Armenian Wine-Makers Cooperate With Italian Partners

ARMENIAN WINE-MAKERS COOPERATE WITH ITALIAN PARTNERS

Noyan Tapan
Aug 31 2006

YEREVAN, AUGUST 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The Chamber of Commerce and Industry
of the Republic of Armenia and Venice’s Chamber of Commerce are
implementing a joint technical assistance program with the aim
of promoting wine-making. Romano Tiozo, Secretary-General of
Venice’s Chamber of Commerce, stated this at the August 30 press
conference. The program is financed by Venice’s Chamber of Commerce,
the Veneto province and the Mekhitarian Congregation of Venice. During
their visit to Armenia, five representatives of Venice’s Chamber of
Commerce familiarized themselves with the local conditions of grapes
production in order to advise on how to improve the quality of Armenian
grapes. The Secretary-General of Venice’s Chamber of Commerce said
that Armenian wines can be competitive on the European market. "In my
opinion, new technologies should be introduced to improve the quality
of Armenian wines. In this case, they would be able to occupy a stable
place on the European market," he said. Under the same program, 15
Armenian wine-makers representing such companies as Eraskh, Areni,
Getanun, Ginetas, Getap, Ijevan, Shahumian, Van 777 and MAP went to
Italy in July 2006. They attended the courses on wine quality and wine
production process improvement, technical programming optimization,
and development of marketing and agricultural tourism.

ANCC Participates in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute Sessions

Armenian National Committee of Canada
130 Albert St., Suite 1007
Ottawa, ON
KIP 5G4
Tel. (613) 235-2622 Fax (613) 238-2622
E-mail:[email protected]

PR ESS RELEASE
August 18, 2006

Contact: Roupen Kouyoumjian

(613) 235-2622

ANCC Participates in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute Sessions

Ottawa, August 18-The Armenian National Committee of Canada (ANCC)
participated in Gen. Romeo Dallaire Genocide Institute’s 2006 teachers
genocide training sessions held between August 14 to 18 at the University of
Western Ontario in London, Ont.

The aim of the institute’s annual sessions is to train teachers about the
moral lessons learned from the Holocaust, the Armenian, and the Rwandan
Genocides. This year the institute hosted 40 teachers from various Canadian
provinces.

On the first day of the weeklong sessions, Prof. Frank Chalk of Concordia
University of Montreal, Que., one of the pioneers on genocide studies,
looked at genocides from a historical perspective and addressed their
social, political and economic roots. During his presentation, Prof. Chalk
screened a documentary of which 20 minutes were devoted to the Armenian
Genocide of 1915 to 1921.

The rest of the week was devoted to the Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust,
and the Rwandan Genocide. Morning sessions focused on building historical
framework of genocides while afternoon gatherings stressed classroom
application. There were four special sessions: genocide intervention, which
was facilitated by Gen. Romeo Dallaire; a session with a survivor of the
Holocaust; a session with a survivor of the Rwandan Genocide; and a session
on the Darfur calamity.

On Tuesday, August 15, Prof. Lorne Shirinian from the Royal Military College
in Kingston, Ont. presented the historical background of the Armenian Cause
and the Armenian Genocide, starting at the Congress of Berlin (1878), the
Hamidian Massacres of Armenians (1894 to 1896), the reform movement, the
Young Turks’ coup d’etat, the Genocide of 1915, the Allied Powers’ promises
and betrayal, and finally the Turkish Government’s denial policy.

In the afternoon Dr. Sima Aprahamian, also from Concordia, lectured on the
pedagogy of teaching the Armenian Genocide and the applicability of its
lessons to today’s genocides. Dr. Aprahamian screened a documentary on the
Georgetown Boys, a state of California prepared classroom documentary on the
Armenian Genocide and finally, Araz Artinian’s "The Genocide in Me"
documentary which address the psychological effect of the genocide denial on
Canadian-born Armenians.

Pamphlets and literature related to the Armenian Genocide, among them a
special resources book prepared by "Facing History and Ourselves" were
distributed to the teachers.

During a reception on August 13, Aris Babikian of the ANCC (a partner of the
institute), welcomed the teachers and emphasized the importance of their
"noble mission to carry out the lessons learned from various genocides and
to spread the message of hope, tolerance and respect to human being,
regardless of their religion, race, or colour." Babikian, ANCC’s executive
director, said that he was confident that the teachers would be the torch
carriers who would stamp out future genocides and "help avert other nations
from suffering racism, hatred, and xenophobia that the Armenians, Jews, and
Rwandans experienced."

In addressing the other partners of the institute, Babikian said ANCC was
delighted to "see so many genocide victim organizations joining together and
cooperating to make Gen. Romeo Dallaire Institute such a success." He said
that it is "imperative that various victims of genocides stand together in
solidarity, to support each other and to send a clear message to the rest of
the world that the victim nations are standing on guard, and that they will
not stand by and let other nations fall victim to mankind’s most heinous
crime."

