Armenian government expects bumper fruit crop in 2005

FreshPlaza, Netherlands
June 23 2005

Armenian government expects bumper fruit crop in 2005

Armenia will register this year a sharp increase in its crop of
fruit, which accounts for a large part of its agricultural output,
due to unusually favorable weather conditions, the Agriculture
Ministry said on Wednesday.

Garnik Petrosian, head of the ministry’s fruit-growing department,
told RFE/RL that farmers across the country are expected to collect
nearly 400,000 metric tons of grapes, apples and other fruit, or
almost 54 percent more than last year.

`We are now expecting a very big harvest,’ he said. `We will even
have trouble selling fruit.’ Petrosian added that the yield of
apricots, estimated to total 80,000 tons this year, will be
responsible for most of the anticipated gain.

The apricot harvest in 2004, as reported by the Agriculture Ministry,
stood at a modest 6,000 tons due to a brief but devastating spring
cold snap. That explains why apricots were very expensive and in
short supply in Armenia last year. Their rapidly growing supply,
which will peak at the beginning of July, is already pushing the
prices down dramatically.

The price of one kilogram of apricots, most of them grown in the
fertile Ararat Valley south of Yerevan, slumped from 1,000 drams
($2.2) to below 500 drams in the past week alone. It could be as low
as 100 drams in a few weeks time.

`This year’s harvest is really good,’ said a woman selling fruit at
one of Yerevan’s agricultural markets. `The prices are already going
down.’

`We are going to have plenty of fruits this year, especially
apricots,’ agreed another trader.

But not all buyers shared the traders’ enthusiasm. `The prices are
still high for low-income people,’ complained one elderly man. `True,
they are down but not as much as we pensioners would like.’

`I didn’t even ask fruit prices today because I can’t afford them,’
he added.

According to Petrosian, the expected bumper harvest is also good news
for Armenia’s wine industry as the aggregate output of grapes is on
course to reach 180,000 tons, up from 148,000 tons reported last
year. `The Agriculture Ministry’s key concern now is to have that
crop fully purchased by both food processing plants and exporters,’
he said.

Petrosian added that the government also expects a sizable increase
in the yields of key vegetables such as potatoes and tomatoes.

Earlier this year the Agriculture Ministry predicted further growth
of Armenia’s wheat output which should meet more than two thirds of
the country’s bread
demand in 2005. Ministry officials said they expect a slight increase
from last year’s wheat harvest which was the largest in a decade.

http://www.freshplaza.com/2005/23jun/2_am_bumperfruitcrop.htm

Report on Karabakh to be submitted to OSCE PA

Pan Armenian news

REPORT ON KARABAKH TO BE SUBMITTED TO OSCE PA

22.06.2005 07:54

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The annual session of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly will
be held June 30-July 5 in Washington. After the sitting of the political
committee on June 29 the Nagorno Karabakh issue will to all appearances be
included in the agenda. To note, earlier Deputy Chairman of the Armenian
National Assembly, head of the Armenian delegation to the OSCE PA Vahan
Hovhannissian rated Goran Lennmarker’s preliminary report submitted to both
parties as balanced. This fact sparked angry protest from Baku causing
protraction of the final report. According to Vahan Hovhannissian, thanks to
the efforts by the Armenian party Mr. Lennmarker’s report will mention the
status of Nagorno Karabakh as a primary matter. Thus all the other issues
advanced by the Azeri party are derivative. He also informed that the
problem of refugees will be in highlight of the report. `With claming return
of Azeri refugees official Baku should realize that the Armenian party has
the right to raise an analogous claim, that is to insist on return of
Armenians to Baku and Sumgait. However it is hardly possible as Armenians in
Azerbaijan are doomed to violent death’, he resumed, IA Regnum reports.

“No need to worry”, says Armen Roustamyan

A1plus

| 21:39:30 | 20-06-2005 | Politics | PACE SUMMER SESSION |

`NO NEED TO WORRY’, SAYS ARMEN ROUSTAMYAN

`As Armenia is member of the COE, the issue of Constitutional reforms is
discussed in the COE from time to time. That is a normal procedure’; this is
the opinion of the Armenian delegation member Armen Roustamyan.

Mr. Roustamyan finds that the more quickly our country, including the
Constitutional reforms, correspond to the European standards, the more
quickly the country will develop, `The direction of the Constitutional
reforms is well chosen, cooperation with the COE continues, and the results
are satisfactory. I think this fact will be recorded by the COE too’,
mentioned Mr. Roustamyan.

