Tennis: Agassi keen on journey to roots

Gulf News, United Arab Emirates
February 21, 2005

AGASSI KEEN ON JOURNEY TO ROOTS

Alaric Gomes, Staff Reporter

–>After a quick tour of Dubai, American legend Andre Agassi
admitted that he wouldn’t mind risking a trip to neighbouring Iran in
an attempt to trace his roots.

“If I have more time here, then I don’t mind making a quick trip to
Tehran and seeing things for myself,” Agassi told reporters at the
Dubai Tennis Stadium yesterday.

Born in Armenia, Agassi’s father Mike Agassian was a boxer with the
national team that went to the 1952 Olympic Games. After he moved to
the US, however, Mike dropped the final two letters in Agassian to
became Agassi.

“Logistically and culturally I have seen how Dubai would compare with
Tehran from the stories I have heard from my father,” Agassi said.
“Most of what I’ve heard about life in this region, and Iran in
particular, is from my father,” he added.

“If I have more time, then it would be possible to go and see things
for myself.”

However, with Patrick McEnroe asking Agassi to step into the US Davis
Cup team this year, such a trip would not seem feasible.

“It would have been really interesting to see all this first hand.
But I have to go to the Davis Cup,” Agassi said.

The American star, however, has seen a lot of potential for this
region, Dubai in particular. “I do have a lot of business interests.
But most of these are confined inside the lines (of the tennis
court),” Agassi said in response to a query.

However, he did agree that eight of his friends have come along with
him on this trip to the region. “I hope such a trip is not once in a
lifetime. I get the feel how much it is to have a holiday,” he
stated.

Agassi felt that most often players do not get the chance of taking a
closer look at the places they visit while on the Tour.

“It’s a tease sort of situation where we really do not get a chance
to enjoy the cultural variety of a place,” Agassi admitted.

“But, it’s been quite different here and I’ve been really getting a
good insight of this place.”

“Logistically and culturally I have seen how Dubai would compare with
Tehran from the stories I have heard from my father,” Agassi said.

“Most of what I’ve heard about life in this region, and Iran in
particular, is from my father.”

Remaining Faithful to Ideas of 1988

REMAINING FAITHFUL TO IDEAS OF 1988

Azg/arm
22 Feb 05

The National Assembly of Nagorno Karabakh made a statement on occasion
of the Day Artsakh’s Revival (Feb. 20) reaffirming the resolution of
building a democratic state on the bases of Nagorno Karabakh people’s
right of self-determination and sticking to the track of the OSCE
Minsk group peace talks.

The statement appeals to the Azerbaijani authorities to give up the
myopic policy of confrontation and to make efforts to establish peace,
stability, trust and tolerance in the region. Meanwhile, believing
that the world community will appreciate Artsakh people’s efforts to
build a jural state andcivil society, the statement calls for
parliaments of all countries to support Nagorno Karabakh Republic’s
recognition.

The Day of Artsakh’s Revival was celebrated in Stepanakert with young
people and school children rallying on the Victory Square. “To
Complete Victory in Elders’ Footsteps” was the youth’s
slogan. Participants of historic events, rector of Artsakh State
University Hamlet Grigorian, poet Hrachya Beglarian, held speech
before people calling for the youth to keep to the ideas of national
self-determination aroused in 1988.

Soon after the multitude headed for the Stepanakert Memorial of
freedom fighters to pay tribute. The arrangements of the day continued
as the Officer’s Home aired films on Artsakh movement. A concert at
the Youth’s Cultural Home closed the day.

The national liberation movement set off as the Regional Council took
its historic decision on the 20th special session of Autonomic Region
of Nagorno Karabakh on February 20 of 1988. The people of Artsakh
proved its right of existence having underwent numerous trails. That
very Council leads today’s generation to the complete fulfillment of
their dreams.

By Kim Gabrielian in Stepanakert

Oranges and lemons perturb Putin

Oranges and lemons perturb Putin
by Jeremy Page

The Times (London)
February 19, 2005, Saturday

A MAP of the former Soviet Union must be a troubling, if not colourful,
sight for a former KGB officer such as Vladimir Putin as he prepares
for a summit with President Bush next week (Jeremy Page writes).

