Armenia, Yerevan and regions: Support to democratic governance

TendersInfo – Project Notices
June 23, 2012 Saturday

Armenia, Yerevan and regions(marzes) : Support to democratic
governance in Armenia

Project Start : 05/2012
Project End : 11/2012
Location : Armenia, Yerevan and regions(marzes)

EU Contribution: 191,170.00 (100% of total).
Scope : The general objective of this assignment is to support the EU
Delegation to Armenia in the design and preparation of the envisaged
project to support the civil society and media to engage in democratic
governance in Armenia. The specific objectives of this assignment are:
To produce an up-to-date situation analyses on the engagement of the
civil society and media in governance in the Republic of Armenia; To
develop a Terms of Reference on the basis of the situation analyses
and recommendations of the Delegation which will be used for the
procurement of the envisaged project.

Republican Party of Armenia sees Kocharyan behind Oskanyan’s back

168 Zham, Armenia
June 19 2012

The Republican Party of Armenia sees Kocharyan behind Oskanyan’s back

There are numerous aspects to political motives behind the launching
of criminal proceedings [on money-laundering charges] against [Vardan]
Oskanyan, former Armenian foreign minister and MP from the Prosperous
Armenia [PA] party. However, there is no doubt that the launch of the
criminal case has a political context.

Criminal proceedings target PA

It is simply interesting what the reason is [for the criminal
proceedings to have been launched]. Opinions on this issue are divided
into two groups. The first opinions voiced immediately after the
launch of the criminal case were that with this move the authorities
started to exert pressure on the PA for not having joined the
coalition, especially considering the fact that the National Security
Service launched the criminal case on 25 May after the PA leader,
Gagik Tsarukyan, made a statement saying he was not joining the
[ruling] coalition. This circumstance produced comments in the
political field that the authorities had started exerting pressure on
Tsarukyan the next day after he made the statement. Certainly, it
cannot be ruled out that the criminal case launched against Oskanyan
may be targeting the PA to some extent as well, but it does not seem
to be the main reason behind it. In any case, considering the
political developments, there is no sense to trigger a new
confrontation between the Republican Party of Armenia and the PA. Yes,
the PA has not joined the coalition but, according to rumours,
[Armenian] President Serzh Sargsyan and Tsarukyan reached an agreement
during negotiations over the issue of coalition. This means that the
PA’s not joining the coalition is the result of mutual agreement.
Also, if the authorities wanted to put pressure on the PA, they would
hardly choose Oskanyan as the target. The authorities could have done
it by looking into the business operations of Tsarukyan or other MPs
who are members of his party.

[Passage omitted: the report says that Oskanyan’s strong criticism of
the current authorities differs from the PA’s “rather mild” position
on the policies of the authorities, and thus it would be wrong to
suggest that the criminal case against Oskanyan is a means of pressure
on the PA.]

Criminal proceedings target Oskanyan and former President Kocharyan

There is also an opposite opinion, according to which developments
surrounding Oskanyan and the Civilitas Foundation established by him
target him and former President Robert Kocharyan. Oskanyan is
considered to be a figure close to the former president [Kocharyan].
His presence in the PA is connected with Kocharyan’s striving for
stepping up his influence on the PA, which may not be liked by PA
leaders. Besides, it is still unclear if Kocharyan or Oskanyan will
run in the 2013 presidential election. It is clear that if Oskanyan
runs in the election, he will do so under Kocharyan’s protection. None
of them gives a definite answer regarding this issue. As for the
current authorities, headed by Sargsyan, it is clear that they must
ensure themselves against the imminent threat.

So do the incidents connected with Oskanyan have such motives? Are the
authorities trying to diminish Kocharyan and Oskanyan’s wish to run in
the presidential election? Rumours have been put into circulation to
this end saying that Oskanyan has been stripped of his impunity [as
MP].

[Passage omitted: PA spokesperson Tigran Urikhanyan has refused to
comment on a possible link between the criminal proceedings against
Oskanyan and the presidential election in 2013. An MP from the
opposition Heritage party, Stepan Safaryan, believes that the
proceedings will be stopped if Oskanyan announces that he will not run
in the forthcoming election.]

[translated from Armenian]

Do Russians wish a little victorious war?

