The Armenian Weekly; August 2, 2008; Community

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The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 30; August 2, 2008

Community:

1. Hairenik Interns Visit Boston Globe Headquarters
By Narineh Abrimian and Anait Grigoryan

2. ‘The Greatest Half-Hour
Egoyan Production of Beckett play opens in NY
By Armand Andreassian

3. Central Ohio Community Holds ‘Musical Evening’
By Anait Grigoryan

***

1. Hairenik Interns Visit Boston Globe Headquarters
By Narineh Abrimian and Anait Grigoryan

DORCHESTER, Mass. (A.W.)-On Tues., July 29, the Hairenik and Armenian Weekly
interns went on a trip to the headquarters of the Boston Globe.

One of the Globe’s public relations representatives took the interns on a
tour, where they learned how the nation’s 14th largest newspaper functions.

News reporting, they quickly realized, is a 24-hour job. Editors meet three
times a day to discuss the lead stories and formulate the paper. Some
reporters stay overnight to complete their stories. To accommodate the
hard-working editors and reporters, the Globe building provides a sleep
center, gym, hair salon, and dry cleaners. Despite the office-like
atmosphere, the Globe is actually a small city strictly focused on news
production with everything created to increase productivity.

The building also houses the entire printing department where a three-story
printing system is constantly in use. "It was interesting to see all the
technology and robots being used to produce the paper," said intern Narek
Yegoyan.

After seeing the paper produced, the tour guide handed the interns a freshly
printed comics section pre-dated for the upcoming weekend. It was a
privilege to see the paper before it is delivered to the rest of New
England. The interns learned that the most up-to-date version of the paper
is marked with one star below the price on the front page. This version is
distributed to the most immediate areas of Boston. The three-star version is
sent to the outer New England area, and the two-star version is sent to the
mid-Massachusetts area.

The interns were pleased with the experience and were grateful to the
Armenian Weekly staff for organizing the trip. Intern Garo Youssoufian said,
"It was great to see how one of the country’s largest and most reputable
newspapers operates."
———————————- ————————————

2. ‘The Greatest Half-Hour
Egoyan Production of Beckett play opens in NY
By Armand Andreassian

NEW YORK (A.W.)-On July 16, the opening night performance of the Beckett
play "Eh Joe" was held at the Lincoln Center Festival in New York City. The
one-man play, which featured the famed actor Liam Neeson ("Schindler’s
List," "Rob Roy," "Husbands and Wives," among other films and Broadway
plays) was directed and staged by Canadian-Armenian Atom Egoyan.

"Eh Joe" was one of three Beckett plays presented during the festival and
had been directed by Egoyan in 2006 in Dublin and London. The play lasts
half an hour and was originally written for television in 1965. Egoyan’s
2006 production featured Michael Gabon and was described by the Times of
London as ".the greatest half-hour in theatrical history."

The current performance at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater begins with a man
dressed in a robe, moving about in a drab room with only a bed as his prop.
There is no sound. He rests on the bed and moments later a large image
appears to his left. It is a projected image of his back side rising and
sitting on the bed. His profile is facing the audience but a camera directed
at him shows his full face in an enormous projection. The actor does not
utter a word during the entire play but reacts with unbroken attention to a
woman’s voice, which is the pre-recorded voice of actress Penelope Wilton.

"In film parlance, it’s called a reaction shot, and this is the longest
reaction shot that an actor can imagine," says Egoyan. The woman’s voice is
that of a past lover who recalls for him all of his failed relationships.

Charles Fisherwood of the New York Times writes, "Mr. Neeson’s concentrated
intensity, from start to finish, is a breathtaking feat, all the more
impressive for the minimal tools at his disposal-nary a word or movement-and
lack of histrionics. The technical sheen of Mr. Egoyan’s production enhances
its effectiveness. The image on the screen has a richness of texture that
lends it an eerie glow under the precise lighting design by James McConnell.
Mr. Neeson’s anguished face comes to resemble a drawn, tortured figure in an
El Greco painting made flesh, both terrible and beautiful to behold."

Egoyan seemed pleased at the end of the performance. Hesaid he was happy to
have worked with Neeson and was glad that the technical aspects of the
production were carried out so well.
——————————————– ——————–

3. Central Ohio Community Holds ‘Musical Evening’
By Anait Grigoryan

COLUMBUS, OH. (A.W.)-It is a well-known fact that Armenians are
everywhere-and central Ohio is no exception. As the capital city of Ohio,
Columbus is far from being a booming Armenian community, but it’s trying. On
Saturday, July 26, the Armenian Church of Columbus presented a formal event
called "An Armenian Musical Evening" featuring classical and traditional
Armenian music. The purpose was to raise excitement in the community and
garner money for a potential community center to be shared by all.

The parish council of the Armenian Church of Columbus has been planning a
fundraising event since April, when the discussion at meetings seemed to
focus on a lack of monetary resources in the parish and the dwindling of
attendance at church services.

Since the late 1980’s, Columbus Armenians have been meeting once a month for
Badarak services officiated by priests and deacons coming from different
parts of the Diocese. Baku Armenians previously made up the majority of the
church community, but are now very few in number, as many have turned their
regular attendance to the Russian church where they are more comfortable
with the Russian language of the service. More recently, the community has
seen an overall decline in attendance and decided to do something about it.

Using their resources, the parish council organized a program that featured
Armenian musicians associated with the community. Aram Tchobanian, tenor and
son of community leaders Margaret and Ohannes Tchobanian, opened the show
with his beautiful rendition of pieces from the "Armenian Divine Liturgy,"
introducing each with a brief explanation. He also performed works by Alan
Hovhaness and Sirvart Karamanuk. Tchobanian has premiered numerous operatic
and chamber works, including the Gregorian/Komitas Divine Liturgy with the
Armenian Festival Orchestra at Boston’s Symphony Hall.

Annie Talar Spain, a music education student at Ohio Wesleyan University,
joined Tchobanian for the "Love Duet" from the opera "Anoush" before
performing solo on the piano. Spain performed works by Claude Debussy and
Aram Khachaturian on the piano.

Lastly, Karine Koroukian, pianist and sister-in-law of parish president
Melkon Hajinazarian, performed Arno Babadjanian’s "Elegy" and "Vagharshabadi
Bar," Robert Andriasian’s "Dzirani Dzar" and Frederic Chopin’s "7 Mazurkas."
Koroukian is a first-prize winner of the Liszt and Ravel national piano
competition, as well as the Albeniz, de Fall, and Granados national piano
competition in Lebanon. She has been widely broadcast on the National TV of
Lebanon and the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation. Currently, she teaches
piano, theory, and ear training privately and at the Belle Arti Center for
the Arts in Forest Hills, N.Y.

Following the concert, guests joined the performers at the reception. The
Tchobanians, who have been involved with the community for 20 years, said
they had never seen anything like this event in the community and "were
truly impressed." The treasurer, Haik Aroutiounian, reported that the event
was a fundraising success, with the result "exceeding his expectations." The
goal of the Armenians in Columbus is to have a community center, and vice
president Arpi Roach saw this event as bringing the community closer to that
goal, commenting, "It’s about getting people to build a community so that
kids can have Sunday School and enjoy our rich heritage and culture." Roach
said he hoped the event moved people to realize that this community has
potential and a future. She encouraged those who have experience in building
communities to support the effort in any way possible.

Outside of the church, Armenians in Ohio have managed to maintain
relationships with each other and preserve Armenian culture in that way.
Currently, the Armenian community meets at St. James Episcopal Church, which
has offered their facility free of charge to the Armenians. In 2005, the
community dedicated a khatchkar to St. James in memory of the Hajinazarian
and Koroukian families. The 6-foot tall khatchkar was carved from tufa
stone, shipped from Armenia to mark the community’s presence in the area.

As a member of the Columbus community for over seven years, I have come to
know Columbus as a transitory city. Armenians frequently come and go, and
because of this, need a permanent establishment to be a resource to both
those who pass through or decide to settle in the area. After 20 years of
trying, the community is now one step closer to that realization.

