Russian military presence guarantees Armenia’s security – DM

Russian military presence guarantees Armenia’s security – defence boss

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
3 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The Armenian authorities regard Russian-Armenian military cooperation
as “a component of the republic’s national security and therefore,
believe that the presence of the Russian military base on the
republic’s territory is very correct and necessary for the country”.
The Armenian defence minister and secretary of the National Security
Council, Serzh Sarkisyan, said this at a meeting with a group of
Russian journalists today. “The Russian military presence promotes the
calm situation in the region,” Sarkisyan said.

Yerevan Mayor Laying Grounds for Opposition Rallies Prohibition

A1 Plus | 17:42:41 | 01-04-2004 | Politics |

YEREVAN MAYOR LAYING GROUNDS FOR OPPOSITION RALLIES PROHIBITION

Yerevan’s Mayor Yervand Zakaryan speaking at today’s news conference on
expected opposition rallies said the municipality was empowered to authorize
or prohibit rally by presidential decree dated from 1997.

Zakaryan was reminded that there is not a word about authorizing in the
decree. Coordination of rallies was mentioned in it.

“What are you basing denying authorization on?” Aykakan Zhamanak newspaper
correspondent asked.

Zakaryan answered there is no permission for power seizure in the
constitution and that’s why the municipality is cautious about giving
permission for rallies.

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Two Wounded in Shooting

A1 Plus | 20:54:27 | 01-04-2004 | Social |

TWO WOUNDED IN SHOOTING

Shooting was heard today in Yerevan’s district Malatia-Sebastia. Two
wounded young men were taken to hospital, Azatutyun radio station
reports.

According to unconfirmed information son of General Manvel Grigoryan,
son of former head of Malatia-Sebastia district Vahan Zatikyan and
nephew of MP Hakob Hakobyan were involved in the incident.

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Ukraine grants rights to deportees

Kazinform, Kazakhstan
March 24 2004

Ukraine grants rights to deportees

Astana. 24 March. KAZINFORM – The Ukrainian Parliament passed the
national rehabilitation draft law, Kazinform reports with reference
to ITAR-TASS.
The governmental document reads that `the state guarantees equal
Constitution rights and residential terms including housing,
employment, education, national, cultural and spiritual growth to
deportees who return to their native land.’ The draft law binds
authorities to establish terms for voluntary return, adaptation and
integration in the Ukrainian Deportees’ Community.

In 1944 nearly 200 thousand Crimean tatars were deported after Crimea
had been freed from fascist oppression. Local Bulgarians, Armenians,
Greeks, 38 people in total, shared the same fate. Earlier, in 1941
over 50 thousand Germans who lived for a century and a half were
deported. They were permitted only in the late 80-es. Since 1988 more
than 260 thousand Crimean tatars, 12 thousand Bulgarians, Armenians,
Greeks and Germans returned to Crimea.

BAKU: Talvitie visiting Azerbaijan

Baku Today
March 19 2004

Talvitie visiting Azerbaijan

Baku Today 19/03/2004 17:02

European Union’s special representative for South Caucasus Heikki
Talvitie will meet with Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev and
foreign minister Vilayat Guliyev on March 22, 2004.
Talvitie arrived in Baku yesterday on March 18. Talvitie has met with
leader of Karabakh’s Azeri community Nizami Bahmanov today. Bahmanov
has presented Talvitie archive materials on the history of Karabakh
during their meeting.
Whether Talvitie will visit Karabakh remains unreported.

The Shield – Back to basics – not bodies

Chicago Tribune , IL
March 9 2004

`THE SHIELD’
Back to basics — not bodies

By Steve Johnson
Tribune television critic

When “The Shield” — which returns for a sharp-looking third season
Tuesday (9 p.m., FX) — came on the scene two years ago, it made an
impact way out of proportion to its venue.

Airing on the then-little-known cable channel FX, the gritty series
about a violently corrupt cop drew a big-for-cable audience and even
won star Michael Chiklis an upset Emmy for best dramatic series
actor. It was a scorcher of a show, too, giving viewers an angle on
TV police work they hadn’t seen before: more violent, more venal and,
making it all seem more real, with an arresting attention to little
details such as the way a bystander reacts to a violent bust.

Then, last season, it seemed to suffer sophomore slump in the early
going. Creator-executive producer Shawn Ryan (a Rockford native) was,
perhaps, a little drunk on his freedoms, a little too stuck on the
idea that violence was what sold the show.

There was an ill-conceived violent foray into Mexico by Chiklis’
Detective Vic Mackey and his renegade Strike Team, and Mackey felt
the urge to punish one drug dealer by searing his face on an electric
stove coil.

By the end of the year, though, it had settled back into a study,
primarily, of the characters in the show’s pressure-cooker,
illuminating not just the dirty work of keeping the peace but the
brutal office politics among police and the family pressures the job
brings.

This third season, in its first four incendiary episodes, seems to be
following suit, more like the beginning of the first year than the
beginning of the second.

Ryan isn’t just piling up bodies here, he’s putting the carnage in
service to taut storytelling that’s often leavened by humor and
always features crackling dialogue and one of TV drama’s best casts.

The animating story is a version of “I’ve Got a Secret.” Last year,
Mackey and crew pulled off a massive heist of Armenian gang money.
This year, they’re feeling the pressure, and temptations, of keeping
the money.

“Just gotta ride things out,” says Detective Shane Vendrell (Walton
Goggins), Mackey’s increasingly troubled and troublesome second.

The plan is for the Strike Team to do everything by the book, draw no
attention, until it becomes safe to spend.

Playing it cool proves to be not so easy, however. First, the bodies
of dead Armenians start showing up as the gang leaders try to figure
out where their cash went. In one of the charming gruesome touches
that have become a signature of the show, they’re footless.

Straight-arrow Detective Dutch Wagenbach (Jay Karnes) is
investigating the murders, and he’s the kind of guy who’s likely, one
way or another, to figure out the truth.

Capt. Aceveda (Benito Martinez), newly elected to City Council but
still on the force until his term begins, has his own suspicions
about the money, even as he plays hardball to keep one-time ally
Detective Claudette Wyms (CCH Pounder) from taking over the
captaincy.

And there are pressures at home for cash.

David Mamet, apparently a big fan, will direct an episode later in
the season, but he’ll have a tough time matching the penetrating eye
of Clark Johnson (“Homicide: Life on the Street”), who helms the
first two episodes of what is, once again, a first-tier TV series.

BAKU: Over 1m dollars amassed in Azeri help-the-army fund

Bilik Dunyasi news agency, Baku, in Russian
11 Mar 04

Over 1m dollars amassed in Azeri help-the-army fund

BAKU

The amount of funds amassed so far in the help-the-army fund of the
Azerbaijani armed forces totals 6.72bn manats [1.37m dollars]. A total
of 14,000 dollars have been transferred into the fund in foreign
currency, the press service of the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry has
told Bilik Dunyasi news agency.

The ministry spokesman, Ramiz Malikov, said that these donations
would not be spent on Azerbaijani officer Sr Lt Ramil Safarov who is
being charged with killing an Armenian officer in Budapest.

“The Azerbaijani president and commander-in-chief, Ilham Aliyev,
keeps the fund’s spending under his personal control,” Col Malikov
said.

BAKU: Azeri, Armenian “mafia bosses” in fear of Georgia’s crackdown

Hurriyyat, Baku, in Azeri
11 Mar 04, p 4

Azeri, Armenian “mafia bosses” in fear of Georgia’s corruption
crackdown – paper

Serious processes are under way in the South Caucasus. The region has
attracted the world’s attention. After his election [Georgian]
President Mikheil Saakashvili started economic and political reforms
that have global significance.

[Passage omitted: More on Georgian politics]

The fight against corruption in Georgia is a highly risky undertaking
since Saakashvili takes on not only local corrupt officials, but also
giant international corrupt networks which earn dirty money and use
Georgia for transit. The directives to protect the borders have
caused fear among certain mafia-related structures in Ukraine,
Azerbaijan and Armenia. Saakashvili said that by controlling the
railway he would rid the country of corruption. Suffice it to recall
the arrest of the former Georgian railways chief, Akaki Chkhaidze.

[Passage omitted: More on Georgian politics]

During his visit to Azerbaijan, Saakashvili sent a message to
[Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev by saying that “together we can
work miracles”. Our newspaper reported that Georgia handed over to
the Azerbaijani authorities a list of Azerbaijani officials with
criminal links to their venal Georgian counterparts. There are even
reports that some officials will be summoned by court when Chkhaidze
is tried by the Georgian law-enforcement bodies.

[Passage omitted: Details]

The Georgian government closed down corridors on its territory
between the Azerbaijani and Armenian borders, which caused fear among
mafia bosses in Armenia and Azerbaijan. According to unofficial
statistics, Armenia and Azerbaijan are involved in shady dealings to
the sum of 35m dollars. This mainly amounts to export of Azerbaijan’s
oil and food to Armenia. The closure of borders means that
higher-ranking state officials will lose their dirty profits.
Moreover, this will create an economic crisis in Armenia. That the
Azerbaijani bodies have failed to take any serious measures to stop
the trade confirms that the state bodies protect the mafia.

In the wake of Saakashvili’s visit to the USA, the fight against
corruption and closure of borders has become more intense. This leads
to the conclusion that the USA uses Saakashvili as a stick to punish
the Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders for their servitude to Russia.
During the upcoming visit to Armenia, Saakashvili will discuss with
[Armenian President Robert] Kocharyan the fight against corruption
and urge Kocharyan to join efforts. Otherwise, Georgia will refuse to
restore the railway to Armenia.

Should Aliyev and Kocharyan fail to take serious measures against
corruption, the processes in Georgia may trigger a US export of
“velvet revolution” to Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Saakashvili: Armenia can help Georgia repair relations with Russia

Pravda, Russia
March 12 2004

Mikhail Saakashvili: Armenia can help Georgia repair relations with Russia

Armenia is a nation which today enjoys the greatest recognition among
the countries of the region, said Georgian President Mikhail
Saakashvili in an interview Friday with the Armenian newspaper, Azg.
In his view, Armenia retains its attraction, ‘in addition to which,
she has a centuries-old history of friendship with the West and
Russia, and all that must be used in the interest of the entire
region.’

Mikhail Saakashvili likewise noted that he has hopes for the
‘economic and juridical union of Georgia and Armenia.’ ‘I want to
share our experience. For example, right now we are trying to
normalize relations with Russia. I think that in this respect Armenia
can be of help to us, insofar as she maintains close ties of
friendship with Russia,’ the Georgian president said.

In addition, he said that he hoped during his visit to Armenia to
learn and adopt a great deal from President Kocharian, ‘everything
that can be adopted.’