Since Mr Putin became President of Russia in 2000, the United States
has relentlessly encroached on Moscow’s sphere of influence in
Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia. First the conflict in
Afghanistan brought US troops to Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Then the
Rose Revolution swept a Western-minded liberal into power in Georgia in
2003. Within a few months the US was training Georgian special forces.

Next Nato fighter jets arrived in the former Soviet republic of
Lithuania after its accession to the alliance in 2004. And late last
year Russia lost its foothold in Ukraine when the Western-leaning
liberal Viktor Yushchenko came to power.

But the erosion of Russia’s strategic orbit does not stop there,
analysts say. They are predicting a series of copycat “revolutions”
in Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Armenia and, possibly, Kazakhstan that will
dash for good Mr Putin’s aspirations to reassert Moscow’s influence
over its former empire.

The Russian media have even come up with names for future revolutions:
grape for Moldova; apricot for Armenia; aubergine for Azerbaijan;
and amber for the tiny Russian enclave of Kaliningrad.

One of the places they are not predicting revolution is in Russia
itself, where Mr Putin recently abolished direct elections for
regional governors.

CIS FMs to discuss reform of commonwealth bodies in Minsk

PanArmenian News
Feb 17 2005

17.02.2005 13:35

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The recurrent sitting of the CIS Council of Foreign
Ministers is planned in Minsk March 18. The ministers will discussed
the work done within the accountable period, will outline the plans
for the coming months. One of the most important issues on the agenda
will be the topic of reforming the CIS bodies. The parties intend to
hear reports, as well as to consider drafts of documents on the CIS
reform. Finally, the drafts will be considered at the summer summit
of CIS leaders in Tatarstan.

Armenia/Azerbaijan: Mediator Sees No Organized Settlement Policy InO

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
Feb 14 2005

Armenia/Azerbaijan: Mediator Sees No Organized Settlement Policy In Occupied Lands
By Jean-Christophe Peuch

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) last
week completed an unprecedented fact-finding mission into Azerbaijan’s
occupied territories to verify claims that Armenian authorities are
sending settlers to the area. The mission, which was supervised by
the three co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, was the first of its
kind since the suspension of the 1988-94 Nagorno-Karabakh war. In an
exclusive interview with RFE/RL, France’s Minsk Group co-chairman,
Bernard Fassier, discussed the mission’s preliminary findings.

Prague, 14 February 2005 (RFE/RL) — For more than a week, experts
from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
toured the seven Azerbaijani administrative districts that ethnic
Armenian troops have occupied for the past 12 years.

Those include the regions of Kalbacar, Lacin, Qubadli, Fuzuli,
Cebrayil, Zangilan, and Agdam.

This is the first time since these territories fell into the hands
of ethnic Armenian forces in 1992-93 that the OSCE was authorized to
conduct a fact-finding mission there.

The eight-member mission was placed under the supervision of the
so-called Minsk Group of nations that has been mediating the Karabakh
conflict for the past 13 years on behalf of the OSCE. Since 1996,
the Minsk Group has been co-chaired by France, Russia, and the
United States.

France’s co-chair, Bernard Fassier, toured Azerbaijan’s occupied
territories with the OSCE experts. He told RFE/RL that the mission,
which had long been demanded by Azerbaijan, was made possible only
after arduous talks between Baku and Yerevan. Azerbaijan claims
the Armenian and Karabakh authorities have already sent some 23,000
settlers to the areas and demands that an end be put to what it says
is a deliberate policy of colonization.

“The determinant factor that made this mission possible — despite
Armenia’s earlier objections — was a compromise reached recently by
the two countries under the aegis of the Minsk Group co-chairs. The
main provision of the compromise was that Azerbaijan would suspend its
action at the United Nations in return for — among other things —
Armenia’s consent to that mission, the technicalities of which were
agreed to by both parties,” Fassier said.

In early 1993, ethnic Armenian forces were in full control of
Nagorno-Karabakh and had already secured the strategic southern
corridor of Lacin that links the separatist exclave to Armenia.

In March 1993, ethnic Armenian forces launched a two-pronged offensive
that drove Azerbaijan’s rag-tag army farther east and expelled hundreds
of thousands of Azerbaijanis and Kurds from their homes.

Kalbacar fell on 3 April 1993. Agdam, Fuzuli, Cebrayil, and other
cities and towns followed soon thereafter.

