Baku: Despite NBA’s Ban, Money Transfers Via MoneyGram System Contin

DESPITE NBA’S BAN, MONEY TRANSFERS VIA MONEYGRAM SYSTEM CONTINUED IN AZERBAIJAN

Today.Az
16 August 2008
Azerbaijan

Despite the ban of the National Bank of Azerbaijan, local post offices
still conducted monetary transfers via MoneyGram system.

The newspaper had on hand the cheques, issued by a post office, about
conduction of monetary transfers by this system, dated August 11 and
12, when the ban of the head bank of the country was still in power.

It means that the communication enterprises ignored the prohibition
of the National Bank of Azerbaijan and carried operations by the
system of transfers, which challenged the sovereignty of Azerbaijan,
against the interests of the Azerbaijani statehood.

At the same time, according to an official of the post office, the
operations via MoneyGram did not stop.

According to spokesman for the National Bank of Azerbaijan Kamran
Nazarli, the National Bank has officially expressed its attitude
to these events, posting the decision passed on its website. In
particular, the National Bank of Azerbaijan resumed operations with
WesternUnion and MoneyGram systems from August 14 of 2008. According
to the internationa, posted on the website of the head bank of
the country, on July 30 of 2008, the National Bank prohibited
the Azerbaijani banks to hold operations in the framework of these
monetary transfers system. As is known, the prohibition was applied
due to the information about the cooperation of these monetary systems
with Khankendi (Nagorno Karabakh).

Western Union website has previously showed that four Armenian banks
received and sent monetary transfers in "Stepanakert". At the same
time, the website fixes that this city is the so-called "capital"
of the unrecognized "Nagorno Karabakh Republic".

As is noted, vice president of Western Union Johnathan Knaus who
visited Baku on August 7, recognized that on the whole, the operations
on monetary transfers in the occupied lands of Azerbaijan are illegal
during the meeting with his Azerbaijani colleagues. At the same time,
he undertook responsibility for averting such cases in the future. The
same responsibility was also taken by MoneyGram. Therefore, the
National bank of Azerbaijan lifted the ban on conducting operations.

In turn, according to deputy Panah Huseyn, the MoneyGram system was
allowed to hold operations in Azerbaijan earlier than Western Union
as this company guaranteed correction of the mistake. "Anyway, if
the National Bank of Azerbaijan had banned conduction of operations
via this system of transfers, non-observance of this requirement is
odd. If operations were carried during the ban, the official circles
should clarify the issue".

earlier, as head of the postal department of Ministry of Communication
and Information Technologies Novruz Mamedov noted, "we have not
concluded a contract on monetary transfers directly with Western
Union. The monetary transfers by this system were conducted by the
line of Parabank (which is an official distributor of the monetary
transfer system in Azerbaijan)". As for MoneyGram, Mamedov said
the postal system in Azerbaijan in fact does not operate with this
transfer system. "We have conducted the e-transfers in the framework
of the international transfers system of the World Postal Union,
called Stefi. We have contracts with 7 countries in the framework of
this system and we plan to expand this net of cooperation.

The Ministry of Communication and Information Technologies was unable
to explain the origin of the cheques.

As was repeatedly noted, "operation" of some companies, dealing with
monetary transfers in the occupied lands of Azerbaijan, contradicts to
international law and is, therefore, illegal. Therefore, after the
reaction of the Azerbaijani side, these companies have suspended their
activity in the territory of Nagorno Karabakh. But nongovernmental
circles are concerned that this step can be taken temporarily to
calm down the Azerbaijani side. These companies may resume such
illegal activity after Azerbaijan calms down. In order to fully
avert such illegal activity, Azerbaijan should develop a single
concept. Specialists consider it necessary to carry out a coordinated
work between the state structures, in particular, the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and on the level of a parliament. The importance of
allocating funds for financing mechanism of reveal, filing a claim
against the companied, operating in the occupied lands of Azerbaijan
and challenging the country’s territorial integrity, was stressed.

History Of Ethiopian Church Presence In Jerusalem

HISTORY OF ETHIOPIAN CHURCH PRESENCE IN JERUSALEM

Tadias Magazine
August 16th, 2008
NY

New York (Tadias) – The following piece first appeared in the context
of the July 2002 brawl that erupted on the roof of Christianity’s
most holy place between Ethiopian and Egyptian monks.

"Eleven monks were treated in hospital after a fight broke out for
control of the roof of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem,
the traditional site of Jesus’s crucifixion, burial and resurrection",
wrote Alan Philps, a Jerusalem based reporter for the Daily Telegraph.

"The fracas involved monks from the Ethiopian Orthodox church and
the Coptic church of Egypt, who have been vying for control of the
rooftop for centuries."

As part of our Ethiopian Millennium series on the relationship
between Ethiopia and the African Diaspora, we have selected part
of the original article from our archives with a hope that it may
generate a healthy discussion on the subject.

Deir Sultan, Ethiopia and the Black World By NEGUSSAY AYELE

Above: Main entrance to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (27/03/2005),
Easter Sunday. This image is licensed under Creative Commons
Attribution.

Unknown by much of the world, monks and nuns of the Ethiopian Orthodox
Church, have for centuries quietly maintained the only presence by
black people in one of Christianity’s holiest sites–the Church of
the Holy Sepulchre of Jesus Christ in Jerusalem.

Through the vagaries and vicissitudes of millennial history and
landlord changes in Jerusalem and the Middle East region, Ethiopian
monks have retained their monastic convent in what has come to be
known as Deir Sultan or the Monastery of the Sultan for more than a
thousand years.

Likewise, others that have their respective presences in the area
at different periods include Armenian, Russian, Syrian, Egyptian and
Greek Orthodox/Coptic Churches as well as the Holy See.

As one writer put it recently, "For more than 1500 years, the Church
of Ethiopia survived in Jerusalem. Its survival has not, in the last
resort, been dependent on politics, but on the faith of individual
monks that we should look for the vindication of the Church’s presence
in Jerusalem…. They are attracted in Jerusalem not by a hope for
material gain or comfort, but by faith."

It is hoped that public discussion on this all-important subject will
be joined by individuals and groups from all over the world. We hope
that others with more detailed and/or first hand knowledge about the
subject will join in the discussion.

Above: Painting on the wall of the Ethiopian part of the church of
the Holy Sepulcher. Photo by Iweze Davidson.

Accounts of Ethiopian presence in Jerusalem invoke the Bible to
establish the origin of Ethiopian presence in Jerusalem.

Accordingly, some Ethiopians refer to the story of the encounter in
Jerusalem between Queen of Sheba-believed to have been a ruler in
Ethiopia and environs-and King Solomon, cited, for instance, in I
Kings 10: 1-13.

According to this version, Ethiopia’s presence in the region was
already established about 1000 B.C. possibly through land grant to
the visiting Queen, and that later transformation into Ethiopian
Orthodox Christian monastery is an extension of that same property.

Others refer to the New Testament account of Acts 8: 26-40 which
relates the conversion to Christianity of the envoy of Ethiopia’s
Queen Candace (Hendeke) to Jerusalem in the first century A.D., thereby
signaling the early phase of Ethiopia’s adoption of Christianity. This
event may have led to the probable establishment of a center of
worship in Jerusalem for Ethiopian pilgrims, priests, monks and nuns.

Keeping these renditions as a backdrop, what can be said for certain
is the following: Ethiopian monastic activities in Jerusalem were
observed and reported by contemporary residents and sojourners during
the early years of the Christian era.

By the time of the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem and the region
(634-644 A.D.) khalif Omar is said to have confirmed Ethiopian
physical presence in Jerusalem’s Christian holy places, including
the Church of St. Helena, which encompasses the Holy Sepulchre of
the Lord Jesus Christ.

His firman or directive of 636 declared "the Iberian and Abyssinian
communities remain there" while also recognizing the rights of other
Christian communities to make pilgrimages in the Christian holy places
of Jerusalem.

Because Jerusalem and the region around it, has been subjected to
frequent invasions and changing landlords, stakes in the holy places
were often part of the political whims of respective powers that be.

Subsequently, upon their conquest of Jerusalem in 1099, the Crusaders
had kicked out Orthodox/Coptic monks from the monasteries and
installed Augustine monks instead. However, when in 1187 Salaheddin
wrested Jerusalem from the Crusaders, he restored the presence of
the Ethiopian and other Orthodox/Coptic monks in the holy places.

When political powers were not playing havoc with their claims to
the holy places, the different Christian sects would often carry
on their own internecine conflicts among themselves, at times with
violent results.

Contemporary records and reports indicate that the Ethiopian presence
in the holy places in Jerusalem was rather much more substantial
throughout much of the period up to the 18th and 19th centuries.

For example, an Italian pilgrim, Barbore Morsini, is cited as
having written in 1614 that "the Chapels of St. Mary of Golgotha
and of St. Paul…the grotto of David on Mount Sion and an altar at
Bethlehem…" among others were in the possession of the Ethiopians.

>From the 16th to the middle of the 19th centuries, virtually the whole
of the Middle East was under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire. When
one of the Zagwe kings in Ethiopia, King Lalibela (1190-1225), had
trouble maintaining unhampered contacts with the monks in Jerusalem,
he decided to build a new Jerusalem in his land. In the process
he left behind one of the true architectural wonders known as the
Rock-hewn Churches of Lalibela.

