BAKU: OSCE Rapporteur Warns Of Risk Of Clashes Over Garabagh

OSCE RAPPORTEUR WARNS OF RISK OF CLASHES OVER GARABAGH

AzerNews Weekly
Sept 3 2008
Azerbaijan

The risk of armed clashes continues in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
over Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh, the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (PA)
president`s special rapporteur on the conflict has said.

Goran Lennmarker, who arrived in Baku on Monday as part of a visit to
the South Caucasus region, expressed his hope that both sides in this
ongoing conflict would seek a common ground, saying it was pivotal to
compromise in exchange for a settlement to the long-standing dispute.

"If a compromise solution is found, many refugees will be able to
return home. I believe this is important for both countries," he said.

Upper Garabagh is an Azerbaijani region that has been occupied by
Armenian forces since a 1994 ceasefire ended separatist fighting that
killed an estimated 30,000 people and forced as many as one million
people from their homes.

The OSCE`s team of diplomats, referred to as the Minsk Group, has
been brokering the peace process.

In reference to the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict, Lennmarker said the
OSCE unequivocally supported Georgia`s territorial integrity. He said
his visit to the region would allow him to closely follow ongoing
developments in the South Caucasus republic, where a brief war with
Russia took place in August.

"Abkhazia is Georgian territory and residents of the region have been
living side by side for years," Lennmarker said.

He added that Azerbaijan is one of the three South Caucasus states,
and how relations develop among these regional states following the
Georgian-Russian conflict will be carefully watched.

On August 16, Lennmarker was appointed the OSCE PA special envoy
for Georgia and the situation in its breakaway republic of South
Ossetia. After completing the visit to Azerbaijan, he is scheduled
to meet with officials in Armenia and Georgia. He will, further,
submit a report on the current situation in Georgia when the PA meets
in Toronto, Canada from September 18-21.

Armenian FM, Turkish Diplomat Discuss Details Of Gul’s Visit

ARMENIAN FM, TURKISH DIPLOMAT DISCUSS DETAILS OF GUL’S VISIT

armradio.am
03.09.2008 10:52

On September 3 RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian received
Ambassador Unal Cevikoz, the special envoy of the President of Turkey
Abdullah Gul.

The parties discussed the details of Turkish President Abdullah Gul’s
visit to Armenia on the occasion of the qualifying match between the
national football teams of the two countries.

Reference was made to Turkey’s initiative to establish a Stability and
Cooperation Platform in the Caucasus. Minister Nalbandian noted that
Armenia has always welcomed any effort targeted at the reinforcement
of trust, deepening of security and cooperation in the region, and
the idea of the Stability and Cooperation Platform in the Caucasus
can only be hailed.

Minister Nalbandian said Armenia has always stood for establishing
friendly ties with all the countries of the region and ensuring
lasting peace in the Caucasus.

Edward Nalbandian and Unal Cevikoz exchanged views on a number of
international, regional and bilateral issues.

Gul’s Visit To Yerevan Won’t Damage Turkey-Azerbaijan Relations

GUL’S VISIT TO YEREVAN WON’T DAMAGE TURKEY-AZERBAIJAN RELATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.09.2008 13:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Ambassador to Azerbaijan Hulusi Kilic said
Azerbaijan will benefit from Gul’s visit to Armenia.

"Dialog has always been an effective measure," he said when commenting
on Azeri reaction to Gul’s forthcoming visit to the Armenian capital.

"Turkey pursues a clear policy. This visit will not damage the
Turkey-Azerbaijan relations. It will be just an ordinary soccer game,"
the Ambassador said.

He refuted hearsay that Gul’s visit will be crowned with opening of
the Armenian-Turkish border. "The issue won’t be discussed unless the
Karabakh problem is resolved," he said, the Azeri Press Agency reports.

Bishop Anoushavan Will Attend WCC Meetings

BISHOP ANOUSHAVAN WILL ATTEND WCC MEETINGS

Armenians Today
Sep 1, 2008

CAMBRIDGE, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENIANS TODAY. Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian
will attend the World Council of Churches’ Faith and Order consultation
on "Tradition and Traditions: Early Sources of Authority in the
Church," in Cambridge, United Kingdom, from September 1 to 6. Bishop
Anoushavan will present the Armenian Church’s approach to this topic.

Other participants include the Syrian Orthodox Church, Eastern Orthodox
Church, Anglican Church, and Methodist Church. Bishop Anoushavan is
Vicar General of the Eastern Prelacy and the Ecumenical Officer in
the United States on behalf of the Catholicosate of Cilicia.

