Armenia sets no prelim terms for opening borders with Turkey

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 6, 2004 Tuesday 3:38 PM Eastern Time

Armenia sets no prelim terms for opening borders with Turkey

By Svetlana Alexandrova, Alexandra Urusova

MOSCOW

Armenia “has set no preliminary terms for opening its borders with
Turkey. Our borders are open,” Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan said on Tuesday. Oskanyan is on an official visit in Moscow.

“It is not Armenia that should open the borders, they are open from
our side,” he stressed. According to Oskanyan, Yerevan would like to
have its relations with Istanbul “restored without any preliminary
terms.”

“We wish Turkey would open the borders from its side,” the Armenian
foreign minister concluded.

World Armenian Congress worried over church destruction

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 6, 2004 Tuesday 3:38 PM Eastern Time

World Armenian Congress worried over church destruction

MOSCOW

The World Armenian Congress has expressed concern over the condition
of the Akhtamar Saint Cross Church – a unique monument of medieval
Armenian architecture, which is situated in Turkey, on an island in
Lake Van.

The Saint Cross Church was built in 915-921, says a statement of the
World Armenian Congress received by Itar-Tass. It is so much
dilapidated now that “soon only ruins will be left of it.”

The World Armenian Congress urged the Turkish and Armenian
governments to take steps without delay for restoring the Akhtamar
Saint Cross Church and to hold talks with the participation of
international experts from UNESCO for outlining measures to be taken
for restoring this and other Armenian architectural monuments on the
Turkish territory.

FC international committee calls for ratification of adapted CFE

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 5, 2004 Monday

FC international committee calls for ratification of adapted CFE

By Lyudmila Yermakova

MOSCOW

Committee on International Affairs at the Federation Council, the
upper house of parliament, has supported the ratification of the
Conventional Forces in Europe treaty (CFE) and decided to recommend
the house members to ratify the document at a plenary session on July
7.

“The treaty is one of basic elements forming the patterns of European
security and stability,” the committee’s chairman, Mikhail Margelov
said.

“The ratification will enable Russia to keep its military forces in
Ukraine and Armenia,” he said. “The treaty also envisages the
building up of confidence between Russia and NATO and precludes the
covert formation of large-scale forces in Europe.”

Considering the fact that only Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan have
ratified the adapted treaty, the committee members decided to prepare
a letter of address to other 27 signatories urging them to do
likewise.

On Tuesday, July 6, the letter of address will be submitted to the
council of the upper house and on Wednesday, July 7, to the all the
house members for affirmation.

Members of the Committee also called on the Federation Council and
the State Duma, the lower house, “to take steps to consolidating
Russia’s positions in different international organizations,
including in the Council of Europe (CE) and NATO, so as to press for
ratification of the treaty.”

‘Last Day’ is a captivating tale

‘Last Day’ is a captivating tale
By Tamira Surprenant
The Capital Times
July 2,2004

Madison’ s Judith Claire Mitchell spent over six years fine-tuning her
literary debut, “The Last Day of the War,” and the finished product is
definitely worth the labor.

The book is a sweeping saga that revolves around the lives of Yale White and
Dub Hagopian following World War I. White is an 18-year-old Jewish girl from
St. Louis who invents a series of lies about her name, age and religious
background in order to follow Hagopian to Paris in 1918.

Hagopian is a young Armenian-American soldier and a member of a subversive
group, Erinyes, which is seeking vengeance on people who initiated the 1915
Armenian massacres.

After a chance meeting with Hagopian in St. Louis, White, intent on
following her heart, crosses the Atlantic to become a YMCA canteen worker.
She is reunited with Hagopian, and instead of becoming wrapped up in the
throes of a relationship, White becomes immersed in adventures and the
Erinyes’ cause of avenging the Armenian massacre.

The story unfolds amid the proceedings of the Paris Peace Conference, where
Hagopian serves as a translator.

