FAR Awards Mathevosian Scholarships to 12 New University Students

PRESS RELEASE
Fund for Armenian Relief
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Edina N. Bobelian
Tel: (212) 889-5150; Fax: (212) 889-4849
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

October 20, 2004
____________________

FAR AWARDS 12 NEW MATHEVOSIAN SCHOLARSHIPS
University Students Look to the Future With Hope and Promise

On September 10, 2004, in joy and in disbelief, 12 university students
arrived at the FAR offices in Yerevan to be awarded Mathevosian
Scholarships. Selected out of 49 applicants from Yerevan and the
provinces of Shirak, Ararat, Armavir, Gegharkunik, Kotayk Tavush, Vayots
Dzor and Syunik, they signed their contracts and hugged each other when
they realized their 10-day ordeal had been resolved!

For two weeks, these 12 youngsters from low-income families in Yerevan,
Gyumri and the village of Chambarak stressed over whether they would be
able to matriculate and attend classes in the university program to
which they had been admitted. In Armenia, students must pass an
entrance exam to be admitted to university. Those with the highest
entrance exam scores qualify to attend for free. All others must pay
tuition fees (approximately $2000 annually). In a country where the
average monthly income is about $75, university tuition for many
families is prohibitive.

These 12 Mathevosian Scholars earned high grades in school and on their
university entrance exams, but just missed the cut for tuition-free
education. Ani Antonyan, 17, from Yerevan said, “when I learned I was
admitted to the economics department at Yerevan State University but
that I scored 57 instead of 58 [the target score to waive tuition fees],
I was extremely disappointed. My mother cannot afford to pay for my
studies.” Barely six months old when her father deserted their family
and disappeared, Ani was raised by her mother who is currently
unemployed. “I saw hope when I read the FAR announcement about the
Mathevosian Scholarship Program posted on the university bulletin board.
I applied immediately, passed the competition, and I feel happy now.”

This 2004-2005 academic year, the Mathevosian Scholarship Program will
provide financial aid for 57 students from different provinces of
Armenia to pursue their higher studies. The 12 newest Mathevosian
Scholars will be studying economics, linguistics, international
relations, journalism, and computer programming at Yerevan State
University, Yerevan State Institute of Economics and Yerevan State
Engineering University. Computer programming is the latest addition to
the list of qualifying majors for a Mathevosian Scholarship.

“I believe in miracles now,” said Armen Avetisyan, 17. The Gyumri
native, who studied at Lansing High School in Michigan last year thanks
to a scholarship from the American Councils FLEX Program, had hoped to
score high enough on the entrance exam be admitted to university
tuition-free. “When I failed, I lost all hope and was preparing to
return to Gyumri. I planned on retaking the entrance exams again next
year. Then I heard about FAR’s decision to include computer programming
in the Mathevosian Scholarship Program on TV. It sounded like a
miracle, and I have now started to believe in them! With the
Mathevosian Scholarship, I am ready to do my best to meet everyone’s
expectations.”

Established in 1997 by New York philanthropist Anoosh Mathevosian, FAR’s
Mathevosian Scholarship Program covers tuition costs for outstanding
students who are admitted to university but cannot afford to attend.
The need-based financial aid program has a rigorous three-phase
selection process: (1) an essay application, (2) an at-home assessment
of the family’s financial situation, and (3) an interview. Provided
they maintain their academic excellence throughout the five-year
university curriculum and remain in financial need, scholarship
recipients can focus purely on their studies. The aid program is
designed to eliminate worries about the next tuition bill and requires
students to work in Armenia for at least five years after graduation.

Of the 49 applications submitted this year for FAR’s university
scholarships, 22 stood out. The Mathevosian Scholarship Program
committee, comprised of five FAR staff members, faced the difficult task
of paring down from 22 hopefuls to 12 scholars. They read every essay
application and traveled to each applicant’s house to assess the
applicant’s family and socio-economic conditions. Applicants were also
interviewed about their socio-economic condition, hobbies and the
specialization they had chosen.

“I am so very grateful for this opportunity,” said Yerevan-born Artyom
Levonyan, 17, who will study journalism at Yerevan State University
thanks to the Mathevosian Scholarship Program. Artyom’s parents are
divorced and he lives with his mother, a concert master at the Yerevan
State Conservatory. A long-time poet, Artyom has published his works in
Armenian newspapers. Currently, he is writing articles and would like
to shift their topics to patriotism.

FAR is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization headquartered in New York,
with offices in Yerevan, Gyumri, and Stepanakert. For 15 years, FAR has
implemented various relief, development, social, educational, and
cultural projects valued at more than $250 million.

For more information or to send donations, contact the Fund for Armenian
Relief at 630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016; telephone (212)
889-5150, fax (212) 889-4849; , [email protected].

— 10/20/04

E-mail photos available upon request.

CAPTION1: FAR’s Mathevosian Scholarship Program allows these first-year
university students with outstanding grades who cannot afford tuition,
pictured here with FAR’s Simon Balian (fourth from left) and Krikor
Tatoulian, Country Director (fifth from left), to pursue a career in
their field of study in Armenia.

CAPTION2: Armen Avetisyan, 17, will study computer programming at the
Yerevan State Engineering University thanks to the Mathevosian
Scholarship Program.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.farusa.org
www.farusa.org

Russia reopens borders with Azerbaijan, Georgia

Russia reopens borders with Azerbaijan, Georgia following security-related
suspension

AP Worldstream
Oct 22, 2004

Russia reopened its borders with Georgia and Azerbaijan on Friday
after more than a monthlong hiatus due to Moscow’s fears of terrorism.

Russia closed the border with Georgia in early September, following
the seizure of hundreds of hostages in a school in southern Russia,
and with Azerbaijan in mid-September. Border officials in those
countries confirmed that traffic had begun traveling in both
directions on Friday.

The closed border affected not only Georgia and Azerbaijan but also
their Caucasus neighbor Armenia, which depends significantly on Russia
for some supplies amid tense relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey
because of the unresolved conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

Located in Azerbaijan, the enclave has been under control of ethnic
Armenian forces for more than a decade. A cease-fire was signed in
1994 after Azerbaijani forces were driven out in a six-year war but
the enclave’s final status has not been resolved.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian air base in Kyrgyzstan to mark first anniversary on 10/23

Russian air base in Kyrgyzstan to mark first anniversary on 23 October

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
22 Oct 04

Russian air base in Kyrgyzstan will mark its first anniversary on 23
October, the ITAR-TASS news agency said on 22 October.

The Russian air base at Kant was opened on 23 October 2003 and
currently hosts about 500 servicemen and officers.

The air base was the first Russian force outside Russia after the
Soviet Union’s collapse and is an aviation unit of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization’s [CSTO – members are Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Russia] Collective Rapid
Reaction Forces, the report added.

(The report ran to about 200 words; no further processing planned)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tbilisi: The shameful invisibility of minorities in Georgia

The Messenger, Georgia
Oct 22 2004

The shameful invisibility of minorities in Georgia

“One Georgian development worker in Tsalka recently commented, ‘They
should all just go to Greece'”

By Mary Ellen Chatwin

Approximately 40 percent of Georgia’s citizens belong to various
minority ethnic groups as defined by their language, religion and
other cultural markers. Although full citizens of the Georgian
nation, they often do not access the same services, institutions and
professional possibilities as their fellow citizens who speak
Georgian from birth, and who attend the better institutions for
education and health care, enter the political and economic
mainstream of the country and continue to participate in the
development of their country. Unfortunately the minority groups have
few voices that speak out to claim better conditions and
possibilities for participating in national institutions, few
representatives in Parliament, and few working in Government to
ensure they receive adequate education and health care.

