Curiosity Doubles

CURIOSITY DOUBLES

A1+
[07:36 pm] 01 September, 2008

Yerevan’s Hrazdan sports ground is supposed to be overcrowded on
September 6. Over 55 thousand football fans will arrive in Armenia
to watch the upcoming Armenia-Turkey football match.

Tickets for the forthcoming 2010 World Cup qualifier are comparatively
more expensive. Generally, people pay 1500-5000 drams to watch a match
in Yerevan with the participation of local teams but a ticket for the
forthcoming event costs 3000-10000 drams. As for European standards
this is a symbolic sum but there are few solvent people in Armenia. Not
everyone can afford a ticket at such a price in Armenia. Nevertheless,
the tickets are of great demand as Turkey’s team doesn’t arrive in
Yerevan every day.

Tickets costing 7000-10000 are said to be sold out.

According to the FIFA regulations the host part is to place 5% of
tickets at the guest’s disposal. The Armenian Football Federation
has foreseen at least 2500 for Turkish fans but they will not arrive
in Yerevan.

Thousands of Turks wished to come to see the match but departing from
security norms the Turkish side decided not to allow their arrival.

Naturally, Armenian fans will not have the opportunity to leave for
Turkey next year.

Recently there have been a series of clashes at international matches
with the participation of Turk fans. Therefore, the sides fear lest
these skirmishes should repeat.

Europe is also interested in this match.

Representatives of various European Mass Media have been accredited
to enlighten the match.

Many expect to see Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul in Yerevan but at
present there is no clear information of his possible arrival.

Even bookmakers have set stakes on Gul’s arrival. The index for
arrival is 1.60, and that for refusal – 2.10.

Turkey Calls For Caucasus Peace Group

TURKEY CALLS FOR CAUCASUS PEACE GROUP

press tv
Mon, 01 Sep 2008 00:47:23 GMT

The Caucasus comprises Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and south Russia.

Turkey has proposed the formation of a regional cooperation group to
stabilize the Caucasus region following the Georgia-Russia conflict.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said on Sunday that the proposed
group would include Turkey and four nearby Caucasus nations including
Russia, Georgia.

Babacan detailed the proposal during a visit to Turkey by Georgian
Foreign Minister Eka Tkeshelashvili, who said Georgia would only
consider joining such a group after Russian forces leave her country.

The Caucasia Cooperation and Stability Platform would also include
Armenia and Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan, two South Caucasus nations that
are locked in a dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, Babacan said.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been under control of ethnic Armenian forces
since a six-year conflict that erupted in the waning days of the
Soviet Union. Some 30,000 people were killed and about 1 million
driven from their homes before a cease-fire was reached in 1994.

Persistent gunfire along the Azerbaijan-Armenian border and in regions
near Nagorno-Karabakh has raised fears of a new war. Turkey has no
diplomatic ties with Armenia and the Turkish-Armenian border has been
closed for years.

Turkey objects to Armenian forces’ occupation of
Nagorno-Karabakh. While Armenia insists the deaths of about 1.5
million ethnic Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th
century should be recognized as genocide.

Turkey says the number is inflated and that killings were result of
civil war.

Babacan said he had discussed the cooperation group with his Azeri
counterpart, and that a Turkish delegation would visit Armenia this
week for talks about the proposed pact.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will also visit Turkey on
Tuesday to discuss Turkey’s proposal, Babacan said.

Total Turnover Of Money Transfers Via ‘HayPost’ Network Amounted To

TOTAL TURNOVER OF MONEY TRANSFERS VIA ‘HAYPOST’ NETWORK AMOUNTED TO 1,7 BLN AMD IN JANUARY-JULY 2008

arminfo
2008-09-01 07:33:00

ArmInfo. The total turnover of money transfers via "HayPost" network
amounted to 1,7 bln AMD in January-July 2008, Director General of
the Armenian National post operator, HayPost CJSC, Hans Boon told
ArmInfo correspondent.