WPS Agency, Russia
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
June 22, 2012 Friday

DO RUSSIANS WISH A LITTLE VICTORIOUS WAR?

by Pavel Felgengauer
Source: Novaya Gazeta, June 20, 2012, p. 7

HIGHLIGHT: WHY RUSSIA REINFORCES ITS MILITARY GROUP IN THE NORTH
CAUCASUS?; Return of Vladimir Putin to the Kremlin noticeably shifts
the foreign and defense policy towards demonstration of
aggressiveness, which is in general characteristic for authoritarian
regimes in the period of domestic problems.

Return of Vladimir Putin to the Kremlin noticeably shifts the foreign
and defense policy towards demonstration of aggressiveness, which is
in general characteristic for authoritarian regimes in the period of
domestic problems. This week and last week anonymous military sources
kept reporting that a group of ships of the Black Sea Fleet was ready
for a long-range voyage to Syria and sometimes that the ships nearly
departed from Sevastopol heading for Bosporus. There were allegedly
marines and possibly armored vehicles on board of big landing ships
Nikolai Filchenkov and Tsezar Kunikov. The goal of the voyage was
evacuation of Russian citizens from Syria and defense of the base in
the Syrian port of Tartus, the last Russian military outpost outside
of the borders of the former USSR.

In any case, it seems that the final decision is not made yet and
command of the fleet says that the big landing ships are standing near
the pier, there are no marines on board and leaves for the crews are
not abolished. Suddenly, Deputy Air Force Commander General Vladimir
Gradusov announced openly that “aviation is ready to fulfill any task”
set by Putin including air defense of the Russian combat ships in case
of their sending to Syria.

A general who wants to retain his post should report to the public in
such way. However, Gradusov was obviously too hasty like our football
fans in Poland. It is possible to defend the ships in the Black Sea
Fleet but there can be only long-range aviation further. There are
only a few aerial tankers IL-78 in Russia.

About 30-40 years ago, during conflicts in the Middle East, Soviet Air
Force was based in the region. At present, there are no Russian air
bases on the coasts of the Mediterranean Sea and it is necessary to
fly there requesting a corridor through airspace of NATO countries.
Along with this, the shortest way is through Turkey that wants to
dismiss the regime of Bashar Assad in Damascus too.

We do not have aircraft-carriers in good repair too. In January, our
only aircraft-carrier Admiral Kuznetsov entered Tartus but it had only
eight last fighters Su-33 in good repair aboard (they are not produced
now) and two helicopters Ka-27 in the rescue version to save pilots in
case of Su-33 crash. We do not have even this now. Kuznetsov is put
into overhaul that is planned to last until 2017.

The big landing ships made a few decades ago in Gdansk may deliver
only a few hundreds of marines and several armored personnel carriers
(there are no amphibious tanks left). Such “group” is unable to
conduct serious combat operations independently and is unable to cope
even with a normal peacekeeping operation without support and approval
of the West: it will have to move, receive reinforcements and
procurements through Bosporus that Turkey may block at any moment.

Thus, it seems that Russian authorities are not going to fight in
Syria or to force someone to “peace.” Probably they planned something
like the famous “march to Pristine” in June of 1999 when a hundred of
paratroopers-peacekeepers at armored personnel carriers moved to
Kosovo from Bosnia with an escort of Serbian police? There was a lot
of noise and national pride like after the recent match against the
Czech Republic and the end result was approximately the same. Russia
did not receive a separate sector in Kosovo, the Albanian majority
ascended to power and declared independence. Putin quietly removed the
Russian peacekeepers from Kosovo in 2003.

When the regime in Damascus falls (this is finally inevitable) the
future government of the Sunnite majority will recall supply of
armament etc and will definitely throw the Russian base out of Tartus
either directly or demanding an enormous rental rate. The risk of a
march to Tartus is big: there may be a conflict with the local
population, threat of terrorist strikes and very likely confrontation
with the West. And it will be necessary to crawl away in the end like
our football players from Poland.

The regime of Putin needs not this but loud foreign policy success and
humiliation of the West, which should cause a powerful rise of
patriotism and dissent of the “white” protest movement. In Syria it is
possible to get problems instead of this. So, I will risk presuming
that if the authorities consider something this is an alternative
option of a little victorious war with a much more predictable
outcome.

