BAKU: Vice-President Candidate Of US Democratic Party, Pro-Armenian

VICE-PRESIDENT CANDIDATE OF US DEMOCRATIC PARTY, PRO-ARMENIAN JOSEPH BIDEN IS ONE OF THE SUPPORTERS OF SECTION 907 OF THE FREEDOM SUPPORT ACT

Azeri Press Agency
Aug 25 2008
Azerbaijan

Washington. Husniyya Hasanova – APA. In the early 90s Chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and Vice-President candidate
of US Democratic Party Joseph Biden played an active role along with
pro-Armenian senator Bob Dole in the adoption of Armenian Genocide
Resolution and Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, which banned
U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan.

APA’s US bureau reports that Joseph Biden is also the author
of the resolution condemning the assassination of Hrant Dink
in Turkey. Therefore, Armenian politicians call Joseph Biden a
pro-Armenian politician.

But, Joseph Biden also supported the resolutions defending Azerbaijan’s
interests. He gave full support to the Silk Road Strategy Act
introduced by U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback in 1997. Joseph Biden makes
severe statements against Russia and accuses Moscow of supporting
separatist movements in the post-Soviet area. In his article published
in the Financial Times last year he said Russia’s supporting separatism
in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Moldova was inadmissible.

BAKU: Armenia Moves To Ban Western Union

ARMENIA MOVES TO BAN WESTERN UNION

Azeri Press Agency
Aug 25 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku. Nijat Mustafayev – APA-ECONOMICS. Azerbaijan’s central bank has
demanded local banks to halt operations with the world’s top payment
transfer company, Western Union because it stopped providing services
in the Nagorno-Karabakh at the request of Azerbaijan.

Observers said Armenian reacted to Western Union’s decision at
Azerbaijan’s request.

RIA Novosti quoted the central bank as saying Western Union violated
the terms of agreements with Armenian banks by not making available
services to the local banks’ branches in the Nagorno Karbakh.

Illegally occupied by Armenia, the Nagorno Karabakh area is an
internally recognized territory of Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s central bank gave green light to local banks to resume
operations with payment transfer company Western Union and its smaller
peer MoneyGram after the both companies promised to discontinue money
transfer transactions with the occupied territories of Azerbaijan
through Armenia.

Azerbaijan blocked Western Union and MoneyGram on July 30 and renewed
clearance for money transfers through these systems on August 14.

Armenia Views Russian Military Bases As Cooperation Symbol

ARMENIA VIEWS RUSSIAN MILITARY BASES AS COOPERATION SYMBOL

RosBusinessConsulting
Aug 25 2008
Russia

RBC, 25.08.2008, Yerevan 15:09:55.Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan
believes that Russian military bases in the republic symbolize
efficient cooperation between the two countries, rather then hegemony,
the ARKA information agency reported today.

Sargsyan pointed out that Armenia stood on principle of sovereignty,
adding that at the moment such sovereignty included participation
in efficient international and regional security systems. He also
reiterated that one of the main principles of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization (CSTO), which Armenia had made a decision to join,
was that an attack on one of its members meant an infringement on
all members.

Rebel Georgian Regions Seeking Statehood

REBEL GEORGIAN REGIONS SEEKING STATEHOOD
by David Cutler

Reuters
Aug 25 2008
UK

Aug 25 (Reuters) – Both chambers of Russia’s parliament urged President
Dmitry Medvedev on Monday to recognise Georgia’s breakaway regions
of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states.

Here are key facts about the two Georgian regions bidding to join
the ranks of the world’s smallest independent states:

SOUTH OSSETIA:

* South Ossetia, about 100 km (60 miles) north of the Georgian capital
Tbilisi, broke away from Georgia in a 1991-92 war that killed several
thousand people. It has close ties with the neighbouring Russian
region of North Ossetia.

* The majority of the roughly 70,000 people living in South Ossetia
are ethnically distinct from Georgians. They say they were forcibly
absorbed into Georgia under Soviet rule and now want to exercise
their right to self-determination.

* A 500-strong peacekeeping force from Russia, Georgia and North
Ossetia monitors a 1992 truce. Tbilisi accuses Russian peacekeepers
of siding with separatists, something Moscow denies. Sporadic clashes
between separatist and Georgian forces have killed dozens of people
in the last few years.

* Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has proposed a peace deal
under which South Ossetia would be given "a large degree of autonomy"
within a federal state. The separatist leaders say they want full
independence.

