BAKU: Armenians impeding BTC construction prosecuted

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Aug 25 2004
Armenians impeding BTC construction prosecuted

The Georgian government has taken steps to crack down on the
Armenian residents impeding construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
(BTC) pipeline. The Borzhomi district prosecutor’s office started
criminal cases against a group of Armenian residents in the Tabaskuri
village who tried to suspend the construction operations last week.
Residents of the village have conducted three protest actions over
the last month. The first one was held peacefully, while the second
action and the one held last weekend resulted in a clash with the
police.
The protesters threw stones at the equipment owned by BP. Several
police officers were injured during the confrontation.*

Russia will arm Armenia with specialists

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
August 25, 2004, Wednesday
RUSSIA WILL ARM ARMENIA WITH SPECIALISTS
Last Friday the president of Russia Vladimir Putin met with the
president of Armenia Robert Kocharyan in his Sochy residence
“Bocharov Ruchey”. (…) The leaders discussed the cooperation in the
military area. “I am pleased with your application for the training
of the military specialists”, – mentioned Putin. He meant the annual
training program for 140-150 Armenian officers in Russian
institutions of higher education. Kocharyan, in his turn, asked
Armenian officers to be trained according to the Russian program not
to the “foreign”. (…) Kocharyan was assured that Russia, acting in
the framework of the Collective organization Treaty, will sell to
Armenia Russian arms for Russia prices.
Source: Gazeta, August 23, 2004, p. 2
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Chess: Ramesh holds Evgeny Vladimirov

Rediff, India
Aug 23 2004
Ramesh holds Evgeny Vladimirov
August 22, 2004 19:50 IST
Grandmaster R B Ramesh held top seed GM Evgeny Vladimirov of
Kazkhstan to an easy draw to take joint-third position after the
seventh round in the Masters section of 14th Abu Dhabi chess festival
now in progress.
On a day that witnessed grueling battles for lead positions, GM
Pendyala Harikrishna was held to a draw by Mahjoob Morteza of Iran
and GM Tejas Bakre went down against his Russian counterpart Dmitry
Bocharov.
Former Asian Junior girls’ champion Tania Sachdev suffered a reversal
at the hands of International Master Imad Hakki of Syria and though
her second Women Grandmaster norm prospects have not suffered any
severe blow, the Indian might just need to push a little more for her
maiden IM norm.
Meanwhile, GM Ghaem Maghami Ehsan of Iran was joined by GM Evegny
Gleizerov of Russia and Pavel Kotsur of Kazakhstan at the top of the
table on 5.5 points after the Iranian held on to his nerves and drew
with Ashot Anastasian of Armenia in a long drawn game.
Bocharov and Anastansian are close behind the leaders on five points
while a pack of nine players including Harikrishna and Ramesh are
also in reckoning for top prizes with 4.5 points in their kitty when
just two rounds remain in this US $16000 prize-money tournament being
played under FIDEs Swiss rules.
Ramesh did not have much to do except play correctly against
Vladimirov, who played the white side of an English opening. The
Indian is respected for his opening preparation and Vladimirov was
disappointed as he failed to get even a semblance of an advantage
with the favourable colour.
In fact, fearing he might end up being worse, Vladimirov signed peace
pact in just 16 moves.
Harikrishna tried hard against Morteza but his efforts did not come
good as the latter kept his position together with black pieces.
It was the Capablanca variation of Nimzo Indian in the opening and
the Iranian equalised almost by force, leading the game to a rook and
minor piece ending wherein Harikrishna had a slightly inferior pawn
structure. The draw was agreed to after 55 moves when Harikrishna
could make no headway against a near impregnable black’s position.
Tania was unlucky to lose against Hakki after putting up a spirited
show. The Syrian had only a level position for the major part of the
game till Tania blundered and lost a pawn without much compensation.
Tania is pitted against WGM Julia Mashinskaya of Russia, whose rating
is less than her own, in the next round.
Currently Tania’s performance rating is 2436 Elo points, which is
quite sufficient for the second WGM norm if she scores even one point
from remaining two matches. However, had Tania drawn the seventh
round game, the norm would have been automatically made as she would
have met another higher rated player.
Amongst other Indians in the fray, IM Neelotpal Das defeated
Al-Tamimi Hamad of Qatar and Eesha Karvade accounted for Amer Mohamed
of Egypt. Drawing their games were S Kidambi and Aarthie Ramswamy who
signed peace with local interests Jasim A R Saleh and Mohamed Hossein
respectively while WGM Nisha Mohota was on the receiving end against
Konstantin Chernyshov of Russia.
Complete results round 7 (Indians unless specified): Ashot
Anastasian (5, Arm) drew with Ghaem Maghami Ehsan (5.5, Iri); Pavl
Kotsur (5.5, Kaz) beat Mikhail Kobalia (4.5, Rus); Evgeny Gleizerov
(5.5, Rus) beat Artashes Minasian (4.5, Arm); Evgeny Vladimirov (4.5,
Kaz) drew with R B Ramesh (4.5); P Harikrishna (4.5) drew with
Mahjoob Morteza (4.5, Iri); Dmitry Bocharov (5, Rus) beat Tejas Bakre
(4); Tissir Mohamed (4, Mar) drew with Artyom Timofeev (4, Rus);
Marat Dzhumaev (4.5, Uzb) beat Sergey Kayumov (4.5, Uzb); Ramil
Hasangatin (4.5, Rus) beat Kivanc Haznedaroglu (3.5, Tur); Safin
Shukhrat (4, Uzb) drew with Jasper Lauridsen (4, Den); Zeinab
Mamediarova (4, Aze) drew with Taleb Moussa (4, Uae); Imad Hakki
(4.5, Syr) beat Tania Sachdev (4); Konstantin Chernyshov (4, Rus)
beat Nisha Mohota (3); Tahir Vakhidov (4, Uzb) beat Nezad Husein Aziz
(3, Qat); Elshan Moradiabadi (3, Iri) lost to Abdullah Hassan (4,
Uae); Shadi Paridar (3, Iri) lost to Yannick Gozzoli (4, Fra),
Saidali Iuldacev (3, Uzb) drew with Julia Mashinskaya (3.5, Rus);
Alexander Raetsky (3, Rus) drew with Mikhail Ulibin (3, Rus); Faruk
Bistric (3, Bih) drew with Firuza Velikhanli (3, Aze); S Kidambi (3)
drew with Jasim A R Saleh (3, UAE); Neelotpal Das (3) beat Al-Tamimi
Hamad (2.5, Qat); Mohamed Hossein (3, UAE) drew with Aarthie
Ramaswamy (2.5); Atousa Pourkashiyan (3, IRI) beat Saleh Nabil (2,
UAE); Tayeb Suhail (2.5, UAE) drew with Illijin Neboisa (2.5, Rom);
Eesha Karavade (3) beat Amer Mohamed (2, Egy); James Coleman (2, Eng)
lost to Adina-Maria Bogza (2.5, Rom); Khalil Ibrahim (1.5, UAE) drew
with Saleh Najueb (1.5, UAE).
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Edinburgh Film Festival preview

iofilm, UK
Aug 17 2004
Edinburgh Film Festival preview
Plenty in treat with typically diverse EIFF 2004
By Rebort

EIFF opening and closing films: The Motorcycle Diaries (top) and E
J-Yong’s Untold Scandal

The glam
Edinburgh is not a big starry event on the level of, say, Cannes, but
still attracts a fair smattering of famous faces. Obvious places for
sleb-spotting are the opening and closing galas. The festival starts
strongly with Walter Salles’ The Motorcycle Diaries, a much feted
adaptation of revolutionary pin-up Che Guevara’s autobiographal
journal about his travels as a young man through South America.
Wong Kar-Wai’s follow-up to his luscious-looking In The Mood For
Love, 2046, was pulled as the closing film, at the last minute,
organisers said, because the film is still not finished. EIFF
artistic director Shane Danielsen quipped it was “one of the pitfalls
of working with eccentric artistic geniuses’. The organisers have
fallen back on E J-Yong’s Untold Scandal, a lavish period remake of
Dangerous Liaisons set in Chosun-period Korea.
The first Saturday of the fest always brings the paparazzi out, with
the world premiere of former EIFF award-winner Pawel Pawlikowski’s My
Summer of Love given the red carpet treatment at the Cameo on
Saturday night, 21 August. Pawlikowski uses his vivid cinematic style
to give a portrait of the blossoming friendship of two 16-year-old
girls during a languid Yorkshire Summer.
Hot tickets
Can’t get tickets to see those galas; or Morgan Spurlock chundering
on his umpteenth McDonald’s meal in Super Size Me; or film stars
puffing away in Jim Jarmusch’s eccentric Coffee and Cigarettes; or
those big waves in Stacy Peralta’s thrilling surf doc Riding Giants?
Don’t give up yet. Extra screenings are often scheduled in for
popular films, tickets for press and guests reallocated and people
don’t pick up tickets. Check with the EIFF box office (full details
at end of this article) what the state of play is. Alternatively,
check out iofilm’s reviews to see if our team has found any gems that
you can see instead – we cover the full programme of films.
Home-grown cinema
Obvious choices: Ken Loach presents Ae Fond Kiss, a Glasgow based
tale of inter-racial romance and Shane Meadows’ dark and gritty Dead
Man’s Shoes, about two brothers returning home to find the same old
drug dealing gangs.
In Hamburg Cell, Antonia Bird dramatises the events leading up to the
September 11 hijackings through the eyes of a young Muslim who
evolves from secular student in Germany, to Islamic ideologue,
jihadist and hijacker. Peter Mullan, a regular at the EIFF, is back
as a blind and jealous landowner caught in a love triangle of sorts
in a drama called Blinded.
Richard Eyre’s tantalising Restoration Comedy, Stage Beauty,
introduces Billy Crudup as the “compleat female actor” until he
becomes overshadowed by his own former dresser (Claire Danes) after
King Charles II (Rupert Everett) changes the law to allow women to
play themselves.
Other world premieres include Irish director Damien O’Donnell’s
Inside I’m Dancing and Terry Loane’s Mickybo and Me.
Kung fu escapes its Asiatic origins and relocates to Scotland, in the
not too distant future in Richard Jobson’s The Purefiers. The title
comes from a gang who having rejected a suspicious truce, find
themselves surrounded on all sides by factions warring to control a
disintegrating Britain. Chop-socky cinema that is one amongst a
fistful of Kung-fu films at the EIFF this year.
Documentary
Fahrenheit 9/11 has not been the only political documentary making
headlines in this US election year. Control Room, directed by Jehane
Noujaim who made the doc Start-up.com, has kept the talk shows stoked
with this embedded view of Al Jazeera, the Arab news service that has
been condemned by the Bush administration as “the mouthpiece of Osama
Bin Laden” and was shut down just days ago by the acting Iraqi
administration for a month.
Filmmakers also aimed their cameras into the darkest corners of human
existence to find stories such as Checkpoint by Yoav Shamir, which
follows the mutual insanity of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and
A Social Genocide (Fernando E. Solana), an angry look at the
squandering of Argentina’s national resources. Guerrilla: The Taking
of Patty Hearst (Robert Stone) offers viewers a chance to step back
in time and re-examine the events surrounding the kidnapping of
Hearst by the Symbionese Liberation Army, an American 1970’s
terrorist militia.
It will be fascinating to see how Thomas Riedelsheimer, who made such
an evocative film about artist Andy Goldsworthy in River of Tides,
conveys the visual and aural harmony of Evelyn Glennie in Touch the
Sound – A Sound Journey. It just won an International Critics Award
at Locarno.
In a similar vein is Armenian filmmaker Harutyun Khachatryan’s
Documentarist where he paints a black-and-white, cinematic mosaic of
life in his ruined homeland.
In Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, the real life hard rockers give
Spinal Tap a run for their money.
The Horror, the Horror
The EIFF has successfully carved out a spot with horror fans with
edgier, late night films. This year includes the world premiere of
American director Chuck Parello’s Hillside Strangler, a true tale of
two “tag-team’ Seventies serial killers (in the Late Night Romps
section of the programme). And Colin Firth wakes from a coma to find
his wife dead and himself implicated in a celebrity murder in
psychological drama Trauma.
Retrospective
The eye in the back of the EIFF head is cast upon Italian director
Valerio Zurlini. “Who’s he?’ You might ask. Between 1955 and 1976,
Zurlini made eight feature films, looking at men and women in crisis.
The retrospective is aptly called “Il Ritrovato: the Rediscovered.”
Commemorating the tenth anniversary of the death of director Lindsay
Anderson, the EIFF will be screening two of his features, O Lucky
Man! (1973) and the Whales of August (1987), and hosting a panel
discussion with a number of Anderson’s creative associates. Actor
Malcolm McDowell, pays tribute to Scottish director Lindsay Anderson
(he made his screen debut in Anderson’s If…(1968) by performing a
one-man show consisting of his personal stories and anecdotes.
Short life
As always, the EIFF programme is chocker with short films, from the
McLaren animation programme to short docs and short form drama,
usually of 5-20 minutes.
Recommendations? Always difficult, but we will have a keen eye on
this year’s three Tartan Shorts – directors often go on from these
prestigious Scottish short fiction pieces to greater things. The EIFF
shorts programmer, who whittled the programme down from 1000 has
these recommendations:
(1) Mona Lisa (Antipodean Shorts Programme)- “A guy lives with his
mother- very low key performances, so simple but well written and
beautifully shot.”
(2) Headway (Nordic Shorts Programme)- “The director (Jens Jonsson)
has done lots of short films. I think he is destined to be the next
big European features director.”
(3) Who Killed Brown Owl (UK Shorts Programme)- “One long take shot
in a summer park. Simply fantastic, everything a short film should
be.”
And there’s more: Mirrorball is back this year with “a mad mix of
music videos, rock documentaries, live events, promos, ads and
animations”. Mirrorball programmers David Drummond and David Ladd
have lined up music videos from Sweden to Australia in Global
Selection, toured to Japan for some commercials, and gathered “the
best of Britain’ (including Basement Jaxx, The Streets and LFO) in
Fresh Tracks.
Latest Edinburgh International Film Festival reviews
Edinburgh International Film Festival Box Office and Information
Edinburgh International Film Festival,
88 Lothian Road,
Edinburgh,
EH3 9BZ,
Ticket hotline +44 (0) 131 623 8030
Information line +44 (0) 131 229 2550
Telephone +44 (0)131 228 4051
Fax +44 (0)131 229 5501
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

AZTAG Interview: So. Caucasus: A war-zone or a place for holidays?

“Aztag” Daily Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: [email protected]
South Caucasus: A war-zone or a place for holidays? An Interview with
Hratch Tchilingirian
by Khatchig Mouradian
`Abkhazia is not a place for holidays…it is a war zone,’ said Georgian
leader Mikhail Saakashvili earlier this month, threatening to sink foreign
(implicitly understood as Russian) ships that enter the region without
permission from his government. His comments came as tensions escalated
between the central authorities of Georgia and two of its breakaway regions,
South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which Saakashvili has promised to win back.
Saakashvili’s pronouncements on South Ossetia and Abkhazia have been
furiously opposed by Moscow, whose relations with Georgia have plummeted
from bad to worse since a `rose revolution’ brought pro-western Sakhasvili
to power.
Armenia and Azerbaijan, Georgia’s South Caucasian neighbors, have been
struggling with problems of their own, the most important of which is the
Karabakh conflict. But despite the various international conflicts they are
engaged in, as well as their serious domestic economic and social problems
the three ex-soviet republics of the South Caucasus continue to struggle
towards political stability, reform and democracy. In this respect, the
example of Armenia is telling.
I discussed the conflicts in the South Caucasus with Hratch Tchilingirian,
who has written and lectured extensively on the region. He is Associate
Director of the Eurasia Programme, the Judge Institute, University of
Cambridge. He received his PhD from the London School of Economics and
Political Science and his Master of Public Administration (MPA) from
California State University, Northridge. His research covers political and
territorial disputes in the Caucasus and Central Asia as well as the
region’s political, economic and geostrategic developments. He has authored
over 120 articles and publications on the politics, economy, culture,
religion and social issues of the Eurasia region, especially the Caucasus
and the Armenian Diaspora.
Aztag- In the Caucasus region ethnic tensions existed during the Soviet era,
and after the collapse of the Soviet Union, these tensions were rekindled
and some of them became full-blown wars. Can you put these conflicts into
perspective?
Hratch Tchilingirian- One of the areas that has not been much researched
when it comes to these regional conflicts, and which I have made part of my
research, is what I call the management of minority-majority relations. You
have a number of minorities living within the majority nationalities in this
particular part of the former Soviet Union, and the tensions actually go
back before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991; indeed, to the
beginning of the Soviet period. The majority of these problems were not
resolved by the sovietisation of the region, they were rather frozen and,
for decades, somehow controlled or managed. These conflicts also need to be
examined from the point of view of how titular nations deal with their
minorities. When the larger group or nationality is not able to deal with
its minorities, whether for objective or subjective reasons, it creates many
problems for both the minority and the majority. I believe this is an issue
that has been overlooked, especially by western scholars.
In addition to these minority-majority relations, there are territorial
claims which further complicate the situation. But, for the moment, if we
concentrate on the socio-political, cultural, and economic levels, we see
that the post-Soviet independent states in the South Caucasus have not been
able to create stable and dependable infrastructures for economic
development, democracy, human rights, and freedom of speech within their own
societies, let alone for their disgruntled minorities. The regimes in
Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia have been unpopular in the last 10-12 years.
In Azerbaijan, the opposition is almost completely wiped out. When a society
lacks healthy political development, it is easy to see where the other
problems are coming from. If an Azerbaijani opposition in Baku cannot freely
express himself or herself or is thinking about reprisal, how can we speak
about the issue of the rights of Armenians in Karabagh?
In my opinion, in order for these conflicts to be properly resolved, there
is, first and foremost, the need for basic political structures that are
stable and a certain level of democracy and openness.
Aztag- Some people argue that the rise of nationalism led to these land
issues and ethnic conflicts. What is your take on that?
Hratch Tchilingirian- Nationalism is, of course, a part of the whole fabric;
but I would argue that nationalism is not the only reason that you have a
conflict there. Some people say, rather naively, `These people have always
hated each other and have fought wars throughout history’, they present the
issue as if it were an innate thing. They fail to appreciate the objective
reasons that contributed to the conflicts — at least in the Soviet period
— in Karabagh, Abkhazia, or Ossetia. There were policies dictated by the
centre which affected education, cultural preservation, language teaching,
socio-economic priorities, etc. When you look at the record, there are
objective reasons that made these minorities unhappy; these factors feed
into the nationalistic ideology that is driven by the elite; we have to look
at these other factors as well; we cannot fully explain these conflicts only
by theories of nationalism.
Aztag- You are saying that during the Soviet era, these conflicts were under
control. Don’t you think that some of the policies of that time have, in
fact, worsened the situation?
Hratch Tchilingirian- Yes, but one also has to remember that the Soviets had
this internationalist ideology where the ultimate goal was to create the
Soviet People — individual nationalities and separate territories did not
matter. However, individual or separate nationalities or ethnic groups still
preserved their sense of national identity.
Aztag- Some scholars argue that although the Soviets wanted to create a
homogenous country, the leaders of individual states were using a
nationalistic rhetoric when tackling key issues in their respective
countries.
Hratch Tchilingirian- If one looks at theories of nationalism, one sees that
it is useful as a political program. So we have to know why nationalist
ideology is being used in this particular era. What is the purpose? Is it to
resolve or address certain issues? What I’m trying to stress is the context
in which events develop; things don’t happen in a vacuum. The elite or the
leadership exploits certain fault lines within a society for nationalistic
purposes. Indeed, existing problems and conflicts in society provide such
opportunities for exploitation. One should also ask why conflicts happen at
a given time: the time factor, the change of leadership, the change of
climate, the change of politics is very important.
During the late 80s and early 90s, the societies in this region, as in other
parts of the Communist world, allocated the necessary resources — human,
financial, military, or other — to gain independence or autonomy. The
weakening of the center (Moscow) was one of the most favorable factors which
provided the republics and peripheral autonomies to re-appropriate power
from the center. And this was occurring very rapidly. The central government
in Moscow was collapsing and you had two or three layers of the state
apparatus trying to appropriate power from the center. When the center
completely collapsed, the republics declared independence and the autonomies
forced a divorce.
Aztag- You are stressing the fact that history does matter. But in conflict
resolution, how far back in history can one go to address the core issues?
Hratch Tchilingirian- As time passes, people forget why the conflict started
and what the initial spark that triggered the conflict was. The present
moment becomes the starting point of analysis; history and the beginning
point become less relevant. And this is part of the problem in this region
specially. Indeed, when you look at the way the mediators work, for instance
the Minsk Group, you see that what matters is today, the year 2004, not what
happened in 1988 or 1991. Yet, for the minorities in the conflict the
starting point is very important.
You have the present moment, which dictates the process of dealing with the
issues. The points of reference for the various groups involved in the
solution could be very different. For instance, on the one hand, you could
have a powerful country trying to impose a solution; and on the other hand,
you have the very people who are going to be affected by such a solution.
Their references or `starting points’ could be very different. This is where
the issue of compromise becomes very important: how far back do you go and
what kind of criteria do you use to resolve the conflict. For instance,
presently Armenia is viewed as an occupying force as far as Azerbaijanis are
concerned; on the other hand, there is no reference as to why or when these
regions were occupied; it’s irrelevant. Yet this is relevant for Karabagh
Armenians, it is relevant for at least certain groups in Armenia. So it is
very important to understand and analyze these various layers that add to
the complexity of the matter.
Aztag- How practical is the approach of solving the conflict by force?
Hratch Tchilingirian- My argument is that any quick or imposed solution in
this region would not be a lasting solution. When one looks at the history
of Karabagh or Abkhazia in the last 200 years, it is easy to see that there
have been various types of political or military conflicts every few years.
Any solution that does not address the fundamental issues of the conflict
would not be lasting. If a solution is imposed just as it was during the
Soviet period, the problems will resurface whenever there is an opportunity.
I believe one of the key issues that should be addressed is the
majority-minority relationship. How you manage and maintain that
relationship will determine the durability of the solution.
Aztag- So you think that democratizing the region would make the situation
better.
Hratch Tchilingirian- Democratic regimes provide a more conducive ground for
conflict resolution.
Aztag- What about the issue of territorial demands? Even if we had a
democratic Georgia or Azerbaijan, the conflicts would still be there because
of the land issue, wouldn’t they?
Hratch Tchilingirian- Yes, I believe so, because especially in this part of
the world, territory is very important. In Europe, throughout history, the
situation was the same. But the European Union has made territory less and
less important. In the Caucasus, territory is still a very important
identity marker, it is a very important political and strategic factor, so I
don’t think this region will become like a mini-EU any time soon.
If you look at the European Union, the issue of territoriality is not
important anymore, you can travel within the EU as if you are in one
country. Today, territorial boundaries are not contentious in Europe, to a
large extent because nobody is suppressed; various national or ethnic groups
are free to practice their culture, to speak their language. But when you
have discrimination, when you have inequality, then people want to protect
their socio-political boundaries; they want to be their own boss!
Aztag- It is no secret that Russia and the US have their strategic interests
in the Caucasus and each tries to enlarge its own circle of influence in the
region. How does this affect the already volatile situation in the Caucasus?
Hratch Tchilingirian- This issue has two dimensions: internal and external.
If you look at the internal situation, when the regime is weak and not
stable, then it would be affected by the big powers, whether positively or
negatively; the ruling elite itself needs the backing of a “sponsor” or a
big power, to secure its position.
The external aspect is that Russia has definite interests in this region;
historically this region has been part of the Russian sphere of influence;
it has been part of the Russian Empire for centuries. Russia is interested
in preserving that influence and role. The US has its own strategic
interests in this region, especially in the Caspian, so there is going to be
rivalry among the superpowers, just like any other region. I would add that
this competition is not unique to this region, it happens throughout the
world.
The issue also depends on how the countries in this region view their
strategic interests. For instance, it’s very important for Armenia to have
good relations with Russia for security and strategic reasons. Armenia also
has trade and economic dependency on Russia, not the least of which is the
large remittances that come from Russian-Armenians who send money to
Armenia. So if there were a choice, Russia would be a priority — even
though Armenia tries to have good relations with both Russia and the US and
virtually with everyone else.
Aztag- What’s your take on the current situation in Georgia and the way
President Saakashvili is dealing with the separatist movements?
Hratch Tchilingirian- Well, I think any leader would wish or would want to
resolve conflicts in his country. Saakashvili has an interest to do that as
the new leader of Georgia. On the one hand, he appears to project a strong
position when it comes to dealing with these conflicts; on the other hand,
he sounds like he is willing to compromise, provide autonomy and so on. But
I would come back to my earlier point: it would ultimately depend on how
Tbilisi is going to manage its relations with the various minorities within
Georgia.
Aztag- In Adjaria, Saakashvili had his way rather easily, didn’t he?
Hratch Tchilingirian- Yes, that was because the problem was limited in one
person, Aslan Abashidze. However, after the removal of the immediate
problem, if you do not provide the guarantees, the opportunities that these
people expect, then you are not resolving the conflict.
On the other hand, he has said that he is willing to give Abkhazia a very
wide autonomy; but it is debatable whether at this point Georgia has the
capacity to deliver. Does Georgia have the capacity and the resources to
deliver? I am not sure. Georgia is hardly paying the salaries of state
employees. Is Georgia ready to help the Abkhazians or the South Ossetians
with their needs? The same goes for Azerbaijan. I do not think the central
governments in Tbilisi and Baku are in any position to make the lives of the
Abkhazians or Karabagh Armenians any better at this point. What clear
incentives or gains do the minorities have? I believe this is missing from
the various solutions that are being proposed. At the end of the day, the
population, the villager, the farmer living in Abkhazia or in Karabagh or
wherever, is going to ask: What am I gaining that I don’t have now through
this agreement? What is this going to add to my current situation?
When mediators look at it purely from a political perspective, it looks like
you could resolve the conflict. On paper, it looks like it is just a matter
of sharing territory or changing flags or sending a governor. But as
scholars we look at it at a deeper level, on the everyday level, the
sociological level — for instance, the fact that people were once neighbors
and became enemies overnight.
Aztag- In your opinion, how far are we from the resolution of the Karabakh
conflict?
Hratch Tchilingirian- In my opinion, the conflict will take a very long time
to resolve; probably 20-25 years. This is not something that can be resolved
in a few years. Even if a peace agreement is signed within months or a few
years, it will take a long time to implement that agreement on the ground.
When you look at Cyprus, it took more than 30 years just to come up with a
framework, not a solution. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is more than 50
years old and nowhere near resolution.
Aztag- Could you give us a brief background about the conflict in Abkhazia?
Hratch Tchilingirian- The Abkhaz conflict is going to take a long time to
resolve. It has a long history. There were inter-ethnic tensions throughout
the Soviet period.
The Abkhazian Autonomous Republic — situated on the eastern Black Sea coast
with an area of 8,700 sq km — was part of the Georgian Soviet Socialist
Republic, with a population of over 500 thousand. The Abkhazians constituted
a minority of 18%, compared with the 46% majority of Georgians. However, in
the late 19th century, before the ‘Georgianisation’ of the region, as Abkhaz
scholars argue, Abkhazians were the majority, with some 55% and the
Georgians counted for only about 25%.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, Abkhazian-Georgian relations
deteriorated, when, in 1992, the Abkhazians reinstated their 1925
Constitution to prevent Georgian attempts to curtail the political status of
the autonomous republic. A full-scale war broke out between the Abkhazians
and Georgia, after the fall of Zviad Gamsakhurdia, the ultra-nationalist
president of Georgia, which resulted in the defeat of the Georgians in
September 1993. Obviously, the Abkhazians were assisted by Russia, whose
policy, at least at the time, was to use the conflicts in Abkhazia and
Karabakh to pressure Tbilisi and Baku, which were rapidly drifting away from
Moscow’s “sphere of influence”.
A ceasefire between the Georgian and the Abkhazian was reached in 1994;
since then the United Nations have been involved in mediating a solution.
While unrecognized by the international community, Abkhazia, like Karabakh,
has achieved de facto independence in what is now the ‘Republic of
Abkhazia’. Nevertheless, Abkhazia remains extremely isolated and extremely
dependent on Russia. The international community recognized only the
independence of what were the 15 Soviet Socialist Republics. The
international community, in fact, discouraged further break up of
second-tier `states’ in the Soviet system, such as autonomous republics like
Abkhazia, and third-tier autonomous regions like Karabakh. As such, the
international community puts more pressure on the secessionists than the
recognized states.
The Abkhaz problem has many similarities with Karabagh, especially in terms
of independence, in terms of breaking off with the center, in terms of
determining their own affairs and lives, and so on. But it also has some
important differences. The Abkhazians were willing to have a federative
relationship with Georgia, but because Georgia was not forthcoming and did
not take it seriously, the Abkhazians declared full independence from
Georgia in 1999. And nowadays they talk about having a special association
or a membership association with the Russian Federation. This proposed
association is a model that does not exist in any other place in the world
yet. Abkhazia would not become a member of the Russian Federation or a
federal entity, but it will have a special, still to be defined association
with Russia. In a way Abkhazia will keep its independence, but in many ways
will dependent on Russia, as it is now.
Aztag- So being part of Georgia in any way is not an option for Abkhazia.
Hratch Tchilingirian- It is not a desired option for the Abkhazians. When
you speak to political leaders and ordinary people in Abkhazia, they say
they do not want to be part of Georgia, they prefer to be part of Russia.
But Abkhazia is very isolated from the rest of the world; they are very
dependent on Russia, so ultimately, Russia’s role in the resolution of the
conflict will be a determining factor. On the other hand, Karabagh is
different from Abkhazia because it has an outlet to the rest of the world
through Armenia — Karabagh is a virtual province of Armenia. Perhaps
legally or on paper Karabagh is a separate entity, but de facto, it is part
of Armenia.
Aztag- What do you think about the recent pronouncements of President
Saakashvili?
Hratch Tchilingirian- The nationalistic pronouncements of the President of
Georgia are not surprising, but the logic of his threats to sink Russian
ships going to Abkhazia is hard to understand. Saber rattling with Abkhazia
is one thing, but with Russia it has serious consequences. Russia still has
enormous levers in this region. Hostility towards Russia is not going to
make Georgia’s position any better nor is it going to resolve the Abkhaz
conflict to Georgia’s favor. I believe, once Saakashvilli’s `Rose
Revolution’ honeymoon is over, he is going to realize that the resolution of
Georgian’s major territorial, political and economic issues depend on good
relations with Russia.

Trial on Case of Incident in “Triumph” to Start on August 16

TRIAL ON CASE OF INCIDENT IN “TRIUMPH” TO START ON AUGUST 16
YEREVAN, August 12 (Noyan Tapan). The trial on the case of the incident that
took place at the Yerevan “Triumph” cafe on March 12 will start on August 16.
Mnatsakan Martirosian, judge of the court of the first instance of the Kentron
and Nork Marash Communities of Yerevan, who presided over the case, told NT’s
correspondent about it. To recap, there are two defendants on the case. They
are accused of premeditated great damaging to health. Haik Aramian, son of
former RA Minister of Urban Development of RA Ara Aramian, is also among the
defendants. As a result of the incident five people were wounded and received
bodily injuries caused with a sharp subject.

Counted Out? U.S. Boxing Loses Some Of Its Punch

Hartford Courant , CT
Aug 11 2004
Counted Out?
U.S. Boxing Loses Some Of Its Punch
ATHENS, Greece – There must have been a doozy of an archeological
find among the ancient Athenian ruins recently, because somebody
claims to have unearthed the U.S. Olympic boxing team.
You may have forgotten we have one.
The U.S. boxers are so far off the radar screen, they may have to get
knocked out by a Jennie Finch wild pitch to get on NBC. Coach Basheer
Abdullah said unlike the soccer and some other U.S. national teams,
his boxers have not been booed in foreign lands. Not one chant of
“Osama!” That might be scarier. Maybe nobody cares.
Boxing once was the can’t-miss programming of the Olympics. Nowhere
did the Cold War have more frostbite than inside the canvas ring.
Nowhere was the judging more suspect. Howard Cosell welcomed himself
into America’s living room and, in no time, he had us so geeked up we
wanted to climb into the ring ourselves and knock the smirk off Cuban
Teofilo Stevenson or bury one of those great Slavic bears.
George Foreman waved his tiny American flag.
Cassius Clay threw his gold medal off a bridge into the Ohio River.
Sugar Ray dazzled us. The Spinks boys landed the 1-2 golden punch.
And so many of our boxers – right up through Roy Jones’ colossal
ripoff in 1988 in Seoul – got stern lessons in international
corruption.
It made for unforgettable television. Yep, those were the salad days
of Ed Sullivan of Manhattan, Archie Bunker of Queens and Damoxenos of
Syracuse. Surely, you remember Damoxenos of Syracuse. He’s the boxer
who jabbed his fingers into the rib cage of Kreugas of Epidamnos and
ripped out his intestines. Yeah, some time B.C. in Olympia was the
last time the Americans won a boxing gold medal.
OK, the record book insists it has been eight years. It only seems
like 28 centuries.
Long gone are Cosell, the Cold War and the five gold medal machine of
1976. The U.S. has 47 boxing gold medals, far more than any country,
but 45 came before 1992. Oscar De La Hoya won in Barcelona, David
Reid won in Atlanta and if Howard’s toupee were still above ground,
he’d be going nuts about those numbers.
“It’s very important we have a great performance,” Abdullah said.
“We don’t need to do great, we have to do well,” counters 23-year-old
Jason Estrada of Providence, the first American super heavyweight to
win at the Pan-Am Games. “At least do better than the 2000 team to
help our sport.”
Even that chore might be too much for this young group of nine. The
Americans failed to win a gold medal in 2000 for the first time in 52
years; they did eek out two silver and two bronze. The fact that
Estrada, light heavyweight Andre Ward and middleweight Andre Dirrell
are projected as the only medalists demonstrates how far America has
fallen.
“The disadvantage is we’re young, but I think we have some greater
natural ability than the 2000 team,” Abdullah said. “They tell me
when you’re inexperienced and don’t know any better you have a
tendency to be a little more courageous.”
Speaking of young, Rau’shee Warren, 17, will return to the 12th grade
at Harmony High in Cincinnati after the Olympics. He’s 5-foot-3, 106
pounds, wears a size 4 shoe and the youngest American male in Athens
is so cute you just want to hug him. Compared to the grizzled pugs
from Russia, Cuba and Kazakhstan – the three might sweep the 11 gold
– the Cincinnati Kid and the Americans are babes. Still, they get no
free passes.
There already have been too many excuses … big American kids play
football. Too many leave the amateur ranks at an early age for the
money. Because of the scandals in the professional ranks, the sport
has staggered … yada, yada.
Ward, a boxing aficionado who travels with a DVD to watch great bouts
from the past, did offer one theory to USA Today:
“If I had to choose one thing, it was that [the ’76 Olympic team]
just attacked those other countries at the Olympics. There was no
fear, no doubts.”
Said Estrada: “I don’t know if the problem is talent. Some are born
more talented, but you can make up for it with heart and
conditioning.
“We have a lot of pro boxers out there right now who are making it
hard for the up and comers. A lot of these boxers are going to prison
for beating their wives, robbing and raping. It becomes a stereotype.
The world sees boxing as violent and ignorant. Half the people on
this team are nowhere near that. I know I’m not. It’s hard, but we’re
going to try to fix all of that.”
It is a team with stories begging to be told. Ward works out by
pushing a Cadillac Coup deVille through Oakland and will fight with a
photo of his late father taped to his boot. Ron Siler, already a
father of five at age 24, got out of prison and is turning his life
around. Dirrell is coached by his grandfather, Leon Lawson, who is a
friend and former training partner of Ali. Rock Allen has a twin
named Tiger and a brother named Bear. The only reason the
Armenian-born, home-schooled Vanes Martirosyan made the team was
because Andre Berto threw down Juan McPherson at the Trials. After
three embarrassing flip-flops by USA Boxing, both welterweights were
disqualified.
As for Estrada, he started on the Mount Pleasant High basketball team
as a freshman before he made his career choice.
“I’m a point guard with a good handle,” he said. “But at 255 pounds
everybody thinks I should play center. That’s why I got this tattoo,
Big Six, on my neck. I’m only 6-0, but I’m wide.”
There’s a lot to like about this team, but as of today, there’s no
reason for America to watch. The good news is the boxing finals don’t
end until the last day of the Olympics and the super heavyweight gold
medal bout will be one of Athens’ closing moments. There’s a chance
for Estrada and the two Andres to make everlasting impressions in
Everlast.
“I’m not going to lie to you,” Estrada said. “Money is a big
incentive for me, besides the gold medal and fighting for my country.
I have a 3-year-old son, Lennox, and I have to take care of him. Ever
since he was born, I’ve been on a winning streak. Everything I do is
for him. He’s the reason why I want to get that gold medal.
“But we need silver and bronze, too. We need medals, period.”

Nagorno-Karabakh enclave holds military exercises

Associated Press Worldstream
August 3, 2004 Tuesday 4:30 PM Eastern Time
Nagorno-Karabakh enclave holds military exercises
YEREVAN, Armenia
Forces in Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh enclave on Tuesday began an
annual military exercise designed to test their combat-readiness, a
military official said. The exercise came amid concerns that war
could erupt again in the region a decade after a cease-fire.
A spokesman for the military in the mostly ethnic Armenian enclave,
which has been de facto independent since Azerbaijan’s forces were
driven out in 1994, said live ammunition would be used in the 10-day
exercise involving regular troops and reservists. He said it was also
aimed at improving coordination in “defensive battles and
counterattacks.”
Nagorno-Karabakh is under control of an internationally unrecognized
ethnic Armenian government, and its forces also hold several sectors
of Azerbaijan outside of Nagorno-Karabakh itself. Sporadic firing
takes place across the demilitarized zone that separates the forces.
With no settlement in sight 10 years after a cease-fire ended a war
that killed some 30,000 people and drove about a million from their
homes, there are fears a new armed conflict could erupt. Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliev has expressed frustration with the stagnation
and has raised the prospects of military action.

Goshavank Under Threat of Destruction

GOSHAVANK UNDER THREAT OF DESTRUCTION
YEREVAN, August 2 (Noyan Tapan). The monastic complex of Goshavank
(Getikavank) is completely accident-prone. Artsrun Hovsepian, Director
of the Historical-Cultural Center, told NT’s correspondent that the
state of the complex sharply worsened after the 1988 earthquake, and
the restoration work hasn’t been carried out here for about 300
years. Only in 1961, the roof was partially renewed (but in a wrong
way), as a result inscriptions made with a cochineal paint (vordan
karmir) started being destroyed of rains. According to Artsrun
Hovsepian, these inscriptions contain historic information about
medieval Armenia. “The destruction of the inscriptions made with this
paint will be an irretrievable loss for the history,” said
A. Hovsepian. It was also mentioned that a museum, which has 10
exhibits, was opened at the temple in 1985. But today the museum is
situated in a timber house. According to A. Hovsepian, the Fund on
Goshavank Saving will be established upon the initiative of several
interested people in the near future. This Fund will find means for
the restoration of the complex. According to preliminary calculations,
about 260,000 dollars will be necessary for this purpose. The
Goshavank complex consists of seven constructions, including the
Cyclopean wall built in the first century, several churches, a chapel
and a vestibule. The first filigree khachkar (cross-stone) is
preserved in Goshavank. In 1184, Mkhitar Gosh, great medieval thinker,
philosopher, lawyer, first Armenian fabulist, created the first
Armenian code of laws, which left a deep trace in the development of
the world juridical thought. The great philosopher of the Middle Ages
established the Supreme Theological University here in 1198, where
along with other subjects they were taught art of wall
inscriptions. Great representatives of the Armenian literary and
spiritual though Kirakos Gandzaketsi, Martiros Sarkavag and Vanakan
Vardapet studied in this theological center.

Not by bread alone

The Economic Times
July 31, 2004
NOT BY BREAD ALONE
Adam Smith may not have got it exactly right when he observed in The
Wealth of Nations that “No society surely can be flourishing and
happy, of which the far greater part of the members are poor and
miserable.”
Flying against the face of that argument is the conclusion of a World
Values Survey conducted in 65 nations from 1999-01 by social
scientists and first reported by the British magazine New Scientist.
The survey indicated that poverty-stricken Nigeria had the world’s
highest percentage of happy people. When Cervantes stated in the 16th
century that “There are but two families in the world, the haves and
the have-nots”, he may never have anticipated that the 21st century
have-nots would have it in terms of happiness! Nigeria was followed
by Mexico, Venezuela, El Salvador and Puerto Rico, in that order.
At the bottom was Romania, just below Armenia and Russia. India was
ranked 21, not too bad for a nation which used to believe that
everything was maya!
The country whose Declaration of Independence describes as sacrosanct
“life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” did not figure in the
top ten, despite being the unrivalled economic and military
superpower.
The US was ranked 16th. The 19th century American writer Nathaniel
Hawthorne had enough wisdom to observe that “Happiness in this world,
when it comes, comes incidentally. Make it the object of pursuit and
it leads us to a wild goose chase.”
Richard Layard of the Centre for Economic Performance of the London
School of Economics may have put his finger on it when he was
recently quoted in Newsweek as stating that satisfying relationships
had a greater bearing on happiness than income.
What better way of forging such relationships than in nations like
Nigeria where community trust has helped people survive hard times?
Conversely, a single-minded pursuit of individual happiness could end
up in what the American writer Norman Mailer once called “an
air-conditioned nightmare.”