The deputy advised not to forget that the conclusion of the COE Venice
Commission about the Constitutional reforms in Armenia is intermediary, `The
process has not finished yet. If we observe the process carefully, we will
see how much has been done for the draft after that conclusion’.

Armen Roustamyan assures that after the COE Venice Commission intermediary
conclusion the coalition has taken into account all the offers in its draft.

Stateless peoples pose conundrums for great powers

Hindustan Times, India
June 16 2005

Stateless peoples pose conundrums for great powers

Daniel Schnieder (IANS)

New Delhi, June 16, 2005

There are, in this world, ‘inconvenient nations’. These peoples –
often oppressed and bound by language, culture and sometimes religion
– are the unfinished business of modern history.

When the wave of nationalism swept the world in the 19th and 20th
centuries and the old empires were carved up, these peoples were left
stateless. In some cases they were divided up, thrown in with nations
that not only didn’t share their values or ethnicity but sometimes
also sought their annihilation.

The list of the inconvenient nations is mostly a familiar one – Jews,
Armenians, Kurds and Palestinians in the Middle East. Some are less
celebrated – Tibetans and Chechens – and the Taiwanese are relative
newcomers to the group.

All of these peoples occupy vital pieces of geography. Their
frustrated national ambitions create political tinderboxes that could
trigger war or deepen existing conflicts. Already some of these
conflicts intersect with the global war against Islamic extremism.
Others could complicate the coming contest for power between China
and the US.

Through sheer persistence, some of these peoples have won statehood –
modern Israel and Armenia, with the Palestinians on the verge. Even
then, the boundaries of these states remain contested and their
security at risk.

Granting all of these inconvenient nations statehood poses serious
challenges to the existing order in the world.

For the US, the country most likely to be an ally of change, they
pose a particular conundrum. In recent years, President George W.
Bush’s administration has embraced with great fervour its role as an
agent of transformation through the spread of democracy worldwide.
Invariably, democratic rights have fed the growth of nationalism.

At the same time, the US is the guardian of a status quo that largely
serves its interests. Historically, American administrations have
resisted demands for change in boundaries that challenge the
principle of territorial integrity. Inherently conservative, the US
has been uncomfortable with the radical fervour of nationalists
unwilling to compromise on their aims.

Great powers have always responded schizophrenically to the
inconvenient nations. They have manipulated stateless peoples’
aspirations for self-rule for their own purposes, but then abandoned
them when ambitions for statehood got in the way of larger interests.

In the Middle East, the British, French and others used the desires
for nationhood of Jews, Armenians, Kurds and Palestinians to pick
apart the Ottoman Empire. During and after World War I, in which the
Turks sided with Germany, the allies backed independence for most of
those peoples to encourage anti-Turkish revolts. As soon as the
allies could build their own empires in the region, those promises
were betrayed.

In East Asia, the Central Intelligence Agency fed arms to Tibetans
rebelling in the 1950s against Chinese invasion. But the conquered
Tibetans were largely forgotten when the West turned to wooing China.

The Taiwanese also have been victims of US fickleness. The US
defended Taiwan as a base for the Chinese who lost the struggle
against Chinese communists. But when native Taiwanese used democracy
in the past decade to assert their desire for a separate identity,
Taiwan became an awkward impediment to partnership with Beijing.

To understand the passions and persistence of the inconvenient
nations, look at “the Armenian question,” as it has been known since
the 19th century. The Armenians are an ancient Christian people who
once were spread from the Russian-controlled Caucasus down into the
Ottoman Empire, what is now modern Turkey.

During the latter half of the 19th century, the mistreatment of
Armenians by the Ottoman Turks became a prominent issue in
international politics. Things only got worse when the Young Turks,
the architects of modern Turkey, overthrew the Ottoman rulers during
World War I. They then carried out what is considered by many to be
the first modern genocide, killing and driving out most Armenians
from Turkey.

Still there was hope for a homeland. Amid the chaos after the
Bolshevik revolution, Russian-ruled Armenia, a small part of
historical Armenia, declared its independence and received the
support of President Woodrow Wilson, the champion of national
self-determination. Under a 1920 treaty with the World War I allies,
Turkey was compelled to recognise Armenian independence and to cede
part of what had been its Armenian-populated areas to the new state.