Mitchell, an assistant professor of English in the creative writing program
at the University of Wisconsin, succeeds in weaving a captivating
coming-of-age tale.

No matter how major or minor the roles of her characters, one of Mitchell’s
strengths in “The Last Day of the War” is character development. The
attributes, idiosyncrasies and feelings of major characters, in addition to
unsavory minor characters, are never overlooked.

White, for example, often has a bright-eyed view of her surroundings, but
when circumstances dictate, she switches gears to become serious and can
assist her friends at the drop of a hat.

Mitchell said in a telephone interview that she developed the story after
reading a series of letters written by a friend’s great aunt Wera.

Wera was a volunteer worker at the canteens in France in 1919 and wrote,
according to Mitchell, “frivolous, flirty and silly” letters interspersed
with pieces of bad news. Wera told of meeting an Armenian man whose whole
family was deported during the Armenian massacre – and the inspiration for
“The Last Day of the War” was born.

Mitchell became engrossed in relaying what her characters were going
through, but didn’t want to lose sight of the Armenian massacre. Mitchell
said she sought not to teach a lesson, but to let history unfold through the
eyes of her characters.

“I think you have to approach it through the characters or it becomes about
an event and an issue. I think specificity is important in writing if you
want to talk to people generally,” Mitchell said.

“I didn’t want to write just about the Armenian genocide, although clearly
that is important and it concerns me, but I wanted all people to think about
times in their lives when they’ve been excluded.”

In her role as a writing instructor, Mitchell tells her students that an
author and reader have different tasks. She heeded her own advice when
writing “The Last Day of the War.”

“The author needs to shut down the intellectual part of the brain and let
the characters speak,” said Mitchell. “I always tell my students, ‘Don’t
think about symbolism, metaphors or subtext, just write your story and it
will all arise.’

“One hopes that some wisdom will find its way into the story.”

Mitchell is already at work on her second novel, a project which required
her to take a junior faculty leave from her position at the UW. Mitchell
hopes to have a first draft completed when she returns to classes for the
2005 fall semester, but isn’t concerned with how long the project will take.

“My hope is that I can do it quicker than I did this one, but I don’t want
to breeze through it either,” she said. “I think that time is necessary.”

Mitchell’s initial plan is to write another historical novel set between
World Wars I and II.

“I have an idea, and one thing I’m going to do during my leave is probably
go to the place where I think the novel is going to take place – which is
something I wasn’t able to do with the first book,” Mitchell said.

“The university support will help me do that with the second one and I think
that will make a huge difference in terms of time spent, to actually be in
the place.”

Tamira Surprenant is a sports reporter for The Capital Times. Her e-mail is
[email protected].

Published: 5:30 AM 7/02/04

http://www.madison.com/captimes/books/topic/fiction/77529.php

Mormon microfilming project stirs protests

Press Herald, ME
June 28 2004

Mormon microfilming project stirs protests

By BETTY JESPERSEN, Associated Press

FARMINGTON – Mormon missionaries Donald and Jeanette Christensen have
left their home in Preston, Idaho, to spend the next two years in
Maine putting fragile, aging probate documents onto microfilm. Since
April, the retired couple have spent about eight hours a day in the
Franklin County Courthouse, microfilming more than 6,400 documents
listing the estates and assets of people who died here between 1838
and 1915.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, through its
Genealogical Society of Utah, has long collected names from
government and church documents worldwide to preserve genealogical
records and to add them to its enormous database of names. In return,
host recordkeepers are given a copy of the microfilm.

Mormons place great emphasis on genealogical research so that living
members may undergo baptismal rites on behalf of deceased ancestors,
a practice known as posthumous or “vicarious” baptism.

But the practice has come under fire. In amassing names from town
halls, churches and government files, millions of names not connected
to church members have been collected – from Jewish Holocaust victims
to Catholic popes to 18th-century Russian Orthodox and Armenian
Christians. Millions of those have been baptized as Mormon.