Quite official reports about hasty rearming of the troops and air
force in the Southern Military District in the North Caucasus have
been published in a growing flow since December. It is reported that
troops of the Southern Federal District are armed with modern
communication systems and armored vehicles (tanks T-90A and T-72BM,
BMP-3 and BTR-82A) by 65-70%, with aviation almost by 100%, whereas in
the Armed Forces as a whole percentage of modern hardware amounts to
16% now. Mobile anti-ship coastal missile system Bal-E with range of
120 kilometers is deployed on the Caspian coast of Dagestan and
Bastion system with supersonic anti-ship system Yakhont with range of
300 kilometers id deployed on the Black Sea coast of the Caucasus.
Along with this, so far the base of the newest strategic nuclear
submarines on Kamchatka is guarded only by ancient counterpart of
Bastion called Redut.

Putin went on his first visit to a military unit after inauguration
last week to the Southern Military District, to the 393rd air base in
Korenovsk of Krasnodar Territory where he inspected the newest army
aircraft and chaired a meeting dedicated to rearming of the Air Force.
Practically simultaneously the General Staff and the Foreign Ministry
started speaking about the “Georgian revanchism” and accused Tbilisi
of preparation of a new war and the West of encouraging of the
potential “aggressor.”

The situation on the ceasefire line in Nagorno-Karabakh grew worse
simultaneously. According to various sources, from 10 to 30 people
died there in fighting in the first half of June. There were also
cases of firing exchange outside of Nagorno-Karabakh at the
Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Because there are no permanent neutral
observers or demilitarized zones on the ceasefire line established in
1994, both parties accuse each other and it is difficult to find out
who is right.

The time of rent of the radar (built in the USSR) of the early warning
system in Gabala expires this year. Baku already demanded increasing
of rent payments from $7 million to $300 million, which caused
terrible irritation of Moscow. In response Armenia proposed deployment
of a new early warning radar on its territory free of charge. While
the peaceful resolving of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem is becoming
increasingly problematic, both parties try to attract Russia to their
side using also the influence of the national Diasporas in Moscow.

So far, Armenians succeed more. Armenia is a CSTO member and has a
Russian base with troops and aviation on its territory. However, there
is no military ground transit to Armenia from Russia through
Azerbaijan or through Georgia, which is absolutely unacceptable for
Moscow in the long term. If the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani
border grows even worse Russia may quite demand a corridor from
Georgia for passage of reinforcements to Armenia and in case of
practically inevitable refusal it may move to fulfill its ally duty
without invitation.

There are no serious problems related to remoteness of the theater in
Transcaucasia unlike in Syria. Air bases are nearby in the Southern
Military District, as well as troops, armament and field depots.
Everything seems to be already prepared. It evidently seems to someone
that by one quick blow Georgia may be cleared from American influence
and will stop striving for NATO membership. Armenia will be tied
closer and Azerbaijan will not escape anywhere. Along with this, the
gas and oil pipelines from the Caspian Basin will be under reliable
control and Russian peacekeepers will enter Nagorno-Karabakh
establishing the new status quo. The regime of personal power will be
strengthened in Moscow and let the US and its allies deal with Syria
and Iran as much as they wish.

[translated from Russian]

Huntington Univ. professor may have found earliest known synagogue

The News-Sentinel (Fort Wayne, Indiana)
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
June 22, 2012 Friday

Huntington University professor may have found earliest known synagogue

BY: Ellie Bogue, The News-Sentinel, Fort Wayne, Ind.

June 22–Mark R. Fairchild, a professor at Huntington University, has
spent the past 15 years studying ancient ruins in Turkey. Recently,
his discovery of first and second century B.C. synagogues have placed
him in the spotlight in one of the most widely read archeology
publications in the world, Biblical Archaeology Review.

Fairchild is a professor and chair of the Department of Bible and
Religion. He has an interest in the ruins of ancient temples and
churches and specializes in the New Testaments, Greek and Roman
studies at Huntington University.

This year alone he will travel to Turkey three times. When he came
across the first synagogue, he was on sabbatical in the spring of 2007
while exploring the ancient Roman province of Cilicia, St. Paul’s home
district. He was looking at the ruins of a coastal town of Korykos, an
early Roman city, known today as Kizkalesi. An Armenian castle was
rebuilt over what used to be an earlier fortress and a Roman forum at
that site.

While looking over the inner of a fortress wall, doing a surface
survey, he discovered a door lintel about two feet off the ground,
with a menorah carved into one corner.

“Synagogues are mostly commonly identified with a menorah carved into
the lintel,” Fairchild said.