Above: Lalibela. This image is licensed under Creative Commons
Attribution.

Above: Lalibela. This image is licensed under Creative Commons
Attribution.

Above: Lalibela. This image is licensed under Creative Commons
Attribution.

The Ottomans also controlled Egypt and much of the Red Sea littoral
and thereby circumscribed Christian Ethiopia’s communication with
the outside world, including Jerusalem.

Besides, they had also tried but failed to subdue Ethiopia
altogether. Though Ethiopia’s independent existence was continuously
under duress not only from the Ottomans but also their colonial
surrogate, Egypt as well as from the dervishes in the Sudan, the
Ethiopian monastery somehow survived during this period. Whenever
they could, Ethiopian rulers and other personages as well as church
establishments sent subsidies and even bought plots of land where
in time churches and residential buildings for Ethiopian pilgrims
were built in and around Jerusalem. Church leaders in Jerusalem often
represented the Ethiopian Orthodox Church in ecumenical councils and
meetings in Florence and other fora.

During the 16th and 17th centuries the Ottoman rulers of the region
including Palestine and, of course, Jerusalem, tried to stabilize the
continuing clamor and bickering among the Christian sects claiming
sites in the Christian holy places. To that effect, Ottoman rulers
including Sultan Selim I (1512-1520) and Suleiman "the Magnificent"
(1520-1566) as well as later ones in the 19th century, issued edicts
or firmans regulating and detailing by name which group of monks
would be housed where and the protocol governing their respective
religious ceremonies. These edicts are called firmans of the Status
Quo for all Christian claimants in Jerusalem’s holy places including
the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which came to be called Deir Sultan
or the monastery (place) of the Sultan.

Ethiopians referred to it endearingly as Debre Sultan. Most observers
of the scene in the latter part of the 19th Century as well as honest
spokesmen for some of the sects attest to the fact that from time
immemorial the Ethiopian monks had pride of place in the Church of
the Holy Sepulchre (Deir Sultan). Despite their meager existence
and pressures from fellow monks from other countries, the Ethiopian
monks survived through the difficult periods their country was going
through such as the period of feudal autarchy (1769-1855).

Still, in every document or reference since the opening of the
Christian era, Ethiopia and Ethiopian monks have been mentioned in
connection with Christian holy places in Jerusalem, by all alternating
landlords and powers that be in the region.

As surrogates of the weakening Ottomans, the Egyptians were temporarily
in control of Jerusalem (1831-1840). It was at this time, in 1838,
that a plague is said to have occurred in the holy places, which in
some mysterious ways of Byzantine proportions, claimed the lives of
all Ethiopian monks.

The Ethiopians at this time were ensconced in a chapel of the Church
of the Holy Sepulchre (Deir Sultan) as well as in other locales
nearby. Immediately thereafter, the Egyptian authorities gave the
keys of the Church to the Egyptian Coptic monks.

The Egyptian ruler, Ibrahim Pasha, then ordered that all thousands of
very precious Ethiopian holy books and documents, including historical
and ecclesiastical materials related to property deeds and rights,
be burned–alleging conveniently that the plague was spawned by the
Ethiopian parchments.

Monasteries are traditionally important hubs of learning and, given
its location and its opportunity for interaction with the wider family
of Christendom, the Ethiopian monastery in Jerusalem was even more
so than others. That is how Ethiopians lost their choice possession
in Deir Sultan.

By the time other monks arrived in Jerusalem, the Copts claimed
their squatter’s rights, the new Ethiopian arrivals were eventually
pushed off onto the open rooftop of the church, thanks largely to
the machinations of the Egyptian Coptic church.

Above: The roof of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem,
where Ethiopians maintain the only presence by black people in
Christianity’s holiest shrine. This image is licensed under Creative
Commons Attribution.

Although efforts on behalf of Ethiopian monks in Jerusalem started
in mid-19th Century with Ras Ali and Dejach Wube, it was the rise of
Emperor Tewodros in 1855 in Ethiopia that put the Jerusalem monastery
issue back onto international focus.

When Ethiopian monks numbering a hundred or so congregated in
Jerusalem at the time, the Armenians had assumed superiority in the
holy places. The Anglican bishop in Jerusalem then, Bishop Samuel
Gobat witnessed the unholy attitude and behavior of the Armenians and
the Copts towards their fellow Christian Ethiopians who were trying
to reclaim their rights to the holy places in Jerusalem.

He wrote that the Ethiopian monks, nuns and pilgrims "were both
intelligent and respectable, yet they were treated like slaves, or
rather like beasts by the Copts and the Armenians combined…(the
Ethiopians) could never enter their own chapel but when it pleased
the Armenians to open it. …On one occasion, they could not get their
chapel opened to perform funeral service for one of their members. The
key to their convent being in the hands of their oppressors, they
were locked up in their convent in the evening until it pleased their
Coptic jailer to open it in the morning, so that in any severe attacks
of illness, which are frequent there, they had no means of going out
to call a physician."

It was awareness of such indignities suffered by Ethiopian monks
in Jerusalem that is said to have impelled Emperor Tewodros to have
visions of clearing the path between his domain and Jerusalem from
Turkish/Egyptian control, and establishing something more than monastic
presence there. In the event, one of the issues that contributed to
the clash with British colonialists that consumed his life 1868,
was the quest for adequate protection of the Ethiopian monks and
their monastery in Jerusalem.

Emperor Yohannes IV (1872-1889), the priestly warrior king, used his
relatively cordial relations with the British who were holding sway
in the region then, to make representations on behalf of the Ethiopian
monastery in Jerusalem.

He carried on regular pen-pal communications with the monks even
before he became Emperor. He sent them money, he counseled them
and he always asked them to pray for him and the country, saying,
"For the prayers of the righteous help and serve in all matters. By
the prayers of the righteous a country is saved."

He used some war booty from his battles with Ottomans and their
Egyptian surrogates, to buy land and started to build a church in
Jerusalem. As he died fighting Sudanese/Dervish expansionists in 1889,
his successor, Emperor Menelik completed the construction of the Church
named Debre Gennet located on what was called "Ethiopian Street."

During this period more monasteries, churches and residences were also
built by Empresses Tayitu, Zewditu, Menen as well as by several other
personages including Afe Negus Nessibu, Dejazmach Balcha, Woizeros
Amarech Walelu, Beyenech Gebru, Altayeworq.

As of the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th Century the
numbers of Ethiopian monks and nuns increased and so did overall
Ethiopian pilgrimage and presence in Jerusalem.

In 1903, Emperor Menelik put $200, 000 thalers in a (Credileone)
Bank in the region and ordained that interests from that savings be
used exclusively as subsidy for the sustenance of the Ethiopian monks
and nuns and the upkeep of Deir Sultan. Emperor Menelik’s 6-point
edict also ordained that no one be allowed to draw from the capital
in whole or in part.

Land was also purchased at various localities and a number of
personalities including Empress Tayitu, and later Empress Menen, built
churches there. British authorities supported a study on the history
of the issue since at least the time of kalifa (Calif) Omar ((636)
and correspondences and firmans and reaffirmations of Ethiopian rights
in 1852, in an effort to resolve the chronic problems of conflicting
claims to the holy sites in Jerusalem.

The 1925 study concluded that "the Abyssinian (Ethiopian ) community
in Palestine ought to be considered the only possessor of the convent
Deir Es Sultan at Jerusalem with the Chapels which are there and the
free and exclusive use of the doors which give entrance to the convent,
the free use of the keys being understood."

Until the Fascist invasion of Ethiopia in the 1930’s when Mussolini
confiscated Ethiopian accounts and possessions everywhere, including
in Jerusalem, the Ethiopian presence in Jerusalem had shown some
semblance of stability and security, despite continuing intrigues by
Copts, Armenians and their overlords in the region.

This was a most difficult and trying time for the Ethiopian monks in
Jerusalem who were confronted with a situation never experienced in
the country’s history, namely its occupation by a foreign power. And,
just like some of their compatriots including Church leaders at home,
some paid allegiance to the Fascist rulers albeit for the brief
(1936-1941) interregnum.

Emperor Haile Sellassie was also a notable patron of the monastery
cause, and the only monarch to have made several trips to Jerusalem,
including en route to his self-exile to London in May, 1936.

Since at least the 1950s there was an Ethiopian Association for
Jerusalem in Addis Ababa that coordinated annual Easter pilgrimages
to Jerusalem. Hundreds of Ethiopians and other persons from Ethiopia
and the Diaspora took advantage of its good offices to go there for
absolution, supplication or felicitation, and the practice continues
today.

Against all odds, historical, ecclesiastical and cultural bonding
between Ethiopia and Jerusalem waxed over the years. The Ethiopian
presence expanded beyond Deir Sultan including also numerous Ethiopian
Churches, chapels, convents and properties. This condition required
that the Patriarchate of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church designate
Jerusalem as a major diocese to be administered under its own
Archbishop.

Above: Timket (epiphany) celebration by the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo
Church on the Jordan River, considered to be the place where Jesus
was baptized. Jan. 1999. Photo by Iweze Davidson.