The Armenian victory, achieved in just four months, precipitated the
collapse of Azerbaijani President Abulfaz Elchibey’s regime. Recalled
from Moscow in the wake of a military coup, Soviet Politburo member
Heidar Aliyev soon took power in Baku and precipitately negotiated
a truce that came into effect in May 1994.

As a prerequisite to any negotiations on the status of Karabakh,
Azerbaijan demands that ethnic Armenian troops leave all occupied
territories in line with a string of resolutions approved by the
UN Security Council. But Armenia, which also represents Karabakh at
the peace talks, wants the future of the enclave to be negotiated in
parallel with the troop withdrawal.

Azerbaijan claims the Armenian and Karabakh authorities have already
sent some 23,000 settlers to the areas and demands that an end be
put to what it says is a deliberate policy of colonization.

But French Ambassador Fassier told RFE/RL that, with one noticeable
exception, Armenian migration into the occupied territories seems to
be largely spontaneous and improvised.

“Contrary to what many people thought, there doesn’t seem to be a
deliberate, large-scale plan to settle those areas. One exception,
however, is the Lacin district. In Lacin, one can say that the
[Armenian] settlement is being encouraged and sponsored. But with
regard to the six remaining districts, its seems that up to 80 to
90 percent of settlers have gone there either on their own or with
the support of local nongovernmental organizations or the [Armenian]
diaspora. Except for Lacin, there is no large-scale involvement from
[the Nagorno-Karabakh capital of] Stepanakert, even less so from
Yerevan,” Fassier said.

Although the OSCE mission had no mandate to conduct a census, Fassier
believes the number of Armenian settlers populating the occupied
territories roughly matches the estimates given by Azerbaijani
authorities.

The French diplomat said the largest group of settlers is made up of
Armenian refugees who fled Azerbaijan before the Karabakh war broke out
in 1988 and in the early months of the conflict. The second-largest
group is composed of victims of the December 1988 earthquake that
leveled the Armenian city of Spitak and partially destroyed Leninakan,
Stepanavan, and Kirovakan.

“Finally, there is a third and much smaller group that consists of
people who have fled Armenia for economic reasons, or who live in
mountainous areas of Armenia and come on a seasonal basis to these
more temperate areas for cattle-breeding purposes. During the winter
season, these families come down from their mountains to graze their
few cows or sheep in these more temperate zones,” Fassier said.

Fassier noted that most Armenian settlers are apparently receiving
no assistance whatsoever from Yerevan or Stepanakert. He said the
precarious Armenian settlements, generally made up of a few families,
remain isolated from each other because there are neither roads nor
any means of communication.

With the exception of Lacin, no organized effort has been made to
restore infrastructure destroyed during the war. Also, Fassier said,
no reconstruction program has been initiated and many settlers continue
to live in appalling conditions more than 10 years into the cease-fire.

“In many areas there is no electricity and poverty predominates. I
wouldn’t say people live. Rather, they are surviving in half-destroyed
walls topped by a tin roof. To survive, these families rely on
small gardens or plots of land that offer only limited agricultural
possibilities. Sometimes, they also rely on what a few fruit
orchards that have been in a state of neglect for the past 10 years
are still able to produce. In the most extreme situations there is
no electricity and just a hole in the ground, a fountain or a well
to draw water from. In areas where conditions are slightly better,
accumulators allow for just enough electricity to supply a single
bulb. In other areas there are small generators. Sometimes electricity
is either imported from Karabakh or supplied by an Armenian military
base nearby,” Fassier said.

Due to its key strategic importance as a land bridge between Karabakh
and Armenia, Yerevan insists that the notion of returning the Lacin
corridor to Azerbaijan is a nonnegotiable issue.

In Lacin, Fassier said, migrants live in much better conditions
then in other occupied lands. The reconstruction rate is nearing 50
percent. Schools have been built with government support, water and
electricity supplies progressively restored, and local administrations
set up — all things that would sustain Baku’s claims of an organized
settlement policy.

The OSCE experts are due to present their final report to the Minsk
Group co-chairs. The latter will then add their own recommendations
and political conclusions before passing on the report to the other
Minsk Group members and the OSCE Permanent Council in Vienna —
tentatively scheduled for the second half of March.

System Of A Down Release Date

Ultimate-Guitar.Com
Feb 9 2005

System Of A Down Release Date

Date: 2005-02-09 Artist: System Of A Down Category: Upcoming Releases

Blabbermouth.net reports, System Of A Down have confirmed an April 26
release date for “Mezmerize”, the first half of their new double
album set. The second CD, titled “Hypnotize”, will be out sometime
this fall. Meanwhile, the first single from “Mezmerize”, called
“B.Y.O.B.”, is poised to arrive at rock radio on or around March 1,
according to Launch Radio Networks.

The Armenian-American quartet has just wrapped up its headlining
stint on Australia and New Zealand’s Big Day Out festival and is
heading home to Los Angeles to finish work on the new album.

The band is also one of many acts that have donated items to a second
eBay auction sponsored by Waxploitation Records to raise money for
genocide victims in the African nation of Sudan. Other artists that
have contributed signed or rare items include Dave Matthews,
Dashboard Confessional, and Bad Religion. System contributed to
Waxploitation’s first such auction last month, along with Limp
Bizkit, Korn, 311, Rob Zombie and others.

AAA: Armenia This Week – 02/07/2005

ARMENIA THIS WEEK

Monday, February 7, 2005

In this issue:

Armenian Assembly sends condolences to Georgia’s leader

Armenia expresses condolences, anxiety over Zhvania’s death

U.S., Armenia cooperate in the Embassy briber investigation

Senior Azeri officials linked to terrorism, drug smuggling

February 3, 2005

His Excellency Mikheil Saakashvili

President, Republic of Georgia

Tbilisi, Georgia

Dear President Saakashvili,

It was with great sadness that we learned of the tragic and untimely
death of Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania. We extend our heartfelt
condolences to Prime Minister Zhvania’s family, to the Georgian people
and to you and your colleagues.

The entire world has taken notice of the sweeping reforms you, the Prime
Minister and your colleagues have initiated throughout Georgia. During
meetings with Prime Minister Zhvania, we had discussed ways in which the
Georgian-American community and the Armenian Assembly of America could
work together to improve the lives of the Georgian and Armenian peoples,
thereby contributing to a stable and flourishing region. We remain
committed to this.

Mr. Zhvania’s legacy will live on as you continue building a strong and
prosperous Republic of Georgia.

On behalf of the Board of Trustees, Board of Directors, members and
staff of the Armenian Assembly of America, we extend our deep
condolences to the Georgian people.

With compassion,

Hirair Hovnanian Anthony
Barsamian

Chairman, Board of Trustees Chairman,
Board of Directors

[AAA Note: Chairman of the Assembly Board of Directors Anthony Barsamian
and Armenia Director Arpi Vartanian visited Georgia and met its leaders
last June.]

ARMENIA EXPRESSES CONDOLENCES, ANXIETY OVER GEORGIAN PRIME MINISTER’S
DEATH

President Robert Kocharian and other Armenian leaders have expressed
shock and grief over the sudden death of Georgia’s Prime Minister Zurab
Zhvania last week. According to the official report, Zhvania, 41 and a
close friend and colleague 25-year-old Raul Yusupov, were found dead of
carbon monoxide poisoning at a Tbilisi apartment. Georgian police said
that deaths were accidental and no foul play was involved.

Kocharian’s message said the news was received “with pain in Armenia. We
share the grief of this loss with you.” He further noted Zhvania’s role
in strengthening Georgian-Armenian relations. There is also anxiety in
Armenia that the death may bring back instability to Georgia. The
Georgian government appointed over a year ago and led by Zhvania has
cracked down on rampant corruption, reducing the barriers to travel and
trade with and through Georgia, on which Armenia depends. Reflecting
these changes, Armenia’s trade with Georgia grew by 50 percent last
year, faster than with any other country. Zhvania also made a personal
contribution to the bilateral relationship, admonishing Georgian
politicians who in the past frequently engaged in xenophobic,
anti-Armenian rhetoric and declaring to the Georgian Parliament that he
was proud that his mother, accomplished physicist Mariam
Antonova-Zhvania, is an ethnic Armenian.