Moving 4-5 miles inland from Korykos in the foothills of the Taurus
Mountains, Fairchild also explored Çatiören, where he discovered
another synagogue.

When he returned from that trip he did some research to find out if
anyone had found anything in that area before, and discovered in 1890
an English explorer and his wife did a surface survey, like Fairchild,
and discovered the same site of Çatiören. The explorer described the
same inscription that Fairchild has seen on the Hermes Temple there.

On a return visit to the area he examined the necropolis (or
cemetery), at Korykos and discovered several sarcophagi carved with
menorahs as well. He discovered two in January, and on his May through
June trip he discovered four more. He believes there was a large
Jewish population in this area at one time. To date he has discovered
six total sarcophagi, but he is positive there are many more.

“Ancient literary sources indicate that many Jews settled in Cilicia
during the Hellenistic and Roman periods. The presence of these tombs
corroborates this testimony,” Fairchild said.

Fairchild said these are significant finds because until now ancient
scholars had said there had been a large settlement of Jews in the
area, but no concrete evidence had been discovered. If the synagogue
at Çatiören is of the Hellistic period, first or second century B.C.,
as Fairchild believes the evidence suggests, this would be the
earliest synagogue ever discovered anywhere in the world. Fairchild
said it is possible that the Apostle Paul could have done missionary
work in this area. Apostle Paul was said to use the strategy of
sharing the gospel message with fellow Jews at synagogues.

Although it might seem odd no one else has run across these ruins
before, except over a hundred years ago, Fairchild said Turkey has
never been explored by modern archeologists the way other countries in
that region have.

“Very few of these areas have even been touched by modern
archeologists,” Fairchild said.

Previously, Fairchild said, the Turkish government had no interest in
opening up the country to western tourism or archeologists.

“They really don’t know the treasure they are sitting on,” Fairchild said.

The Turkish government is now thinking about promoting and developing
these sites. They have an interest in joining the European Union and
developing their tourism. Fairchild gave a presentation to the Turkish
government in January showing them some of the pictures of the sites
he has visited. He said they were amazed and had no idea of the
richness of historical ruins in their country.

Fairchild said Turkey’s antiquities are more numerous, spectacular,
and untouched then what he has seen anywhere. Currently the government
doesn’t have the money to appoint people to oversee these sites. Some
of the ruins Fairchild has visited show signs of illegal digs.
Fairchild said some of the Turkish people know there is treasure
underground and are digging illegally and selling it on eBay or on the
black market.

“One way or another Turkey is emerging from the underground, both
legally and illegally,” Fairchild said.

OSCE Minsk Group for Nagorno-Karabakh to meet in July – FM

ITAR-TASS, Russia
June 21, 2012 Thursday 07:24 PM GMT+4

OSCE Minsk Group for Nagorno-Karabakh to meet in July – FM

MOSCOW June 21

The OSCE Minsk Group for Nagorno-Karabakh will meet in July, Foreign
Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said on Thursday.

“The foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia met in Paris on June
18. This was the planned meeting organized by the co-chairmen of the
Minsk Group. It preceded the meeting by the mediators from any side,”
Lukashevich said.

“The ministers exchanged views on preparations for a framework
agreement on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement due to the recent
deterioration of the situation on the Azerbaijani-Armenian border and
the line of contact. They discussed possible variants of the work in
order to ease tension in the conflict zone and considered approaches
towards investigating armed incidents,” the diplomat stressed.

“We positively treat this event and we believe that it proves the
readiness by Armenia and Azerbaijan to continue the political dialogue
in compliance with the statement on Nagorno-Karabakh that the
presidents of Russia, the U.S. and France had made at the G-20 summit
in Los Cabos,” he said.

2 killed, 3 injured in major car crash

2 killed, 3 injured in major car crash

TERT.AM
11:33 – 24.06.12

Two people died and three others were injured as cars transporting
agricultural products collided on the Armavir-Alashkert highway
overnight.

As photo reporter Gagik Shamshyan told Tert.am from the scene, a VAZ
2101 vehicle crashed with a Ford Transit on 2nd kilometer of the
roadway at 3:30 am.

The driver of the VAZ 2101, Telman Grigoryan, and his passenger, Roman
Grigoryan, 13, died immediately. Both were residents of the Tandzut
village (Armavir region). The Ford Transit Driver was taken to the
Metsamor Medical Center. Two other passengers, Gor Yeghishyan and
David Hakobyan (both aged 17), were hospitalized in Armavir.

Traffic police are now reported to be on the scene.

Witnesses have told Shamshyan that the deceased were cousins. A
criminal case under Article 242.3 of Armenia Criminal Code (breach of
traffic rules that negligently causes the death of two or more people)
will be reportedly launched in this connection.

Employees at both medical centers have told the photo reporter that
the survivors have not received life-threatening injuries.

The Olympics – ancient and modern

The Olympics – ancient and modern
Traffic congestion, corruption, professional athletes and spiralling costs
– despite our rose-tinted view of the ancient Olympics, they were not so
dissimilar to our modern Games =85 the Olympic tradition has never quite
lived up to its own ideals

Mary Beard
guardian.co.uk,
Friday 22 June 2012 22.55 BST

Fair play? You didn’t even get a medal if you came first in the early
Olympic competitions, just a wreath of olive leaves. Photograph: Getty
Images/The Bridgeman Art Library

The Olympic Games of AD165 ended in a horribly spectacular fashion. Just a
couple of miles from the main stadium, watched by a large crowd, an old man
called Peregrinus Proteus – an ex-Christian convert, turned loud-mouthed
pagan philosopher and religious guru – jumped on to a blazing pyre to his
death. He had been threatening to do this ever since the previous Olympics,
four years earlier. The self-immolation was modelled on the mythical death
of Heracles (one of the legendary founders of the Games) and was meant as a
gesture of protest at the corrupt wealth of the human world, as well as a
lesson to the guru’s followers in how to endure suffering.

Despite his brave words, as the days of the Olympic festival went by,
Peregrinus kept putting off the final moment. It was not until the Games
had officially finished, that he actually built the pyre and took the
plunge. But there was still a big audience left to witness his death,
because traffic congestion (too many people trying to leave the place at
once), combined with a shortage of public transport, had prevented most
people from leaving Olympia. Then as now, presumably, only the VIPs were
whisked away.

The story of Peregrinus is told in detail by an eye-witness, the ancient
satirist and essayist Lucian – who not only describes the old man’s last
moments and the scuffles that broke out around the pyre between his
supporters and detractors, but also throws in the point about the ancient
Olympic traffic problems. Lucian himself has no time for Peregrinus: “a
drivelling old fool”, bent on “notoriety”, he sneered. But the story is
not, as some have taken it, a sign of the decadence of the Olympics under
Roman rule (by AD165 Greece had been part of the Roman empire for over 300
years). Quite the contrary. It was surely because the Games were still such
a major attraction that Peregrinus chose the occasion for his histrionic
suicide; and it was because of their considerable cultural significance
that the incident was so prominently written up.

When we now think back to the ancient ancestors of the modern Olympics, we
usually prefer to bypass the Roman period, and concentrate instead on the
glory days of classical Greece. It’s easy to ignore the fact that the
ancient Games were “Roman” for almost as long as they were “Greek” – in the
sense that they were celebrated under Roman rule and sponsorship from the
middle of the second century BC until they were abolished by Christian
emperors at the end of the fourth century AD. In fact, a pedantic chorus of
protest has recently been raised at the appearance of explicitly Roman
rather than Greek gods (Mars not Ares, Minerva not Athene, and so on) on
the British coins minted to commemorate the 2012 Olympics. And this is not
so very different from the chorus of protest raised in 2000, when the
Sydney Olympic Committee put an instantly recognisable Roman Colosseum on
their Olympic medals (and on that occasion the angry voices were not
quelled by the claim that it was meant to be a “generalised” image of an
arena, rather than the Colosseum itself). Forget the story of Peregrinus:
in most modern accounts, the true ancestor of “our” Games lies in the
rose-tinted age of classical Greece, between the sixth and fourth centuries
BC, or maybe even further back (according to legend the ancient Games were
founded in 776BC, though not much has been found to justify that date).

For us, talk of these “original” Olympics usually conjures up a picture of
plucky amateur athletes, men only, of course, fiercely patriotic, nobly
competing in a very limited range of sports: running races, chariot races,
wrestling and boxing, discus and javelin throwing. There were no team games
then, let alone such oddities as synchronised swimming. Everything was done
individually, for the pure glory of winning – and for no material reward.
You didn’t even get a medal if you came first in an Olympic competition,
just a wreath of olive leaves, and if you were lucky a statue of yourself
near the stadium, or in your home town. The very luckiest might also be
celebrated in one of the “Victory Odes”, specially composed by the Greek
poet Pindar, or one of his followers, that are still read and puzzled over
2,500 years later (and I mean puzzled over: they are written in some of the
most difficult and obscure Greek to have come down to us, and the prospect
of being asked to translate one of Pindar’s Olympian Odes scares even the
brightest student of classics).