It is vital that victim nations stand together and fight against the last
act of all genocides: the denial aspect, said Babikian. "Victim nations
should also be alert to notions of dividing the victims and of creating a
hierarchy of suffering among them thus shattering the solidarity of the
victims," the ANCC representative concluded.

-30-

Regional Chapters

Montréal – Laval – Ottawa – Toronto – Hamilton – Cambridge – St.
Catharines – Windsor – Vancouver

The Governor Is Real Trouble For ARF

THE GOVERNOR IS REAL TROUBLE FOR ARF

Lragir.am
29 Aug 06

Rather interesting developments are underway inside ARF Dashnaktsutyun,
especially with regard to Romik Manukyan, the governor of
Shirak. Inside the political party, namely a rather big wing in the
Gyumri organization, believe that the governor’s activities stain the
political party’s reputation. Our source from the ARF Bureau says
one of the members of the Bureau visited the region and met with
the activisits. During he meeting they discussed the expediency of
dismissal of the governor of the region of Shirak.

However, we have learned that the Dashnaks in Yerevan are not likely
to free Gyumri Dashnaks from Romik Manukyan.

Armenian National Football Team Gets Ready For A Game With Belgium

ARMENIAN NATIONAL FOOTBALL TEAM GETS READY FOR A GAME WITH BELGIUM

Panorama.am
12:15 29/08/06

Jan Porterfield, the chief coach of the Armenian national football
team, has launched a training course for the Armenian national
team. The team is getting ready for a game with Belgium, which will
take place on September 6, at 9 p.m. at the Republican stadium.

The Armenia national team undergoes trainings twice a day – in
he morning and evening, at Piunik and Banants stadiums. Before
the actual match, the team will get training at the Republican
stadium. Porterfield explains that he wants the team to get used to
playing in different stadiums. The chief coach has invited players
from both local and foreign teams.

Georgia Drags Feet On Issuing Visas To Russian Military – Source

GEORGIA DRAGS FEET ON ISSUING VISAS TO RUSSIAN MILITARY – SOURCE

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS Military Newswire
August 28, 2006 Monday 1:41 PM MSK

The Georgian Foreign Ministry has dragged out issuing visas for Russian
soldiers for more than a month and has finally issued fewer than 100
visas instead of the required 1,200, a source in the command of the
Russian military force in Transcaucasia told Interfax-Military News
Agency on Monday.

"More than a month ago the command of the Russian military force in
Transcaucasia asked the Georgian authorities to issue almost 1,200
visas to Russian soldiers who are coming to Georgia for a rotation.

However, visas were issued only to 94 soldiers," the source said.

"This cannot satisfy the command of the Russian military force, and
it should not probably satisfy the Georgian authorities, if they do
not plan to drag out the process of Russian military bases withdrawal
from the country’s territory," he noted.

"The position of the Georgian Foreign and Defense Ministries seems
strange, because they demand the swiftest possible withdrawal of
bases, but they create a lot of bureaucratic barriers when resolving
almost any issue, be it issuing visas or the slightest movement of
vehicles, demanding coordination over many days and many stages,"
he said, adding that Russia is fulfilling all its obligations on the
withdrawal of bases.

"Six trains with armaments have left the 12th base in Batumi this
year, and they cargo was added to the inventory of the 102nd Russian
base in Gyumri, Armenia. We will fulfill the plan of armaments and
hardware withdrawal from the 62nd base stationed in Akhalkalaki to
Russia in September," he stressed.

According to the source, "the stress is laid on the withdrawal of
heavy hardware in 2006, while various materiel and equipment will
mostly be relocated in 2007."

Under a Russian-Georgian accord, the Russian military bases are to
leave Georgia in 2008.

RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly – 08/25/2006

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
_________________________________________ ____________________
RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly
Vol. 6, No. 16, 25 August 2006

A Weekly Review of News and Analysis of Russian Domestic Politics

**************************************** ********************
HEADLINES

* THE FADING LEGACY OF THE FAILED 1991 SOVIET COUP
* GORBACHEV REFLECTS ON THE COUP
* FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR ASSESSES THE COUP
* NEW COUNCIL POINTS TO DIVISIONS IN CHECHEN REPUBLIC’S LEADERSHIP
*************************************** *********************