Ethiopia and Black Heritage In Jerusalem

For hundreds of years, the name or concept of Ethiopia has been a
beacon for black/African identity liberty and dignity throughout the
diaspora. The Biblical (Psalm 68:31) verse , "…Ethiopia shall soon
stretch forth her hands unto God" has been universally taken to mean
African people, black people at large, stretch out their hands to God
(and only to God) in supplication, in felicitation or in absolution.

As Daniel Thwaite put it, for the Black man Ethiopia was always
"…an incarnation of African independence."

And today, Ethiopian monastic presence in the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre or Deir Sultan in Jerusalem, is the only Black presence in
the holiest place on earth for Christians. For much of its history,
Ethiopian Christianity was largely hemmed in by alternating powers
in the region. Likewise, Ethiopia used its own indigenous Ethiopic
languages for liturgical and other purposes within its own territorial
confines, instead of colonial or other lingua franca used in extended
geographical spaces of the globe.

For these and other reasons, Ethiopia was not able to communicate
effectively with the wider Black world in the past. Given the fact
that until recently, most of the Black world within Africa and in
the diaspora was also under colonial tutelage or under slavery, it
was not easy to appreciate the significance of Ethiopian presence
in Jerusalem. Consequently, even though Ethiopian/Black presence in
Jerusalem has been maintained through untold sacrifices for centuries,
the rest of the Black world outside of Ethiopia has not taken part
in its blessings through pilgrimages to the holy sites and thereby
develop concomitant bonding with the Ethiopian monastery in Jerusalem.

For nearly two millennia now, the Ethiopian Church and its adherent
monks and priests have miraculously maintained custodianship of Deir
Sultan, suffering through and surviving all the struggles we have
glanced at in these pages. In fact, the survival of Ethiopian/Black
presence in Christianity’s holy places in Jerusalem is matched only
by the "Survival Ethiopian Independence" itself.

Indeed, Ethiopian presence in Deir Sultan represents not just
Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity but all African/black Christians of
all denominations who value the sacred legacy that the holy places of
Jerusalem represent for Christians everywhere. It represents also
the affirmation of the fact that Jerusalem is the birthplace of
Christianity, just as adherents of Judaism and Islam claim it also.

The Ethiopian foothold at the rooftop of the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre is the only form of Black presence in Christianity’s holy
places of Jerusalem. It ought to be secure, hallowed and sanctified
ground by and for all Black folks everywhere who value it. The saga of
Deir Sultan also represents part of Ethiopian history and culture. And
that too is part of African/black history and culture regardless of
religious orientation.

When a few years ago, an Ethiopian monk was asked by a writer why
he had come to Jerusalem to face all the daily vicissitudes and
indignities, he answered, "because it is Jerusalem."

— About the Author: Dr. Negussay Ayele is a noted Ethiopian
scholar. He is the author of the book Ethiopia and the United States,
Volume I, the Season of Courtship, among many other publications. He
lives in Los Angeles, California.

Olympics-Athletics-Women’s 100m Heats Results

OLYMPICS-ATHLETICS-WOMEN’S 100M HEATS RESULTS

Reuters
Sat 16 Aug 08 | 07:04 GMT
Nigeria

Aug 16 (Reuters) – Olympic athletics women’s 100m heats results in
Beijing on Saturday.

Heat one 1. Torri Edwards (United States) 11.26 seconds 2. Jeanette
Kwakye (Britain) 11.30 Q 3. Myriam Leonie Mani (Cameroon) 11.64 Q
4. Inna Eftimova (Bulgaria) 11.67 5. Wang Jing (China) 11.87 6. Ani
Khachikyan (Armenia) 12.76 7. Ivana Rozhman (Macedonia FYR) 12.92
8. Peoria Koshiba (Palau) 13.18 9. Buthayna Al-Yacooubi (Oman) 13.90

Heat two 1. Christine Arron (France) 11.37 Q 2. Lauryn Williams (United
States) 11.38 Q 3. Tahesia Harrigan (British Virgin Islands) 11.46
Q 4. Lucimar de Moura (Brazil) 11.60 Q 5. Sherry Fletcher (Grenada)
11.65 6. Dana Abdulrazak (Iraq) 12.36 7. Sadaf Siddiqui (Pakistan)
12.41 8. Asenate Manoa (Tuvalu) 14.05

Heat three 1. Muna Lee (United States) 11.33 Q 2. Anita Pistone
(Italy) 11.43 Q 3. Guzel Khubbieva (Uzbekistan) 11.44 Q 4. Virgil Hodge
(St. Kitts & Nevis) 11.48 Q 5. Natalia Rusakova (Russia) 11.61 Q 6. Wan
Kin Yee (Hong Kong, China) 12.37 7. Gharid Ghrouf (Palestine) 13.07
8. Elis Lapenmal (Vanuatu) 13.31 9. Bonko Camara (Mauritania) 13.69

Heat four 1. Chandra Sturrup (Bahamas) 11.30 Q 2. Kelly-Ann Baptiste
(Trinidad & Tobago) 11.39 Q 3. Lina Grincikaite (Lithuania) 11.43
Q 4. Semoy Hackett (Trinidad & Tobago) 11.53 Q 5. Amandine Allou
Affoue (Ivory Coast) 11.75 6. Valentina Nazarova (Turkmenistan)
11.94 7. Titlinda Sou (Cambodia) 12.98 8. Fathia Ali Bouraleh
(Djibouti) 14.29

Heat five 1. Kim Gevaert (Belgium) 11.33 Q 2. Yuliya Nesterenko
(Belarus) 11.40 Q 3. Thi Huong Vu (Vietnam) 11.65 Q 4. Halimat Ismaila
(Nigeria) 11.72 5. Chisato Fukushima (Japan) 11.74 6. Sonia Williams
(Antigua and Barbuda) 12.04 7. Cora Alicto (Guam) 13.31 8. Robina
Muqimyaar (Afghanistan) 14.80

Heat six 1. Shelly-Ann Fraser (Jamaica) 11.35 Q 2. Vida Anim (Ghana)
11.47 Q 3. Paulette Ruddy Zang-Milama (Gabon) 11.62 Q 4. Laura
Turner (Britain) 11.65 5. Nirinaharifidy Ramilijaona (Madagascar)
12.07 6. Tamica Clarke (Bahamas) 12.16 7. Montserrat Pujol (Andorra)
12.73 8. Jessica Aguilera (Nicaragua) 13.15 9. Pauline Kwalea (Solomon
Islands) 13.28

Heat seven 1. Ivet Lalova (Bulgaria) 11.33 Q 2. Montell Douglas
(Britain) 11.36 Q 3. Virgen Benavides (Cuba) 11.45 Q 4. Franca Idoko
(Nigeria) 11.61 Q 5. Pia Tajnikar (Slovenia) 11.82 6. Feta Ahamada
(Comoros) 11.88 7. Fatou Tiyana (Gambia) 12.25 8. Nazmun Nahar Beauty
(Bangladesh) 12.52

Heat eight 1. Oludamola Osayomi (Nigeria) 11.13 Q 2. Debbie
McKenzie-Ferguson (Bahamas) 11.17 Q 3. Daria Korczynska (Poland) 11.22
Q 4. Yomara Hinestroza (Colombia) 11.39 Q 5. Sasha Springer-Jones
(Trinidad & Tobago) 11.55 Q 6. Mae Koime (Papua New Guinea) 11.68
7. Hinikissia Albertine Ndikert (Chad) 12.55 8. Franka Magali (DR
Congo) 12.57

Heat nine 1. Evgeniya Polyakova (Russia) 11.24 Q 2. Jade Bailey
(Barbados) 11.46 Q 3. Sherone Simpson (Jamaica) 11.48 Q 4. Nataliya
Porgebnyak (Ukraine) 11.60 Q 5. Tezdzhan Naimova (Bulgaria) 11.70
6. Jutamas Thavoncharoen (Thailand) 11.82 7. Waseelah Saad (Yemen)
13.60 8. Maria Ikelap (Micronesia) 13.73 9. Philaylack Sackpraseuth
(Laos) 13.86

Heat 10 1. Kerron Stewart (Jamaica) 11.28 Q 2. Ezinne Okparaebo
(Norway) 11.32 Q 3. LaVerne Jones-Ferrette (Virgin Islands) 11.41 Q
4. Barbara Pierre (Haiti) 11.52 Q 5. Natalia Murinovich (Russia) 11.55
Q 6. Charlene Attard (Malta) 12.20 7. Michaela Kargbo (Sierra Leone)
12.54 8. Milena Milasevic (Montenegro) 12.65 9. Chandra Kala Thapa
(Nepal) 13.15

(Compiled by Infostrada Sports, Editing by Padraic Halpin)
(For more stories visit our multimedia Beijing website at
; and see our blog
at )

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.reuters.com/news/sports/2008olympics
http://blogs.reuters.com/china

Humanitarian Impulses

HUMANITARIAN IMPULSES
By GARY J. BASS

New York Times
7wwln-lede-t.html?_r=1&ref=magazine&oref=s login
August 15, 2008
United States

The Way We Live Now

The long overdue sight of Radovan Karadzic in The Hague facing trial
for genocide is a useful reminder of wars past. In 1995, after three
and a half years of killing, an American-led NATO bombing campaign
helped stop Karadzic’s atrocities and turned the Bosnian Serb leader
into a fugitive. But do the humanitarian interventions typified by
America’s interventions in Bosnia and Kosovo have a future? Even as
Darfur bleeds, Iraq has become a grim object lesson in the dangers of
foreign adventures. The former Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright
recently wrote that "many of the world’s necessary interventions in
the decade before the invasion [of Iraq] — in places like Haiti and
the Balkans — would seem impossible in today’s climate."