Serge Sargsian Congratulated Nagorno-Karabakh Republic On Independen

SERGE SARGSIAN CONGRATULATED NAGORNO-KARABAKH REPUBLIC ON INDEPENDENCE DAY

De Facto
2008-09-02 17:38:00

YEREVAN, 02.09.08. DE FACTO. RA President Serge Sargsian congratulated
Karabakh people on the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’s Independence Day.

According to the RA President’s Press Office, Armenian President’s
congratulatory message runs, in part, "Dear compatriots, I congratulate
you on the Independence Day.

The past 17 years proved that Artsakh people’s choice was the
only right in that situation. This choice is historical, sacred and
incontestable for us. Today is a holiday for everyone: it is also the
holiday for those, who immortalized themselves with fighting exploits
in the name of a liberated and worthy homeland.

Dear Artsakh people, You have bore the test of both war and peace and
nowadays you are devoted to the case of building and protecting a free
country. You are devoted to the case, trying to improve your state,
public and economic activity. I am convinced that you will solve
current problems and will be able to resist all future challenges
with the help of Armenia and Armenians living in different countries
of the world.

I again congratulate you on this remarkable holiday and wish you
peaceful sky and steady progress".

ANKARA: Fatih Cekirge: Should The Turkish President Visit Armenia?

FATIH CEKIRGE: SHOULD THE TURKISH PRESIDENT VISIT ARMENIA?

Hurriyet
Sept 1 2008
Turkey

This is the critical question being asked at the table where high
officials of the Turkish Foreign Ministry sit:

-Should Turkish President Abdullah Gul attend the football match
between the Turkey and Armenian national teams?

None of these diplomats say "he should not" attend…

The basic opinion they hold is that "the hand extended by Armenia
should not be left hanging in the air."

At this point, the decision is entirely the president’s.

According to my observations on the issue;

-Gul has decided to accept the invitation to visit Armenia but does
not want to announce it.

Why?

-Because, if he announces it now it will give fanatics in the Armenian
capital, Yerevan time to prepare disruptive actions; as fanatics
collectively buy tickets to watch matches together.

It is for this reason that Gul will announce his decision on Sept 6,
the match’s scheduled date, and travel to Yerevan on that day.

Of course his decision will have some reflections on internal politics?

At hurriyet.com.tr, we conducted a brief survey in which we asked
our readers the following questions:

– Should Gul go or not?

A serious number of readers, 25,000, participated in the survey.

It is a high figure, considering that some 5,000 people participate
in comprehensive surveys… It is important since it also gives an
insight into to what society thinks about this issue.

The result on Sunday afternoon was as follows:

– The percentage of respondents supporting his visit was 41.2 percent.

– The percentage of respondents that do not support his visit was
58.8 percent.

Of course, the relations between the two states leave little room
for sentimentality.

– Can such a visit be paid while Armenia continues its invasion of
Azerbaijani lands?

-Can such a visit be paid while the so-called genocide sculpture
still stands in Yerevan?

The visit can be assessed within the scope of these two questions.

– Turkey can teach a lesson of peace to whole world. The invitation
has been extended, the hand is outstretched, and it should be shaken.

It can also be assessed in this way…

In my point of view, diplomacy cannot progress through fear and closed
borders… The problems will not be solved. It is not consistent to
talk of a Caucasus Platform and to close borders.

It is certain, the only thing that can affect the decision at this
point is:

– Will Gul’s visit be the start of something?

A serious intelligence study is currently ongoing in Yerevan to
understand the atmosphere that exists and the possibility for any
disruptive and destructive activities that might take place at the
match, such as egg throwing or riotous behavior…

This is not an easy task, but as it is Turkey’s president who will
make the visit, all these details are being observed.

Tankian Sure To Surprise And Impress

TANKIAN SURE TO SURPRISE AND IMPRESS
By Richard Smirke

Metro
Sunday, August 31, 2008

Serj Tankian

Political activist, environmental campaigner and, most famously, voice
of alternative metal band System Of A Down, Serj Tankian has never
followed a conventional rock’n’roll career. The Armenian-American
has long been one of the more contentious and idiosyncratic frontmen
in rock.

Now that he is effectively a solo artist, following the announcement
in 2006 that System Of A Down were in indefinite hiatus, he is proving
just as unpredictable. In October last year Tankian’s solo debut,
Elect The Dead, was released to positive reviews, expressing relief
that the singer had abandoned the obscure Armenian folk of his previous
side project, Serart.