POLITICS

THE FADING LEGACY OF THE FAILED 1991 SOVIET COUP. PRAGUE, August 18,
2006 (RFE/RL) — Through the winter of 1990-91 the glue that held
together the Soviet Union was becoming unstuck.
On August 20, 1991, a meeting was scheduled to sign a union
treaty that would give the republics more independence. But two days
before, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev’s chief of staff and
other Politburo members arrived at the presidential dacha in Crimea
putting the president and his family under house arrest.
This move unleashed a chain of events that threatened to
engulf the country in a bloody civil war.
"I call on you, my comrade officers, soldiers, and sailors,
do not take action against the people — against your fathers,
mothers, brothers, and sisters," Russian Soviet Republic Vice
President Aleksandr Rutskoi, a decorated hero of the war in
Afghanistan, appealed to the Soviet armed forces on August 19, 1991.
"I appeal to your honor, your reason, and your heart. Today
the fate of the country, the fate of its free and democratic
development, is in your hands," Rutskoi said.
Rutskoi’s plea was for the most part heeded. Tanks took
up positions, but no soldiers fired on the thousands of Muscovites
who had taken to the streets to oppose the plotters.
"Just after 8 a.m., [human rights activist] Yury Samodurov
rang and told me to switch on the television," activist Yelena
Bonner, widow of Nobel Prize laureate Andrei Sakharhov, told RFE/RL.
"I switched it on and saw all those people and everything that was
happening. I began to phone everyone. It emerged that I was now the
center of a rather large circle of people. I told them all: ‘Go
to the Moscow City Soviet.’ Nobody really knew what was going on.
Then, around 9 or 10, they called from the City Council to say that a
lot of our people were there and that they were heading for the White
House. Of course, I went to the White House as well."
Russian Republic President Boris Yeltsin provided the
defining symbol of defiance. Standing on top of a tank, with the
Russian flag in the background, he called for mass resistance.
Gradually, the tide turned. The coup crumbled and Gorbachev
returned to Moscow from Crimea to find a starkly changed balance of
power.
And as Yeltsin told Radio Liberty just after the coup, the
Soviet Union had changed in Gorbachev’s absence.
"I think it is important too that President Gorbachev has
returned to a different Russia, to a different country," Yeltsin
said. "It seems to me — and yesterday I spent half the day with him
discussing the future course of reforms and economic transformation
— that he has at last understood that without democracy, without the
development of democracy, without radical reforms — and not the sort
of quiet reforms during which coup d’etats of this sort can
happen — that we can’t go further. It seems to me too that he
has understood the need in fact to end the ruling role of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union."
But building democracy in Russia — to say nothing of most of
the other post-Soviet republics — has proved a daunting task.
The war in Chechnya, clampdowns on media and NGOs, the Yukos
affair, the appointment rather than election of regional governors,
the hobbling of all political opposition are all black marks against
Russia’s democratic record in the last 15 years.
James Nixey, the manager of the Russia and Eurasia program at
Chatham House, thinks Russia’s experiment with liberal democracy
is over.
"If you look at President [Vladimir] Putin’s very high
approval ratings and if you look at the fact that living standards
have risen quite considerably since 2000 and the fact that you have a
leader who is strong and independent and doesn’t give off the
same kind of vibes as President Yeltsin, then that is actually far
more important to [Russians] than the appointment of governors or
NGOs," Nixey says.
And gone today is the neat demarcation between the plotters
and those camped outside the White House, between democrats and their
opponents.
In 2004, Putin awarded one of the coup plotters, former
Soviet Defense Minister Dmitry Yazov, Russia’s Order of Merit
medal for "high achievements in useful, societal activities."
A recent poll by the Moscow-based Levada Center shows that,
with the benefit of hindsight, people’s attitudes toward the
plotters and the August 1991 events have changed somewhat.
Fifteen years after the events, 52 percent of Russians say
that both the plotters and Yeltsin had been in the wrong.
Yury Levada, the head of the polling agency, says that
democracy these days is not high on Russians’ list of priorities.
"People don’t [think] of democracy and democratic
institutions, universal elections, and other [things] as very
important," Levada told RFE/RL. "The subject of concern for Russian
people is family, the economic situation, finances, inflation,
unemployment, criminality, and other [things]."
The question of Putin’s succession and the 2008
presidential election will be a test for Russian democracy.
"Whether or not President Putin stays in power, and changes
or adjusts or abolishes or alters the constitution to enable him to
stay in power will show us an awful lot about the true nature of
Russia," analyst Nixey says.
After 15 years of a rocky transition, Russians for the moment
appear content to waive their human rights in return for stability
and rising living standards. The drama of 1991 seems as much a part
of history today as the Soviet Union itself. (Luke Allnutt)

GORBACHEV REFLECTS ON THE COUP. Fifteen years after the failed coup
that triggered the collapse of the Soviet Union and transformed his
own life, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev talks to
RFE/RL’s North Caucasus Service about the events of August 1991
and their legacy.
RFE/RL: In his annual address to the Federal Assembly in
2005, Russian President Vladimir Putin called the collapse of the
Soviet Union "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th
century." Do you agree with such an interpretation of our recent
history?
Mikhail Gorbachev: I have said this on many occasions, and I
will say it again: I agree. When, during a period of widespread
reform, glasnost came along and lit up the darker corners of the
situation in our country, it seemed as though all of society started
moving and talking. It turned out that the people had something to
say and that they had someone to speak to. At this time I had already
been saying that the way of democracy, glasnost, and economic reform
was the way to go.
Yet I also warned against the destructive nature of what was
happening. Things certainly needed to change, but we did not need to
destroy that which had been built by previous generations. We had to
deprive ourselves of some things, yes, but this was the unfortunate
cost. After the putsch, when the real danger of the country coming
apart arose, I continued to speak out in the same vein. I emphasized
that the dissolution of a country that was not only powerful, but
that, during perestroika, demonstrated that it was peaceful and that
it accepted the basic principles of democracy, would be a tragedy.
The end of the Cold War presented us with an unprecedented
opportunity to pursue a new, peaceful policy.
RFE/RL: Some observers think that the State Committee for the
Emergency Situation (GKChP) was the natural result of events then
going on in the country, an effort to restrain the destructive
processes that had arisen as a result of a systemic crisis of state
management that, in turn, was created by ill-considered and sporadic
reforms. Many of the participants of the so-called GKChP insist that
this was the case. In you opinion, how fair is this point of view?
Gorbachev: It is nonsense. The natural result of events was
the well-tuned process that was already under way in the spring of
1991. There was already the crisis that arose when people had to wait
in long lines to purchase basic everyday goods. But in the big
picture, after a long period of deliberation and debate, the
anti-crisis program had finally started to materialize.
Interestingly, it started out as a program initiated by the cabinet
ministers, but then it was joined by all the republics and even the
Baltic states, with their own special views on certain questions. The
Baltic states didn’t actually sign the document, but they decided
to implement it anyway. By this time, we had found new solutions and
ways of dealing with the situation, and we were ready to move
forward.
This was natural for the democratization of the Soviet Union,
and it was also natural for correcting the mistakes we had made
earlier, particularly our delay in reforming the Communist Party and
the federated union. The goal of the putsch was to interrupt this
process. The putschists were at the top of the reactionary
nomenklatura — remember, many in the nomenklatura went ahead and
worked with us, struggled with us. So this is my response to the
common cliche that you were referring to. These people were unable to
publicly overthrow the government, so they took a clandestine route,
which they failed in, because difficult as the times were, nobody
wanted to return to Stalinism.
RFE/RL: According to many public opinion polls, perestroika
remains more popular abroad — particularly in Europe and the United
States — than in the overwhelming majority of countries of the
former Soviet Union. How would you, as the author of that initiative,
explain such a difference in its reputation?
Gorbachev: The difference between the reputation perestroika
has in Russia and abroad is explainable. Central and Eastern Europe
gained independence. All of Europe got rid of the nightmare of
potential confrontation — moreover, a confrontation that could have
developed into nuclear war in which Europe would suffer the most
damage.
Your question mentioned the CIS countries. Without going into
detail, I can tell you that neither the majority of their people nor
their political elite desire a return to the way things were, or have
any regrets about exiting the union. Recent polls have shown that the
percentage of the population in these countries in favor of a return
to the Soviet Union is only about 5-7 percent.
Russia is a special case. The reason I say this is because
Russia lost the most as a result of the break-up, in terms of
geopolitical stature, in terms of historical merit, in terms of
political power it had by virtue of controlling other republics, and
finally in terms of economic strength, having ceased to be the center
of a major economic complex with a population of nearly a
quarter-billion people. [Former Russian President Boris] Yeltsin and
[former acting Russian Prime Minister Yegor] Gaidar’s reforms
destroyed the industrial potential of the country and reduced
millions of people to poverty. Privatization was carried out in such
a way that instead of contributing to a growing private sector, it
only resulted in corruption and mass theft. The country was in shock,
so people naturally looked back to the Soviet Union and the social
guarantees that it offered. The guarantees were modest, but at least
they were guarantees. Now, even though things are improving under
Putin, I would still estimate that about 50 percent of our people
live in poverty."
RFE/RL: In Russia, it is popular to argue — and you hear
this at the highest political levels — that the end of the Cold War
destabilized the modern world order; the solid bipolar international
system was replaced by an unstable monopolar domination. Do you agree
with this view?
Gorbachev: I’ve heard this view before — that the Cold
War supposedly offered a level of stability. I’m not sure where
this view comes from — whether it is part of someone’s agenda or
simply rooted in ignorance of the situation that developed in the
mid-1980s. I was touring the country at the time and from all sides I
heard the same question: "Will there be war? Please, do anything you
can to not let it happen. Do anything, we’ll live through
whatever it takes, but just don’t let it happen." Of course, many
people forgot about this when the fear of war subsided.
The stability of the Cold War was a false one. It was tricky
and dangerous. We in the Russian and U.S. governments knew better
than anybody what the true situation was and what it could develop
into, because we knew what point we were at in the arms race. We knew
that the kind of technology that we were operating was powerful
enough to put the fate of civilization in question should there be
some sort of slip-up. We also knew that the arms race was leading to
an unprecedented depletion of national resources.
RFE/RL: How do you assess the state of democracy and freedom
of speech in Russia today?
Gorbachev: There are frequent accusations that democracy is
being suppressed and that freedom of press is being stifled. The
truth is, most Russians disagree with this viewpoint. We find
ourselves at a difficult historical juncture. Our transition to
democracy has not been a smooth one, and we must assess our successes
and failures not in the context of some ideal, but in the context of
our history. When Putin first came to power, I think his first
priority was keeping the country from falling apart, and this
required certain measures that wouldn’t exactly be referred to as
textbook democracy.
Yes, there are certain worrying tendencies. We still have
certain stipulations and restrictions that cannot be explained by
real dangers, or by the realities of life in Russia. However, I would
not dramatize the situation. In the past 20 years, Russia has changed
to such an extent that going back is now impossible.
RFE/RL: Let’s turn the clock back 15 years. You suffered
a horrible betrayal on the part of the people you considered your
comrades-in-arms, as well as, perhaps, your personal friends. Not
many people have experienced this. What personal lessons have you
learned?
Gorbachev: We need to follow the path of democracy. We need
to respect the people, and not turn them back into the herd that was
bullied for decades and centuries in our country. We cannot resolve
problems through coups. We need the people to participate in the
changes that are being enacted in the country. Democracy needs to be
effective. The law needs to be efficient. Thieves and corrupt
officials should not feel safe. We need to follow the path of
democracy toward a free, open, and prosperous country.

FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR ASSESSES THE COUP. Jack Matlock was U.S.
ambassador to Moscow from 1987 until 1991. He left Moscow just a week
before the August 1991 coup attempt. RFE/RL Russian Service
correspondent Yury Zhigalkin spoke with Matlock about his
recollections of those turbulent times.
RFE/RL: How did you first hear about the coup attempt and
what did you think?
Jack Matlock: I heard about it the morning of August 19. We
were on my wife’s farm, and my first thought was that it would
probably fail. I felt that the people who were announced as running
it, it would appear, had not prepared things adequately. I thought
there would be resistance and, in my judgment, they were not the sort
of people who would put down the resistance ruthlessly. Or, if they
tried to put it down, I thought the armed forces and others would
probably not follow the orders. I thought that society had moved to
the point that it was no longer acceptable, even in the, you might
say, power structures, to put down a popular uprising.
RFE/RL: You left your post in Moscow just a week before. Did
you have any indications that this scenario could take place or was
it just out of the blue?
Matlock: I had been told confidentially in June by the then
mayor of Moscow — he actually wrote it in notes as we sat and talked
about other things — that a putsch was being prepared. And he named
four people who, in fact, were involved later. He did this to get a
message to [Russian Soviet Republic President Boris] Yeltsin, who was
then in Washington. When Yeltsin was given the information, he said
we must warn [Soviet President Mikhail] Gorbachev. And we tried to do
so, but without naming the people involved. I think he misunderstood
the warning, didn’t take it seriously.
But when I heard that the coup had occurred and the people
who were clearly behind it — because they were on the committee that
announced it was taking control — this came not as a total surprise.
But, at the same time, I didn’t believe these people were capable
of running the country and I thought that, particularly in Moscow,
there would be sufficient opposition that, unless they were willing
to enter into a bloody civil war, they could not prevail. And I
didn’t think they were willing to enter into that. And the first
time I was interviewed on television the evening of August 19, I
said, "This is not a done deal. I’m not at all sure this is going
to hold."
RFE/RL: Did you detect any real worries in world capitals
that the plotters might succeed?
Matlock: I think that most people looking from the outside
thought they had succeeded. Because I think most people didn’t
understand the degree of change that had occurred in the Soviet Union
at that time. The Soviet Union was not the Soviet Union that it had
been five years before or even two years before. It had changed very
rapidly. I had been privileged to be there and witness these changes.
You know, most people — including our governments — didn’t
really grasp that.
Now, the American government, I think at the top they
understood that this could happen. For one thing, I was reporting
these various things to them. But, on the other hand, we didn’t
want to make predictions because, for one thing, one couldn’t
predict for sure what was going to happen. Second, if we had started
predicting — even in our intelligence reports — that there might be
a coup, this would have leaked and this would have influenced the
situation in a negative way. So, there were very good reasons for not
trying to predict this. But understanding there was the possibility
that’s there, understanding that even if it happened, it might
not succeed, was not as widespread.
RFE/RL: What had principally changed in Russia that led them
to be defeated?
Matlock: I don’t think you can select a single one, but
mainly, I think, Gorbachev’s opening up created the feeling that
the system had to change, that it had not produced what it was
supposed to, and that they people who wanted to put the clamps down
wanted to turn back to the past. And that had to be resisted.
RFE/RL: Today, 15 years after this event, how would you
assess the coup?
Matlock: I think that without that attempted coup d’etat,
the Soviet Union in some form would have lasted much longer. So, if
people, think that tragedy was caused in their lives by the breakup
of the Soviet Union, then the coup brought it about. It was not going
to preserve it. I think that’s one thing.
Second, I would say it was not the breakup of the Soviet
Union that has caused so much the distress that people have felt. It
was the inability of the system to change from one system, which was
getting nowhere, to a different one. And this is a very difficult
process, one without clear historical precedent. But I’m sure
that there would have been some sort of union — not of all 15
republics. One of the things that had to be understood was that they
really had to let the three Baltic countries regain their
independence because trying to hold them was putting a stress on the
whole system. Second, there were certain other things that needed to
be done. Gradually, Gorbachev was beginning to do them, although I
think he no longer had the full support of the power structures, he
couldn’t control them anymore. And it was these structures that
turned against him, thinking that they could bring back the past,
when the possibility of doing so had passed.
RFE/RL: Do you believe that history might have turned out
somewhat differently had they succeeded? The Soviet Union could have
survived.
Matlock: Not if the coup had succeeded, no. If it had
succeeded, they would have broken away much faster. Good gracious, if
that coup had held a few more days, they would have had a civil war.
It would have looked like Yugoslavia. Is that what people wanted? No,
I’m not saying that. I’m saying if there had not been the
coup, the Soviet Union could have been preserved for longer — I
didn’t say forever or even for very long — longer in some form.
But that’s only if they had not attempted the coup.
RFE/RL: Today we may basically say that it was for the better
that the coup happened, that it was defeated, and that Russia is
moving somewhere.
Matlock: It is certainly for the better that it was defeated.
I think the whole area would be better off today, possibly — one can
never be certain of these things — if the coup had never occurred.
If the coup attempt had never occurred and if the democratization
process, which was going forward, had been allowed to proceed. Then
one would have had, I think, a less disruptive democratization than
occurred. In many ways, the Soviet Union, in the middle of 1991, with
all the problems it was having, was freer than most of the successor
states are today. That’s the fact of the matter.
RFE/RL: What is your feeling about Russia’s direction
today?
Matlock: I think that economically there have been a number
of encouraging changes. I think that the stability and confidence
that has returned is a positive thing. I think there are negative
signs from the standpoint of Russia’s future. But I would say
these are matters for Russians to decide and not matters for
outsiders to try to teach lessons, because I think every country has
to find its own way in its own way.

NEW COUNCIL POINTS TO DIVISIONS IN CHECHEN REPUBLIC’S LEADERSHIP.
PRAGUE, August 19, 2006 (RFE/RL) — On October 5, Chechen Prime
Minister Ramzan Kadyrov will turn 30, the minimum age for candidates
for the post of pro-Moscow republic head.
Many observers both in Russia and abroad have long considered
it a given that Kadyrov will be named to succeed incumbent republic
head Alu Alkhanov before the end of this year, even though Kadyrov
has denied harboring any such ambitions.
A recent visit to Chechnya by a large Russian government
delegation, whose members were cited in the Russian press as
unanimously lauding Kadyrov’s role in expediting reconstruction
of the republic’s war-shattered infrastructure, has also been
widely interpreted as reflecting Moscow’s backing for Kadyrov.
Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, however, who has years
of first-hand experience of developments in Chechnya and elsewhere in
the North Caucasus, suggested in a recent interview with RFE/RL’s
North Caucasus Service and a subsequent article published in "Novaya
gazeta" on August 14 that the Russian leadership has finally lost
patience with Kadyrov, and that the government ministers who traveled
to Grozny in July ordered him unambiguously to toe the line.
Politkovskaya further claimed that several Chechen law
enforcement bodies have "mutinied" against Kadyrov and refused either
to continue making the requisite payment of a percentage of their
monthly salary into the Akhmed-hadji Kadyrov Fund, named after
Ramzan’s slain father, or to renew their oath of loyalty to
Ramzan.
Kadyrov said in an interview published in "Nezavisimaya
gazeta" on August 14 that he does not consider himself mature enough
to assume the role of republic head, and he claimed — not entirely
convincingly — that he dreams of quitting politics altogether.
Aleksei Malashenko of the Carnegie Moscow Center was quoted
by "Novye izvestia" on August 15 as suggesting that Moscow may shunt
Kadyrov sideways into some kind of honorific post such as
Russia’s permanent representative to the Organization of the
Islamic Conference.
Meanwhile, Alkhanov has launched what appears to be either a
last-ditch attempt to preclude, or at least delay, his dismissal, or
alternatively, a move coordinated with Moscow to discredit Kadyrov
and provide grounds for removing him. On August 11, Alkhanov issued a
decree establishing an advisory body that will focus on human rights
issues, law and order, and the interaction between Chechen government
bodies and federal agencies in the sphere of economic and social
security. Those are all areas in which Kadyrov and his subordinates
are widely charged with have ridden roughshod over legal norms.
Alkhanov’s August 11 decree transforms the republic’s
Security Council into a Council for Economic and Social Security. His
stated rationale for doing so, according to "Nezavisimaya gazeta" on
August 14, was the law enforcement organs’ failure to reduce the
scale of endemic corruption by arresting offenders and bringing them
to trial.
Alkhanov simultaneously appointed as secretary of the new
council his former chief adviser German Vok, who headed his election
campaign in Grozny in 2004. Kadyrov was quoted by "Nezavisimaya
gazeta" on August 14 as saying neither he, other government
officials, nor the Chechen parliament were informed in advance of the
impending reorganization of the Security Council. But Alkhanov could
not have undertaken that reorganization without the prior approval of
the Kremlin.
The first session of the new council took place on August 15
and focused on the situation in those districts of southern Chechnya
that border Georgia, according to chechnya.gov.ru. Local pro-Moscow
administrators have accused Russian military units deployed there of
violations ranging from restricting the access of local residents to
their homes to illicit logging. Vok rejected attempts by Vladimir
Ponomaryov, deputy commander of the Federal Border Service
Administration, to deny or downplay the seriousness of those
violations, regnum.ru reported on August 16.
Vok further announced the creation of a commission that will
address the "misunderstandings" between the Chechen civilian
population and the Russian military. The primary cause of such
"misunderstandings" over the past seven years has been the
indiscriminate recourse by the latter to violence against the former.
But some observers claim that since the death of
Kadyrov’s father in a terrorist bombing in May 2004, police
formations subordinate to the younger Kadyrov have superceded the
Russian military as the primary perpetrators of seemingly arbitrary
killings and abductions of civilians. Thus if Alkhanov were to
announce that effective measures have been enacted to prevent such
abuses by the Russian military, the blame for any future crimes of
that nature would devolve onto the Chechen government law enforcement
agencies for which Kadyrov as prime minister is ultimately
responsible.
Just days after the creation of Alkhanov’s new council,
Kadyrov’s office issued orders to the Interior Ministry to
investigate reports that local bureaucrats are extorting money from
residents of Argun and Gudermes (Kadyrov’s home town) to finance
reconstruction work there, kavkaz.memo.ru reported on August 15.
It was not clear whether those payments were in addition to
the statutory requirement that all Chechens employed in the public
sector pay a percentage of their monthly salary into the Akhmed-hadji
Kadyrov Fund, which finances reconstruction projects, among other
things. Kadyrov warned that any bureaucrat found guilty of extorting
money will be punished. (Liz Fuller)