* The separatist leader is Eduard Kokoity. In November 2006, villages
inside South Ossetia which are still under Georgian control elected
a rival leader, ex-separatist Dmitry Sanakoyev. He is endorsed by
Tbilisi, but his authority only extends to a small part of the region.

ABKHAZIA:

* A Black Sea region bordering Russia, Abkhazia was once the favourite
holiday destination of the Soviet Union’s elite. It accounts for
about half of Georgia’s coastline.

* It fought a war in the early 1990s to drive out Georgian forces. The
conflict killed an estimated 10,000 people and forced hundreds of
thousands to leave their homes.

* Georgia, a former Soviet state, says just under 250,000 people —
most of them ethnic Georgians — were driven out by the conflict and
are now registered as internally displaced. Abkhazia’s separatist
authorities dispute this, saying there are no more than 160,000
internally displaced people.

* Russia can deploy up to 3,000 peacekeeping troops in Abkhazia under
a 1994 ceasefire agreement. Georgia complained the Russian troops were
effectively propping up the separatists. Moscow said their presence
was preventing more bloodshed.

* Abkhazia’s separatist administration says the region’s population
is 340,000. Tbilisi says that is artificially inflated.

* The Abkhaz people are ethnically distinct from Georgians. They
say they were forcibly absorbed into Georgia under Soviet rule and
now want to exercise their right to self-determination. Separatist
officials say over 80 percent of residents in Abkhazia have been
issued with Russian passports.

* According to the International Crisis Group think tank, a Soviet
census in 1989 showed ethnic Abkhaz accounted for 18 percent of the
region’s population, ethnic Georgians 45 percent and other groups,
mostly Russians and Armenians, the rest.

* Starting in the late 1990s, some ethnic Georgians began returning
to their homes in Abkhazia’s Gali district, near the de facto border
with Georgia. About 50,000 people have returned to the district.

Multi-Instrumentalist Levon Ichkhanian Olympic Tour With Dee Dee Bri

MULTI-INSTRUMENTALIST LEVON ICHKHANIAN OLYMPIC TOUR WITH DEE DEE BRIDGEWATER, SHIELA E AND OTHERS

All About Jazz
2203
Aug 25 2008
PA

Multi-instrumentalist/producer Levon Ichkhanian joins Shiela E, Dee
Dee Bridgewater, Oliver Jones, Taylor Dane and others on the Marriage
of Excellence Tour in China. The musical and cultural tours will
deliver the highest quality entertainment performances with specially
taped messages from Celine Dion, Chaka Khan and Itzhak Perlman. Held
during the 10 days between the Olympics and Paralympic games, the tour
will demonstrate the power of the Arts in fostering cross-cultural
understanding and excellence that can be achieved when we live the
notion of "One World, One Dream" … the slogan for the 2008 Olympics.

This concept is not new to Levon, who was born in Lebanon, had
traveled around the world with his musical director father, Edouard,
before immigrating to Canada at the age of 12. Growing up in a family
rich in music, his uncle Joseph is the founder of the Conservatory
in Beirut (still in existence today), uncle Jacques was a flamenco
guitarist, and cousin Hovannes Darbinian is the world leading scholar
and performer of the Armenian Tar, it was only natural for Levon to
follow suit performing his first professional gig at the age of 13.

"I had several monumental experiences growing up which had a rich
influence on me culturally and musically. My Dad exposed me to jazz
and continental music letting me sit in during his band rehearsals and
taking the family to places like Yemen, Cyprus and Jordan. My uncle
Joseph would often host gatherings filled with musicians, dancers and
painters celebrating their art. I also have vivid memories of spending
summer trips with my family to the Northern part of Lebanon. At night
there would be parties filled with traditional Armenian and popular
Arabic music (Adiss and Fairuz were the favorites), dancing and lots of
food that went on until the small hours of the night. These experiences
have influenced me profoundly in my music and in my person. I believe
that music is the common voice for all cultures, so, it was an honour
to be asked to perform and represent my culture during the Tour."

Over the past 30 years, Levon’s scope of knowledge has spanned over
all areas of music – performing, composing, recording, touring, and
producing in several genres including Jazz, World and Traditional
music. He is just fresh off performing the Canadian stage tour of
Spamalot. His playing talents include fretless and fretted electric
and acoustic guitars, Oud, Bouzouki, Banjitar and Mandolin, and most
recently the Irish Bouzouki which he performed in the Orchestra for
the stage production of The Lord Of The Rings.

Levon has toured extensively throughout North America and Europe,
performing at festivals and concert halls such as Peter Gabriel’s
WOMAD, MIDEM (Cannes), Chet Atkins Musician Days (Nashville), All Star
Guitar Night (Los Angeles), Montreal Jazz Festival and Pizza Express
Jazz Club (London, UK) to name a few, in addition to touring with
notables as Peter Murphy (of Bauhaus fame), Marisa Lindsay (singing
sensation from Barbados) and A.R. Rahman’s (one of the world’s top
10 all-time top selling recording artists, and composer of stage
productions Bombay Dreams and The Lord of the Rings) 3D World Tour
which took Levon to India, Singapore, Dubai and the United Kingdom.

Levon has three solo C.D.s: Kick-n Jazz with Bernard Purdie, After
Hours (which features Grammy Award winners Paquito D’Rivera and John
Patitucci) and Travels (featuring Alain Caron), to rave reviews in All
Music Guide to Jazz, Jazztimes, The Jazz Report, Canadian Musician,
Gitarist, Horizon and Nor Gyank magazines to name a few. Levon has
published articles in such magazines as Guitar Player and Canadian
Musician, and has also been the subject of cover features for magazines
as Muzic Etc, Canadian Musician and most recently Musicopro.

As a session musician, Levon has played on over one hundred diverse
commercial recordings including The Canadian Idol’s gold selling
C.D., India’s renowned singer Hariharan’s latest Waqt Par Bolna,
soprano and multiple Juno Award winner Isabel Bayrakdarian’s Tango
Notturno. He also performed on numerous soundtracks for films,
commercials and television, including environmentalist David Suzuki’s
Nature of Things, the CBC documentaries Daughters of Afghanistan
and Robbing the Cradle of Civilization (New York Festival’s Silver
World Medal winner for Television Documentary [International]), and
AR Rahman’s Guru, Sivaji and Rang De Basanti. He has also composed
for the Nashville Chamber Orchestra and the Atlantic Jazz Society,
scored soundtracks for the likes of acclaimed filmmaker Atom Egoyan,
as well as produced artists C.D.s, concerts and staged productions.

Upon his return from performing in Beijing, Levon will be returning
to the studio to record his next CD and is putting the finishing
touches to an improvisation method book.

http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=2

Georgia’s Russians Express Shame, Anger Over Moscow’s Actions

GEORGIA’S RUSSIANS EXPRESS SHAME, ANGER OVER MOSCOW’S ACTIONS
By Tara Bahrampour

Georgiandaily
/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id =6639&Itemid=65
Aug 26 2008
NY

TBILISI, Georgia — Growing up in this capital, Svetlana Tikhonova
remembers how proud her father, Petr, was of his medals. A Soviet Red
Army pilot during World War II, he used to show them off to visitors,
and on the annual holiday commemorating the end of the war, he would
march down the street with all 30 of them affixed to his chest.

But since the violent Russian conflict with Georgia, his home for
more than half his life, the 86-year-old ethnic Russian won’t leave
his room. "He says it is a shame for him to look into people’s eyes,"
Tikhonova said. "He is ashamed that his army has turned into this
group of bandits."

When the Soviet Union imploded in 1991, millions of ethnic Russians
were left in the newly independent states, outside Russia. Many
have felt a stronger allegiance to Moscow than to the country where
they wound up. The Kremlin has pushed this to its advantage in some
cases. In years of tension here, Russia supported separatist movements
and even issued Russian passports to residents of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia, two breakaway regions that have sought independence from
Georgia.

But in the rest of Georgia, and especially in Tbilisi, where
residents are proud of the city’s multiethnic composition, playing the
nationalist card hasn’t worked. Russians here feel a mix of emotions
these days, but the most salient ones seem to be shame before their
Georgian neighbors and anger that the latest conflict among politicians
could threaten their harmonious relations.

"We all love Georgia and we all feel nervous about this situation,"
said Mikhael Kazakov, 68, an ethnic Russian who was fixing a bathroom
door at the Count Alexander Nevsky Russian Orthodox Church, one of
several Russian churches in Tbilisi. "In this mutual fighting and
these mutual victims, we feel like we are losing something, and of
course we feel sad about that. In Tbilisi, we were always saying,
‘I have no nationality — I feel I am a resident of Tbilisi.’ "

Russia has long been an integral part of Georgian life. For more than
a century, Georgia was part of the czarist empire; after a brief fling
with independence from 1918 to 1921, it was swallowed by the Soviet
Union. Russian literature and language influenced Georgian culture,
and close ties with Russia offered education and work opportunities
that were unavailable here. Although Georgian remained the official
language, educated Georgians spoke Russian as fluently as their
own language.

Georgia, for its part, was a source of wine, fresh fruit, art
films, and mountain and beach vacations for the czarist and Soviet
elites. Some Russians chose to move here, charmed by the sunny climate,
and many married Georgians.

Wars and the rise of a nationalistic leader at the time of the Soviet
collapse sent many Russians back to Russia. Some also returned to
Russia to work as the economy improved. Their presence here shrank
from 6.3 percent of the population in 1989 to 1.5 percent in 2002;
today an estimated 65,000 Russians live here, according to the office
of Georgia’s ombudsman.

For the last few days, the ombudsman’s office has hosted meetings
for ethnic Russians who have come up with a petition declaring their
allegiance to Georgia and condemning the Russian occupation.

Lali Moroshkina, a journalist who arranged the meetings, said
she is worried that Russians living here may be used as political
pawns. "Russia often says they must defend their citizens in Georgia,"
she said.

She said some ethnic Russians have been quiet since the war began,
perhaps because they are afraid they won’t get Russian visas. An
estimated 1 million Georgians live and work in Russia, sending money
back to family here. This has become harder since Russia cracked down
on trade two years ago, banning Georgian wine and mineral water,
restricting travel and deporting some Georgians back to their
homeland. The bans effectively shut down the biggest market for
Georgian goods.

But the 60 or so people who attended one of the meetings were not
shy about making their feelings known.

"It’s doubly painful for me . . . because my roots, my compatriots,
are doing this," said Lyudmila Atamanova, 53, whose father, a
Russian military officer, moved to Georgia 50 years ago because of the
"special energy here." She was signing the petition, she said, because
"in the future we will be asked where we stood during this war. We
are citizens of Georgia, and I think the majority of us think this
way. It’s not nice to be objects of manipulation like what happened
in Abkhazia and South Ossetia."

Atamanova said that when she told her sister in Russia about the
bombings, she didn’t believe it. "She told me, ‘You are inventing
it.’ Now, they are silent. Maybe they are afraid to say anything."

Russians here said they had not yet heard of any backlash from
Georgians, but a few said they were worried. Matrushka, a Russian
restaurant in Tbilisi, is nearly empty these days, and Oleg Alfanesiev,
32, the manager there, said he feels a bit self-conscious.

"My neighbors say hello to me in the same way. When we watch TV and we
see these corpses, sometimes they say curses, but they’re not directed
at me." However, he said, he doesn’t let his son, a 10-year-old with
blond hair and Slavic eyes, play in the street now. "I don’t want
that someone may call my children something because they’re Russian,"
Alfanesiev said.

He may take comfort in looking at the Azerbaijanis and Armenians
here. For years, their countries have been in a cold war over a
disputed enclave, but in Tbilisi they play backgammon at teahouses
and leave politics behind.

Even in Gori, a city that suffered from heavy Russian bombardment,
Georgians standing in the shattered main square Sunday said they bore
their Russian neighbors no ill will.

"The local Russians are ashamed of those Russians who came," said
Emzar Akhalkatsi, a soccer scout, who had returned from a shelter
in Tbilisi. "There won’t be any problems for Russians; they’ve never
done anything but good here."

http://georgiandaily.com

Germany Presses Russia To Leave Georgia

GERMANY PRESSES RUSSIA TO LEAVE GEORGIA
By Michael Fischer

Associated Press Worldstream
August 24, 2008 Sunday 4:51 PM GMT

German Chancellor Angela Merkel
Enhanced Coverage LinkingAngela Merkel -Search using:
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News, Most Recent 60 Days called Sunday for Russian troops to complete
their pullout of Georgia, saying Moscow’s credibility "is at stake."

Speaking to German broadcaster ZDF, Merkel raised the possibility the
European Union would call a special summit to address the situation
in the Caucuses, saying France which currently holds the EU’s rotating
presidency would take up the issue in the coming days.

"Russia has not yet fulfilled its commitment to the six-point peace
plan," Merkel said, urging Moscow to uphold its end of the deal.

"Russia’s credibility is at stake," Merkel said.

Under the plan, promoted by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and
signed last week by Russia and Georgia, both sides must move back
to positions they held before fighting broke out Aug. 7 in Georgia’s
South Ossetia region, which has close ties to Russia.

Russia pulled the bulk of its troops and tanks from its small southern
neighbor Friday after a brief but intense war, but the U.S. and
its European allies have criticized Moscow for leaving some troops
in Georgia and performing military operations despite agreeing to
a cease-fire.

Merkel also has suggested the EU could sponsor a conference with
Georgia and its immediate neighbors, including Azerbidjan, Armenia
and Ukraine, to encourage efforts to rebuild damaged infrastructure
in Georgia.

Russia would not participate in such a conference, she said.

Also Sunday, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier spoke
by telephone with his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, to insist
Moscow uphold its end of the EU-brokered cease-fire agreement.

Germany’s Foreign Ministry said the two also agreed that 20 extra
unarmed observers would be sent to monitor the situation in Georgia
near the separatist region of South Ossetia.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe agreed last
week to immediately send 20 additional unarmed military monitors to
join its 200-person mission in Georgia.

Merkel departs Monday for a two-day trip to Sweden, Estonia and
Lithuania, in an effort to promote continued dialogue with Moscow.

CSTO Armies To Stop Using Soviet Weapons, Hardware Past 2020 – Offic

CSTO ARMIES TO STOP USING SOVIET WEAPONS, HARDWARE PAST 2020 – OFFICIAL

Interfax News Agency
Aug 25 2008
Russia

The countries comprising the Collective Security Treaty Organization
(CSTO) will have no military hardware made in the Soviet era times
after 2020, said Vladimir Poleshchuk, a deputy director of the Russian
Federal Military- Technological Cooperation Service.

"It would be naive to count on weapons and hardware built in the
Soviet era times as the basis of the weapons possessed by the CSTO
armies after 2020," Poleshchuk said. Such weapons and hardware would
be modernized by 2020, but after this time they need to be replaced
by modern weapons, he said.

Taking this into account, the CSTO member-states need to start
developing unified standards for weapons and military hardware already
now, Poleshchuk said.

The CSTO is comprised of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.

Armenia Must Free Azeri Lands – Baku

ARMENIA MUST FREE AZERI LANDS – BAKU

Interfax News Agency
Aug 25 2008
Russia

Azerbaijan welcomes any initiatives aimed to bring peace to the region
and is ready for Karabakh settlement negotiations with Armenia, Azeri
Foreign Ministry spokesman Khazar Ibrahim told a Monday press briefing.

He said Baku was prepared to continue the Karabakh settlement
negotiations with Yerevan, yet, "we cannot imagine Karabakh outside
Azerbaijan."

"International laws are on our side and Armenia must free Azeri lands,"
he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian External Reserves Fall Over H1

ARMENIAN EXTERNAL RESERVES FALL OVER H1
by Venla Sipila

World Markets research centre
Global Insight
August 25, 2008

Armenia’s international reserves continued to decrease over the second
quarter of 2008, after reducing by 3.4% over January-March. Indeed,
latest figures from the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) show that
the country’s gross international reserves over the first half of
this year decreased by 4.9%, ARKA News reports. Over June alone,
Armenia’s external gross reserves fell by $31US.5 million. This
development brought the level of CBA’s gross international reserves
down to $1US.578 billion by the end of June. Specifically, Armenia’s
convertible foreign-currency assets stood at $1US.563 billion, falling
by 5.2% during the first half. Conversely, Armenia’s Special Drawing
Rights (SDRs) at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) amounted to
$15US million, rising by over 50% over January-June. The CBA does
not hold any gold reserves.

Significance:Armenia’s international reserves have considerably
increased over recent years, boosted by strong inflows of workers’
remittances and investment, and import coverage at present stands
comfortably above the critical level of three months. Against this
background, the fall in reserves over the first half is not yet very
alarming. Indeed, Global Insight expects import coverage to weaken
somewhat over 2008, while still providing adequate means for paying for
imports and for any possible currency stabilisation needs in the case
of external shocks. However, this should not mask the fact that rapidly
rising imports at present are exerting strong weakening pressure
on Armenia’s trade balance and, further, on its overall external
payments position, at the same time as its export earnings potential
remains poor. Indeed, Armenia’s wide current-account deficit signals
continued external vulnerability, especially given Armenia’s reliance
on remittances and private transfers for covering the external gap.