In contrast, Elect contained the same blend of soaring guitars,
skewed time signatures and classical arrangements that had made SOAD
so distinctive.

Unsurprisingly, Tankian’s plans for the follow-up record are somewhat
different. ‘I am putting together a world-class orchestra and a few
opera singers to collaborate with for the next one,’ he says. ‘I
am looking at doing a jazz/orchestral record: jazz on the intimate
side and orchestral on the grand side. I want the orchestra to be
the electric guitar.’

Tankian is also working with playwright Steven Sater on a musical
adaptation of Greek tragedy Prometheus Bound. ‘I have never done
a musical or a play, so to me i t’s interesting new territory as a
composer,’ he says, describing the project as ‘ranging in style from
classical to pop, noise to rock to electronic’.

Although keen to stretch himself, Tankian has not abandoned
his rock roots, with this rescheduled UK tour mostly based on
Elect The Dead. Then again, if you’re not prepared for the odd
orchestral-jazz-noise-rock fusion moment, you just don’t know Serj.

Mon Sep 1, ABC, 300 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow. 7pm, £18.50, sold
out, returns only. Tel: 0870 400 0818.

–Boundary_(ID_W86DcI7tmNQXgm FJksfSbw)–

www.serjtankian.com

Reality TV: Footsteps To A Confronting Past

FOOTSTEPS TO A CONFRONTING PAST
By Darren Devlyn

Herald Sun (Australia)
August 27, 2008 Wednesday
C – TVGuide Edition

FAMILY Footsteps delivers the best kind of reality TV.

It takes participants out of their comfort zone, but does not trade
on exploitation or ritual humiliation.

But the show does force people to confront who they are and where
they’re from.

The first episode of the second season illustrates the life Joanna
Kambourian might be living if she’d been born and stayed in her
ancestral homeland, Armenia.

We see Kambourian, who lives on the NSW coast, travel to Armenia to
live with a mentor family in the small village Ohanavan.

Kambourian’s greatest and most confronting challenge came in exploring
her family’s dark past.

Kambourian, 30, is the first in her family to visit Armenia in 90
years. Her great grandfather left the village in shame and Kambourian
is desperate to find out whether her family can lay to rest the ghosts
of the past.

Kambourian was overcome with emotion when visiting a genocide museum. A
historian told her that in 1915, under the cover of World War I,
the Turks began a systematic genocide of Christians and Armenians in
the Ottoman Empire.

Kambourian’s great-grandfather was the surgeon general in the Turkish
army and to save his family he converted to Islam.

Kambourian learned how there was honour and dignity in refusing to
convert, which is why her great-grandfather was made to feel he’d
brought shame to the family.

Modern interpretation of her great-grandfather’s actions, however,
lifts the veil of guilt. He is now seen as someone who simply did
what he had to do to survive.

"It’s about resolution," Kambourian says. "It (the trip to Armenia)
has filled in a big hole I’ve felt for a long time".

Sadly her father died in May after a prolonged battle with cancer.

SERIES

Family Footsteps, PG ABC1, Thursday, 8.30pm Tracing ancestry Duration:
1 hour

Amid War, Georgia’s Tourism Industry Down, But Not Out

AMID WAR, GEORGIA’S TOURISM INDUSTRY DOWN, BUT NOT OUT
Molly Corso

EurasiaNet
Aug 20 2008
NY

Call it a case of supremely bad timing. Among the economic casualties
of the war with Russia are not only Georgia’s ports and energy
transportation grid, but its summer tourism industry, once considered
an engine for economic growth. Despite the dimming prospects for
a rapid Russian pullout, Georgian tourism officials and industry
professionals retain hope that the damage done to the sector can be
repaired relatively quickly.

Over the past few years, the Georgian government has poured millions of
lari into developing the country’s tourism potential. Over a million
visitors – a figure that combines tourists with business travelers
– came to Georgia in 2007, according to official figures. As one
foreign consultant commented, tourism in Georgia was on the brink of
"becoming a really big deal."

When fighting with Russia broke out on August 8, though, that bright
picture suddenly turned dark. Approximately 10,000 tourists have left
Georgia over the past 10 days, the government estimates. And officials
expect the number of both leisure and business visitors to remain
low for the foreseeable future. "This conflict and this emergency
situation has very negatively influenced tourism," said Beka Jakeli,
head of the tourism department.