“For them to come in and baptize deceased relatives without the
family’s permission is very unbecoming, is un-American, is illegal
and could lead to a court case. I think it is invading territory that
is private, and unless they get permission from the family, it is
none of their business,” said Rabbi Harry Sky of Temple Beth-El in
Portland.

“If my family had wanted to be baptized, they would have done it
centuries ago. They decided to remain Jewish, so don’t do it to us
now,” Sky said.

THE CHURCH

The genealogical society’s 6 million names on digitized and
microfilmed copies of records from more than 100 countries are stored
in a climate-controlled vault beneath 700 feet of solid granite
outside the church’s headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is
available on certain Web sites – for a fee – or can be seen at
computer banks at Family History Centers in Mormon churches.

“The primary purpose is to preserve vital records worldwide and make
it available to everyone,” said church spokesman Paul Nauta. He says
published reports about the extent of the baptism-by-proxy practice
are overblown.

“Members of the church are encouraged to identify their ancestors as
part of our doctrine because we believe families are eternal and ties
and bonds exist beyond death,” he said.

Nauta said if deceased who are not related to living Mormons have
been baptized, it was done unintentionally by a small number of
overzealous church members out of a caring expression of faith. He
said it was difficult to police all proxy baptisms but regardless, a
change of religion is not forced on anyone.

“If you believe in the doctrine of immortality, those individuals can
accept or reject it in the hereafter just as they would in this
life,” he said.

1995 AGREEMENT

In 1995, the Mormon church came to an agreement with Jewish leaders
that it would stop posthumous baptisms of anyone known to be Jewish.
It also agreed to remove the names from the International
Genealogical Index of about 6 million names if they are presented to
church officials.

According to The New York Times, however, as late as April 2004,
Jewish names were still in the database. Independent researchers have
found lists of Jews killed in the Holocaust that had been extracted
from memorial books, Jewish notables including Anne Frank, Albert
Einstein, Theodore Herzl – the founder of Zionism – as well as Roman
Catholic popes and saints, and members of Armenian Christian and
Russian Orthodox parish churches in Europe.

The Catholic Church does not recognize the validity of Mormon
baptisms, but the problem is that it constitutes a denial of the
baptism that already has taken place, the Rev. Ronald Roberson,
associate director of the Secretariat for Ecumenical and
Interreligious Affairs of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in
Washington, told the Associated Press in January.

But he understood that people “certainly have reason to be upset,” he
said.

In Maine, many small county probate offices still have paper files of
the assets and estates of the deceased. According to the
Christensens, each has been contacted by a Mormon volunteer with the
offer of free microfilming. The church just completed Oxford County’s
documents, and Kennebec County’s were done several years ago, but
Somerset and Cumberland counties maintain their own microfilm
records, according to probate court officials.

In Cumberland County, the busiest probate office north of Boston with
2,000 cases a year, Probate Register Alfred E. Piombino said he had
been contacted by different Mormon couples three times in the past 15
months with requests to make duplicates of his originals. He told
them there would be a fee, as for any member of the public, and they
never came back.

“I did not think the taxpayers would be pleased if we allowed a
religious group to come in and make carte blanche duplicates of all
our microfilm records for their own purposes,” he said.

Piombino said as a custodian of public records, he feels that if he
allowed one group to have free access, he would have to allow all
users the same privilege. Probate clients include abstract companies,
genealogical research companies, lawyers and private detectives as
well as individuals.

RECORDS PRESERVED

The Christensens have temporarily moved into an apartment in Wilton
while they work at the Franklin County courthouse until the task is
done. “So far, we have gone through 133,000 pieces of paper here and
are about one-third through,” Jeanette Christensen said.

“We are going to every state and every place where there are people,”
said Donald Christensen.

Jeanette Christensen said she has been told not to discuss the
church’s religious use of the names.

Franklin County Register of Probate Joyce Morton said the microfilm
offer means she can finally preserve her records, some so brittle
they are turning to dust.

“This is being done at no cost to the taxpayer. If we had to pay to
have it done, we would need a specialist and have a staff person tied
up with the project,” she said.

Probate Judge Richard Morton said the records are public. “Anyone can
come in and use them for any lawful purpose. We are not providing
special access to anyone that we are not providing to anyone else.
And the service we are receiving in return is an extraordinary
savings to the county.”

BAKU: Norwegian PM visits “anti-Turkish” exhibit at Armenia’s invite

Norwegian PM visits “anti-Turkish” exhibition at Armenia’s invitation – Azeri
TV

ANS TV, Baku
24 Jun 04

An Azeri TV station has criticized the Norwegian prime minister and
foreign minister for accepting the Armenian president’s invitation to
an exhibition at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg. The exhibition,
entitled “Fridtjof Nansen and Armenia”, is dedicated to the work of
the Norwegian Nobel prize winner with Armenians in the early 20th
century. An Azeri delegate to the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, Rafael Huseynov, told the TV station: “The books
being exhibited distort the truth and go against historical facts and
lack of bias.” The following is the text of the report by Azerbaijani
TV station ANS on 24 June:

[Presenter] We are going back to Strasbourg to speak about [Armenian
President] Robert Kocharyan’s visit. Proud of his role in the
occupation of Nagornyy Karabakh and other regions of Azerbaijan,
Robert Kocharyan met the Norwegian prime minister, the Norwegian prime
minister exactly.

[Correspondent over Kocharyan’s speech at the Council of Europe]
Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has met Norwegian Prime Minister
Kjell Magne Bondevik in Strasbourg. What is intriguing is that the
Norwegian prime minister came to Strasbourg at the invitation of
official Yerevan to attend the opening of an exhibition titled
“Fridtjof Nansen and Armenia” at the PACE [Parliamentary Assembly of
the Council of Europe] building.

Who is Fridtjof Nansen? A Nobel Prize winner and public figure from
Norway, who devoted part of his activities to propaganda on behalf of
Armenia and the Armenians. From the 1920s, he was a big partner and
supporter of the Armenians. He even toured the world alleging that
acts of genocide were carried out against the Armenians by the Turks
and raised funds for the Armenians.

Alleging that the Turks carried out genocide against the Armenians,
Nansen’s books extensively propagate hatred for Turks. There is also a
monument erected in Armenia in his memory. In Strasbourg, at the PACE
building, Nansen’s books in Armenian were shown at the “Fridtjof
Nansen and Armenia” exhibition. The Norwegian prime minister also
attended the exhibition together with Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan. And the Norwegian prime minister’s visit to Strasbourg
namely for the opening of this exhibition creates an impression that
the Norwegian prime minister is in solidarity with his country’s
friends of Armenia.

The exhibition was also attended by Jan Petersen, Norwegian foreign
minister and chairman of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of
Europe. Speaking at the exhibition, the speakers once again claimed
that the Armenians had been subjected to genocide by the
Turks. According to Armenian channels, entering the headquarters of
the Council of Europe, Kocharyan had a 40-minute conversation with the
Norwegian prime minister before meeting the PACE leadership. In turn,
the spokesman of the Armenian president, Ashot Kocharyan, said that
Robert Kocharyan and Kjell Magne Bondevik had debated bilateral
relations, energy issues and the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. I want to
reiterate that Norway now holds the chairmanship of the Committee of
Ministers of the Council of Europe. It is also worth noting that
Norway attended this anti-Turkish exhibition at the highest level.

MP Rafael Huseynov, a member of the Azerbaijani delegation at the
Council of Europe, said that the issue would be on their agenda for
the next session, and it was important for Turkey to take the
necessary steps.

[Huseynov, voice] The books being exhibited distort the truth, go
against historical facts and lack of bias. For example, the Turks are
accused of barbarism, the Germans are accused of not stopping the
Turks and similar things. A discussion on Armenia will take place in
September. I hope that Robert Kocharyan’s thoughts, which run counter
to the principles of the European Council, and the biased opinions in
books by Nansen in the exhibition, which was also attended by the
prime minister, will be covered in our speeches. We shall also prepare
a document for the autumn session of PACE. I think that Turkey should
also work in this direction.

[Correspondent] Norwegian Foreign Minister Jan Petersen, who will also
hold the chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of
Europe for six months, called for activities to be stepped up for the
resolution of Nagornyy Karabakh. As for the possibility of an unbiased
attitude from Norway, this will become clear from the statements of
Oslo officials in a short while.

[Huseynov] Undoubtedly, the Norwegian foreign minister shares common
views with his prime minister on many aspects. However, as the foreign
minister of his country, his tenure in the post of chairman of the
Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe is six months. This is
not a post with extraordinary powers to have serious impact on the
resolution of any problem. Certainly, there might be an impact, but
this is a post where Azerbaijan and other countries are
represented. But in any case, while analysing Petersen’s activities,
we should also bear in mind this prelude and be more attentive and
cautious.

[Correspondent over Statoil’s Baku office] Let us recall that Norway’s
Statoil is one of the leading companies exploiting Azerbaijan’s oil
and gas projects. Norway now is investing in the Caspian littoral
states, rich in oil resources. For example, the Norwegian prime
minister was recently in Kazakhstan. Oslo always wants to play an
active role in oil and gas projects and expand cooperation with
Azerbaijan. Nevertheless, it seems a bit mysterious that the Norwegian
government should have resorted to such levers of pressure against
Turkey and Azerbaijan in alliance with Armenia.

We asked for comment on this subject, but were told that the Norwegian
ambassador in Azerbaijan would reply to these questions tomorrow.

Qanira Pasayeva for ANS.

Coalition Surviving

A1 Plus | 16:42:37 | 23-06-2004 | Politics |

COALITION SURVIVING

“The newly-forming Opposition is much more dangerous for Armenia”,
Galust Sahakyan, head of Republican Party of Armenia announced during
the discussion held by Political Debate Club.

He is sure system changes are necessary in our state. To achieve that
our society must produce a demand and if we don’t manage to enjoy the
independence we may have only a territory and a president nominated
from the outside in 15 years.

As to the main topic of the discussion, “A Year of Political
Coalition”, Mr. Sahakyan thinks “Republican” Party for instance has
always borne responsibility for key problems of the society and
expressed concern that Armenia must be alarmed only at the actions of
inner powers.

Vigen Khachatryan, Chair of Liberal and Democratic Party, is sure
there isn’ t now a mighty political power in the political field of
Armenia and Authorities do nothing to create a healthy climate for
political competition. “Coalition is just surviving, so there’s no
point is speaking about progress in the country in that case”.

Karabakh insists on package settlement , parliament speaker says

Karabakh insists on package settlement , parliament speaker says

Aykakan Zhamanak, Yerevan
22 Jun 04

[Aykakan Zhamanak correspondent] Mr Yesayan, rumours are circulating
that on 3 June, during the meeting of [Armenian President] Robert
Kocharyan with the US co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, Steven Mann,
they discussed the issue of returning to Azerbaijan three districts
bordering on Iran. Are you aware of these discussions?

[Oleg Yesayan] I did not take part in these discussions, I have never
heard of them, and I do not think there were such discussions. If
Karabakh does not think it is serious to return five districts in
exchange for opening the railway, why do you suppose that it should
agree to return three districts?

[Correspondent] Nevertheless, it is evident that the Karabakh issue
should be settled only by means of compromises. What is the limit of
compromises that Karabakh can make?

[Yesayan] All the problems connected with compromises may be more
specifically discussed during the talks. By the talks I mean a much
wider and deeper process than the talks that are being conducted
today. We can talk about any compromise only in case the Karabakh party
is also a full participant in the talks. On the whole, our principled
position is the following: Karabakh should never be an enclave and
should border on Armenia, Karabakh cannot stay within Azerbaijan with
any status. Moreover, Karabakh should have firm security guarantees.

[Correspondent] In an interview with our newspaper, a member of the
Azerbaijani Milli Maclis [parliament], Samad Seyidov, has said that
resources of the peaceful settlement of the issue seem to have been
used up. Moreover, Azerbaijan has been frequently making calls for
a military settlement to the problem.

[Yesayan] If there is only a cease-fire between the parties which
are at war and there is no peace agreement, naturally nobody has
ever denied the possibility of the war restarting. But according to
our information, we are sure that today Azerbaijan is not ready to
settle the problem militarily. We also say that such problems may not
be settled militarily. Finally, once there was war and the problem
was not settled. Who said that another war could settle the Karabakh
issue? As for the bellicose statements, they are conditioned by the
necessity in Azerbaijan to strengthen [President] Ilham Aliyev’s
political positions and nothing else.

[Correspondent] Recently an attempt has been made on different
international levels to return to the stage-by-stage settlement of
the problem once again. What will be Karabakh’s position in this case?

[Yesayan] The Karabakh party definitely insists on the package
settlement. If today the stage-by-stage settlement supposes dividing
the whole package of the Karabakh issue into separate parts and
discussing them in a succession where only the last stage may concern
the defining of the Karabakh status, of course, this is unacceptable
for us. I would like to ask: will Azerbaijan agree to discuss
the package settlement if the first problem of the stage-by-stage
settlement is the Karabakh status? [Sentence as received] Our position
is strict: the issue should be resolved under the package settlement.

[Correspondent] The presidents of Azerbaijan, Aliyev senior and Aliyev
junior, and Kocharyan met 17 times. Is there any positive change as
a result of those meetings?

[Yesayan] Yes, there is. The continuation of these talks is a guarantee
that today’s peace will be preserved. The cease-fire is being preserved
at least. Moreover, as long as these meetings continue, the Minsk
Group thinks that a mutually acceptable settlement to the problem can
be found and they also stimulate their work. I certainly understand
that these meetings have not yet yielded serious results, but they
should be considered as positive in the abovementioned context.

[Passage omitted: NKR wants to participate in talks]

Karabakh minister hails Armenian diaspora’s role in Karabakh settlem

Karabakh minister hails Armenian diaspora’s role in Karabakh settlement

Mediamax news agency
18 Jun 04

Yerevan, 18 June: The authorities of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic
[NKR] are ready to participate in negotiations in any format and
search for ways to resolve the conflict without damaging the vital
interests of the Karabakh people.

The NKR foreign minister, Ashot Gulyan, told a meeting in Stepanakert
[Xankandi] with a group of young Armenian specialists from the USA,
the press service of the NKR Foreign Ministry has reported.

Gulyan highly assessed the role of the Armenian diaspora in maintaining
Karabakh’s interests, including in the postwar restoration of the
republic. Saying that the Karabakh leadership is facing major tasks
for the socioeconomic development of the NKR, the minister expressed
his confidence in the further support of the Armenian diaspora in
these issues.

Boxing: Harrison stays focused on Abelyan, not record books

Harrison stays focused on Abelyan, not record books

The Scotsman, UK
June 19 2004

HISTORY beckons Scott Harrison at the Braehead Arena tonight. The
priority for Scotland’s WBO featherweight champion, however, is
simply to ensure his ambition to become his country’s most successful
boxer of all time does not become a thing of the past.

There is undoubted danger in Harrison’s mandatory defence of his
title against William Abelyan. Promoters Sports Network, who have
packaged the fight as ‘Risky Business’, have made no secret of the
fact they would have preferred to avoid the American southpaw as they
attempt to steer Harrison towards more lucrative and career-defining
contests.

With no rematch clause in the contract, the Cambuslang man simply
cannot afford to suffer another loss in the manner of his shock
points defeat to Manuel Medina last July which he was able to
emphatically avenge four months later.

Since then, Harrison has stopped Colombian Walter Estrada, a late
replacement for Abelyan who called off injured from the
originally-scheduled meeting in March, to score his fourth victory in
five world-title fights. If he can overcome his Armenian-born
challenger tonight, Harrison will join Jim Watt in the record books
for the most successful world championship contests by a Scottish
boxer.

Watt, who lifted the WBC lightweight title with a 12th-round stoppage
of Alfredo Pitalua in April 1979 and defended the belt four times
before losing to the brilliant Nicaraguan Alexis Arguello in June
1981, will be ringside tonight in his role as Sky Sports’ most cogent
boxing analyst.

He is willing his compatriot to succeed, unfazed by the apparent
resentment towards him from both the champion and his father and
trainer Peter Harrison in the wake of Watt’s criticism of the
performance last time out against Estrada.

Despite Harrison becoming the first man to stop the tricky Colombian
southpaw, an achievement this correspondent believes did not earn him
enough credit, Watt felt there were dangerous flaws in the
26-year-old’s display which could be exploited by a better opponent.

“I know the Harrison family aren’t too happy with me,” says Watt,
“but my honest view was that it was a bad performance against
Estrada. Although Scott was never in danger of losing, he got hit
with far too many silly punches in the first three rounds.

“I’m sorry if Scott and his dad are upset at what I said, but my job
is to call it as I see it. I can’t sit at ringside and ignore the
evidence of my own eyes just because Scott is Scottish. No-one has
given him more praise than I have since he started boxing on Sky and
no-one wants him to keep winning more than I do.”

To keep winning tonight, Harrison must solve the puzzle that is
25-year-old Abelyan, the North American champion who has lost just
four of his 28 fights since turning professional six years ago. He is
unbeaten since suffering a first-round loss to Victor Polo in January
2000, when he cited a stomach bug as the reason.

Nonetheless, as Polo later lost to Julio Pablo Chacon, the Argentine
dethroned by Harrison when he became champion in October 2002, it
would appear to be an encouraging form line for the Scot.

However, in reeling off 13 consecutive wins since the Polo defeat,
including an impressive points success over former WBC champion Guty
Espadas, Abelyan has earned his world-title shot and a reputation as
someone capable of making the best fighters look bad.

Jim Brady, the acerbic American correspondent of Boxing News, said
after Abelyan’s points win over veteran former WBA super-bantamweight
champion Jesus Salud in April 2002 that he “moved so much, they
should have had a lap counter in the ring”.

It is an indication of Abelyan’s elusive style, one which Brady
claims is “death at the box office”. When he knocked out Orlando Soto
in Las Vegas to win the North American title four months later, Brady
was moved to observe “he has a style only a mother could love, but
then she probably doesn’t have to pay to get in”.

Harrison, who weighed in four ounces inside the nine stone limit
yesterday, two ounces heavier than Abelyan, has no doubts his
challenger will be unable to avoid him for 12 rounds.

“He’s awkward, he jumps in and out,” said Harrison, “but I’m in
perfect shape and I will get to him. He doesn’t like to get hit to
the body and there are other weaknesses we have noticed. I just want
to get this guy out of the way, then move on to unify the belts.”

Watt, while anticipating a difficult night for Harrison, is confident
he will be joined in the record books by his fellow Glaswegian by the
end of the night. “Abelyan’s a good fighter, can adopt different
styles and will try and mess Scott about,” said Watt. “Scott has all
the physical advantages, though and as long as he controls the pace
of the fight, I see him winning well on points.”

I believe Harrison, as intensely motivated as he has ever been, will
force a stoppage somewhere around the tenth round.

• Willie Limond weighed in four ounces inside the super-featherweight
limit for his clash with French champion Youssef Djibaba for the
vacant European Union title. Live coverage of both fights from
Braehead begins at 8pm on Sky Sports 2.

• Audley Harrison defends his WBF heavyweight title tonight against
Poland’s Tomasz Bonin at Alexandra Palace in the last fight of his
contract with the BBC.