But the Armenians were betrayed when Turkey repudiated the treaty,
seized Armenian cities and then made a deal with the invading Russian
army which brought Armenia back under the control of the Soviet
state.

The Soviets, who also claimed to champion self-determination,
preserved an Armenian republic within their modern empire. But
Stalin, making deals with the Turks, cynically stripped away some
Armenian-inhabited territories and placed them under the
administration of an Azeri Turkish republic within the Soviet Union.

Seven decades later, the Armenians rose to seize back their
independence. In 1988, a movement for the return of the
Armenian-populated territory of Nagorno-Karabakh from the Soviet
republic of Azerbaijan signalled the beginning of the disintegration
of the Soviet Union in 1991.

The struggle intensified when Armenia won its independence from the
Soviet Union and nationalist passions quickly fanned into a white hot
heat, drawing Armenians from their scattered diaspora in places such
as Beirut, Paris and Los Angeles. In a short but fierce war,
Armenians regained control of Karabakh, which they hold tightly to
this day.

Today, the Armenian question simmers quietly. Although Russia and the
US support Armenia, both press for the return of Karabakh to
Azerbaijan and encourage Armenians there to accept autonomy within
Azerbaijan. Although the boundary lines of Karabakh were the product
of Stalin’s pen, the great powers insist that they are now inviolable
international frontiers, never to be altered. The defence of
principle, however, is a convenient cloak for a more basic interest:
access to Azerbaijan’s rich oil fields.

The Kurds next door to the Armenians were also promised statehood out
of the rubble of the Ottoman Empire. They too are an ancient people
whose common identity stretches back more than 2,000 years. Most of
the 20 million Kurds live in a mountainous area straddling Iran, Iraq
and Turkey – countries that have all crushed Kurdish nationhood. In
the modern era, Kurdish nationalism has been encouraged-and
abandoned-by both the US and the Soviet Union.

When Washington needed to topple Saddam Hussein, the Kurds regained
favour, providing a base for operations against his government.
Today, when the US seeks to rebuild Iraq as its own bastion of
influence, Kurdish aspirations for separation and self-rule are again
inopportune.

For the great powers, inconvenient nations are, by their nature,
irritating. They are single-minded, often undeterred by those who
advise caution or patience. Even as clients, they are hard, if not
impossible, to control.

There is some hope these days that globalisation will help diminish
the authority of nation-states – replacing their influence with
multinational corporations and other trans-national entities – and
therefore also diminish the inconvenient nations’ drive for
self-rule.

But nationalism is hardly a diminished force. Witness the spiralling
tensions between Chinese and Japanese in recent months, fighting and
re-fighting issues more than a half-century old. And French and Dutch
voters recently rejected a new constitution that would more
completely merge those states into a unified Europe.

Some in the Bush administration, meanwhile, argued that the spread of
democracy also would cool nationalist flames by giving minorities
such as the peoples of the inconvenient nations more clout in their
current countries.

But to the contrary, the more people are free to express their will,
the more nationalism seems to gain fervour. Kurds in Iraq vote
virtually without exception only for Kurds and are no less determined
to eventually be independent of the Arab state.

More than other great powers, Americans find the idea of a nation
defined by ethnic identity disturbing. As a country built by
immigrants, America explicitly rejects any ethnic definition of
citizenship. The passions of peoples that seek to separate themselves
from others are often seen as irrational, somehow less acceptable
than our patriotism.

Indeed, Americans are remarkably blind to their own bellicose
nationalism, garbed as it is by the assertion of the universality of
American ideals and of self-defence against possible attack.

“Since most Americans don’t realise that they do have a nationalism
and that it is so strong, perhaps it does make it more difficult for
Americans to appreciate and understand the force of other peoples’
nationalism,” said Anatol Lieven, author of America Right or Wrong:
An Anatomy of American Nationalism.

History, however, tells us that the inconvenient nations will not go
away. No wave of globalisation can sweep their passions into a dusty
corner forever. And the desire for freedom will not conveniently stop
short of national self-determination.

Turkish PM: Middle East needs reforms

World Peace Herald, DC
June 16 2005

Turkish PM: Middle East needs reforms
By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Published June 16, 2005

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said
during a short visit to Lebanon that all Middle Eastern countries
need political and economic reforms.

Speaking at a banquet in his honor Wednesday evening, Erdogan said,
“Our world today has entered the age of globalization and become more
democratic, which necessitates reforms in the Middle East.”