Despite a recent withdrawal agreement, Russian soldiers still control
key Georgian cities, including Gori and the Black Sea port of Poti,
and have blocked the country’s only east-west highway. Their armored
vehicles often cruise the seaside highway linking Poti with Georgia’s
main Black Sea tourism hub, Batumi, scaring away both Georgians and
foreigners from the west coast’s most favored vacation spots.

No hard and fast number has been put on lost tourism revenue as yet,
but for hotels and tour operators, the conflict could not have come
at a worse time. August is Georgia’s peak tourist season, when life in
Tbilisi slows to a snail’s pace as families – and visiting foreigners
— head en masse for the Black Sea coast or the mountains.

In the Black Sea beach town of Ureki, some 10 kilometers south of Poti,
Eldorado Hotel manger Zurab Morchuvadze says that "practically no one"
is left at his establishment, one of the town’s most popular. The hotel
had been fully booked through August, with 70 percent of the guests
from Armenia, Turkey, the United Kingdom and other countries, he said.

But three days into the conflict, when Russia bombed Poti’s port,
those guests started to go.

"[W]e are close to Poti and [we could] hear when the explosions took
place. It was not very pleasant," Morchuvadze said. "The population
was in a panic."

While no immediate plans exist to close the hotel, Morchuvadze
worries that if Russia’s occupation of Georgian territory continues
for an extended period, hoteliers and other entrepreneurs who cater
to tourists will have no choice but to shut down. Those who now show
up to swim are locals, and they do not stay for long. "No one knows
what will happen. Today Russian forces came to Poti, took some things
and arrested people. Of course [that scares people]," Morchuvadze
told EurasiaNet on August 19. "We are not ready to close the hotel,
but if this continues, we will have to close down."

Reviving tourism promises to be a daunting challenge. Jakeli, the
tourism department head, suggested that a massive PR campaign would
be needed in 2009 to dispel the negative publicity generated by the
conflict. A million-dollar marketing initiative called "Europe Started
Here," launched before the outbreak of hostilities, could serve as
a starting point.

The resilience of international hotel chains that had launched
ventures in Batumi and Tbilisi is another source of hope for tourism
officials. So far, none of the chains have backed out of their
multi-million dollar development deals, according to Jakeli. "All
these brands are still under construction," he said.

Nonetheless, the negative publicity has already made its mark, notes
one American consultant active in Georgia’s tourism campaign. "This
kind of publicity worldwide, will make your average, non-adventure
tourist at least think twice before coming to Georgia," said Mark
Rein Hagen, the former director of the tourism department’s office
of strategy and communications.

Safety guarantees will be key to any kind of tourism revival, believes
Ia Tabagari, general manager for Tbilisi’s Caucasus Travel agency,
one of Georgia’s oldest tour operators. The agency had roughly 150
foreign tourists in Georgia at the time of the conflict and "numerous"
bookings for the next few months, Tabagari said. They are now faced
with a 50-percent cancellation rate. "[W]e need real guarantees of
security," she said. "I believe they [tourists] will come, but it
will take a long time to [for tourism to] recover."

According to PR consultant Hagen, it will all come down to the
country’s ability to market itself once the conflict is over. "[[I]t
takes a while for that impression to die," he said of the war scenes
now shaping most foreign news coverage of Georgia. "But, literally,
once Russian soldiers are off Georgian territory, I think things
will go back to normal very, very quickly, especially for tourism
purposes… It’s a PR game."

Confidential Prayer At Sacred Chrism Jar

CONFIDENTIAL PRAYER AT SACRED CHRISM JAR

Panorama.am
15:41 21/08/2008

On August 19 in The Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin the 40-day
preparation of Sacred Chrism commenced. After evening divine service
a confidential ceremony was conducted by his holiness Karekin ll,
Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians.

According to the press-bureau of The Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin,
his holiness Karekin ll, accompanied by celebrants entered the Holy
Church and made a the first prayer at the Sacred Chrism Jar, full of
pure live-oil. At the end of the solemn ceremony his holiness, Karekin
ll gave his blessings to the believers present. The Supreme patriarch
emphasized the significance of Sacred Chrism preparation, encouraging
people to take a greater part in the life of Armenian Apostolic Church,
because from now on all Armenian churches, cathedrals, holy things
and even our souls will be anointed with Sacred Chrism.

According to the regulations of Armenian Apostolic Church, during 39
days after evening devine service (at 18:00) this confidential prayer
will be made in The Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin.