BAKU: Head Of Separatist Nagorno Karabakh Regime Passes Decision On

HEAD OF SEPARATIST NAGORNO KARABAKH REGIME PASSES DECISION ON HANDING OVER AZERI CAPTIVE ASHRAF JAFAROV

Azeri Press Agency
[ 18 Sep 2007 16:03 ]

Separatist Nagorno Karabakh regime will hand over Azerbaijani captured
on June 30 this year, APA reports quoting the State Commission on
Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons of the separatist
regime.

Chief of the commission Viktor Kocharian told Novosti-Armenia that new
"president" of the separatist regime Bako Saakyan passed a unilateral
decision on handing over the soldier. Victor Kocharian said they hope
the opposite side will also release two captured Armenians.

Armenians captured 22-year old Jafarov Ashraf Mahabbat in Aghdam and
now held in Nagorno Karabakh. Jafarov introduced himself as Samandar
Guliyev and still claims that he is Samandar Guliyev. Azerbaijani
serviceman Samir Mammadov captured by Armenians on December 24 last
year and Anar Aliyev captured on August 2 this year have not been
released.

Office of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in
Azerbaijan told APA even if the committee is appealed in connection
with the decision on releasing Azerbaijani captive, it is a secret
and is not publicized.

Ashraf Jafarov’s family told APA that they are unaware of the decision
on his release.

BAKU: We Inform International Organizations About Violation Of Cease

WE INFORM INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS ABOUT VIOLATION OF CEASEFIRE REGIME BY ARMENIAN: AZERBAIJANI VICE SPEAKER

Trend
15.09.2007 15:21:14

Azerbaijan, Fizuli / corr Trend S.Jaliloglu / The Azerbaijani
Parliament informs the international organizations about violation of
the ceasefire regime in the frontal zone by the Armenian armed forces,
Bahar Muradova, the Vice Speaker of the Azerbaijan Parliament, said
in an opening ceremony of a new secondary school in Ashagi Bahmanli
village of Fizuli District.

She noted that the Armenian armed divisions also commit arsons in
the occupied territory of Azerbaijan.

As a result of ceasefire violation the soldiers of the Azerbaijani
National Army, as ell as civilians, are killed and injured.

Muradova said that the parliament presents to international
organizations wide and fair information in this connection.

Ashagi Bahmanli village of Fizuli District of Azerbaijan was occupied
by the Armenian armed divisions in 1993. After 4 months the Azerbaijani
army liberated the village from the Armenian occupation.

Due to permanent firing the school in the village was unfit for
use. Last year, at the initiative of the Education Ministry a new
school constructed in the village.

The conflict between the two countries of South Caucasus began in 1988
due to territorial claims by Armenia against Azerbaijan. Armenia has
occupied 20% of the Azerbaijani land including the Nagorno-Karabakh
region and its seven surrounding Districts. Since 1992, these
territories have been under the occupation of the Armenian Forces. In
1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which time
the active hostilities ended. The Co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group
(Russia, France and USA) are currently holding peaceful negotiations.

Uncovering Northern Cyprus

UNCOVERING NORTHERN CYPRUS

Times Online, UK
September 14, 2007

Nick Redmayne is enthralled by the sights, cafe culture and people
of the less-visited Turkish sector Forestry watch station, near the
Persian palace remains of Vouni, western Kyrenia ranges

Picking up a tourist map in southern Cyprus one could be forgiven for
thinking that the Isle of Aphrodite lies in the realm of a contemporary
Middle Earth.

Substitute "Here be Dragons" for "Inaccessible due to Turkish
Occupation" and the myth would be complete.

Since 1974’s Turkish invasion North Cyprus has been in the shade of
its southerly neighbour, despite the Mediterranean sunshine.

Kofi Annan’s 2004 UN plan for reunification under a federal framework
failed after the south returned a resounding ‘no’ vote in twin
referendums. The goal of an undivided island was effectively kicked
into touch for the foreseeable future. In the same year, Greek
controlled Cyprus joined the EU, whilst the singular existence of
the Turkish Republic of North Cyprus (TRNC) effectively black balled
Turkey’s application to be the first secular Muslim state in the so
far Christian club of Europe.

However, these days despite international political isolation the
reality for apolitical tourists dispels the myth of dragons. Since
April 2003 the north/south border has been open and now five crossing
points exist across the island. The Cypriot capital Lefkosa (also known
as Nicosia) has a tourist attraction in its own right, Ledra Palace
gate, which lies beneath the fortress-like walls of the eponymous
one-time top hotel, now a UN barracks.

Here a steady trickle of Greek and Turkish Cypriots together with
curious EU nationals cross to "the dark side", whichever side that
may be, in a mundane process that belies diplomatic deadlock. Indeed
rumours that the world’s only remaining divided capital holds a
peculiar, if not healthy fascination for former East German visitors,
nostalgic for the days of the Berlin Wall, have more than a ring of
truth – dark tourism indeed.

In the context of North Cyprus, Lefkosa isn’t marketed as a tourist
destination. The city lies on the flat, featureless Mesaoria plain,
and away from any cooling sea breezes can claim the island’s highest
summer temperatures and levels of humidity. This superlative aside, the
city also excels in an immediate concentrated dose of the otherness
that permeates North Cyprus and highlights the rebel republic’s
enduring exoticism, an attribute long-since eschewed by the south.

During my recent visit I heeded the advice of others and upon
penetrating the old town’s substantial 16th Century Venetian walls,
utilised eight storeys of 1960s concrete, the Saray Hotel, to get the
best city view. With one’s back to the huge Turkish and TRNC flags of
painted stones, provocatively flown above the slopes of the Kyrenia
Mountains, the Green Line of division traces a twister-like path of
corruption across the city.

Scarred carcasses of buildings, some in partial collapse, others
pockmarked by gunfire abut wasteland sutured by barbed wire and grey
metal sheeting.

Perhaps more surprising is the other visual line of demarcation
formed by Greek Nicosia’s high-rise development, for better or worse
an indicator of the North’s relative economic as well as political
isolation.

Emerging once more at ground level, the immediacy of street life
quickly displaces thoughts of sentry posts and watchtowers. Walking
from the Saray through the cafe tables to Ataturk Square and the
landmark Venetian Column, the honey-coloured stone and fine facades
of the British-built Post Office and other government buildings seem
almost too fine to be functional. Taking a quick orientation using
thoughtfully placed street maps, heading south soon brings Rustem’s
bookshop into view. Lefkosa’s premier emporium for the written word,
Rustem’s is a proper bookshop.

In a mildly untidy antiquarian manner Turkish and foreign-language
titles are stuffed on shelves of all levels – it smells of books. I’m
sure JK Rowling is here somewhere, indeed Dumbledore himself would
not be out of place. A conversation is in full flow between a young
man halfway up an unhealthy-looking ladder and a woman at the counter,
no doubt bemoaning the effects of online retailing on high street book
sales. So then, a magical place for a happy half hour rustling about,
after which I buy my exit with a local guidebook. Leaving, I spy a pile
of turgid-looking English-language titles protesting the reality of the
Armenian holocaust, just a little too much – and the spell is broken.

The half-sunken entrance to the ancient Buyuk Hammam (Great Baths)
is just round the corner, its semi-subterranean entrance a measure of
the 14th century street level. I poke my head inside and am greeted
faintly by a very large man with a thick black moustache befitting
his stature. He launches unstoppably into an eclectic menu of
vaguely unsettling and most definitely sweaty hammam-type offerings:
"Everything for £15, no extras". I’m not a little relieved. "Can I
have a look?"; "Look? £1.50 Tamam OK?" Time to move on, it’s been 40
to 44 deg C for the last few days and I don’t feel the need to buy
a look in a steam bath when I’ve been living in one.

Lunch seems a more welcome prospect and as a bona fide commercial
traveller I feel it’s time to visit a travellers’ inn – fortunately
Lefkosa has an outstanding example in the Buyuk Han (Great Inn).

Originally built in the 16th century and seeing service as British
prison, even then overcrowding was a problem, the Han has lately
been restored to encompass within its walls a tranquil courtyard of
calm. Upper and lower cloistered rooms are now populated by art,
craft and curio shops, and at the centre of things there’s even a
scaled down traveller-sized mosque.

In one corner the family that runs the Sedirhan cafe has shifted food
prep al fresco. A woman of generous smiles is rolling out a sheet of
fresh pasta, almost a metre across, on a cool marble tabletop. Her
mother and daughters appear and the sheet is cut into squares,
everyone joins in to pinch them around morsels of spiced meat –
et voila, Turkish ravioli or more properly manti is on the menu. I
order some immediately.

Having carb-loaded with manti and seen the sun drop from overhead
I’m ready for a stroll down nearby Arista Street, through the market
traders, to get a close-up of the Green Line. No, I’m not von Berlin,
just naturally intrigued. For the tourist, the impact of partition
is under whelming, there’s no build up, no suspense, just grey metal
sheets stencilled with soldier caricatures making it clear that
further progress is prohibited.

Beyond the oily soil demarking an area favoured by ad hoc motor-repair
garages, the crumbling skeleton of an Armenian church lies close
to the divide, sealed off for reasons of imminent collapse as much
as anything.

>From the Greek side, the bell tower of a Catholic church looks down
imperiously on the decay.

Continuing, the Green Line enters the shady streets of grand houses
of Arabahmet. UN funded redevelopment has visited the district but
has not resulted in a sterile gentrification, and balconied upper
floors broadcast sounds of daily life; television, families living,
pots and pans clanging across to the divide.

Surprisingly a sunshine-bright cubist mural lights up the side of
the Cultural Centre – an award-winning commission from the British
Council, executed by American artist Farad Nargol O’Neill to which
both Turkish and Greek Cypriot youth contributed. Soon, I’m on the
Venetian ramparts and to my left a children’s playground occupies
the last bastion jutting into Nicosia. Through the slides and swings,
a simple wire fence is the only barrier. Below the alphabet changes
and traffic surges round the city walls. Greek and Greek Cypriot
flags fly opposite those of Turkey and TRNC.

A visit to Lefkosa/Nicosia certainly highlights a north/south boundary
but also marks a meeting of East and West. Whilst the past economic
depravations of division have without doubt prevented the TRNC to
progress in the manner of the south, in Lefkoþa, aspects both physical
and cultural have been maintained, where elsewhere they are now lost
for good. As money has started to filter in to the north, one can
only hope that this lesson is not overlooked in the race to catch up.

Later, a Turkish Cypriot taxi driver bemoaned the distance between
the island’s communities, "The old ones, my father, he speaks Greek
but me and this generation, no". Crossing the line in Cyprus is not
hard and it’s not a case of taking sides, rather an opportunity to
learn from another’s differing perspective and that’s an enduring
benefit of travel.

Need to know

Nick Redmayne is the updater of Bradt’s North Cyprus guidebook. He
travelled to Cyprus with Sun Express airlines. For more information
contact North Cyprus Tourist Centre 020 7631 1930.

–Boundary_(ID_qtHUk52BieYhv4XdiH5Hhw)–

Jonathan Henick Explains To Baku That U.S. Assistance To Karabakh Us

JONATHAN HENICK EXPLAINS TO BAKU THAT U.S. ASSISTANCE TO KARABAKH USED FOR HUMANITARIAN PURPOSE ONLY

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.09.2007 14:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The U.S. government is confident that the funds it
assigned to Nagorno Karabakh are used for humanitarian purpose only,"
said Jonathan Henick, the PR officer of the U.S. Embassy in Baku.

The sums are allocated by the U.S. Agency for International
Development, but the government closely watches the process. "These
funds cannot be spent on other needs, specifically military ones,"
the diplomat said, APA reports.

The U.S. House of Representatives with 241 votes ‘for’ and 178
‘against’ maintained parity in financial assistance to Armenia and
Azerbaijan. The states will receive $68 million each. $6 million will
be allocated to Nagorno Karabakh as humanitarian assistance.

Redback: Over 70 Carriers Deployed SmartEdge Routers

REDBACK: OVER 70 CARRIERS DEPLOYED SMARTEDGE ROUTERS
By Narayan Bhat, TMCnet Contributing Editor

TMCnet
September 13, 2007

San Jose-based Redback Networks (News – Alert) Inc. announced on
Wednesday that more than 70 carrier customers have deployed its
SmartEdge 100 multi-service edge router, making it one of the fastest
growing routers in the industry.

Introduced in March 2006, the SmartEdge 100 is Redback’s smallest
all-in-one router for data, voice, and video services.

A subsidiary of global telecom giant Ericsson (News – Alert), Redback
networks has a history of making video-centric routers for world’s
largest triple-play networks.

Redback notes that over the past 18 months, more 70 carriers in 35
countries deployed SmartEdge 100.

"The SmartEdge 100 is an ideal solution for carriers in emerging
markets, as well as for all carriers providing broadband service
to multi-dwelling buildings," said Simon Williams, VP of product
management, business development and strategy for Redback Networks,
in a statement.

Redback’s routers enable PCs and mobile devices to access the Internet.

According to Redback, telephone carriers have deployed the SmartEdge
100 in several countries – from Armenia to Australia, Brazil to
Cambodia, and Malaysia to Mexico.

The SmartEdge 100 uses the same operating system as Redback’s larger
routers, and supports many of the same network applications for data,
voice and video services.

Today, Redback Networks is managing 63 million broadband subscribers
for 15 of the top 20 telephone carriers worldwide.

Moreover, its multi-service routing platform also delivers next
generation broadband services such as VoIP, IPTV, On-Demand Video,
and on-line gaming.

Armenian Delegation To Take Part In The Session Of Council Of CIS Fr

ARMENIAN DELEGATION TO TAKE PART IN THE SESSION OF COUNCIL OF CIS FRONTIER TROOPS COMMANDERS IN ASTANA

ArmInfo
2007-09-12 13:07:00

Armenian delegation will take part in the session of Council of CIS
frontier troops commanders in Astana. As Arminfo was informed from
National Security Service of Armenia, the delegation will be headed
by commander of the Armenian Frontier Troops Headquarters, Colonel
Valery Atalyan. Over the session they are going to touch on several
problems, exchange views on the situation at external borders of
the CIS member-states and to discuss the cooperation problems which
are still relevant today. They will also discuss fulfillment of the
conception of the joint frontier policy of the CIS member-states
for 2007-2020.

The delegations of the frontier troops from Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine will take part in the session.

Days Of Russian Word Officially Started In Yerevan

DAYS OF RUSSIAN WORD OFFICIALLY STARTED IN YEREVAN

ArmInfo
2007-09-12 13:09:00

The Days of Russian Word in Armenia, organized within the frames
of Russian language Year, being held by the decree of the Russian
President Vladimir Putin, officially started in Yerevan today.

Opening ceremony of the Russian Word Days took place in the building
of National Academy of Science. Representaives of the Armenian and
Russian writers’ unions, literature and scientific community took part
in opening. As the head of Armenian writers’ union Levon Ananyan said,
holding of the Year of Armenia in Russian in 2006 promoted raising
of the image of our country in the eyes of Russians and creating its
positive face. The leader of the Russian Society of Friendship and
Cooperation with Armenia, Viktor Krivopuskov, said before opening of
the Russian Word Days in Armenia they implemented the great work on
publishing the works of the Armenian writers and poets in Russian.

Today Treaty on Friendship and Cooperation between writers’ unions
of Armenia and Russia was also signed.

To Change The Model Or To Become The Holder Of The Model?

TO CHANGE THE MODEL OR TO BECOME THE HOLDER OF THE MODEL?
Harutyun Gevorgyan

Hayots Ashkharh daily
Sept 6 2007
Armenia

Leader of National Democratic Union Vazgen Manukyan opened some of
his playing cards prepared for the forthcoming presidential elections,
in "Pastark" club yesterday. We should remind you that this political
figure was the first to announce about his unreserved nomination for
presidency and refused to participate in the parliamentary elections.

V. Manukyan said Armenia’s political life is in a certain governance
model formed in 1994 after the end of Artsakh war. The peculiarity
of that model is that there is a group of chosen ones in the state
structure that can afford any type of business, unpunished murders,
for which later they compensate during the elections.

Leader of National Democratic Union says the people and the social
structures don’t have any role or influence in this system. "This model
develops, but the worst thing is, the model is not effective and the
development of the country falls behind from the world. And it is not
directed to the improvement of the country’s political system. For me
election is a way to change the model. For some people election is a
means to become the holder of the model or an opportunity to change
the chosen layer."

V. Manukyan states, more often internal political developments are
conditioned by the logic of making their own people as chosen ones.

"I can’t understand some judgments. For example I can’t understand,
when Artashes Geghamyan says the challenges oblige us to be similar to
the authorities. And what has changed from 2003, what new challenges
have been announced that oblige us to find common language with the
authorities instead of struggling against them."

Leader of National Democratic Party touched upon the issue of Levon
Ter-Petrosyan’s returning to policy. "Levon Ter-Petrosyan doesn’t
utter a word. I’m sure he won’t nominate his candidacy. But his
supporters keep on stating that most of the electorate needs a new
"master". And only Levon Ter-Petrosyan can be this new "master".

This means he can win. This means we should unite and follow him.

This is a false mentality."

The most necessary thing, to change the model, according to V. Manukyan
is the corresponding social movement. "If election is an end in
itself, it will have the same conclusion as it usually has in our
reality. When there is no vigilant social movement, with a leader,
with a guiding team, we can’t expect any changes. And if this marazmus
continues it will simply be impossible.

Everyone speaks about a united candidate, but if from the beginning
it is not clear who the united candidate is and around whom we should
unite, then it is impossible to settle issues by sitting, chatting and
drinking coffee. Then, life itself will nominate the united candidate.

Leader of the National Assembly states a dozen of candidates will
be nominated for presidency but only three or four will be real
candidates.

"Two or three from those three or four candidates will withdraw their
candidacy immediately before the elections, saying that they don’t
have any chances to win the elections. After which one or two pivotal
candidates will appear. If you remember in 1996 they got together and
decided that Vazgen Manukyan should be the united candidate. With 7-8
parties we were trying to solve this problem. And when it came clear
that the overwhelming majority of the society supports me we united
on certain conditions and I became a united candidate."

V. Manukyan didn’t deny that there is no pre-condition – a social
demand – to change the model. But he said this factor is not very
important, because anyway people are dissatisfied, but the problem is,
the fundamental reason of this situation is not explained properly. "
We propose a model that will never become old, a state based on
national values and national culture but the form of governance is
European. I’m not very interested in my social rating.

Because it shows to what extent you have managed to attract the
people. But I don’t have any desire to attract the people. The most
important thing is to put forward a task and to inspire the people.

To make them follow you and settle the problems. If you manage to
do so, then your rating will sharply increase. If someone with high
rating proposes me to unite with him I will refuse saying that I
don’t need his rating if he doesn’t have any issue to settle."

Commission To Boost Competition Among Media

COMMISSION TO BOOST COMPETITION AMONG MEDIA

KarabakhOpen
06-09-2007 13:37:17

The National Assembly passed amendments to the law on the Public
Services and Economic Competition Regulatory Commission. According
to the amendments, the commission is entitled to boosting competition
among the media.

By the way, the Commission of Karabakh also deals with the TV and
radio frequencies. However, since the commission has just been
set up, those who wished to set up a TV company had nowhere to turn
to. Therefore, there is only one local channel in Karabakh – the Public
Television. Apparently, the government decided to enable opening
an alternative channel. Although, unfortunately, there was no such
opportunity before the election. However, it is not late to do it now.

Georgian President Slams UN, Warns Against Buying Property In Abkhaz

GEORGIAN PRESIDENT SLAMS UN, WARNS AGAINST BUYING PROPERTY IN ABKHAZIA – TEXT

Rustavi-2 TV
6 Sep 07

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has defiantly rejected
calls by the UN and other international organizations to relocate
a patriot youth camp located in the village of Ganmukhuri, on the
Georgian-controlled side of the Abkhaz border. In a speech at the
camp, Saakashvili praised the international community for "finally
speaking out" following the alleged bombing of the Georgian village
of Tsitelubani on 6 August whereas before "no-one cared" when Georgia
endured similar "attacks". He expressed the hope that the world would
give a similar reaction to the expulsion of most of the ethnic Georgian
population of Abkhazia following the 1992-93 war.

Saakashvili warned foreigners against purchasing property in Abkhazia
that was abandoned by Georgian refugees and pledged that all such
property would be confiscated and returned to its original owner. He
also touted the country’s accomplishments under his rule and said
Georgia was "closer than ever before" to reclaiming its breakaway
regions and achieving unity. The following is the text of Saakashvili’s
speech carried live by Rustavi-2 TV on 6 September:

[Presenter] We go now live to Ganmukhuri, in the [Georgian-Abkhaz]
conflict zone, where the Georgian president has opened a new school.

[Saakashvili, transmission begins mid-sentence] – where gangs would
come in from various regions of Abkhazia and from other regions of
Georgia, as well as local robbers would run rampant. A few years ago,
when we came up with the idea to open the patriot camp – that was two
years ago – I said that a school should be built in Ganmukhuri. It
was set up very well. Now we are opening a kindergarten and pre-school
and I hope we will also do that well.

Kristina here [a young girl at his side] joined us in the car. On
the way Kristina told me, [Education Minister] Kakha Lomaia and
[Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti Province governor] Zaza Gorozia that she was
reading (?Main Reed) and Harry Potter. She wants to say a few words.

[Young girl] I want to extend my great thanks to the president and to
the minister for giving us such a wonderful school. My Abkhaz coevals
live quite close by here. Some of them have been my guests. I am
proud of my president and minister. I told them that they have made
my dreams come true and that we love them very much. Mr President,
you have crossed over on the Inguri bridge [on the border with
separatist-controlled territory; as heard]. There are numerous such
bridges in Georgia, but we are confident that we, together with you,
will manage to build yet one more bridge – a bridge between us and
Abkhaz children. It will be as beautiful as a rainbow. This will fulfil
yet another of our dreams: to see old Dioscuria [old Greek name for
Sukhumi], which is frequently mentioned as a small paradise, because we
Georgians are capable of forgiveness, mercy and great love. [Applause]

[Saakashvili] But in order to build good bridges and to ensure
that everything is the way we want it, we must be strong, my dear
people. We must be very strong and we must work very efficiently. We
must be united. Georgia now has incredible support throughout the
whole world. Georgia is now incredibly united, as never before. It
is the combination of these two factors that will certainly lead us
to victory.

Georgia would always lose out when the rest of the world did not
care about its fate and when we attacked and besieged each other,
when neighbour shot at neighbour. These villages have witnessed all
of this. At that time their country’s army did not bring relief,
instead posed a danger and it was an unpleasant event when it would
come to your village. At that time the police were not protectors,
but enemies. We have now turned all of that on its head. I want us
all together to comprehend just how far Georgia has come and how
close we are to ultimate reunification and ultimate victory.

Our task today is to maintain all of this and grow stronger with
each passing day, develop the economy with each passing day – this
year we will have a very high economic growth rate. We must build new
homes, new cities – we are building new cities. Look at how Sighnaghi
[town in eastern Georgia] has been built. Look at Shaori [village in
northern Georgia] will be built.

Look at what Batumi has become – it has become the best city on the
Black Sea. Look at what Kutaisi [town in western Georgia] will become
very soon – we have separate programmes for Kutaisi. The same for
Tbilisi, Zugdidi and many other cities. We are working very hard on
Zugdidi. All of this is being done so that it can later be extended
to the whole of Georgia. I want us all to remember that no matter
what a beautiful city Tbilisi – where I was born and raised – is,
no matter how beautiful Batumi – which is a city of incredible beauty
on the Black Sea – is, no matter how unique and miraculous Sighnaghi
is, no matter how much we may love Zugdidi and Kutaisi, Georgia’s
most beautiful city is another city. It is called Sukhumi and we
must rebuild Sukhumi in the exact same way [applause; crowd chants
"Georgia, Georgia"].

I want you to know that there are two kinds of Georgian
politicians. One type believes that a nice office, incomes, salaries
and elections mean everything. I heard a few days ago on television
[opposition politicians were saying]: the elections are coming
soon. These hapless people fail to realize one thing – we are not
engaged in an election campaign, we have a historic chance, the
likes of which no generation of Georgians has had over the past 10
centuries. We have come to a historic moment – there is great effort
and a great sense of togetherness which is aimed at reunifying Georgia,
strengthening Georgia and establishing and cementing its place on
the world map. This is much bigger than any elections, this is much
bigger than any political campaign. Today, thankfully, our people,
our population, our multi-ethnic society, which consists of Ossetians,
Armenians, Azerbaijanis, ethnic Georgians – naturally, and people of
other creeds, representatives of many other ethnic groups. Every one
of them has understood much more than certain politicians – namely,
that we are the most united today. Now the most important thing is
rolling up our sleeves and getting down to work and everything else
is of hundredth-rate significance and is not even worthy of attention.

I want to warn everyone-[changes tack] There has been quite a stir in
these past few days about the selling of property which was snatched up
during one of the most immoral and still forgotten ethnic cleansings
in the history of the world – the expulsion of nearly 500,000 people
[as heard] from Abkhazia.

These 500,000 people included 300,000 ethnic Georgians; tens
of thousands of ethnic Jews – I have seen them in Tel Aviv and
Jerusalem and I know how much they miss Abkhazia; Pontic Greeks,
who were evacuated by the Greek navy and to this day long to return
to Abkhazia; Ukrainians, Russians and many Abkhaz. I want to tell
everyone that this property belongs to these people and that the
Georgian state will protect them. [In a significantly louder voice:]
Any attempt on the part of some adventurist from Russia to buy so much
as one inch of this land-[changes tack] I vow and I guarantee that we
will confiscate all of it from them and leave them with nothing. They
will find themselves with nothing [applause and cheers].

We are not developing so that some foreigner [Georgian: gadamtieli;
literally: "person from across the mountains"] can come here and
appropriate the property of honourable and peaceful people. We are not
becoming stronger and showing the world some of the best examples of
development so that someone can oppress and belittle us. Our task is
to unite Georgia, to have peace in Georgia and create conditions for
the development of each and every citizen. We do not need destruction
at all.

But I also want to tell the international community: many things
have happened recently. For the first time the world has spoken out
absolutely openly and publicly against attacks on Georgia. Before,
they would bomb us, kill our people and destroy our houses and still,
no-one would speak out, no-one cared about us. Now, Georgia’s friends
have formed a real coalition.

And I want this to extend to all international organizations, to all
bureaucrats at international organizations. We do not need hapless
and amoral advice and friendly consultations where we are told that
we need to move the camp away from the Abkhaz border. Some of the
children who come here were expelled from their homes there. [Imagine:]
A bandit kicks you out of your house, appropriates your property and
sits in that house while the police come and advise you not to walk
along that street in order to avoid angering that bandit and that
it is better to steer clear and just leave. We will not leave. Let
those bandits leave and return what belongs to us [applause].

Therefore, we ask not for such advice, not even for such friendly
consultations. We demand that you [international organizations]
speak out and we demand that the UN and other organizations answer
for what they have done in order to right the consequences of this
absolutely mindless, inhumane crime, one of the worst committed against
humanity in the 20th century, and what has been done to ensure that all
resolutions which concern the return of the refugees – not just in Gali
[predominately ethnic Georgian-populated district on the border with
the rest of Georgia, where many Georgian IDPs returned following the
conflict]-[changes tack] Gali is right here, Gali is not a problem. We
must return to Gagra, we must return to Bichvinta [Russian: Pitsunda],
we must return to Ochamchire, we must return to Sukhumi [applause].

I want to tell all bureaucrats to show decency. We must all together
raise our voices against that which undermines the conscience of
mankind and the principles of humanity. Together we must all manage
to establish peace once again in our multi-ethnic, many centuries-old
country.

I want to once again welcome you, my dear people. I want pay great
thanks to [Deputy Culture Minister] Lado Vardzelashvili and everyone
who worked on this camp. The patriot movement is the most effective
movement in Georgia.

It is often said: what is this, a military camp? We do not need
military camps at our patriot camps. We already have very good military
camps in the Georgian armed forces. These are not paramilitary
camps. These are not camps where people are told to hate certain
people. These are camps where friendship, love for our fellow citizens
and love for our homeland are taught, where people are taught that
we are all part of a greater whole, where people come to simply be in
contact with other people. There is no politics in this. If there is
politics, it is the best kind of politics – it is a policy of human
relations, it is a policy of having a civilized attitude towards the
state, it is a policy of our future. I want to point out that there
has not been a single problem, not a single misstep. Each young person
here is better than the next. A great many works have been created
here by talented young people – music has been written, poems have
been written, pictures have been drawn. Ultimately, that is why we
are all here. I have seen other camps, Soviet camps. I was in Artek
myself [Soviet pioneer camp in Crimea]. Not long ago one idiot wrote
that I applied my experience in Artek to Georgia. You have nothing in
common with Soviet pioneers, thankfully. You are studying something
else altogether. That was an inhumane regime while we are learning
humanity and human development, we are learning humanism and everything
that is part of the modern world. I want to thank you all very much. I
want to tell you that this year we have 30,000 young people staying
at the patriot youth camps and that we will increase this number to
50,000 next year and double the number of kids at this camp. We will
increase the number of camps. We will equip them even better – though
this place is very well set up, as I often see it on television. And
indeed when I look at you-[changes tack] Everyone in Georgia wishes
they could be a little younger, 17, 18 or 20 years old. [They say:]
I wish I could go to Ganmukhuri and that life and youth would begin
now. Thank you very much. I wish you success and victory.