Erdogan stressed that achieving “comprehensive, just and lasting
peace in the Middle East is a priority of Turkey’s foreign policy.”

Erdogan’s 20-hour visit, which started Wednesday, was met with protests
by Lebanese Armenians who accuse Turkey of perpetrating genocide on
Armenians from 1915 to 1923.

Armenian youth burned tires and the Turkish flag Wednesday to protest
the prime minister’s visit, demanding that Ankara acknowledge the
massacres, in which more than 1 million Armenians died.

MIT professor named top economist under 40

MIT professor named top economist under 40

Key study minimizes geography in formation of rich vs.
poor nations

The Boston Globe
June 15, 2005

By Robert Gavin, Globe Staff

CAMBRIDGE — Daron Acemoglu grew up in Turkey during a tumultuous
period of economic crises and political unrest, when hyperinflation
sapped spending power; rural poor streamed into cities, only to find
squalor and more poverty; and terrorist attacks frequently rocked
the nation, leading to the military coup of 1980.

Living through these times, Acemoglu, the only child of a middle-class
couple, said he often wondered why Turkey’s development lagged that of
the United States and other industrialized nations. Some two decades
later, as an economist and professor at MIT, he came up with an answer.

Acemoglu’s groundbreaking work in explaining that gap between rich
and poor nations recently helped him win the John Bates Clark Medal,
awarded every two years by the American Economic Association to the
nation’s top economist under 40. Acemoglu, 37, joins an elite club
that includes 11 Nobel Prize recipients, and giants of the field such
as MIT’s Paul Samuelson, the University of Chicago’s Milton Friedman,
and Harvard’s Martin Feldstein.

“The cast of people who have been awarded this is staggeringly strong,
and it’s a great honor,” Acemoglu said. “It’s one of those things
that you never fully expect to win.”

In awarding the Clark medal to Acemoglu, the economic association noted
a large and diverse body of original research, which has ranged from
developing statistical models to exploring the relationship between
technology and income inequality. In particular, the association
cited as “especially innovative” his recent work, which concludes
that political and social institutions, rather than geography, are
the key factors determining why a nation is rich or poor.

Acemoglu’s institutional theory challenges a widely held notion
that the wealth of nations is guided by geographical features such
as proximity to seaports, the availability of rich farmland, or
climates less conducive to disease. But, said Acemoglu, the idea that
“geography is destiny” can’t explain why nations that were once rich
are today poor.

For example, the geography of Peru hasn’t changed, but
in the 15th century, it was the center of the wealthy Inca
civilization. Conversely, the Native American cultures of North
America were far less advanced than the Incas, but today the United
States is the world’s wealthiest nation.

The reversal of fortunes, Acemoglu argues, is because of the different
political and social institutions colonial powers established, based
on the conditions they found. In the sparsely populated American
colonies, settlers created a relatively open society that allowed
new players to participate in the economy and prosper.

But in Peru, where the Spanish found a populous, urban society,
they exploited the conquered Incas, using them as slave labor
and creating institutions that kept wealth in the hands of a few,
ultimately resulting in an economy unable to renew itself and grow.

“Colonialism is a big event that economists have not talked about,”
Acemoglu said. “Historians talk about it. Political scientists talk
about it. But economists just focus on the last 50 years.”

That Acemoglu would seek answers some 600 years in the past
provides just one example of the broad vision and wide interests
that have distinguished him, colleagues say. In a still young career,
his research has made important contributions to macroeconomics, the
study of national economies; labor economics, the study of employment,
unemployment and job markets; and political economy, which studies
the relationship between politics and markets.

He has even coauthored papers on electrical engineering with his wife,
Asu Ozdaglar, an electrical engineering professor at MIT.

“He is interested in everything,” said James Robinson, a Harvard
University professor who has collaborated with Acemoglu for a
decade. “Most of economics is specialized, knowing more and more
about less and less. His strategy is to know more and more about more
and more.”

Acemoglu, who grew up in Istanbul, attributes his curiosity to his
parents. His father, Kevork, who died in 1988, was a law professor
and practicing attorney; his mother, Irma, who died in 1991, was a
middle school principal and teacher.

“It was a house full of books,” he said, “and I became an avid reader.”

As a teenager, Acemoglu said, he developed interests in politics and
social issues, which, with his interest in math, made economics a
likely subject to pursue. After high school in Turkey, he earned his
bachelor’s degree at the University of York in England, and then his
master’s and doctorate at the London School of Economics.

Acemoglu arrived 12 years ago at MIT, where he soon impressed with his
scholarly rigor and range. Colleagues describe him as intellectually
tough, but personable and generous. Simon Johnson, a professor at MIT’s
Sloan School of Management, and another of Acemoglu’s collaborators,
said graduate students are typically lined up outside his office,
seeking advice.

“The key to being a great adviser is to be able to help other people
hone their ideas,” Johnson said, “and he has the ability to switch
between ideas like I’ve never seen before. It’s amazing how he juggles
these balls and adds value.”

More juggling appears on the horizon for Acemoglu. He and Johnson
are studying the impact of public health on economic growth, while
he and Robinson in August will publish a new book, “Economic Origins
of Dictatorship and Democracy.”

“Whenever I see a problem, I become curious,” Acemoglu said. “I love
research, and it’s just so hard to give anything up.”

Robert Gavin can be reached at ([email protected]).

http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2005/06/15/mit_professor_named_top_economist_under_40/?rss_id=Boston+Globe+–+Business+News

UNDP Armenia and the Prosecutor General join efforts to fight….

UNDP ARMENIA AND THE PROSECUTOR GENERAL JOIN EFFORTS TO FIGHT TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS

Armenpress

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS: The United Nations Development Program
(UNDP) and the Office of the Prosecutor General of the Republic of
Armenia signed on June 14 a Memorandum of Understanding that marked
the new phase in cooperation between UNDP project on “Anti-Trafficking
Program: Capacity Building Support and Victims Assistance” and the
Government of Armenia.

Representatives of UN family in Armenia, diplomatic corps, government,
and major partners were present at the event.

A press release by UNDP Armenia Office said the enhanced cooperation
is aimed at preventing and effectively responding to trafficking
in human beings and illegal migration, as well as at boosting the
effectiveness of counter-trafficking activities. The Parties to the
Agreement agreed to jointly work in the area of institutional and
legislative development, as well as capacity building of the law
enforcement bodies of Armenia. UNDP and the Office of Prosecutor
General have a rich history of cooperation in the past few years
in a number of areas. The Memorandum signed yesterday represents
a timely response to the challenges of trafficking in Armenia,
especially through prevention of trafficking in human beings and
illegal migration, and prosecution of traffickers.

The Memorandum signed is in line with the National Action Plan for the
Prevention of Trafficking in Persons from the Republic of Armenia. Mr.

Alexander Avanessov, UNDP Armenia Resident Representative a.i.,
noted in his speech: “Trafficking is an evil that destroys the very
fabric of life of Armenian families, and jointly with the Government,
we are confident that that the results of our enhanced cooperation
will be seen in the near future. We will focus our efforts not only
on prevention of trafficking, but also to direct assistance to those
suffered from this evil.”

The aim of UNDP two-year project on “Anti-Trafficking Program:
Capacity Building Support and Victims Assistance” is to facilitate
the development of a national framework to tackle the problem of human
trafficking at the policy and institutional levels as well as provide
direct assistance to victims of trafficking. The project has three
components; a) strengthening national capacity for policy elaboration;
b) raising public awareness, and c) assistance to victims.

Bordyuzha, Armenian leaders discuss agenda of CSTO session

Bordyuzha, Armenian leaders discuss agenda of CSTO session
By Tigran Liloyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
June 15, 2005 Wednesday 10:43 AM Eastern Time

YEREVAN, June 15 — Nikolai Bordyuzha, Secretary-General of the
Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO), met Armenian leaders
on Wednesday to discuss the agenda of the CSTO session to be held in
Moscow on June 22-23.

The meeting with Armenian President Robert Kocharyan focused on the
CSTO efforts to counteract terrorism and illicit drug trafficking,
as well as on prospects for the development of military-technical
cooperation, the Armenian president’s press service told Itar-Tass.

The talks with Serzh Sarkisyan, Armenia’s defence minister and the
Security Council secretary, touched on the agenda of the upcoming
CSTO session.

Visit by Turkish premier angers Armenians in Lebanon

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
June 15, 2005, Wednesday
13:54:34 Central European Time

Visit by Turkish premier angers Armenians in Lebanon

Beirut

A planned visit to Lebanon by Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan
later Wednesday has angered members of the country’s large Armenian
community.

Some 300 Armenians demonstrated in Burj Hammoud east of the capital
Beirut, torching the Turkish flag and denouncing the presence of
Erdogan due to arrive at 6:00 p.m. (1500 GMT) for an official two-
day visit.