Zhvania had the most political experience of the leaders of the Georgian
opposition movement that forced out President Eduard Shevardnadze in
November 2003. Long seen as a political successor to Shevardnadze,
Zhvania for six years served as Parliament Speaker before breaking ranks
with Shevardnadze in 2001. While at the helm of the Parliament, he is
credited with attracting young, Western-educated cadres, such as the
future President Mikhail Saakashvili, to serve in the government.
Zhvania played a key role in what became known as Georgia’s “revolution
of the roses,” the subsequent anti-corruption drive and diffusing
tensions in Ajaria and South Ossetia last year.

Many Georgian commentators have questioned the official version of the
Prime Minister’s death. Some pointed to the deadly bomb blast earlier
last week outside the police station in the town of Gori near the South
Ossetia region, which saw renewed fighting last year, as somehow
connected. Others have linked an apparent suicide by the Georgian
President’s staff member 32-year-old Giorgi Khelashvili and murder of a
Russia-based Georgian businessman Mamuka Jincharadze, just days after
Zhvania’s death, as possibly linked. According to the U.S. Ambassador to
Georgia Richard Miles, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) will
send a special team of experts to study the circumstances of Zhvania’s
death, as well as the recent blast in Gori. (Sources: Armenia This Week
4-2-04, 1-24; Noyan Tapan 2-3; Regnum 6-10-04, 2-4, 5, 6, 7; Civil.ge
2-4, 5, 6, 7; BBC News 2-5; Daily Telegraph 2-6)

U.S., ARMENIA COOPERATE IN EMBASSY BRIBERY INVESTIGATION

A former U.S. consular official in Armenia has been charged with bribery
and visa fraud, an indictment jointly released by the Departments of
Justice and State said last week. Piotr Zdzislaw Parlej, who pleaded
guilty, faces between 5 and 15 years in prison for bribes he allegedly
took from visa applicants while working at the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan
until last month. The case was jointly investigated by the U.S. State
Department’s Diplomatic Security Service, the Embassy in Yerevan and
Armenia’s law-enforcement authorities. In a statement issued last week,
the U.S. Embassy in Armenia praised Armenia’s National Security Service
“for their invaluable assistance” in the case. (Sources: Mediamax 2-4;
Noyan Tapan 2-4)

SENIOR AZERI OFFICIALS LINKED TO TERRORISM, DRUG SMUGGLING

Recent publications in Azerbaijan’s opposition-leaning press have
renewed accusations that senior government officials are linked to
terror groups and drug trafficking. A publication last week said that an
unnamed “head of a state committee and a patron of various sports” had a
private army, elements of which have fought against the U.S. in
Afghanistan and Iraq to “gain experience.” Another publication alleged
that the head of the State Customs Committee Gen. Kamaleddin Heydarov
and Border Guards commander Gen. Elchin Guliyev are complicit in
narcotics trafficking.

Azerbaijan reportedly lies at the crossroads of the opium and heroin
trade stretching from Afghanistan and Pakistan to Russia and Western
Europe. A State Department report issued last March suggested that while
drug trafficking is a significantly smaller problem in Armenia than in
the neighboring states, it could potentially exacerbate should borders
with either Turkey or Azerbaijan open. (Sources: Armenia This Week 6-18,
10-4, 25; Monitor 12-25; Azadliq 2-1)

A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
(202) 638-4904

E-Mail [email protected] WEB

http://www.aaainc.org

Education: Anxiety in the UK: Serious complaints by overseas student

Education: Anxiety in the UK: Serious complaints by overseas students are
unjustified, says their university

The Guardian – United Kingdom
Feb 08, 2005
HSIAO-HUNG PAI REPORTS

About 400 students from east Asia have enrolled for programmes this
year at Royal Holloway, University of London. They are paying at
least three times the fees of UK students, but came because they
regarded it as a prestigious place to study. But following a series
of what appear to be racially motivated assaults, several students at
the campus in Egham, Surrey, have expressed concerns about security,
accommodation, and what they describe as a culture of isolation within
the college. These claims are vociferously denied by Royal Holloway.

A Korean female postgraduate exchange student was attacked by three
youths – one man and two women – inside a college laundry room at
the main campus in November, 2004. They verbally abused her and hit
her continuously for half an hour, till she fell on the floor. Then
they started kicking her. She was left with bad injuries and bruises
all over her face.