Beyond Georgia: The Ripple Effects of Russia’s Attack

The New Republic
Beyond Georgia: The Ripple Effects of Russia’s Attack
August 11, 2008

As the world watches Russian troops gather on its border with Georgia, we
asked Central Asia expert Martha Brill Olcott to look at the broader
implications of the recent fighting:
Senators McCain and Obama are both trying to demonstrate their leadership
capacities in their strong statements on the conflict between Russia and
Georgia. But the man who takes power as president of the United States in
January will have to confront circumstances quite unlike those upon which he
is now commenting on. The current conflict in the Georgia shows just how
difficult it is for the U.S. to maintain a strategic position in the
Caspian, as well as how tough a competitor Russia is.
There is no easily solution to the conflict. It is virtually a given that
Russia will not be pushed from its current position–that of military
protector in the break-away regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia–through
diplomatic pressure. None of the NATO nations will send in troops to support
the Saakashvili government because of the risk of a direct NATO-Russian
military engagement. NATO countries may also be cautious about how much
rebuilding of the Georgian military they are willing to do if they fear
Georgia will use them for offensive rather than defensive purposes. Economic
sanctions will create more of a hardship for European countries dependent
upon Russia’s gas than they would for Russia. And international criticism of
Moscow from the Security Council podium in New York will also have little
effect, save to demonstrate anew the divisions within and ineffectual nature
of the United Nations.
So Russia will come out of its military actions in South Ossetia much
stronger than it went into them, both at home and in many of the neighboring
states. The Russian public has long sought a Russian government that
supports its citizens–who include much of the population of both South
Ossetia and Abkhazia. Most in Russia (and that would include those in the
Kremlin) understood the Soviet-era assignment of these "autonomous"
territories to Georgia as merely a temporary measure.
Russia’s aggressive behavior toward these provinces will have implications
elsewhere in the Caspian as well. The Azerbaijani’s in particular, may want
to rethink their strategic priorities, as they seek to hold onto the
Karabakh province, whose Armenian population has been seeking independence
since the late ’80s. The Azerbaijanis first threw their lot in with the West
at a time when Moscow, under Yeltsin, was much weaker. Russia’s attack this
week now means that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, up for reelection in
October, will need to seek guarantees from Moscow that it will not now
support Armenia’s claims in Karabakh or in Azerbaijan’s other territories
that are internationally recognized as occupied. Recapturing all of these
lands is Azerbaijan’s ultimate aim, and who knows what Aliyev might be
willing to offer Moscow to grant him this.
Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan are also going to have to calculate what this
means for their own strategies. Both have been juggling competing offers for
new oil pipelines–one from Western countries, who are calling for a
Trans-Caspian (undersea) gas pipeline to export gas through Azerbaijan,
Georgia, and on to Turkey, and one from Russia, who is offering higher gas
prices and partial financing of repairs and expansion of capacity on the
Soviet-era routes to Europe, all of which go through Russian territory.
Developments in Georgia could make the newer Azeri and Georgian routes seem
more risky. Kazakhstan too has been a major foreign investor in Georgia in
recent years, and if the Saakashvili regime is ousted, Kazakhstan will want
to work closely with any successor regime, presumably more pro-Russian, to
make sure that the Kazakh investments (largely in the energy sector) are
secure.
So while current attention is focused on Tbilisi, Obama and McCain should be
beefing up their knowledge of the broader region, as this conflict is sure
to have ripple effects far beyond the Georgia-Russia border.
Martha Brill Olcott is a senior associate with the Russian & Eurasian
Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington,
D.C.
From: Baghdasarian

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I receives former Lebanese Min of Justice Ch. Rizk

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I RECEIVES FORMER MINISTER RIZK

His Holiness Aram I received the former Minister of Justice on Lebanon,
Charles Rizk, in Antelias on August 11.

The Armenian Pontiff and Minister Rizk reviewed issues related to the
situation in Lebanon. After assessing the work of the former government,
Rizk spoke about the challenges facing the newly formed cabinet.

His Holiness stressed the need to use all means to support the new Lebanese
government in its attempts to open a new page in the history of Lebanon. His
Holiness and the former minister also spoke about the role of the Armenian
community in this respect and its contribution to the internal political
life of Lebanon.

On Monday also, His Holiness received the mayor of Byblos, Joseph El-Shami
and the committee of the municipality. His Holiness and the delegation
discussed projects related to decorating the historic city of Byblos, where
the "Birds’ Nest", the orphanage that is supported by the Catholicosate of
Cilicia, is found.

##
View the photo here:
tos/Photos297.htm#2
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

ANTELIAS: His Holiness Aram I receives the president of AGBU

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I RECEIVES THE PRESIDENT OF AGBU

His Holiness Aram I received the President of the Armenian General
Benevolent Union (AGBU), Berdj Setrakian, in Bikfaya on August 10. Hagop
Ateshian, a member of the Central Committee of the Catholicosate, also
attended the meeting.

His Holiness and his guest discussed issues of interest to the Armenian
nation worldwide, as well as projects underway both in Armenia and the
Diaspora under the auspices of AGBU.

The Pontiff praised the AGBU’s efforts particularly in the educational and
cultural fields. His Holiness also reminded Mr. Setrakian that AGBU, as an
organization of Pan-Armenian character, must also support the projects of
the Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia.

##
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

ANTELIAS: Week Of Prayers in Bikfaya on The Eve Of St. Asdvadzadzine

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

WEEK OF PRAYERS IS OBSERVED IN BIKFAYA ON THE EVE OF ST. ASDVADZADZINE

A week of prayers will be observed in the summer residence of the
Catholicosate of Cilicia, the Saint Asdvadzadzine Monastery in Bikfaya, on
August 11-15 as preparation for the grand Feast of Saint Asdvadzadzine. The
prayers, held under the auspices of His Holiness Aram I and organized by the
Catholicosate of Cilicia’s Christian Education Department, will start at 10
in the morning and include Bible studies, sermons, the singing of hymns and
the reading of the Gospel.

This will be a unique opportunity for believers to participate in the
prayers and meditation sessions, to embrace the spiritual experiences
offered by the Armenian Church.

##
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
jurisdiction and the Christian Education activities in both the
Catholicosate and the dioceses, you may refer to the web page of the
Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

Truth And Lies

TRUTH AND LIES

The Sun
Monday, August 11, 2008
UK

ARARAT is a very powerful film from renowned director Atom Egoyan,
best known for his masterpiece The Sweet Hereafter.

The film is based around events of 1915-1918, when Turkey killed around
1.5million Armenians, something that Turkey has neither apologised
for nor hardly acknowledged to this day.

Raffi (David Alpay) is a young driver on a movie being made about
the Armenian holocaust.

On returning to Canada with cans of 35mm film he is stopped by customs
officer David (Christopher Plummer) and interrogated.

As the two talk, secret emotions begin to emerge and a present-day
story is enacted against the backdrop of the Armenian tragedy.

Egoyan says: "The challenge was to harness the epic consequences
of genocide with the intimate moments shared by contemporary
characters. If history is in the telling, life is in the making."

A strong movie — beware, though, some of the footage included is
very graphic.

Georgian Ambassador To Armenia: Georgia Doesn’t Want To Be At War Wi

GEORGIAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA: GEORGIA DOESN’T WANT TO BE AT WAR WITH RUSSIA

arminfo
2008-08-11 15:18:00

ArmInfo. Georgia does not want to be at war with Russia but
the situation in South Ossetia left practically no alternative,
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Georgia to Armenia
Revaz Gachechiladze says in an interview with ArmInfo. Presenting
Georgia’s viewpoint on the developments, the Ambassador said that on 8
August the Russian Federation made a direct and full-scale attack on
Georgia: both the territory of its province of South Ossetia and the
territory rather far from the conflict zone. Russian planes bombed
the towns of Gori, Kareli, Poi, Senaki, Marneuli, Tbilisi and the
airdromes of other tows. ‘It can be called nothing but a strategy
of aggression. It is very distressing that I have to speak in such
way of a country we perceive as friendly and we have common history
and even fraternal relations with. But now, unfortunately, it is
nothing but aggression. ‘Peace-enforcement’ as Russian Federation
representatives call this cannot be legitimate without relevant
decisions of international organizations, specifically the UN Security
Council. It is known that UN Security Council could not adopt any
specific decisions on the issue since many countries insist that not
only Georgia but also Russia be responsible for it. All the norms
and principles of the international law were violated.