Most Georgians believe “there is no minority problem” and often
indicate they are sure minorities are taken care of ‘as well as other
citizens’. “Many Georgians are poor” is a frequent comment, which
could also be interpreted as meaning “First put your attention on the
majority and not minorities.” It also takes for granted “minorities
are poorer in general”. Well-meaning citizens often do not realize
that a much lower percentage of minority children finish secondary
school, many minority children have no access to the main language,
many children are not registered at birth (50 percent of certain
minority schools), many women have never had access to reproductive
health care and go through life with debilitating health conditions.
Even though the Georgian norm for girls finishing secondary school is
higher than for boys, in the case of minorities it is lower. Minority
girls and women in Georgia are especially vulnerable to the lack of
access to education, lack of civil rights (birth registration, voting
rights, marriage and family rights), or freedom of choice that other
Georgians take for granted. A much greater percentage of minority
girls finish school under 15 years of age and marry or begin working
before the legal age; they are thus more vulnerable to trafficking
and other illegal practices. This is not, as most prefer to believe,
due to religion or culture-it is due to an invisible discrimination.

Access is not denied outright in Georgia. There is no apartheid
system as was the case in South Africa or the USA until recent
decades. In Georgia, access to equal education, healthcare and social
services is denied through ignorance by the majority government of
the specific circumstances that are attributed to cultural and
religious differences, or even-as in the case of Greek ethnic groups
in Tsalka-to a dwindling population left behind, while many go abroad
for lack of better conditions. One Georgian development worker in
Tsalka recently commented, “They should all just go to Greece”,
although none of the community had ever been to Greece nor do any
speak Greek, but only Russian. Such stunning remarks are common, and
demonstrate the difficulty for minorities to insist on their right
like all Georgian citizens to access the education system, the
political and civil society, and health care services. Majority
Georgian groups exert a cultural pressure in perceiving minorities as
“guests”, even if they have populated whole towns and areas of the
country for centuries, have Georgian passports and have no wish to
live outside of their own country.

Access to equality is also denied when the extra effort for
integration has not been made, for example additional courses in
Georgian language to make children’s educational possibilities equal
to those of the majority. In 2004 the Georgian language courses in
primary and secondary schools have been cut in all schools,
irrespective of the need for minorities to have increased Georgian
lessons in order to integrate. At all governmental levels there is a
“denial system” that blinds government offices, development agencies
and most majority Georgian citizens to the de facto segregation of
minorities from full participation in the development of their
country.

The difference between an active “apartheid system” that collapses
and gives way to democratic and equal access and participation by the
minorities, and the “denial system” as it is found in Georgia, is
that purposeful, constructive, pro-active and systematic measures and
policies were enacted by the governments to include minorities at all
levels when the decision for integration was made in the USA and
South Africa, while in the Georgian “denial system” the problems
remain invisible. No decisions are made; most minorities remain
docile and are told they receive as much as others. They are made to
feel they have less right to be in Georgia than other Georgians. They
cannot read the most important documents or legislation that has been
passed in the fields of health, social welfare and education (for
example, the World Bank Education Reform legislation has been
translated to English, but not to Russian or Azeri so that minorities
would be able to access this important information). They are often
reminded that they are “guests” or else are encouraged to “go
elsewhere” or receive aid from neighboring countries such as Armenia
or Azerbaijan. The Georgian government does not envisage any serious
special measures for integration. If hospitality in Georgia were a
true value, I believe there would be greater concern by the ethnic
majority to find ways and make serious efforts to include their
fellow citizens in the development of the country.

M.E.Chatwin, PhD, is a Policy Advisor and Lecturer in Tbilisi State
University’s Sociology Department, and contributed this article to
The Messenger. She has been living in Georgia for over twelve years

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Deputy FM receives GB-Armenia friendship group members

ArmenPress
Oct 22 2004

DEPUTY FM RECEIVES GREAT BRITAIN-ARMENIA FRIENDSHIP GROUP MEMBERS

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 22, ARMENPRESS: Armenian deputy foreign minister
Tatul Margarian received members of Great Britain-Armenia friendship
group of the British parliament.
According to foreign ministry press services, during the
discussion the sides talked about the Armenian-British cooperation,
integration of Armenia into European structures and the possible role
of British parliamentarians in that.
The deputy minister introduced the British parliamentarians to the
Armenia’s position in regional and international developments and
steps taken by Armenia to settle the existing challenges.
Speaking on Nagorno Karabagh conflict resolution, T. Margarian
reaffirmed that Armenia stays committed to peaceful regulation of the
conflict. He expressed gratitude to the British parliamentarians,
particularly Baroness Caroline Cox in her endeavors to support
Karabagh people.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Motor traffic through Georgia-Armenia checkpoints regular

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
October 22, 2004 Friday 3:48 PM Eastern Time

Motor traffic through Georgia-Armenia checkpoints regular

By Tengiz Pachkoria

TBILISI

Motor traffic through checkpoints on the Georgian-Armenian border is
regular, Georgian Border Department Chairman Badri Bitsadze said at a
Friday meeting of the Georgian and Armenian presidents in the border
village of Sadakhlo.

“Armenia and Georgia are interested in motor traffic through the
Russian Verkhny Lars checkpoint [in the North Ossetian sector of the
Russian-Georgian border]: It is the only and vital road to Russia for
Armenia,” Bitsadze said.

Motor traffic through Verkhny Lars was stopped after the Beslan
hostage crisis this September. Hundreds of vehicles en route to and
from Georgia have amassed on both sides of the border.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

US against sale of Georgian gas pipelines to Gazprom

Agency WPS
The Russian Oil and Gas Report (Russia)
October 22, 2004, Friday

THE US IS AGAINST SALE OF GEORGIAN GAS PIPELINES TO GAZPROM

The US is against the sale of the trunk gas pipeline of Georgia to
Gazprom, which has been demonstrating its interest in privatization
in the country, says energy envoy of the US Department of State to
the Caspian region Stephen Mann.

In 2003, Gazprom signed a framework agreement with the former
Georgian government headed by President Eduard Shevardnadze on close
cooperation and gas supplies to the country. Soon after that Gazprom
managed to oust the international group of companies ITERA, that was
at that time the monopoly gas supplier to Georgia, from the Georgian
market. Several times Gazprom offered the government of Georgia to
sell the trunk gas pipeline through which gas was delivered from
Russia to Georgia and Armenia. Georgian economic experts say that
Gazprom is prepared to pay a few hundreds of millions of dollars to
acquire control over the object strategic for Georgia.

In a few years Georgia plans to receive gas via the pipeline from
Azerbaijan to the Turkish Erzurum and to become less dependent on the
gas supplies from Russia, political relations with which have grown
worse lately. Mann states, “If the trunk gas pipelines are sold to
Gazprom the possibility of gas purchase from Azerbaijan will be lost.
Naturally, Gazprom will try to sell its gas.” Mann believes that if
Georgia sells the gas pipelines to Gazprom it will lose energy
security. Mann concludes, “I call on everyone to look at the
agreement between Gazprom and Georgia. For Georgia it was
unfavorable.”

Source: Vremya Novostey, October 21, 2004

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Kyrgyzstan needs second-hand weapons

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
October 22, 2004, Friday

KYRGYZSTAN NEEDS SECOND-HAND WEAPONS

SOURCE: Kommersant, October 20, 2004, p. 11

by Dmitry Glumskov, Konstantin Lantratov

NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer held negotiations with
President Askar Akayev of Kyrgyzstan and the speakers of both houses
of the parliament in Bishkek on October 19. (…)

Mr. Scheffer stated that NATO intends to intensify cooperation with
Kyrgyzstan. He stated at a meeting with the president of Kyrgyzstan:
“We’ll have to solve common tasks in combating international
terrorism and countering other challenges.” Mr. Scheffer said that
NATO intends to strengthen its influence in Western districts of
Afghanistan, and needs transport and telecommunication support in
Central-Asian republics. NATO intends to sign a transit agreement
with these republics. Kyrgyzstan let the US and European nations use
its airdromes for transit of military and humanitarian cargo to
Afghanistan in 2001. experts state that this decision brought in
around $250 million to the republican budget in 2002.

Askar Akayev promised that Kyrgyzstan will join NATO’s programs at a
higher level, which includes analysis and planning.

Mr. Akayev said that the main effort will be aimed at strengthening
the border and intensifying control. The president of Kyrgyzstan
said: “The center of Alpine rescue-workers, which we want to
transform into a center for training peacekeepers, is the main unit
in this program.”

Kyrgyzstan asked NATO to pass over weapons, which new members of the
alliance will write off as a result of modernization of their armies,
to the republic. This request was announced by Altai Borubayev,
speaker of the house of representatives of the parliament of
Kyrgyzstan. Mr. Borubayev noted that new members of the alliance
rearm their armies according to NATO’s standards, and have a lot of
weapons and military hardware, which could become a substantial
contribution to the combat against terrorism. Mr. Scheffer did not
comment on this proposal but did not rule out that NATO will discuss
this issue later.

It should be noted that Russia is the major supplier of weapons to
Kyrgyzstan. However, Bishkek also receives weapons from the US,
China, Turkey, France and India. At the same time, Bishkek exports
Soviet weapons. In particular, Kyrgyzstan supplied armored personnel
carriers, infantry weapons and ammunition to Afghanistan in October
2001. In addition, Kyrgyzstan was involved in supplying obsolete
weapons to conflict zones. In particular, Kyrgyzstan was rumored to
send weapons to Armenia during an armed conflict in Nagorny Karabakh.
In addition, experts of the UN Security Council stated in November
2001 that Kyrgyzstan violated UN sanctions and supplied aircraft
spare parts to Liberia. It’s not ruled out that if NATO considers the
prospects of supplying obsolete weapons to Kyrgyzstan it will demand
additional guarantees that Bishkek will not re-export them to other countries.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

US absorbing GUUAM

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
October 22, 2004, Friday

US ABSORBING GUUAM

SOURCE: Zavtra, No 42, October 14 – 20, 2004, p. 2

Political activeness in some parts of the former Soviet Union
(Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova) is confined within
some clearly defined geographic borders. Certain changes in
Washington’s foreign policy along with a major displacement of
American troops in Europe, Asia, and in the East are indicators of
what all of that is about.

Black Sea – a branch of the Atlantic

Information obtained from sources in the West (scientists,
journalists, officials) makes it plain that the West has changed its
tactic and evaluation of the situation on the southern borders of
Russia. It confirms the opinion we featured more than once already
that importance of the Caspian region in the energy sphere is grossly
exaggerated and that the United States’ interest in it is purely
military-political and, to some extent, economic.

The Caspian region cannot be a source of energy resources alternative
to the Arab oil and gas. In other words, we cannot expect the
Americans to spoil their relations with Saudi Arabia, to become
disinterested with regard to Kuwait, or to leave Iran and Iraq alone.
Pressure on Middle East countries loyal to the United States will
continue in the form of a collision of their interests with interests
of the third countries (like Russia). Countries that are too
obstinate will be “reformed” the way Yugoslavia and Iraq have been
treated.

Along with this evaluation of importance of the Caspian basin, there
is also the idea (expressed more and more frequently) that it is
wrong to mix Central Asia and Caucasus. These are two absolutely
different regions. Strategically important as they undoubtedly are,
they can develop and perform their functions independently of each
other. Central Asia (where the Americans are counting on Kazakhstan,
as the latest analysis shows) is an element of a larger region
comprising of the East and South and East Asia. The Caucasus in its
turn is viewed as an integral part of Europe, its outpost on the
southern flank. It makes the entire Black Sea basin a part of Europe
too.

Policy Review (June-July, 2004) featured an article with a catching
headline “Black Sea and Frontiers of Freedom”. Its authors use the
term that is coming into popular use – the Larger Black Sea Region
that comprises Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova, Ukraine, Russia,
Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.

Black Sea’s western and southern coasts are territories of NATO
countries. It was accomplished through implementation of a staggering
project to integrate Central and East Europe countries under the US
aegis into the European-Atlantic community. Somebody may have
forgotten already that 10 years ago Zbigniew Brzezinski suggested
this project of rearrangement of the East European zone and
establishment of the Baltic – Black Sea alliance of the former Soviet
republics. It was announced then that the alliance should exist
beyond the sphere of Russian influence and serve as a strategic
deterrent factor in the Western direction.

Washington’s active interest in the political lives of Georgia,
Moldova, Ukraine, Moldova, Armenia, Azerbaijan is undeniable
nowadays. These are the countries that comprise what the West calls
the Larger Black Sea Region.

Establishment of a new military-political alliance on the territory
between the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea, an alliance associated with
NATO, becomes more and more likely. GUUAM was but an experiment. Most
East Europe countries dream of joining European-Atlantic structures.
Some of these countries have already been granted the wish. Others
have not because of various obstacles including regional and border
conflicts.

Western politicians and consultants believe that time has come to get
down to the matter of the Larger Black Sea Region.

Previous waves of NATO and European Union expansion – and Moscow’s
reaction to them – will facilitate the process.

Romania and Bulgaria are NATO neophytes now. Eager to up their clout,
they will certainly do their best to promote problems of the Larger
Black Sea Region into the forefront of the West’s foreign political
priorities.

The situation itself assigns the order of priority to the tasks the
United States will try to settle in the not so distant a future.

The forthcoming presidential election in Ukraine is the task
following the recent successful Revolution of Roses in Georgia (which
was but an operation to replace national leadership with certain
elements of a show aimed to persuade the population that changes are
in fact possible).

After that, more effort will be put in settlement of conflicts in
South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Trans-Dniester region.

Preparations for the parliamentary and presidential elections in
Armenia will take place against this background. Moldova and
Azerbaijan are the next countries marked for installation of new
regimes. Eventually, some countries of the Larger Black Sea Region
will participate in establishment of a military-political alliance
that will enable its members to be integrated into the
“European-Atlantic security framework” without formal membership in
NATO.

Whose tongue will lead one to Kiev?

A lot of articles and materials on the Ukrainian election appear in
the Western media. Public opinion is being brainwashed on a major
scale. The distinction between two candidates is emphasized again and
again: Yuschenko represents democracy and Western values, while
Yanukovich is a businessman from the Donetsk Clan, associated with
Moscow and backed by Leonid Kuchma.

Kuchma himself, after all the quarrels with Russia and advances to
the West, counts on Russia’s support alone and even pretends to be
making steps to meet it halfway.

Emphasizing their sympathies with Russia, the authorities of Ukraine
are still bent on membership in NATO and European structures.
Analysis of statements and actions of politicians in Kiev leaves no
doubts as to their strategic objectives.

Even Yanukovich’s statements generate doubts in Ukraine’s proclaimed
objectives and goals in international matters. When he boarded
frigate Getman Sagaidachny for celebration of the 12th anniversary of
the Ukrainian Navy, Yanukovich said in no uncertain terms that
“reorganization of the Ukrainian Armed Forces is directly associated
with the future membership in NATO.”

In other words, membership in NATO remains one of the central
strategic objectives of official Kiev. In fact, official Kiev is
helped along the way by all sorts of non-government organizations.
With the support from the NATO Center of Information and Documents,
NATO bureaus are being established at regional libraries throughout
Ukraine. They will make access to the literature having to do with
NATO – Ukraine partnership, integration, and other international
security issues easier for Ukrainians.

Twenty-seven regional bureaus (including one in Simferopol and
Sevastopol each) have been established by the middle of September,
2004.

According to the US Department of State, Ukraine received about 9% or
$5 million of the funds the United States set aside for the program
of military assistance to former Soviet republic in 2004. This is 11%
higher than what Ukraine ended up with in 2003. Along with everything
else, Ukraine received $1.7 million (11.4% of sum total) within the
framework of the international military education program.

The 2004 international financial military assistance program, does
not stipulate anything for Russia. As for the 2004 international
military education program, Russia received $800,000 or 50% of what
Ukraine got. Why the program is called international when it is
financed by the US Administration is anyone’s guess.

In the meantime, the United States maintains that the presidential
election in Ukraine must be democratic and legitimate. This is but
essentially an open campaign for Yuschenko.

In other words, Kiev’s loyalty to the United States and NATO is
unlikely to become an automatic pass into the Alliance for Ukraine.
Washington and the West apparently regard Ukraine as a partner but
also a potential future rival in geopolitical games on the territory
of the CIS and throughout the world. Ukraine has scored in arms
export. It delivered modern tanks to Pakistan, it is helping
Turkmenistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Libya. It is a serious rival
for Russia and other arms exporters.

Advancement of relations with Moscow will help Kiev secure a source
of relatively cheap energy resources and other strategic commodities.
And loyalty to NATO will help it create a counterweight to Moscow for
whenever it interferes with advancement of Ukraine’s national
interests.

At the same time, Moscow and Washington will certainly try to force
Kiev to make up its mind. Moscow has a chance to succeed, but
everything will depend on what extent the United States and the West
are determined to drive a wedge between Moscow and Kiev.

Europe’s outlying regions

Honeymoon in the relations between the United States and Georgia is
practically over, about to be replaced with mundane drudgery. The
more energetic “NY lawyer Mikhail Saakashvili” becomes in repelling
the Russian empire, the more practical difficulties Washington
encounters. The problem is that Saakashvili’s undisguised attempts to
take over South Ossetia and Abkhazia by sheer strength of arms force
Moscow to side up with the Ossetians and Abkhazians more and more
firmly. Washington is aware that Moscow knows who actually supports
the young president of Georgia and that awareness and knowledge
aggravate the conflict, affecting all other aspects of the
Russian-American relations. Western analysts do not even rule out a
military clash in the region because NATO has troops on the territory
of Georgia. Military solution to the problem will only make the
regional situation all the more complicated for the United States.
Moreover, it may complicate the state of affairs in Ukraine where
Western analysts hope for a chance to repeat the Revolution of Roses
scenario.

The United States is aware that the peoples of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia have voted to withdraw from Georgia and join Russia.
Washington understands that these problems cannot be solved without
Russia’s participation and consent. All other ways lead to a war and
political fiasco.

Saakashvili is frowned at for his sabre-rattling but immediately
reassured of support.

The US Administration parceled out 21% to Georgia, more than to any
other former Soviet country. The sum amounted to $12 million in the
2004 financial year, a 74% rise compared to 2003. Tbilisi ended up
with $1.3 million of assistance within the framework of the
international military education and training program.

It should be noted that Azerbaijan and Armenia received $2.485
million each this financial year (against $5 million each in 2003).
Perhaps, this “equal distance” is Washington’s contribution to the
Karabakh conflict settlement. It is clear, however, that this is a
message to Ilham Aliyev and Robert Kocharjan. Both were regularly
criticized by the West, neither answers the requirements to the
region put forth by official Washington. Both leaders are earmarked
for replacement. In Yerevan, the national leader may be replaced
before his time is up.

The US Department of State appointed a new Ambassador to Armenia just
two months ago. He is John Evans, a specialist in early expiry of the
term of office just like US Ambassador Miles in Tbilisi. Evans
studied Russian history at Yale. He worked in Tehran and Prague in
the 1970’s and in Moscow between 1981 and 1983 (the period when the
Soviet-American relations hit bottom, when CIA agents in the Soviet
Union were extremely active). After that Evans served with the
American mission to NATO. In the middle of the 1990’s, he was the US
Consul in St. Petersburg and worked in the OSCE mission in Moldova.

Before his assignment to Armenia, career intelligence officer Evans
headed the Russia and Eurasia analysis directorate at the Department
of State and all of the Russian sector. It is clear that he was sent
to Armenia for a purpose. Evans began studying Armenia in the late
1980’s. He knows Russian leadership well ever since his assignment to
St. Petersburg between 1994 and 1997.

Trans-Dniester thorn

Washington constantly demands – in no uncertain terms – a solution to
the Trans-Dniester problem. The United States needs an integral and
loyal Moldova without alien disseminations like pro-Russian Tiraspol,
a Moldova capable of joining the block of Black Sea states. Now that
the Russian-Moldovan relations are not what they used to be once,
Washington is certainly active in this sphere, and pressure on
Tiraspol is mounting.

Trans-Dniester’s and Abkhazia’s promise to help South Ossetia against
the invasion of Georgian and NATO troops is branded by enemies of
Tiraspol as “international terrorism”. This is an indirect way of
providing an ideological basis for an ultimate solution to the
problems of all these territories. The opinion of the peoples
residing in these regions is of little interest for the
decision-makers.

All of that indicates that the West is out to orchestrate political
cessation of two major regions – Black Sea region with the Caucasus
and Central Asia – from Russia. Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia,
and Azerbaijan united in the Larger Black Sea Region are the first in
line.

The situation being what it is, the authorities of Russia must
concentrate on foreign political solutions to the problem of
advancement of its cooperation with these countries and promotion of
interests of national security of the country. An effective solution
to the problem requires direct involvement of the government of the
Russian Federation. Analysts alone will not do.

ORIGINAL-LANGUAGE: RUSSIAN

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Drama depicts story of genocide survivors

The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois)
October 12, 2004 Tuesday

Drama depicts story of genocide survivors

PANTAGRAPH STAFF

NORMAL — Richard Kallnoski’s drama, “Beast on the Moon,” is the new
offering from the Heartland Theatre Company in Normal, opening with a
“pay-what-you-can” preview at 7:30 p.m. Thursday.

Regular performances are at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and Oct.
22, 23, 29 and 20, with a 2 p.m. matinee Oct. 24.

Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors and $6 for students. Call
(309) 452-8709 for reservations.

“Beast on the Moon” depicts the lives of two Armenian genocide
survivors, beginning in 1921 after a portrait photographer meets his
“picture bride” with whom he wants to rebuild or resurrect a small
fraction of his annihilated family and save them from oblivion.

Kallnoski’s 1995 drama has been produced around the world in regional
theaters and is due to open in New York City in March 2005.

The production is directed by Rachel Chaves, Heartland’s Jean
Scharfenberg Award winner, and features Dan Irvin, Katy Lacio and
Greg McGrath.

Also scheduled are two post-performance responses to the play.

The first, on Oct. 23, is a panel discussion featuring Jared Brown,
playwright and retired chair of IWU’s School of Theatre, and Emine
Evered, who has taught courses that concern historical and social
dimensions of the Middle East.

On Oct. 24, a discussion will be led by Mark Wyman, an ISU
distinguished professor emeritus, whose specialty is the immigrant
experience, and Shushan Avagyan, a poet and Armenian citizen doing
graduate work at ISU.

Heartland Theatre is located in the Community Activity Center of One
Normal Plaza, Lincoln and Beech streets, Normal.

GRAPHIC: Greg McGrath, center, studied his face in the mirror he gave
his bride, played by Kathy Lacio, as Dan Irvin looked on in a scene
from “Beast on the Moon” opening Thursday at Heartland Theatre. The
Richard Kallnoski play is being directed by Rachel Chaves.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress