledge, work quality and low morale
among their U.S. work force, which led to poor productivity overall.

The overseas outsourcing boom is working on two cyclinders. It’s
providing U.S. firms with low-cost workers and creating a level of
prosperity for many overseas workers who, in turn, are taking
advantage of their new way of life.

The surge in technology outsourcing, for one, has created a middle
class with middle-class appetites for better homes and cars and
paychecks. These sought-after workers are demanding and getting
better salaries. And that’s creating increased labor costs for U.S.
firms.

“A lot of people outsource because they think it’s cheaper,” said
Tony Greenberg, chief executive of RampRate Sourcing Advisors. “But
it’s not. They’re not looking at the hard costs or soft costs.”

Nine-month odyssey

Crane’s story goes beyond surveys and data. It began almost two years
ago and culminated with a nine-month journey through Armenia, China
and India.

He made the customary plant visits and met with officials. But he
preferred to venture off the beaten path, taking trains and cabs and
rental cars, as opposed to air-conditioned limos.

He kept a diary of his journey and often traveled in cargo pants,
tennis shoes and a Braves T-shirt. He ducked into shops and roadside
stands. He talked to street vendors, visited libraries and
universities, and talked to students. He took in the markets where
locals bartered for goods, all to get a feel for how the average
worker lives and works.

“This wasn’t a cursory blow-through as a CEO or executive,” Crane
said. “I wanted to go experience what these countries were. I didn’t
want to go as a CEO. I wanted to get my fingernails dirty.”

He found that outsourcing may work for companies with call centers
abroad, but not for a $10 million-a-year information technology firm
like Aelera. Not for programmers and developers who depend on
teamwork, business nuances and a stress-free work environment to
create software systems.

“It’s one thing to offshore call-center work where transactions last
one to five minutes and repeat 20 times an hour,” Crane said. “It’s
different to offshore a piece of work that takes two to three months
to master and maintain that momentum and productivity.”

The company takes such pains to create a conducive work environment
that once, when a database administrator was “getting bogged down” by
his commute from Lawrenceville to Alpharetta, Aelera paid to move him
and his family closer to work.

“That improved his family life and productivity,” Crane said. “That’s
what we’re focused on.”

Creating that kind of atmosphere abroad would be nearly impossible,
considering what Crane saw:

* Pollution was so thick in one Chinese town that he had trouble
breathing. High-rises seem to vanish behind towers of brown clouds.

“I felt like I was slowly suffocating. I thought, ‘This is horrible.
People have to live in this environment.’ ”

* Office space in India turned out to be more expensive in some cases
than some parts of Atlanta, and “the facilities weren’t nearly as
good.”

* Traffic jams were so bad that during one cab ride in the Indian
city of Mumbai (formerly Bombay), the driver got out, ate dinner and
returned to the taxi, which was still in the same spot where he left
it because traffic hadn’t budged. Crane was still sitting waiting
inside. To combat traffic, some companies have set up bus services to
get employees to work.

* Crane found out-of-reach costs among the so-called cost savings
touted by Armenians. When Crane asked about installing a DSL line, he
was told it would cost $5,000 a month for the service that is
normally $50 in the States.

* Workers were so jammed into cubicles that they had to tuck in their
elbows to keep from bumping each other. During a demonstration at
another firm, the presentation was interrupted by technical glitches.
At one point, Crane saw a cockroach scamper across the keyboard.

“I’m thinking to myself, ‘There’s more than one kind of bug here,’ ”
Crane said.

At times, the experience was unsettling, bringing Crane’s Western
ways face-to-face with worlds where prosperity often collided with
poverty. That was the case when he landed at the airport in Mumbai.

“It was fourth world, almost fifth world” in its appearance, he
recalled.

The shuttle waiting to take him to his hotel was an air-conditioned
BMW 740i. A minute earlier, he said “three beggars [are] saying ‘Give
me a penny.’ It’s truly a country of contrast.”

On the ride to the hotel, Crane said he couldn’t help but think:
“This opulence of the moment could feed 20 or 30 people. It didn’t
make me feel comfortable.”

Journey’s beginning

Crane’s nine-month process of elimination began in Yerevan, Armenia,
a city of about 1.25 million people.

Armenia is my first stop. I landed at midnight shocked at the dearth
of city lights below. The pilot announced, ‘If this is your first
time in Yerevan, be aware that the landing will be rough due to the
condition of the runway.’ … When the runway lights did not come on
in time, he did an abrupt fly-around for a second try. This former
republic of the Soviet Union still shows signs of its time behind the
Iron Curtain. The drive to the hotel was punctuated with random
police inspections. … It is clear the city is in need of much more
commerce. With a vibrant economy, it would be a lovely place, but
right now it is very run-down.

Crane found the city “wasn’t as alive and dynamic as we are here.”

And there weren’t enough resources, namely qualified students and/or
qualified software developers, Crane said. Universities there turn
out roughly 1,000 to 2,000 such workers a year, vs. 300,000 to
400,000 in India, Crane said.

“I liked Armenia and its people. [But] I didn’t want to bet my
business on it.”

Guangzhou, China. I tried to talk to as many [software] developers as
I could to determine both their language and skill levels. These
young people had worked hard at honing their English, but still
lacked the ability to field questions and comprehend the directions
the questions were heading … I see potential issues with knowledge
transfer, communications, business culture differences and living
conditions.

Heading by train into the Chinese seaport city of Guangzhou
(pronounced GWAN-JOW and formerly called Canton), Crane rode straight
into a huge brown cloud of pollution.

Beyond the smog, Crane was struck by how few people had a real grasp
of English, a key requirement for working with complex technology
projects.

“When you go offshore, it’s all about communication when it comes to
software. This is not paint by number,” said Crane, who speaks some
Cantonese. “You need to be able to define the problems so you can
define the solutions. Although a few were exceptional, [overall] they
were lacking in English.”

Crane’s assessment of China?

“China is going to be the place in the next 10 years. But they’re not
developed to the point of [being] ready for prime time now.”

Mumbai, Hyderabad and Bangalore, India. Suds will be my travel guide.
We have been in and out of technology parks, observing and talking to
developers. Seems like India is in the middle of their tech bubble.
People are willing to switch jobs for an extra quarter an hour. The
conditions appear to be unstable, maybe unsustainable.

India, in some ways, is becoming a victim of its emerging success,
Crane said.

The most cosmopolitan of the three cities Crane visited was
Bangalore, where workers were technologically skilled, he said.
Business is conducted in English, and the culture is steeped in
democracy. But it still had its own set of problems, starting with a
10 1/2-hour time difference.

The outsourcing and technology boom has created a middle class in
places like Bangalore, but many of the towns haven’t kept pace with
the changes. Workers are making more money. In turn, they’re
demanding — and getting — the conveniences that go along with
being middle class. There are traffic jams at 1 a.m.

“One thing India touts [is] labor rates are low,” Crane said. “What
we discovered there was a lot of additional costs.”

An engineer from a top tech university in India commands about
$10,000 a year in salary. An Indian software developer with a
master’s degree from a university in India would get about $50,000 a
year.

A U.S. engineer who has a bachelor’s degree commands about $60,000 to
$70,000 a year. An American software developer with a master’s would
get $70,000 to $80,000 a year on average. In Atlanta, the going rate
is about $70,000 for an engineer with a bachelor’s.

“If you look at the [labor] rates you could be intoxicated by the
savings,” Crane admits. “But if you looked at the entire cost …
clearly there’s a very good alternative. Many large companies say
they have no choice. They have to go offshore. We want them to hear
loud and clear that there is [an alternative].”

Aelera’s decision to stay in Georgia speaks to another trend.
Spherion Corp., a staffing company that runs call centers across
North America, said it’s seeing companies looking to smaller U.S.
markets to fulfill customer service needs instead of big cities or
overseas.

“Small American markets are ideal for companies to locate their call
centers because they offer lower-cost labor, available real estate
and attractive incentives from local and state governments,” said
Robert Morgan, president of employment solutions at Spherion Corp.
“In exchange, the town gets a thriving new business that feeds the
local economy and lowers unemployment.”