According to him, the internal money transfers of the Armenian state
post operator in 2007 amounted to 10,5 bln AMD. In January – July
2008 internal transfers came to 250 mln AMD. International transfer
turnover in 2007 totalled 2, 6 bln AMD, in January – July 2008 it came
to 1,45 bln AMD. Boon said that the pilot mode of exercising money
transfer system "Blizko" in cooperation with Russian "Svyazbank"
has been successful. To recall, agreement has been reached during
the conference of CIS postal operators in Yerevan in June. According
the agreement, the "Blizko" tranfer system becomes available through
HayPost network, presently on a basis of a pilot program.

Mr. Boon added that one cannot neglect the key role that Armenian
post operator plays for rural inhabitants, who often have Haypost
as the only available operator of cash transactions. "We are going
to ensure our position establishing Postbank", said H. Boon. Haypost
has also strong capacity, noted H. Boon, to cooperate with commercial
banks outside Armenia.

"We have a worldwide span of corresponding banks. That means we
can afford a larger geographical penetration in money transactions,
especially to remote destinations. And there’s always cooperation
between post operators, with an exceedingly high coverage. Say, if
you wish to operate a money transfer to Buenos Aires, you won’t waste
time and space through a chain of banks and countries. The transfer
can be easily accomplished via post", underscored H. Boon.

Number Of ArmenTel Subscribers Up 26% For 2nd Qt Of 2008

NUMBER OF ARMENTEL SUBSCRIBERS UP 26% FOR 2ND QT OF 2008

arminfo
2008-09-01 07:29:00

ArmInfo. Number of ArmenTel subscribers was up 26% for he 2nd qt of
2008 and net operating income totaled $64.7 million, says VimpelCom
(Russia) report for 2nd qt of 2008. The number of mobile subscribers
in Armenia totaled 655,000 people as against 520,000 for the 1st qt
of 2008 and 471,000 in the 2nd qt of 2007. ArmenTel’s share in the
mobile market in Armenia is 30.5% as against 26.9% for the 1st qt of
2008 and 33.5% for the 2nd qt of 2007.

Operating Income Before Depreciation and Amortization (OIBDA) totaled
$30.3 million including $10.3 million mobile communication, $20.0
million fixed-line communication. OIBDA margin totaled 46.8%.

Average monthly minutes of usage per subscriber (MOU) totaled 164.9
min as against 158.9 min for 1st qt of 2008 and 185.1 for 2nd qt of
2007. Average monthly service revenue per subscriber (ARPU) totaled
$15.3 as against $16.1 for 1st qt of 2008 and $17.3 for 2nd qt of 2007.

Net operating income of the company totaled $64.7 million as against
$59.1 million for 1st qt of 2008 and $58.4 million for 2nd qt of
2007. Mobile communication revenues totaled $26.4 million (40.8%),
fixed line telephony – $38.3 million (59.2%). For the 1st qt of 2008
mobile communication revenues totaled $22.9 million, for the 2nd qt
of 207 – $23.2 million. Revenues of fixed-line telephony totaled $36.2
million for 1st qt of 2008 and $35.2 million for the 2nd qt of 2007.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

VivaCell Subscribers Number 1.49 Million People For Second Qt Of 200

VIVACELL SUBSCRIBERS NUMBER 1.49 MILLION PEOPLE FOR SECOND QT OF 2008

arminfo
2008-09-01 07:23:00

ArmInfo. VivaCell subscribers numbered 1.49 million people for the
second qt of 2008, Mobile TeleSystems financial results for the
second quarter ended June 30, 2008 say. As compared to the first qt
the number of subscribers was up 2.3%. Total number of MTS subscribers
is 91 million people (SIM-cards), VivaCell press-service told ArmInfo.

Revenues of VivaCell that represents MTS in Armenia totaled $61.5
million for 2nd qt of 2008, $55.2 million fr 1st qt of 2008. Operating
Income Before Depreciation and Amortization (OIBDA) totaled $33 million
and $32 million, respectively. OIBDA margin for second qt totaled
63.7%, and for the1st qt – 57.9%. Average monthly service revenue
per subscriber (ARPU) totaled $14.1 for 2nd qt and $13.1for 1st qt.

Consolidated revenues were up 34% y-o-y to $2,635 million. Consolidated
OIBDA was up 32% to $1,349 million y-o-y with 51.2% OIBDA margin.

Consolidated net income up 30% y-o-y to $659 million. Free cash-flow
generation of $1.1 billion in the first half of 2008.

In 2009 the company plans to launch 3G in Armenia (in Yerevan, Gyumri
and Vanadzor) as well as in Uzbekistan. 3G was launched in Russia
and another 14 towns will be involved till the end of 2008 and over
40 tows till the end of 2010.

MTS OJSC reports that growth of revenues in Armenia was connected
with the growth of the number of connections and increase in use
of services.

Tankian Sure To Surprise And Impress

TANKIAN SURE TO SURPRISE AND IMPRESS
By Richard Smirke

Metro
Sunday, August 31, 2008

Serj Tankian

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

–Boundary_(ID_W86DcI7tmNQXgm FJksfSbw)–

www.serjtankian.com

A Federative Georgia?

A FEDERATIVE GEORGIA?
Eduard Popov

31. 08.2008

For Georgia, the consequences of the aggression against South Ossetia
and of the attack on Abkhazia which was about to be launched are
going to be felt not only in geopolitics but in domestic politics as
well. The less-than-excellent show of the pro-presidential National
Movement Party in the parliamentary elections last May and the rather
unconvincing victory of M. Saakashvili in the presidential elections
were among the factors behind the Georgian invasion of South Ossetia
as the planned snap offensive was supposed to improve Saakashvili’s
domestic political standing. In reality, the intervention in South
Ossetia ended with a complete debacle and is sure to echo with a drop
of the Georgian President’s popularity. The opposition in Georgia
has the impression that its time is coming.

Though opposition leaders invariably reiterate at public gatherings
that they are united with the authority in the confrontation "with the
common enemy", the struggle over the popularity in the Georgian society
is bound to intensify. A few days ago one of the opposition leaders
Koba Davitashvili said Georgia needs a national unity government and
expressed the view at a media conference that at the current period
which is extremely difficult for the country the opposition should take
on a part of the responsibility. The patriotic rhetoric should breed
n o illusions – the goal of the opposition is to topple Saakashvili’s
regime which it hates and to prove to both the population of Georgia
and to the West that only the leadership whose authority is truly
delegated by the nation can efficiently counter Russia. No doubt,
the coming political changes will, among other things, affect the
relations between the central authority in Georgia and its regions.

While the opposition in Georgia seeks to be admitted to running
the country, Georgia’s regions demand (or are going to demand in
the nearest future) a bigger role in the currently centralized
decision-making process and, most importantly, a certain extent of
autonomy from Tbilisi. Though the majority of Georgia’s opposition
movements are nationalistic in character, a tactical alliance between
the opposition and the autonomists is nevertheless possible. Such
alliance will not necessarily be public, yet behind the scene the sides
interested in each other will attempt to cooperate in accomplishing
their priority objective which is the ouster of the Saakashvili regime
or at least a limitation of its political monopoly.

The threat separatism allegedly poses to Russia may be a staple of
the Georgian propaganda, but in reality the thesis mostly reflects
the wishful thinking on the part of the Georgian officialdom, while
the country faces the same problem in much greater proportions. As
for Russia, Georgia’s invasion of South Os setia not only angered the
nations of the North Caucasus but also instilled a stronger sense of
togetherness in the ranks of the nations of the Russian Federation. A
comparable level of unity is unattainable for Georgia which is in fact
organized as a "small empire" and has to deal with a highly volatile
situation in its ethnic provinces.

Historically, Georgia used to exist in the form of a loosely knit
federation of small counties. Abkhazia, for example, was subordinate
to Georgian rulers in some epochs but managed to expand its authority
beyond its original confines and to seize control over originally
Georgian territories in others. It was incorporated into the
Russian Empire as an independent county in 1810 with no reference to
Georgia. Ossetia has put to practice the same pattern even earlier,
in 1764, and also separately from Georgia. Georgia’s claims on
the "separatist regions" can only be traced back to the formative
phase of the USSR whose heritage the ideologists of the Georgian
independence chose to renounce with utmost radicalism already in the
late 1980ies. Therefore it is J. Stalin, the man who established
Georgia in its current formal borders, who should be regarded as
Georgia’s father-founder rather than M. Saakashvili whose escapades
jeopardize what Georgia used to have. And by this we mean not only
Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