“There is no security system at this university,” said Mr Jin,
president of the Korean society, who asked us not to publish his first
name. The incident provoked great anger among east Asian students
and overseas students in general. The Korean society, along with the
Chinese society, Japanese society, Taiwanese society and the Indian
society, presented a petition with 400 signatures to the college,
demanding that a satisfactory security system be installed, with
better lighting on campus and an increased patrol.

“In the first two weeks, patrolling increased. But things got back to
usual after that,” said a Korean student who doesn’t want to be named.

Two months later, on January 28, a Chinese-German student was attacked
by 10 youths at the south gate, outside the college grounds. On the
same night, an Indian student was attacked.

“The college could have done better on informing students about the
attacks,” said Zepyur Batikyar, an Armenian MA student. “We got to
hear of them mostly from other students.”

“We feel extremely excluded by our skin colour,” said Yu-Jen Bai,
a postgraduate business student from Taiwan, “We almost feel we can
only be protected by the presence of a white student.”

Royal Holloway emphatically denied it had responded inadequately to
the attacks. All the students have been offered support and counselling
since the attacks, a spokeswoman said.

“The incident involving a Korean student was taken very seriously,
and subjected to a full investigation in collaboration with Korea
University, [the] students’ union, the local community and local
police. The college has also provided ongoing support for the student
involved.

“The student support officer, who has been working closely with the
Korean student involved in this incident, has received much gratitude
for the care and support, and we understand the student is hoping to
return to Royal Holloway for further study.”

After the November attack, the spokeswoman said, a bulletin was issued
by the students’ union alerting students. “Lighting systems throughout
the campus were reviewed and the level of patrol by security officers
was increased to cover additional areas on the campus, in particular,
those close to halls of residences, and arrangements for these patrols
were continued through the vacation period. In addition, the college
is working closely with the local community and police to seek ways
to ensure that all members of the community continue to work and live
in a safe and secure environment.”

It was “totally inaccurate” to say the college had no security
system. “Each of the halls of residence has a resident warden to
support students and the college operates 24-hour security presence.”

Students, particularly east Asian students, feel fearful of these
attacks and are deeply concerned that something should be done. But,
according to Jin, they have no proper channels of complaint and are
worried that too much noise would have a negative effect on their
status at college.

“There is practically no means of communication between overseas
students and the college authorities,” said a Taiwanese MBA student.

Royal Holloway’s spokeswoman said: “This could not be further from
the truth. The college prides itself on its level of pastoral care.”

Yuki Yanagi, a 22-year-old postgraduate student from Japan, says that
the attack in November “is not just a Korean issue. To the eyes of
locals, we look similar and I feel the same thing could happen to me
or my friends.

“I have become very cautious. Nowadays I only do shopping in the
daytime and in British, male company.” My parents are worried
about me.”

Safety has, in fact, been a long-term concern. “Incidents of attacks
and harassment have been going on here for at least two years. MBA
students who studied here in 2003/04 warned me about safety the first
day I got here,” said Yu-Jen Bai. “There should have been stronger
action from the students themselves. I never imagined safety to be
a problem at London University.

“The problem is our student societies are only interested in organising
social events. They aren’t interested in fighting for our rights. I
guess it’s because they are run by younger people, undergraduates,
who aren’t very aware.”

The students suffer from being both separate and visible. “Life
is isolated and lonely here,” says Sangseuk Park. Like many other
east Asian students, Park chose to study at Holloway because of its
excellent international reputation. “And the campus looks so nice,”
he said. He is self-funded and pays a tuition fee of pounds 8,500
for a one-year course.

Park finds language a barrier. He only socialises with east Asian
students. “It’s not so easy to interact with local students. Perhaps
it’s cultural differences.”

“It isn’t always language that is the barrier,” says Zepyur Batikyar.
“Self-blame was my initial reaction when I experienced distance from
the local environment. But I understood it wasn’t me at all when I
began to interact so well with other overseas students.”

“We don’t go out much. Our weekend entertainment is going to the
cinema in Staines with other Chinese students,” says Gu Chen, 24,
a Chinese postgraduate in Business Information Systems.

Yuki Yanagi came to this college for its reputation in women’s
studies. She’s eager to be socially active and learn about local
culture. She joined the women’s football team where there are hardly
any Asian players, and went to watch the football in the local pub.

“But the best time of my stay in Royal Holloway was when I met east
Asian students. We socialise a lot and I feel things are getting
better and better.”

She’s disappointed with the level of interaction between overseas
and local students. “I often have racially abusive jokes thrown at
me by fellow students, and some of the sexually harassing behaviour
really disgusts me.”

Pei-Ling Lu, a business postgraduate from Taiwan, says: “We didn’t
really know that much about the course structure or the environment
before we came, because all the information was provided by agencies
at home, who gave us nothing but college brochures.”

All the east Asian students we spoke to talked about the administrative
inefficiency of the college. “Our requests are often ignored or
delayed,” one said.

Accommodation is also one of the biggest concerns among overseas
students here. “There is a large difference in the types of
accommodation we get, and the criteria of housing distribution seems
arbitrary,” said one student.

“There’s no support for overseas students here,” said Gu Chen. “We
believe that overseas students tend to be given poorer-facilitated
housing. The course is also very different from what I had
expected. It’s loosely organised, and the teaching hours are too
short – only two days a week.”

The postgraduates on the business courses seem particularly unhappy
with what they get in return for the high tuition fees. “The college
facilities are commercialised,” one MBA student said. “There are
bars run by outside companies, which charge higher prices than local
pubs. But there aren’t enough academic resources, such as a good
library. This is only geared towards undergraduate interests.”

The college denied these charges. “International students are given
priority in securing accommodation within halls of residence. In
the case of a large group of students, such as those from Korea
University, we also work to accommodate them across the campus, to
enable them to integrate more fully within the campus community,”
said the spokeswoman.

“We consider our accommodation standards to be high – situated in a
135-acre parkland campus. Royal Holloway opened a brand new pounds
23m state-of-the-art halls development in September 2004. Many
international students are within these halls. Indeed, we have a
collaborative venture with Korea University, and a section of the
halls have been named in honour of a Korean industrialist.”

She added: “We have many channels in operation to receive feedback
from students. Standards of teaching at the college are frequently
praised by students, and the college’s record demonstrates our high
commitment to teaching and research.”

OSCE completes mission in disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave

OSCE completes mission in disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave

Associated Press Worldstream
February 7, 2005 Monday

BAKU, Azerbaijan — Officials from the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe left the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave Monday after
completing a fact-finding mission as part of efforts to resolve the
territory’s status and end a long-running dispute between Armenia
and Azerbaijan.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Metin Mirza said the mission from the
so-called Minsk Group would report back to the main body of the OSCE
before a final report is issued.

The four-day OSCE mission was investigating, among other things,
whether ethnic Armenians are settling in occupied territories around
the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s has been
trying to help the two countries reach a settlement for enclave,
which since the mid-1990s has been under the control of ethnic
Armenian forces. The forces also occupy some territory adjacent to
Nagorno-Karabakh proper.

A cease-fire in the conflict was reached in 1994, but
Nagorno-Karabakh’s political status remains unsettled. Its ethnic
Armenian government is not recognized internationally, and Baku
insists it must remain part of Azerbaijan.

Mirza also said Azerbaijan would again seek to the have the U.N.
General Assembly discuss the status of the enclave.

Meanwhile, in Nagorno-Karabakh, officials said the mission met in the
enclave’s main city, Stepanakert, with Armenian refugees who were
driven out of Azerbaijan during the six-year war in the 1990s that
killed some 30,000 people and sent 1 million fleeing from their homes.

ANKARA: President Aliyev Of Azerbaijan Hosts A Banquet In Honor OfAr

Anadolu Agency
Feb 8 2005

President Aliyev Of Azerbaijan Hosts A Banquet In Honor Of Arinc

Anadolu Agency: 2/7/2005
BAKU – President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan hosted a banquet in honor
of Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc, who is currently in Baku
on an official visit, on Monday.

Relations of Azerbaijan with the other regional countries, and the
Upper Karabakh dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia were high on
agenda during the banquet.

Speaking at the banquet, President Aliyev called on Turkey to support
them in their fight against Armenian occupation.

Meanwhile, Arinc said in his part that several decisions were made by
the EU and the United Nations for withdrawal of Armenia from the
occupied Azerbaijani territories, adding, ”however, Armenian
occupation has been continuing. More than 1 million people were
forced to leave their homes. They have been living under extremely
difficult conditions. Turkey will continue extending all kinds of
support to Azerbaijan in its rightful struggle.”