Russian Federation makes a challenge to the international community
again and threatens to the established international order and
stability in the Caucasus. Naturally, ‘blast’ in one region in the
Caucasus may have negative response in other regions. A question
may arouse why everything happened. Of course, Georgia undertook
an action a day before to establish constitutional order inside the
internationally recognized borders and did not exceed its territory
by a single centimeter. Georgia intended to disarm the bands of
separatists to create conditions for peaceful development of the
region.

Georgia is known to have developed the so-called ‘road plan’
of settlement of South-Ossetic problem that was approved by OSCE
Ministerial Council in Ljubljana. The plan provided for rehabilitation
of the region and very great economic assistance to that region. But
the region, of course, was to remain in Georgia having very wide
autonomy. By the way, at the first stage the RF Foreign Minister also
approved the plan. However, quite a few days later, when the text was
studied in the Kremlin, they understood that the plan might become
a real settlement to the problem and created all the conditions in
order the marionette regime in Tskhinvali refuses from the plan’,
the Ambassador says. He says that despite that Georgia continued
diplomatic efforts for the following two years proposing the region
unlimited autonomy as part of Georgia and economic rehabilitation. Many
diplomats in Tbilisi visited Tskhinvali, studied the situation and
proposed settling the problem.

However, Tskhinvali refused from everything. Moreover, Moscow
increased the military aid to Tskhinvali regime and a great quantity
of military equipment was delivered there which was not stipulated
by any agreement. ‘Starting from 2000 Russian passports were actually
distributed in the separatist regions of Georgia and the greatest part
of the population adopted Russian citizenship. That was a fact of gross
interference into the internal affairs of Georgia. After the greatest
part of the population in South Ossetia and Abkhazia become citizens
of RF, peacemakers on the border with Abkhazia – formal peacemakers of
CIS that were Russians in reality, and peacemakers on the border with
South Ossetia from CIS and North Ossetia turned from neutral mediators
into supporters of one of the conflicting parties. Russian leadership
has repeatedly stated that it intends to protect the rights of its
citizens whenever they were in the world. By the way, there were many
citizens of Russia also in Israel, but Russia does not take any measure
to help those people for some unknown reasons’, the Ambassador says.

‘How Georgia fell into its enemies’ trap?’ article by Edward Lucas
published in London Times on 10 August was very proper. Lucas describes
the scenario of the trap: at first to provoke, then to wait for
response and then to reply with a prevailing military force. To say
that Georgia wants war is to say nonsense. President Saakashvili has
repeatedly stated that war with Russia is fatal for Georgia. We had
no intention and desire to war with Russia. We do not need that and
it is very dangerous. But the situation in South Ossetia had left no
alternative actually’, the diplomat says.

He said that on August 7 presidential representative, Minister for
Reintegration Temur Yakobashvili was sent to Tskhinvali to negotiate
with local leadership. Representative of Russian Foreign Ministry
Popov was there as well. ‘Yakobshvili was not received. He was
ignored. In addition, the president called on ceasing fire from
Tskhinvali at Georgian villages. Maybe it was not intensive fire,
but it was constant and unbearable. Evidently, it was done to involve
Georgia into military actions. Georgia went to military actions and
established control almost over the entire region within a day.

It would allow starting peaceful development and rehabilitation of
the region. However, about 24 hours later RF sent an army, planes,
tanks and other military equipment to Georgia. To see how Ossetic
was the so-called ‘South-Ossetic leadership’, suffice it to look at
the list of its leaders.

There are citizens of Russia, mostly ethnic Russians sent to
Tskhinvali by Moscow. Actually it turns out that the leadership was
not local by appointed by Moscow. Naturally, Russia began to protect
the separatist regions of Georgia and establish ‘order’ there. What
takes place is very painful but international community cannot be
in a role of observer. Many countries have declared their support
to Georgia. Not only the USA, but also Great Britain and many other
countries- members of UN Security Council support Georgia.

Unfortunately, many international media rely on the misinformation
by Moscow that represents Georgia as an aggressor and outlines
‘ethic purges’. In the meantime we have repeatedly stated that we
have nothing against the Ossetic people who peacefully reside also
in Tbilisi and other towns and villages of Georgia. Moscow tries
to diabolize our leadership whereas devils sit in quite a different
place’, the Ambassador says.

Baku: Armenian Defense Minister: "Nagorno Karabakh Should Take Part

ARMENIAN DEFENSE MINISTER: "NAGORNO KARABAKH SHOULD TAKE PART IN THE TALKS ON THE CONFLICT RESOLUTION"

Today.Az
11 August 2008
Azerbaijan

Nagorno Karabakh should take an active part in the talks on the
resolution of Nagorno Karabakh conflict, said Armenian Defense Minister
Seyran Ohanyan in Khankendi.

He said the issues to lay a basis of new talks with the officials and
people of the self-declared "Nagorno Karabakh Republic" may emerge
at the last stage of the negotiations.

As for the recent situation on the contact front line of Nagorno
Karabakh and Azerbaijani troops. Ohanyan noted that "the defense
army" of the separatist "Nagorno Karabakh Republic" fully controls
the situation on the front.

"Tensions arise at some moments, but Nagorno Karabakh "army" is
confident of its powers and is able to resist the enemy", said the
Armenian Defense minister.

During the visit to Nagorno Karabakh, the Armenian Defense Minister
met with the "president" of the self-declared "NKR" Bako Saakyan, the
staff of the "defense army" of Nagorno Karabakh and visited the border.

Georgian Ambassador To Armenia: We Shall Create All The Conditions F

GEORGIAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA: WE SHALL CREATE ALL THE CONDITIONS FOR THE ARMENIAN EXPORT AND IMPORT VIA BATUMI, IF IT IS NOT RUINED BY RUSSIAN AVIATION

arminfo
2008-08-11 15:17:00

ArmInfo. ‘We shall create all the conditions for the Armenian export
and import via Batumi, if it is not ruined by Russian aviation’,
– Georgian Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador to Armenia
Revaz Gachechiladze told ArmInfo correspondent.

Asked if the situation around South Osetia will affect Armenia and
lead to worsening of the blockade, the ambassador replied ‘this a very
unfavourable situation for Armenia’. ‘I am very sorry for worsening of
situation in Armenia… I can say nothing about Verkhiy Lars checking
point, as everything is ready from our side and it still remains closed
not because of us. We were event ready to open the railway via Abkhazia
but the opposite side is against it. I still hope that reason will
win and battle action will end, Russian troops will return home and
we shall get an opportunity to develop peacefully’, – the ambassador
said. When commenting on bombing port Poti the ambassador said it also
was a strong blow at the economy of Georgia. ‘I think at the Armenian
economy too, since if port Poti and Verkhiy Lars checking point remain
closed, in that case the contact ways of Armenia with external world
will be limited. As for the cargo, it will also suffer as the port
infrastructure has been ruined much>, – the ambassador said.

Georgia’s Embassy In Armenia Does Not Have Specific Information Abou

GEORGIA’S EMBASSY IN ARMENIA DOES NOT HAVE SPECIFIC INFORMATION ABOUT THE NUMBER OF THE PEOPLE KILLED AS A RESULT OF BATTLE ACTION IN SOUTH OSETIA

arminfo
2008-08-11 15:16:00

ArmInfo. Georgia’s Embassy in Armenia does not have specific
information about the number of the people killed as a result of battle
action in South Osetia, Georgia’s Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Ambassador Revaz Gachechiladze told ArmInfo correspondent.

‘There is no specific number. And I don’t want to comment on what
Moscow publishes. I don’t even know how many people were killed when
bombing of the base in Senaki. They say, from 16 up to 60. Their
number will be calculated later, but it is already clear that there
is a big number of the killed and wounded people’, – the ambassador
said. Asked how Georgian authorities may shoot at their own citizens,
since they say that citizens of south Osetia are citizens of Georgia,
the ambassador replied similar question rose when Russian troops were
attacking Grozniy. ‘As for Tskhinvali, all the attacks were pinpoint
at government buildings and accumulation of military bands but not at
apartment houses. By the way, Russian airplanes ruined the theatre
and several buildings when bombing Senaki. One cannot account the
attack absolutely strictly’, – the ambassador added.