What exactly the so-called Georgian territories are is not such an
easy question. Quite a few of the scholars studying the Caucasus
contest the broad interpretation of the term "Georgian" pointing
to the fact that at least two Kartvelian peoples – the Mingrelians
and the Svans – have languages distinct from that spoken by other
groups of Georgians and differ from the overall Georgian population
culturally. In the political sense, the Mingrelians and the Svans are
also fairly distanced from the Georgian central authority. The Svans
are a mountain people which has always lived in a de facto autonomy
from Tbilisi. Their relations with Georgia have been strained in
the recent years when the Svan-populated Kodor region was occupied
on Saakashvili’s order and their local leader Emzar Kvitsiani was
expelled. As for the Svans’ neighbors – the Abkhazians – the relations
between them have for the most part been complicated rather than marked
by downright hostility. The Svans typically adopted a friendly-neutral
stance during the conflict between Abkhazia and Georgia which unfolded
in the post-Soviet period.

The Mingrelians are a people residing in the western part of Georgia,
south of the Svan-populated region. Their status in Georgia is an even
more intricate issue. On the one hand, the Mingrelians have typically
been radical Georgian nationalists. Two notorious butchers – chief of
Stalin’s secret police L. Beria and the first (and extremely radical)
Presi dent of the post-Soviet independent Georgia Z. Gamsakhurdia –
were Mingrelians. On the other hand, the Georgianization implemented
by Georgian leaders of Mingrelian descent has always been a disguised
Mingrelianization.

When L. Beria led the Georgianization campaign in Abkhazia which
took the lives of practically all Abkhazian communist leaders and
prominent intellectuals, the new population poured into the region
was predominantly Mingrelian.

The objectives of Tbilisi and Zugdidi (the center of Mingrelia)
are not necessarily identical. The Mingrelian elite would be
happy to see the authority of Georgia over the two breakaways –
Abkhazia and South Ossetia – reinstated but it also aspires to
rule Georgia. Mingrelians resisted more than any other group to
the Shevardnadze-Ioseliani-Kitovani triumvirate which toppled
Z. Gamsakhurdia. By the way, at that time the Mingrelian march to
Tbilisi was stopped by the Russian troops at the behest of Tbilisi.

It is unrealistic to expect that the Mingrelians with their manifest
nationalism and belief in their elite status in the Caucasus are
going to miss the opportunities opening as a result of the weakening
of the central authority in Georgia. The opportunities may be ample –
even the US advisers admit that the counterattack by the Russian army
has destroyed not only the Georgian military infrastructure but also
the country’s state control system as a whole.

It is difficult to track20the developments in the potentially
separatist regions of Georgia such as Svanetia and Mingrelia given
the informational blockade organized by Tbilisi. But the information
does spread in some amounts. Clashes between the Georgian police and
Mingrelian youths in Zugdidi, the "capital" of the Mingrelian province,
have been reported. Bloodshed was prevented only by the intervention
of the Russian peacekeepers. Accounts of the activization of Ajarian
autonomists are also available. In one of the episodes, they attempted
to open fire on a US warship entering the Batumi seaport.

The list of Georgia’s defiant territories is not limited to Mingrelia
and Svanetia. The list also includes Ajaria and the Armenian-populated
Javakheti.

The top priority of Georgia, the country which has just lost a war and
is plagued by a whole range of problems, should be not the rearmament
with the US assistance (the result may be another lost war and the
irreversible demise of the Georgian statehood) but the formation of a
more democratic and responsible regime capable to reform the Georgian
state system model.

Historically, Georgia has always been a federation. A unitary Georgia
invariably troubled its neighbors and proved unsustainable. Georgia
has no chance to survive as a political entirety unless it reverts
to some form of a federative model.

Abkhazian President’s foreign politics adviser B. Chirikba says:
"The remaining part of20the "small empire" created by Stalin (Georgia
minus the now independent Abkhazia and South Ossetia) should be
transformed into a federation by instituting the following autonomies:
the Mingrelian autonomous province, the Svanetian autonomous province,
the Ajarian autonomous province (an already existing de facto autonomy
populated by Muslim Georgians), the Javakheti autonomous province
(with a mostly Armenian population), and the rest of Georgia. Only
such truly federative Georgia can function as a stable state as
this political and administrative structure would be adequate to
the country’s ethnic composition and traditional statehood based on
federalism and decentralization". The point of view is absolutely
logical. Of course, nobody has the right to impose any forms of
political organization on the peoples of Georgia. The type of conduct
practiced by the US – imposing on the whole world its value system
as the only appropriate – is unacceptable as it discredits the very
concept of democracy. But life itself compels the peoples of Georgia
to rethink their historical experience, to identify the mistakes made
in the recent past, and to adopt some form of federalism.