And yet somehow the idea of humanitarian intervention remains
intact. In the 2000 presidential race, both George W. Bush and Al Gore
said they would not have intervened to halt the genocide in Rwanda. But
today, John McCain says the United States has an obligation to stop
genocide when it can do so effectively, and Barack Obama has made
genocide prevention a signature issue. He has surrounded himself with
advisers haunted by America’s failure to stop the Rwandan genocide
and regularly calls for saving Darfur.

How can this be? For many Europeans, there is a simple explanation: the
United States has learned nothing. Rather than recognizing the stark
limitations of military power, Americans are promising again to remake
the world. Infinitely distractable, the United States plunged into
Iraq before it had stabilized Afghanistan; now, while both countries
are still hanging by a thread, it may be on to Darfur. Humanitarian
intervention, in short, seems to many a distinctively American idea
— and not in a good way. During the Somalia intervention in 1992,
Henry A. Kissinger wrote that "no other nation" except the United
States had ever asserted that "humane concerns" matter so much "that
not only treasure but lives must be risked to vindicate them."

But a look back at history shows this to be a caricature. In fact,
Europeans were backing humanitarian interventions almost two centuries
ago, while Americans were often the ones who objected. Throughout the
19th century, people in Britain, France and Russia urged the dispatch
of troops to stop killings in places like Poland and Bulgaria —
even when doing so undermined the national interest. Some of the
most celebrated European names — Victor Hugo, William Wilberforce,
Anthony Trollope, Oscar Wilde — demanded action. The telegraph and
newspapers confronted readers with horrific stories from remote lands
— a forerunner to the famous "CNN effect" in which televised images
of suffering prompt the call for rescue.

The result was actual interventions in Syria and Naples and, perhaps
most spectacularly, Greece. When Greek nationalists rose up against
Ottoman rule in 1821, much of the British public rallied to their
cause, galvanized by press reports of Ottoman atrocities. This
was supremely inconvenient for the British government, which had a
clear imperial interest in supporting the Ottoman Empire as a bulwark
against Russian expansion. But the London Greek Committee lobbied the
government, sent money and weapons to the Greeks and dispatched men,
including Lord Byron, then probably the most famous poet in Europe,
to Greece to fight. Byron died of fever there. (Imagine Bono fighting
in Darfur today.) Finally, in 1827, the British Navy, alongside
French and Russian ships, sank much of the Ottoman Navy in Greece —
helping to secure the creation of today’s independent Greece.

In contrast, the United States was rarely moved by humanitarianism
alone. While Thomas Jefferson, Daniel Webster and countless Americans
thrilled to the Greek cause, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams
refused to act: America, he famously said, "does not go abroad,
in search of monsters to destroy." There was widespread American
outrage at the 1915 Armenian genocide, which Theodore Roosevelt called
"the greatest crime of the war." But Woodrow Wilson dared not risk
entering World War I at the time, and his secretary of state, Robert
Lansing, secretly admitted that his department was "withholding from
the American people the facts now in its possession" — an official
cover-up of genocide.

Humanitarian intervention, in other words, is not the property of the
United States or the generation of liberal hawks who championed Balkan
interventions in the 1990s. For better or worse, it is best understood
as an idea that’s common to the big democracies on both sides of
the Atlantic. Canada has promoted the principle of an international
"responsibility to protect" endangered civilians. Europe has a
fresh crop of foreign ministers who — following their 19th-century
predecessors — support humanitarian intervention: Bernard Kouchner
of France argued for delivering aid to cyclone victims in Myanmar
by force if necessary, and David Miliband of Britain championed the
faltering United Nations-African Union peacekeeping mission in Darfur
on a February trip to Beijing. And in Berlin, Barack Obama won German
cheers and applause by saying, "The genocide in Darfur shames the
conscience of us all."

Of course, the real test will come when George W. Bush is gone and
Americans and Europeans have to turn those cheers into policy. It’s
not at all clear that European publics are outraged by abuses in
Darfur the way they were once outraged by massacres in Greece,
Syria and Bulgaria. When the next president takes office, America
will still have troops in Afghanistan and Iraq and will inevitably
be more eager for European soldiers to deploy in Afghanistan than in
Darfur. In August 1992, a promising presidential candidate named Bill
Clinton said, "If the horrors of the Holocaust taught us anything,
it is the high cost of remaining silent and paralyzed in the face of
genocide." As the Rwandans found out, it’s easier to state historical
lessons than to apply them.

Gary J. Bass, a Princeton professor, is the author of "Freedom’s
Battle: The Origins of Humanitarian Intervention," which will be
published by Alfred A. Knopf this month.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/17/magazine/1

As Russian Tanks Roll, Europe Reassesses

AS RUSSIAN TANKS ROLL, EUROPE REASSESSES
By Judy Dempsey

New York Times
August 15, 2008
United States

News Analysis

BERLIN — The Russian tanks rumbling across parts of Georgia are
forcing a fundamental reassessment of strategic interests across
Europe in a way not considered since the fall of the Berlin Wall in
November 1989 and the subsequent collapse of Communism.

Skip to next paragraph Related News Analysis: No Cold War, but Big
Chill (August 16, 2008) For nearly two decades, European capitals in
concert with Washington have encouraged liberalization in lands once
firmly under the Soviet aegis. Now, they find themselves asking a
question barely posed in all those years: How far will or can Russia
go, and what should the response be?

The answer will play out not just in the European Union, but also
along its new eastern frontier, in once obscure places like Moldova
and Azerbaijan.

Already, French leaders, acting on behalf of Europe, have firmly told
the Russians they cannot insist on the ouster of Georgia’s president,
Mikheil Saakashvili, as a precondition for a cease-fire.

Farther west, in Poland, a long-stalled negotiation on stationing
parts of a United States missile defense system was quickly wrapped
up, as American negotiators on Thursday dropped resistance to giving
the Poles advanced Patriot missiles.

The Poles, of course, had their own security in mind. "Poland wants
to be in alliances where assistance comes in the very first hours
of — knock on wood — any possible conflict," Prime Minister Donald
Tusk said.

"The reality is that international relations are changing," said
Pawel Swieboda, director of demosEUROPA, an independent research
organization based in Warsaw. "For the first time since 1991, Russia
has used military force against a sovereign state in the post-Soviet
area. The world will not be the same. A new phenomenon is unfolding
in front or our eyes: a re-emerging power that is willing to use force
to guarantee its interests. The West does not know how to respond."

At stake 20 years ago was whether the Kremlin, then under Mikhail
Gorbachev, would intervene militarily to stop the collapse of
Communism. But Mr. Gorbachev chose to cut Eastern Europe free as
he focused — in vain — on preventing the collapse of the Soviet
Union itself.

Communist bloc lands from the Baltic States in the north to Bulgaria
in the south have since joined the European Union and NATO — a feat,
despite flaws, that in the Western view has made the continent more
secure and democratic.

But Russia never liked the expansion of NATO. In the 1990s, it was
too weak to resist; today, in the Caucasus, Russia is showing off its
power and sending an unmistakable message: Georgia, or a much larger
Ukraine, will never be allowed to join NATO.

The implications of Russia’s action reverberate well beyond that,
from the European Union’s muddled relations with a crucial energy
supplier, Russia, through Armenia and Azerbaijan in the south and east,
to Ukraine and Moldova in the west.

This region has everything that the West and Russia covet and
abhor: immense reserves of oil and gas, innumerable ethnic splits
and tensions, corrupt and authoritarian governments, pockets of
territory that have become breeding grounds or havens for Islamic
fundamentalists. As a result, the region has become the arena for
competition between the Americans and Europeans on one hand, and
Russia on the other, over how to bring these countries into their
respective spheres of influence.

The European Union — as ever, slow and divided — has offered few
concrete proposals to bring the countries of what Russia calls its
"near abroad" — Belarus, Ukraine, the Caucasus and the Caspian —
closer to Europe. Analysts say the 27 member states have not been
able to separate their view of Russia from adopting a clear strategy
toward the former Soviet republics on the union’s new eastern borders.

"The Georgia crisis shows that Russia is in the process of testing
how far it can go," said Niklas Nilsson of the Central Asia-Caucasus
Institute in Stockholm. "This is part of a much bigger geopolitical
game. It is time for the Europeans to decide what kind of influence
it wants in the former Soviet states. That is the biggest strategic
challenge the E.U. now faces."

NATO, led by the United States and several Eastern European countries,
has reached out more actively. At a summit meeting in Bucharest,
Romania, in April, Georgia and Ukraine failed to get on a concrete
path to membership as they had sought, but did secure a promise of
being admitted eventually.

Georgia and its supporters say that NATO membership would have
protected Georgians from Russian tanks. Western European diplomats
by contrast note with relief that Georgia is not in NATO, and thus
they were not required to come to its defense.

The newly resurgent Russians, buoyed by oil and gas wealth and the
firm leadership of Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin, have played
their hand with less hesitation.

Tomas Valasek, the Slovak-born director of foreign policy and defense
at the Center for European Reform in London, says Russia has used
the ethnic and territorial card to persuade some NATO countries that
admitting Ukraine or Georgia would prove more dangerous and unstable
than keeping them out. Georgia’s incursion Aug. 7 into South Ossetia
serves both these Russian arguments, as well as Moscow’s passionate
objections to the West’s support for an independent Kosovo.

Recognize Kosovo’s break with Serbia, Mr. Putin warned last spring,
and Russia will feel entitled to do the same with South Ossetia and
Georgia’s other breakaway enclave, Abkhazia — where Mr. Putin needs
stability to realize his cherished project of the 2014 Winter Olympics
in nearby Sochi.

Ukraine, bigger than France and traditionally seen by Russians as
integral to their heritage and dominion, has been conspicuously
quiet over the past week. Senior Ukrainian officials say that the
weak European Union response on Georgia will only embolden Russia
to focus even more on Ukraine, where many inhabitants speak Russian
and, particularly in the eastern half, look to Moscow, not Kiev,
for leadership.

"The crisis in Georgia has clear implications for regional security,
and of course Ukraine," said Hryhoriy Nemyria, deputy prime minister
of Ukraine, who is responsible for European integration. "This crisis
makes crystal clear that the security vacuums that have existed in
the post-Soviet space remain dangerous."
From: Baghdasarian

Know What You Are Picking

KNOW WHAT YOU ARE PICKING
By Ken Allen

Kennebec Journal
08/16/2008
ME

Dry years have less of an effect on encouraging folks to become wild
mushroom gatherers, but this wet summer has fungi sprouting on lawns,
beside roads and in forests and fields. Such obvious abundance has
folks talking about becoming amateur mycologists more so than usual.

I once picked wild mushrooms on a routine basis, a serious hobby
that lasted 12 years before an incident spooked me enough to quit,
but I’m getting way ahead of my story.

My stint as a mushroomer began one August 35 years ago when a
Massachusetts native of Armenian descent taught me a few basics as
I followed him around the woods.

This wonderful gentleman passed away years ago after a long life of
running hounds, fly-fishing and living partly off the land, gathering
wild foods and gardening. His parents were born in Eastern Europe,
where mushrooming is a national pastime, and he learned from them.

My mentor and his wife were staying on Frost Pond near the Penobscot’s
West Branch by Ripogenus Dam when we met, and in this northern
latitude and high elevation, mushrooms associated with fall around
central Maine were growing there in mid-August.

This fellow stressed a concept. He claimed that the North American
mushroom family contained about the same percentage of poisonous
species as this continent’s herbaceous and woody plants did, so
picking fungi proved no more dangerous than gathering plants —
the latter having ultra-toxic species, too.

Tom Seymour, an author and well-known wild-food gatherer from Waldo,
also claims this point about the percentage of poison plants vs. fungi.

Neither man was saying that wild-food gatherers could be careless,
but rather, picking the wrong plant could be as lethal as choosing
a bad mushroom. They stress this point because, for one reason or
another, Americans are far more afraid of mushrooms than plants.

My friend said that a tiny percentage of fungi proved of gourmet
quality and a small number of species would make folks very sick or
very dead, and the trick began with concentrating on the quality,
edible mushrooms and mastering identification one species at a time.

Not to belabor the point, but in this man’s estimation, most mushrooms
might possess a poor flavor or unsuitable consistency such as being
watery, but the majority were not toxic.

In that halcyon summer so many years ago, we picked Boletes, hen
of the woods, chicken of the woods, coral (a species that grows in
conifer forests) and puffballs, and years later, I learned horse
mushrooms that grow in horse pastures.

The latter looks like supermarket fungi — just giants in comparison
to the store-bought variety. Before my frightening experience,
I’d sometimes fill a paper grocery bag or two with horse mushrooms
for freezing.

Here’s what got me thinking about poison mushrooms this week:

Recently, an acquaintance of my partner and intrepid companion, Jolie,
wound up in the emergency room after eating poison mushrooms.

This might not have caught my attention, but the woman, Masha
Ben-Tepherith of Augusta, has picked mushrooms her whole life, so
she has experience galore. While growing up, she learned fungi skills
from her parents, immigrants from Russia.

A recent interview with Masha fascinated me, beginning with this:

We had quite a time, trying to communicate about which mushrooms were
which because she had learned mushroom identification in Russian
and doesn’t know the English names. I did take Russian in college
— for one day. As soon as the professor told the class we had to
learn a different alphabet, I dropped the language, so I was no help
with Masha.

Apparently, Masha, her sister and the sister’s boyfriend had picked
a species, thinking the mushrooms were puffballs, but according to
Masha, the fungi turned out being a poison variety colloquially called
"earth ball."

When her sister sliced the first mushroom, the center was a lovely
purple rather than puffball white. The odd color concerned Masha,
but the sister, who has also picked mushrooms her whole life, felt
the fungi were fine and cooked them.

To complicate matters, Masha has recently suffered abdominal pains,
so when the bad mushrooms started causing her stomach problems,
she figured it was more of the same ailment — not a case of poisoning.

However, the stomachache turned to excruciating pain, so the three
of them headed to the emergency room. Soon, the sister and boyfriend
were also suffering with typical symptoms of mushroom poisoning —
stomach pains, sweating, vomiting and diarrhea. In fact, the guy
passed out and fell onto the ER floor.

When all three were suffering at the hospital, Masha and her sister
realized that they had made a horrible mistake, but they lived to
tell the tale.

It must be stressed that the two women are not casual fungi gatherers,
either, illustrating that experienced folks may get themselves in
trouble. No one is immune to making a mistake.

My scare also came with puffballs but proved far less dramatic. After
eating this common mushroom for 12 years, I read in a book that if a
sliced puffball had the tracing of a mushroom on the inside slices
— beware. It’s not a puffball, but rather, an extremely poisonous
species. I didn’t know that tidbit and would have eaten it tracing
or not — probably killing myself.

My lesson?

If I were going to gather mushrooms, I needed to know far more than
what a brief summer had taught me.

For folks like myself not born into mushrooming, I’ve often thought of
joining some group such as The Maine Mycological Association, amateur
and professional fanciers of wild mushrooms and other fungi. MMA
formed in 1985. The Web site is
and the e-mail is: [email protected].

It was either go that route or enroll in a course at a community
college or night class at a high school.

If someone is going to pick mushrooms, this fall would be the time
to sign up somewhere because this is a grand year for picking.

Ken Allen, of Belgrade Lakes, is a writer, editor and photographer.

http://www.mushroomthejournal.com/mma/

Local Eastern Europeans See Both Sides In Georgia Conflict

LOCAL EASTERN EUROPEANS SEE BOTH SIDES IN GEORGIA CONFLICT
By Robert Morris – [email protected]

Myrtle Beach Sun News
Aug. 16, 2008
SC

Whether they have lived here for years or are only serving fast
food for the summer, Russians and Eastern Europeans across the Grand
Strand have been scouring the Internet this week for accounts about
the recent conflict in Georgia.

In the media from their native countries, they read accounts
about the fighting that may surprise many Americans: The South
Carolina-sized republic of Georgia, emboldened by its growing ties
with the United States and Western Europe, suddenly attacked an
increasingly independent separatist region within its own borders.

Innocent civilians, including Russian citizens, were killed by the
Georgian bombs, those Russian accounts say, and Russia was forced to
send troops in to stop the violence.

"We were shocked, because in the American news they said Russia started
the war with Georgia," said Valeriya Binyuk, a 21-year-old economics
student working at Mad Myrtle’s Ice Creamery for the summer. "Georgia
started the war. I think Russia was just protecting its citizens."

In the American media, a completely different story has
developed: Using the first excuse it could find, Russia invaded
Georgia to reassert its faded glory since the fall of the Soviet
Union. Commentators speculate that Moscow is punishing the former
Soviet state for aligning itself with the West and trying to push
so far into Georgia’s interior that the ensuing fear will undermine
support for the country’s anti-Russian president.

Ultimately, elements of each side’s story are likely to prove true
and blame for the conflict will fall on both countries, say experts
and some locals.

Either way, this week’s fighting – and the widely disparate media
accounts of it in both countries – may mark a significantly negative
shift in U.S.-Russia relations.

"In a way, we’ve left one period of post-Soviet history and entered
another," said Bill Richardson, dean of Coastal Carolina University’s
humanities college and an expert in Russian politics. "The Russian
state is just more powerful, and we’re moving back to a period of
tension between Russia and the U.S."

Three-way combat

The five days of fighting in Georgia centered on two regions, Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, which for more than a decade have both had limited
and uneasy independence from the rest of Georgia. The two areas have
significant numbers of Russian citizens.

Around Aug. 3, small skirmishes began between Ossetian separatists and
Georgian forces, and, as casualties escalated, Georgia began bombing
and sending in more forces. Claiming that Georgians were wiping out the
Russian citizens there, Russia sent its armies to aid the Ossetians.

"The Georgians behaved pretty irresponsibly in how they went about
doing this," Richardson said. "But I also think Russia kind of
manipulated this."

By Monday, the Russian army had also attacked Georgian forces in
Abkhazia and even pushed past those regions into undisputed Georgian
territory, killing hundreds with aerial bombing.

On Wednesday, French President Nicolas Sarkozy brokered a cease-fire
between the warring countries, but even though the fighting stopped,
Russian troops have continued their advance into Georgia, reaching
25 miles from the capital city of Tbilisi.

‘A bad peace’

As many Eastern Europeans look at the fighting in Georgia, they repeat
the Russian proverb that "a bad peace is better than a good war." But,
they insist, Georgia was killing Russian citizens in South Ossetia,
so Russia was forced to respond.

"Russia is like a third person," said Anna Konchinkova, a fifth-year
law student with a summer job working for Russian-speaking Myrtle
Beach attorney David Canty. "Nobody wants a war."

Dennis Sorokin, a 20-year-old law student working for the summer at
a pay parking lot on Withers Drive, said the people of South Ossetia
should be considered the true victims of the fighting.

"Every country wants to be independent," Sorokin said. "Russia doesn’t
want to be in a war. They have a big territory and lots of people –
they don’t need that tiny country."

Amid the American news media’s depiction of a Russian invasion of
Georgia, the Eastern Europeans said they could only rely on their
home country’s media for news of the fighting.

"When you look at the CNN side, they all blame Russia," said Hovsep
Karapetyan, an Armenian who owns the Euro Foods grocery on Kings
Avenue. "They don’t show you what’s really going on."

Tamara Johnson, a native Russian who lived in Ukraine for 15 years
before marrying an American worker and moving to the U.S., said
Georgia’s plight captured the West’s attention because its leader,
Mikhail Saakashvili, so aggressively sought help from the U.S.

"When children are fighting, who gets mama’s kiss is who is crying
louder," Johnson said. "Georgia is crying louder."

The real rift

Regardless of who started it, the Georgian conflict is universally
seen as part of a widening fault line between the West and Russia.

In recent years, the former Soviet states of Georgia and Ukraine have
elected Western-leaning leaders and sought inclusion into NATO. In
Georgia, an important street in the capital is even named after
President George W. Bush.

After this month’s fighting began, Georgia announced it would break
from the Russian-led federation of post-Soviet states known as the
Commonwealth of Independent States – yet another move that will likely
heighten the tensions underlying the conflict.

"As Russia has become more sure of itself and more secure, it was
pretty clear that Russia was going to begin to assert itself as a
regional power," Richardson said. "The Russian government wanted to
show a potential alliance with NATO wasn’t going to bring them much,
and that the real power in the region is Russia."

Amid the dangers posed by a real shift in diplomatic attitudes between
the U.S. and Russia, some who have lived on both sides worry that
aggressively one-sided media coverage is only widening the divide.

In Conway, Belarus native Marina Hearle’s gallery mixes European art
with her husband’s collection of American baseball collectibles,
and her own paintings are as likely to have scenes from Conway as
from Russia.

"I just wish people would learn about each other more," Hearle
said. "Maybe they would understand what’s going on."

In Karapetyan’s store, amid all the Russian teas and chocolates,
he also stocks bottles of the famed Tkemali hot sauce from Georgia.

Georgians and Russians will remain friends, he said, but the
saber-rattling from the politicians concerns him.

"If they go too far, it’s going to get bigger and bigger," Karapetyan
said. "They should figure out how to stop it."

As Washington and Moscow continue their war of words over Georgia,
the situation could worsen, experts said.

"There’s always the potential for a miscalculation where things can
escalate," said Ken Rogers, chair of the department of politics
at CCU. "Hopefully, the relationship is important enough to both
countries that they will do what they can to make the impact as
minimal as possible. But who knows?"
From: Baghdasarian

Guts And Glory

GUTS AND GLORY
By Derrick Z. Jackson

Boston Globe
August 16, 2008
United States

Vahram "Vee" Sookikian, 81, section-hiked the 2,175-mile Appalachian
Trail at age 64. (Derrick Z. Jackson/Globe Staff)

AS MIDDLE-AGERS at the Beijing Olympics exalt the iron abs of
41-year-old swimmer and mother Dara Torres, the gold medal for guts
goes to 81-year-old Vahram "Vee" Sookikian. Three days before the
games began, Sookikian jubilantly bore his backpack on spindly legs
back into base camp at the Philmont Scout Ranch in Cimarron, N.M.,
the oldest national high adventure camp of the Boy Scouts.

He finished a 10-night, 60-mile trek in the mountain wilderness
with one of the four, 12-person crews from our Boston Minuteman
Council. Sookikian’s crew included his 50-year-old son Steve and
15-year-old grandson Julian. There are families where three generations
can chat on a porch. There are three generations capable of a gentle
stroll or a genteel round of golf.

Few are the families in our sedentary nation where three generations
share a trail, undulating between 7,000 and 10,000 feet under a
withering sun. Few families have an octogenarian who can carry 40
pounds on his back for a week and a half to sleep on the ground
under the stars. Vee was sturdy enough to fall off a log bridge
into a stream, right himself, wipe himself off and keep hiking,
only complaining that he drowned his digital camera.

Few families have a grandson who thinks this was another walk in the
park. "He’s always been out there with me," said Julian, a sophomore
at Waltham High School. "I remember him in my earliest memories,
camping out, sleeping in an old station wagon, fishing, hiking around
in Vermont. It’s a big deal to other people around me. To me it’s
just normal."

Sookikian, a retired electronics engineer, never stopped walking from
the time he joined a troop in Brooklyn, in time to be part of the
90th birthday celebration in 1940 of Dan Beard, a founder of American
scouting. By age 16, as World War II sapped the adults from the troop,
Sookikian played scoutmaster, leading younger Scouts onto subways
and buses in full backpacks to woodland camps out of New York City.

"My dad walked everyday in his life and lived to 86. I never knew him
to be sick until just before he died," said Vee, whose Armenian parents
escaped genocide in Turkey. "When I started, I never thought I’d make
a good Scout or hiker. I never made Eagle (Scouting’s highest rank)
because I could not do a standing broad jump . . . My family being
Depression-poor, we had no equipment, no mess kits, not much food,
slept in blankets pinned together, and wore city shoes with leather
soles with no grip."

He stayed in shape over the decades by starting a troop in Watertown
and completing a Philmont trek at age 45 with Steve. Vee section-hiked
the 2,175-mile Appalachian Trail until he finished it at age 64. At age
74, he hiked Philmont again with two other grandsons. He vowed to do
it with Julian as well. On the last day, even Julian as amazed. "We
gave him a big head start but we’d always thought we’d catch him,"
Julian said. "But we were huffing and puffing and when we got to where
he was, he was sunning himself with our sister crew from Texas. On
his good days, he was a speed demon."

Sookikian said the one time he was scared was also on the last day,
when a storm of lightning, hail, and 40-mile-an-hour gusts hit the
crew atop an exposed, 9,000-foot peak. "I was slipping and falling
several times," Sookikian said. "My knees were starting to fail. I
was mad at myself because I thought I might create an emergency."

The storm subsided, allowing the jubilant victory steps down to
base camp. Philmont has no record of the oldest person to finish
a trek. Sookikian needs no record or gold medal to know how rare
he is. "I knew so many people who, when they turned 65, all they
could talk about was sitting in a lounge chair and smoking a pipe,"
a glowing Sookikian said. "To me, that was like preparing to die. I
hope to do this until the day I die."

Derrick Z. Jackson can be reached at [email protected].

© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.

–Boundary_(ID_cM2YZxUm0rtM0rbLtxSLYQ)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

David Day On Essential Books About Historical Conquest

DAVID DAY ON ESSENTIAL BOOKS ABOUT HISTORICAL CONQUEST

Wall Street Journal
August 16, 2008

1. History of the Conquest of Mexico By William Prescott 1843

History can be understood in many ways, but one of the most compelling
is to track the movement of peoples and their later attempts to put
their stamp on newly conquered lands. Spain’s conquest of Mexico
in the 16th century is a dramatic example. A rousing narrative of
that conquest was written in the early 1840s by the partially blind
American historian William Prescott, who combined admiration for
the Spanish conqueror Cortes with a relatively sensitive portrayal
of the vanquished Aztecs. "It is but justice to the Conquerors
of Mexico," Prescott writes, "to say that the very brilliancy and
importance of their exploits have given a melancholy celebrity to
their misdeeds." This hugely influential book was based on research
in Spanish archives and was published as Americans were completing
a sweep across land that they had claimed as their own.

2. Ceremonies of Possession in Europe’s Conquest of the New World,
1492-1640 By Patricia Seed Cambridge, 1995

The assertion of control over newly conquered lands is usually marked
by an act that has symbolic meaning, at least for the conquerors. In
her landmark history, Patricia Seed describes the competing ways
in which European powers asserted their right to territory in the
Americas, with each country refusing to recognize the claims of the
others. Her book is peppered with fascinating vignettes of Portuguese
and Dutch who thought that mastering the navigation of distant seas
entitled explorers to seize the lands that their ships chanced upon. In
contrast, the British emphasized enclosing and farming as a means of
establishing their dominion, while the French preferred to enact a
ceremony that mimicked the forms of a coronation back home. As for
the Spanish, "it was the words that counted," Seed writes. "A highly
formalized and stylized speech known as the Requirement had to be made
when encountering indigenous peoples for the first time. The text of
the speech was not a request for consent, but a declaration of war."

3. Sacred Landscape By Meron Benvenisti University of California, 2000

Military superiority is not enough to ensure that an act of conquest
will prevail. The newly acquired land must be made to seem the
natural possession of the new rulers. In "Sacred Landscape," Meron
Benvenisti — who served as deputy mayor of Jerusalem from 1971
to 1978 — recounts how, in the 1940s, he traveled across British
Palestine with his father, a Jewish mapmaker, on a mission to
"draw a Hebrew map of the land" that could act as "a renewed title
deed." Partly based on this personal experience, "Sacred Landscape"
is an anguished reflection on the terrible costs of two peoples’
asserting an inalienable right to the same land.

4. The Isles By Norman Davies Macmillan, 1999

Although the British are usually regarded as having been conquerors
across the world, the islands that they inhabit have themselves been
the scene of conquests over the centuries, by Romans, Celts, Vikings,
Saxons and others. In "The Isles," the British historian Norman Davies
— who has written extensively about Poland, another much-contested
country — applies his skills to describing his homeland. The result is
a rewarding tour from prehistory to the present day. Davies explores
the successive invasions of what we call the British Isles and the
struggles between the peoples who had come to conquer and then remained
to call different parts their own.

5. Axis Rule in Occupied Europe By Raphael Lemkin Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace, 1944

Any legitimacy that Hitler might have been able to claim for his
European conquests unraveled as soon as he revealed that he was intent
on doing more than redress the harsh peace of 1919. As readers of
"Mein Kampf" had already learned, his ambitions were continental in
scope and merciless in method. The monumental "Axis Rule in Occupied
Europe," written as World War II entered its final phase, is Polish
lawyer Raphael Lemkin’s description of how the Nazis executed with
cold precision their brutal plans for conquered peoples. In the
process of sounding the alarm, Lemkin coined what has become the
vexed term "genocide." It is clear from Lemkin’s other scholarly
work, on the Turkish genocide of the Armenians during World War I,
that he intended the term to have a wider application than just to
the Nazis; it was meant to cover all those laws and actions that are
used by conquerors to remove distinct populations from the landscape,
whether through direct killing, expulsion, compulsory assimilation
or other means. The book remains tragically relevant.

Mr. Day’s latest book, "Conquest: How Societies Overwhelm Others,"
was published in June by Oxford University Press.

Moscow Transforms Real-World Game Of RISK

MOSCOW TRANSFORMS REAL-WORLD GAME OF RISK

Globe and Mail
August 15, 2008 at 10:34 PM EDT
Canada

In early 2002, some 200 U.S. Special Forces soldiers landed in the
former Soviet republic of Georgia to train the Georgian army in
anti-terrorism techniques, including how to protect a planned oil
pipeline from secessionist or anti-Western saboteurs.

With strong encouragement from Washington, Georgia was finalizing
a deal with its neighbours, Azerbaijan and Turkey, and Britain’s BP
PLC to build a $3.9-billion (U.S.) pipeline from the oil-rich Caspian
region to the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean Sea.

The 1,768-kilometre, somewhat-circuitous route bypassed major
U.S. rivals in the region, Russia and Iran, as well as Armenia,
the traditional enemy of Turkey and Azerbaijan.

The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) project, completed in 2005, entailed
tremendous commercial risk because the three participants were involved
in violent struggles with neighbours or internal separatist groups,
and the pipeline would be vulnerable to sabotage. Under the agreement
with BP, each country was to provide security within its borders and
be responsible for losses should the pipeline be shut down as a result
of political violence.

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John O’Sullivan: Is Russia morphing into another USSR?

Earlier discussion: John O’Sullivan took your questions Marcus Gee:
Russia no longer content to swallow its bitterness It was part of the
United States’ effort to reduce Russia’s dominance of the region’s
booming oil trade, and by doing so to encourage the development of
independent-minded states on its rival’s southern flank.

Now, with its invasion of Georgia, Moscow has dramatically transformed
the real-world game of Risk that is being played out in the region.

For more than a decade, Russia watched while the U.S. and Europe played
the new "great game" of energy geopolitics in its own backyard. It
was 10 years ago this weekend that Russia plunged into financial
crisis by devaluing the ruble and defaulting on its mounting debt.

With the Georgian invasion, the Kremlin has sent notice that it
now controls the Risk board. And that it is willing to use its
armed forces to back up what it regards as its national interest in
neighbouring states.

At stake is control over one of the world’s most promising new sources
of crude oil – one that could rival the impact of the North Sea a
generation ago. The U.S., in particular, has worked strenuously to
minimize Russia’s influence over this energy development.

"While it is early days to say what the security situation is going
to look like in Georgia longer term, the events of the past few days
deal a blow to the U.S.’s plans to support existing and new oil and
gas routes that bypass Russia," Tanya Costello, Eurasian director
with the political risk consultancy, Eurasia Group, said yesterday.

For BP, the Russian invasion of Georgia could turn into a nightmare
if it forces it to keep closed two oil pipelines that pump more than
a million barrels a day of high-quality oil into world markets. They
represent an overall revenue stream of $100-million (U.S.) a day
among the oil company and its partners.

But then, BP recognized the risks before going into the project
and insured against losses with host governments and export credit
agencies. David Kirsch, an analyst with Washington-based PFC Energy
Group, said multinationals like BP have no choice but to operate in
extremely risky areas. "You go where the oil is," he said.

However, the Russian economy may also pay a price over the conflict,
which further tarnishes its reputation as a safe, reliable economic
partner and has provoked confrontation with the United States.

Ms. Costello said the Georgian war – which was motivated by political
rather than energy concerns – has added to the nervousness of foreign
investors, who dominate the Russian stock market.

In recent months, Russian markets have been rattled by the battle
between BP and its Russian partners, who received government support
for control over joint venture TNK-BP, as well as government threats
to prosecute companies that raise prices too aggressively.

"What happened in Georgia has come on the back of other events in
Russia that have increased market concerns," she said. "Together,
these are increasing the risk perception around the Russian market."

Moscow’s aggressiveness and lawlessness has clearly turned off some
Western investors. "Take all the money you want to lose to Russia and
you won’t be disappointed," quipped Toronto business leader Seymour
Schulich, who has spent a lifetime in global businesses.

But the country’s vast energy and mineral wealth, and its booming
construction and retail sector, amount to a lure that is too enticing
for many to pass up, regardless of the widespread criticism.

Inbound direct investment in Russia totalled $45-billion in 2007,
and is not expected to be dramatically affected by domestic squabbles
or Russia’s foreign adventure.

"I don’t think direct investors will be so easily deterred and they
will still be seeking opportunities across all different sectors of
the Russian economy, including energy," Ms. Costello said.

Despite setbacks, most of the international oil companies continue to
operate profitably in Russia. BP has made enormous returns from its
TNK-BP partnership, even as its battle with its Russian billionaire
partners heated up and its executives either fled the country or
were expelled for overstaying their visas. Fadel Gheit, an analyst
with Oppenheimer & Co. in New York, said BP has already earned back
its investment in the joint venture, though it may still lose out if
forced to unload its interest in a fire sale.

PUTIN’S HAND

Western governments and producers regard the Caspian-Central Asian
region as they had viewed Russia not so long ago – an important
source of production growth outside the cartel of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries, and an attractive area for investment
by their multinationals.

But as the West has had to reconsider Russia’s role in the global
energy picture over the past five years, it will now have to
recalibrate its assessment of the security of supply from the former
Soviet states.

Moscow’s aggressive energy policy in seeking to dominate energy trade
in its "near abroad" – as it calls the former Soviet republics –
is consistent with the approach taken to the oil and gas industry by
former president Vladimir Putin. In bare-knuckle fashion, Mr. Putin
reversed a decade of wide-open capitalism to reassert the dominant role
of the Russian state, heavily dependent on oil and gas for revenue.

Mr. Putin "intended to reorganize the Russian oil and gas industry to
enhance the power of the Russian state," says Martha Brill Olcott,
an expert on Russia with the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace. "Only then, after the reorganization was complete and the
state’s capacity to protect the national interests in this strategic
sector was reaffirmed, would Western firms be invited to participate
in the Russian market."

As rising oil prices strengthened the Kremlin’s hand, the former
president, who still wields considerable power as Prime Minister,
acted to correct what he viewed as the unacceptable status quo in
the energy sector.

His government reined in the freewheeling Russian businessmen known
as oligarchs, most famously through the controversial prosecution
of OAO Yukos chief executive officer Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Yukos’
assets were later sold at bargain prices to state-owned companies.

He changed the advantageous terms for Western companies operating
in his country, annulling exploration licences won by Exxon Mobil
Corp. and Chevron Corp. in the Sakhalin offshore, and then forced
Royal Dutch Shell PLC to sell its Sakhalin holdings to state-owned
OAO Gazprom.

He unilaterally raised previously subsidized natural gas prices to
former Soviet republics such as Ukraine and Belarus, raising the threat
of disruptions to gas exports that flow through those states to Europe.

Mr. Putin’s assertiveness was fuelled by Russia’s growing economic
clout, which resulted from rising oil and gas prices. Russia remains
the world’s second-largest producer of oil, at close to 10 million
barrels a day, and the largest producer of natural gas.

When he took power in 1999, crude prices averaged $10 a barrel
and Russia was virtually bankrupt. Since then, Russia has averaged
7-per-cent economic growth a year – 8 per cent in 2007 – and has run a
string of budget surpluses that last year topped 3 per cent of gross
domestic product.

As a result, its foreign reserves grew from $12-billion in 1999 to
$470-billion at the end of last year, a measure of economic strength
equalled only by countries such as China, India and the oil producers
of the Middle East.

The added riches stoked Russia’s ambitions to be an energy
superpower. To bolster its presence in energy markets, Moscow not
only boosted the government’s role domestically but has also sought
to dominate the export of oil and, especially, natural gas, from its
southern neighbours.

The transportation issue is both economic and political: Russia
reaps huge revenues and more control over export prices by having
its state-owned firms deliver crude and gas from competitors in the
Caucasus and Central Asia. At the same time, control of those exports
gives the Kremlin massive political leverage over Europe.

"Russia knows they are providing huge amounts to natural gas to
Europe – that they have a stranglehold on Europe," said Oppenheimer’s
Mr. Gheit. "There is no question in my mind that Russia is going to
play its energy card as much as it can."

Few analysts believe this week’s invasion of Georgia was motivated
by Russia’s energy ambitions, but it clearly supports the Kremlin’s
goal of exercising more clout in the broader region.

As a result of the invasion, Georgia’s reputation as a safe alternative
for transporting crude oil and natural gas is threatened, and Central
Asian producers will have to reconsider the risk involved in their
various plans for getting their oil and natural gas to Western markets.

"There are certainly very strong parallels between the development
of Russia’s domestic policy and its projection of influence over
the other former Soviet countries," Julian Lee, a senior analyst
with London-based Centre for Global Energy Studies, said in an
interview. "Russia has always felt it would like to exert a high
degree of control over the development of the oil and gas industries
of both Central Asia and the Caucasus, as well as its own."

Stephen Blank, a professor of national security affairs at the
U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., highlights the American
distrust of Russia’s energy policy in the region, though he added
those energy goals were of secondary importance in the current
crisis. "Russia’s energy objective is to monopolize all Caspian
energy flows to Europe, so that it can then blackmail Europe and
force political changes to European policy," Prof. Blank said.

It can then play that energy card to block further NATO expansion to
its borders, to prevent criticism of its anti-democratic government,
and to win support for the foreign ambitions of its state-owned
companies, he added.

PIPELINE POLITICS

The United States has long viewed the Georgian energy corridor as
the linchpin of its policy of encouraging independent, pro-Western
states to develop in the former Soviet states in the Caspian and
Central Asian regions.

At a meeting of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe in Istanbul in 1999, then-U.S. president Bill Clinton lobbied
hard and won agreement from Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey to proceed
with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline project.

The deal represented a major victory for U.S. foreign policy.

The high stakes in the "new pipeline politics" had been clearly spelled
out two years earlier – somewhat undiplomatically – by Sheila Heslin,
who had earlier served on Mr. Clinton’s National Security Council as
director of Russian, Ukrainian and Eurasian affairs.

At the time, Western oil firms were making major investments in the
energy-producing states of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan,
but export routes were still under discussion.

Washington’s fear was that the former Soviet producers would be
forced to market their oil and gas through Russia and Iran, thereby
conferring both economic and political clout on America’s rivals. (Even
then, the U.S. was enforcing sanctions against Iran over its nuclear
program.) In a New York Times opinion piece, Ms. Heslin wrote that
"the consequences would be dire" if Russia and Iran locked up the main
pipeline routes for the Caspian and Central Asian resources.) At the
time, Shell was planning to build a $2.5-billion natural gas pipeline
from Turkmenistan through Iran to Turkey. An oil pipeline was already
under construction that would move crude from Kazakhstan’s rich Tengiz
field to Russia’s Black Sea port of Novorossiysk.

A second oil pipeline was being considered, and it would be routed
either directly through Iran, or by a more circuitous path through
Georgia. Ms. Heslin said vital American interests required Washington
to ensure the Georgian route won out.

Washington’s staunchest ally for the Georgian route – in addition
to Tbilisi itself – was Azerbaijan, which was already sending crude
exports through a Russian-controlled pipeline but wanted to diversify
and did not trust Iran.

When the agreement was struck in 2003, the BTC pipeline had generous
backing from Western governments, including the World Bank’s
International Finance Corp., the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development and seven national export credit agencies.

The BTC pipeline opened in 2005, complementing the smaller Baku-Supsa
line that BP also operates and the Russian line that ends in
Novorossiysk.

This week, BP was forced to shut down the Baku-Supsa line, which
delivers 100,000 barrels a day of oil from Azerbaijan to the Black
Sea port of Supsa. The company said it was planning to reopen the
line as soon as possible.

The larger BTC pipeline had been shut down last week as a result
of apparent sabotage by a Kurdish separatist group. BP is hoping to
reopen the line after Turkish officials complete repairs next week,
assuming the situation in Georgia has stabilized.

Georgian officials – backed up by Western press reports – claimed
Russian bombers had targeted the buried BTC pipeline, but BP said
it saw no evidence to support those allegations. Analysts said they
did not expect Russia to deliberately target the Georgian pipelines,
noting that the Kremlin is eager to bolster its claim that it is a
reliable energy partner.

NO TEARS IN MOSCOW

Fallout from this week’s Georgian war may, however, affect future
decisions regarding pipeline routes, and persuade Central Asian
states – which have better relations with Moscow than either Georgia
or Azerbaijan – that the risks of partnering with those U.S.-friendly
states is too great.

Those decisions will not only affect Europe’s dependence on Russia for
its gas supplies, but will directly affect the return on investment
of international oil companies that are operating in Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.

Those states are expected to contribute major growth in non-OPEC
global oil and gas production. Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan are expected
to boost crude production from 11/2 million barrels a day two years
ago to 21/2 million currently, to up to six million barrels a day
within the next 15 years.

"What is really at stake is the unrestricted access of Caspian
oil to world markets," said the Centre for Global Energy Studies’
Mr. Lee. "If, as a byproduct of the conflict in Georgia, people
become more wary in the future of expanding the capacity of the export
corridor through Georgia, then there will be no tears shed in Moscow."

Eurasia Group’s Ms. Costello said the key to future projects through
Georgia will be the degree to which the country returns to normal after
the Russia occupation of up to a third of its territory. Serious and
continuing instability in Georgia could force producers like Kazakhstan
and Azerbaijan to rely more heavily on Russian export routes.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Russia’s sole motivation for its
incursion was to defend the residents of separatist Georgian enclaves,
South Ossetia and Abkhazia, from Tbilisi’s aggression. The Kremlin
has long denied it covets "energy superpower" status or that it uses
energy as a political weapon. It insists it remains a dependable
supplier of energy to world markets.

By yesterday, a de facto ceasefire was in effect, though Russian
troops remained in Georgian territory beyond the disgruntled enclaves
where they had previously maintained a peacekeeping force. With
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at his side, Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili signed a ceasefire that would require
Russian forces to withdraw to South Ossetia and Abkhazia, though not
out of the country completely.

Short of a continuing crisis, the regional oil producers are likely
to continue developing non-Russian export routes to reduce their
dependence on their aggressive northern neighbour.

Kazakhstan already exports 60 per cent of its oil through Russian
pipelines, but Moscow is blocking expansion of a line owned by a broad
consortium that delivers Kazakh oil directly to Russian terminals
on the Black Sea. Instead, it would force Kazakhstan to blend its
high-quality crude with lower-grade Russian oil in the line controlled
by state-owned Transneft.

There has been some speculation about building a pipeline across the
Caspian Sea to link Kazakh production with an expanded BTC line,
but both Iran and Russia – which have sea coasts on the Caspian –
would have veto rights over those plans.

Instead, Kazakhstan is likely to ship the oil across the sea by tanker,
and then feed it into pipelines leaving Azerbaijan.

European consumers are also hungrily eyeing Turkmenistan’s growing
natural gas production, as a way to reduce reliance of Russian exports,
which account for 25 per cent of European demand and much greater
than that in key markets like Germany.

But natural gas is more difficult than oil to transport because it
cannot be loaded on tankers or rail cars. There are proposals to build
a sub-Caspian pipeline and then ship the gas into central Europe,
a project known as Nabucco.

Analysts say the Nabucco project faces commercial obstacles that are
more problematic than the political resistances of Russia, largely
because Russia and even China would provide greater prices – net
of transportation – on gas sales from Turkmenistan than the Central
Europe market could offer.

So while oil producers may succeed in diversifying their export
routes, natural gas suppliers will remain beholden to Russian and
its monopolist, state-owned Gazprom.