The Armenians called on the Lebanese government to “remind their guest
of the 1915 massacres which were committed by Turkey against Armenians
and to call on his country to admit that the killings were genocide”.

On April 12, Lebanon’s well-integrated Armenian community commemorated
the anniversary of the massacre of their ancestors by the Ottoman
Turks between 1915-1917.

Lebanon hosts the Arab world’s largest Armenian community, descendants
of survivors of the massacres who are now leading a global campaign
to declare the mass killings an act of genocide.

The massacres have so far been acknowledged as genocide by a number
of countries, including France, Canada and Switzerland.

During his visit, Erdogan is to hold talks with his Lebanese
counterpart Nagib Mikati focusing on improving bilateral ties.

On Thursday the Turkish premier will attend a large economic conference
grouping Arab ministers and economic figures, the first economic
conference to be held in the country after former Lebanese prime
minister Rafik Hariri was assassinated on February 14.

Erdogen is scheduled to visit Hariri’s grave upon his arrival. dpa
wh mga

TENNIS: Injury forces Agassi to miss Wimbledon for second year in ro

TENNIS: Injury forces Agassi to miss Wimbledon for second year in row

The Independent – United Kingdom; Jun 15, 2005

Mark Staniforth

The former Wimbledon champion Andre Agassi has withdrawn from this
year’s tournament because of injury.

All England Club officials said yesterday that the 1992 champion said
in a fax that he would not play in the tournament, which starts next
Monday. The American pulled out of last year’s Wimbledon with a hip
problem.

Agassi, 35, has won eight Grand Slam titles, including one of each of
the four majors. His last title came at the Australian Open in 2003.
At the French Open last month, Agassi was seeded sixth but lost to
Finland’s Jarkko Nieminen in the first round.

Ivo Karlovic served up another Wimbledon warning yesterday with a 59-
minute victory over Igor Andreev at the 10tele.com Open in
Nottingham.

The 6ft 10in Croatian will enter tomorrow’s draw as the non-seed the
big names will want to avoid after reaching successive finals at
Surbiton and Queen’s Club. Yesterday Karlovic ” who beat the
defending Wimbledon champion Lleyton Hewitt in 2002 ” sent down 11
aces in beating his Russian opponent 6-4, 6-4.

‘If I play well I have got a chance of winning Wimbledon ” I feel I
am now playing the best I have ever played on grass,’ said Karlovic.
‘Last year I was pretty unlucky with the draw because I had to play
[Roger] Federer, who is almost unbeatable on grass. But if the draw
is kind to me this year I can certainly do better than I did last
year.’

Karlovic has hit form at the right time as he bids to build on last
week’s victories over Hewitt and Thomas Johansson at Queen’s before
losing the final to Andy Roddick. Before his run to the final at
Surbiton two weeks ago ” where he lost to Italy’s Daniele Bracciali ”
he had lost in the first round of eight consecutive tournaments since
the start of March.

The experienced Max Mirnyi of Belarus ” a 6-2, 6-0 first-round winner
over Armenia’s Sargis Sargsian yesterday, said: ‘It would be strange
if Ivo were not one of the favourites for Wimbledon. He has such a
big serve and has done so well in the last couple of weeks that his
chances must be very good.’

Richard Gasquet won 7-6, 6-2 against the Czech Tomas Zib to set up a
match with Yorkshire’s Jonathan Marray. The Frenchman, 18, who
reached the quarter-finals at Queen’s Club, said: ‘The low bounce on
the court is not one I like because I prefer to play on clay, but I
still think I can play well.’

Johansson beat Dmitry Tursunov 7-6, 6-3 after the Russian got a
second chance following Andrew Murray’s withdrawal. The 18-year-old
Scot needed two extra days to recover from the ankle injury he
suffered at Queen’s.

Murray’s wild card for the All England club is not believed to be in
jeopardy. In a statement, the reigning US Open junior champion said:
‘It was a close call but as there is a slight inflammation still in
the ankle. I am really looking forward to playing at Wimbledon.’

In Den Bosch, Elena Dementieva was forced to retire from her Ordina
Open second-round match against Denisa Chladkova thanks to a shoulder
injury.

Michaella Krajicek, the 16-year old sister of the former Wimbledon
champion Richard, defeated Ludmila Cervanova of Slovakia 6-1, 6-3 to
reach the second round.