In the Soviet era, Georgia was jokingly referred to as the Federal
Republic of Georgia, invoking the analogy with Germany. Currently,
Georgia needs a genuinely democratic formula of federalism.

Russia and other neighbors of Georgia in the Caucasus ar e interested
in its being a prosperous and democratic country, a country best
known for people like the famous philosopher M. Mamardashvili, not for
militarists like its current President M. Saakashvili. Federalization
would help to revive Georgia, which has often been unlucky in its
choice of political leaders, as a country of high culture.

http://en.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=1580

His Holiness Garegin II Congratulates Teachers And Students On Knowl

HIS HOLINESS GAREGIN II CONGRATULATES TEACHERS AND STUDENTS ON KNOWLEDGE DAY

armradio.am
01.09.2008 12:35

His Holiness Garegin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
Armenians, issued a congratulatory address on the occasion of the
Knowledge Day. The message says, in part:

"On the occasion of the Knowledge Day, from the Mother Seer of Holy
Etchmiadzin we bring our pontifical blessing and good wishes to the
workers of the sphere of education, devoted lecturers and teachers,
pupils and students.

The meaning of the Knowledge Day is bright and joyous, full of hope
for progress. The doors of hundreds of educational establishments
are opening today with this aspiration and optimism to educate our
children, to whom the future of our people, our country and Motherland
should be entrusted.

We wish a productive academic year, robust health and vigor to
the teachers and organizers of the educational process, as well as
educative spirit, bright mind and diligence to the students.

May Our Lord Jesus Christ keep you under his protection and guide
your steps, keep our Motherland and people in peace today and
forever. Amen."

President Sargsyan’s Congratulation On Knowledge Day

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN’S CONGRATULATION ON KNOWLEDGE DAY

armradio.am
01.09.2008 12:38

Dear pupils and students,
Dear teachers and parents,
I warmly congratulate you on the occasion of the Knowledge and
School Day.

The aspiration for new knowledge and education has turned among us
into a national character, and today, at this important point for our
country, our state and public are destined to reinforce the bases of
this value system, to root the respect for teachers and the devotees
of education, and try their best to establish a public founded on
education and knowledge.

Greeting everyone on this great day, I extend my congratulations
to our first-grade pupils and the young people who entered higher
educational establishments this year.

Once again congratulating everyone, I wish you new achievements and
a productive academic year."

Turkey Preparing For President Gul’s Visit To Armenia

TURKEY PREPARING FOR PRESIDENT GUL’S VISIT TO ARMENIA

armradio.am
01.09.2008 14:33

Though Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul is yet to make up his mind,
Ankara is preparing for his potential visit to Armenia. A high-level
diplomatic and security delegation will be dispatched to Armenia this
week, ahead of President Abdullah Gul’s trip to Armenia on Sept. 6
for the first-ever international football match between the two
countries. The delegation has been sent to ease security concerns
and outline the issues to be discussed during the trip, the Turkish
Daily News reported.

"I will send a delegation to Yerevan to hold talks on the possible
visit of President Gul," Foreign Minister Ali Babacan told
reporters yesterday during a press conference with his Georgian
counterpart. However, Babacan did not give details of what the
delegation would discuss with Armenian diplomats.

The meeting of the two countries’ national teams in the same World
Cup qualification group sparked a new effort to normalize bitter
ties. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan officially invited Gul to
Yerevan for the match, a move that was warmly welcomed by the United
States and the European Union, the Turkish Daily News reminds.

Though the official announcement has not yet been made, all indications
show that Gul’s assessment will be likely to be positive.

"I am still evaluating. I have not made a decision yet,9 D Gul told
reporters late Saturday on the sidelines of a reception held by the
Chief of General Staff Gen. İlker BaÅ~_bug.

–Boundary_(ID_FzPRFEUZYxtUlBF971N ldA)–