***************************************** ****************
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Armenian Genocide Memorial To Be Build In Las Vegas

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL TO BE BUILD IN LAS VEGAS

Yerkir
24.08.2006 13:53

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – The Armenian Community of Las Vegas, Nevada HAS
announce the formation of the Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee
comprised of local Armenians dedicated to the erection of an Armenian
Genocide Memorial in Las Vegas.

After several meetings with Mayor Oscar Goodman and Councilwoman
Lois Tarkanian , the City of Las Vegas has decided to dedicate land
in downtown Las Vegas. Mayor Goodman announced Las Vegas’ commitment
and the location of the Memorial at the annual April 24 commemoration.

The budget for this historical Monument has been set at $150,000.

Jordanian King Holds Talks With Azerbaijani President

JORDANIAN KING HOLDS TALKS WITH AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT

Jordan News Agency (Petra), Jordan
Aug. 23, 2006

Baku, Aug. 23 (Petra)– His Majesty King Abdullah II on Wednesday held
talks at the Presidential Palace in Baku with Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev focused on the relations between the two countries and
ways of strengthening them in all areas.

Talks touched to a number of issues of mutual concern and means of
fostering the bilateral cooperation.

The two sides discussed the challenges facing the Middle East and the
latest developments, particularly the Palestinian-Israeli conflict
in addition to the problem of the Armenian occupation of the of
Nagorno-Karabakh region, which is about 20% of the Azerbaijani
territory.

His Majesty King said his talks with the Azerbaijani President were
important, affirming that it was a real opportunity to build on the
strong political relations and develop relations of cooperation in
many areas.

In a statement following the talks, His Majesty said "We discussed
during the talks several issues of common interest, especially since
our two countries are facing the same challenges and can achieve a
great deal of interest through enhancing cooperation in a number of
priority areas for the two countries,"

"We discussed a number of issues in the region, which constitutes
a major challenge for our countries, where Jordan and Azerbaijan
will work together to face these challenges that face the region as a
whole," King Abdullah said, stressing the importance of translating the
friendly relations between the two leaderships into strong relations
between the Jordanian and Azerbaijani peoples.

His Majesty pointed to the importance of the visit in supporting the
economic relations and in increasing the trade exchange between the
two countries, affirming that Jordan will pay much more attention to
the economic issue.

"We will work with the government and the embassy of Azerbaijan in
Amman to translate the results of the successful visit to achieve
the desired objectives into reality," the King added, inviting the
President of Azerbaijan to visit Jordan in the near future.

Talks were attended on the Jordanian side by HRH Prince Ali Bin Al
Hussein, Director of the King’s Office Basim Awadallah, the Minister
of Foreign Affairs Abdel Elah Khatib, and Jordanian non-resident
Ambassador Fares Mufti. On the Azerbaijani side, Minister for Foreign
Affairs Almar Mamadiarov, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
National Security Navroz Mammadov and the Azerbaijani Ambassador in
Amman Alman Arsli.

BAKU: Armenian Arsons Continue To Catch Azerbaijani Lands

ARMENIAN ARSONS CONTINUE TO CATCH AZERBAIJANI LANDS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Aug. 22, 2006

On 21 August, at night Armenian occupying forces set fire to no man’s
land in Noyemberyan village bordering with the Azerbaijani village
Kamarli in Gazakh region.

Deputy head of Gazakh executive power Farman Naghdeliyev told
journalists, APA’s Garabagh bureau reports.

Naghdeliyev said the fire was brought under control by local
firefighters with the help of soldiers and local residents after 6
hours. However, the fire caught 5000 hectares of pasture and farmlands.

Local residents said about 25-30 antitank and antipersonnel mines
exploded during the fire.

Anniversary is a time of reflection for the families

Anniversary is a time of reflection for the families
By John Leonidou

Cyprus Mail
13 Aug 06

IT WAS meant to be day of excitement for most of the passengers on
board Helios Airways flight ZU 522 as families boarded for their
summer holidays. It ended a day of national tragedy, shock and
mourning as their plane crashed into the hills of Grammatikos near
Athens, killing all 121 passengers and crew on board.

On the eve of the first anniversary of the disaster – the worst
inCypriot aviation history – the Head of the Helios Crash Victims
Relatives Committee Nicolas Yiasoumis told the Sunday Mail, `This is a
very sad time for us as the anniversary approaches.

`Memories of that fateful day come back to us, in which we said
goodbye, or rather au revoir, to our relatives who were going on
holiday only to be told some hours later that we were not to see them
again… ever.’ Around 190 relatives of the victims will fly to
Grammatikos to attend a memorial service tomorrow, August 14, he said,
`and then pray at the site of the disaster’.

Twelve entire Cypriot families, including a family of four Armenian
Cypriots, were wiped out in last August’s horrific crash. The
youngest victim was four years old.

In all, 17 children under the age of 16 died in the crash. Three of
the children, aged 16, 14 and five died along with their parents.

The oldest passengers were a couple aged 63 and 65.

Few people in Cyprus did not know one of the victims, but places like
Paralimni and Dhali lost more than most.

Sixteen resident of Paralimni died, half of them children.

Three entire families from the town were wiped out, including Christos
Pyrillis 40, his wife Antonia, 36 and their three children Eva 12,
Xenios 10 and Marcos six, who had gone on a week-long holiday

Another Cypriot family in Paralimni, who were visiting from Australia,
left their 20-month old baby at home with its grandparents because it
had a fever. The boy, George Xiourouppa, is now an orphan.

His father Demos, 39, his mother Margarita, 34, and sisters Sophia,
10, and Joanna, nine, died in the crash.

It has been a daunting time for the relatives, who have had to go on
with their lives thinking of what might have been had their loved ones
just nothad chosen that day or that plane to fly.

The relatives’ committee was formed in the aftermath of the crash`to
protect the orphans who have been left behind by this horrible
event,’ said Yiasoumis.

Maintaining those rights has not been without its problems.

The relatives have more than once come into confrontation with the
Communications Ministry, mainly over what they believe is the
Ministry’s loose handling of some of Helios Airways’ activities
after the accident.

But as the eve of the anniversary approaches, Yiasoumis believes that
it is a time of reflection and a time to remind ourselves that those
responsible must not escape unpunished.

`I call on the authorities also to reflect on what happened and get to
find out once and for all what happened aboard Helios Airways flight
ZU 522,’ said Yiasoumis.

He added: `However, right now we are just waiting for the commentsof
Boeing and Helios to be reviewed so Mr Kallis’ investigating team in
Cyprus can get to work and bring those responsible to justice.’