What is more, the whole contest was performed in honour of the gods.
Olympia was a religious sanctuary of Zeus and Hera, as much as it was a
sports ground, and the Games united the Greek world under a single
religious cultural banner. Though the warring city states of Greece were
usually doing just that – warring – every four years the “Olympic truce”
was declared to suspend conflict for the period around the competition, to
allow anyone from everywhere in the Greek world to come and take part. It
was a moment when sport and fair play trumped self-interested military
conflicts and disputes.

As with most stereotypes, there are some grains of truth here: there were
no medals and no women at the ancient Olympics; the contests were keenly
fought, man against man, ostensibly for nothing more than glory for oneself
and for one’s city; and the whole thing was done under the watchful eye of
the ancient gods. But taken altogether, as a picture of what the ancient
Games were really like, this tissue of clichés is deeply misleading. In
fact, it owes more to the preoccupations of the founders of the modern
Olympic movement – through whose sometimes frankly warped vision we now
look back to the original Games – than it does to the ancient Greeks
themselves. Men such as Baron Pierre de Coubertin, who successfully
relaunched the modern Olympics in 1896, systematically projected their own
obsessions – from their disapproval of alcohol to their rather woolly ideas
of world peace and harmony – on to the early centuries of the ancient Games
and their participants.

One particular obsession of those in charge of the modern Olympics – until
as late as the 1980s – has been the cult of the amateur. Coubertin, and
later Avery Brundage, the tyrannical president of the International Olympic
Committee between 1952 and 1972 (“Slavery Bondage”, as he was nicknamed),
sometimes cruelly policed the frontier between the amateur contestants –
who were warmly welcomed as modern Olympians – and the professional
interlopers, who were most definitely not. One of the most mean-spirited
incidents in modern Olympic history is the story of the brilliant American
athlete Jim Thorpe, who won both the pentathlon and the decathlon at the
Stockholm Olympics of 1912. He was an ordinary working man, part
native-American, and a famously down-to-earth character: on being presented
with a commemorative bust of himself by King Gustav of Sweden, he is
supposed to have replied “Thanks, king.” But there was a bitter sequel. It
later came to light that he had received some trivial payments ($25 a week)
for playing a bit of minor league baseball in the US; he was reclassified
as a professional, stripped of his medals and asked to return the bust. A
change of heart did not come until 1983, when his family was sent some
replica medals. For Thorpe it was too little, too late. He died in 1953, in
utter poverty.

For Coubertin and his like, the Olympic Games of classical Greece made
their total ban on professional athletes legitimate. The great competitors
of the fifth century BC, they would have insisted, were noble amateurs, not
vulgar money-grubbers selling their athletic prowess for cash. Well, yes
and no. The competitors at the classical Olympics were certainly not
“professionals” in the sense that we (or Coubertin or Brundage) would
understand the term. But that is largely because our own familiar divide
between “amateurs” and “professionals” did not operate in classical Greece.
To put it another way, if we approach the ancient Games armed with modern
categories of sporting competition, we do not find many “grubby
professionals”, but we don’t find much “noble amateurism” either.

For a start, the winning athletes may not have received cash prizes at
Olympia for their performances, but many of them did very nicely when they
got back home. It wasn’t just a question of honorific statues. The various
Greek cities offered all kinds of rewards to their athletics stars, from
free meals for life at the state’s expense to cash handouts and tax
exemptions. And just under the surface of the surviving evidence, there are
hints of something rather closer to a professional athletics circuit than
the founding fathers of the modern Games would have liked. According to the
ancient lists of Olympic victors, between 588 and 488BC, 11 winners in the
short sprint race (“stadion”) – that is, about a third of the total number
– came from the not particularly large, or distinguished, town of Croton,
one of the Greek settlements in southern Italy. Maybe the people of Croton
just got lucky, or maybe they lived in some fanatical athletics boot-camp.
But much more likely they were buying in top talent from other cities, who
then wore the colours of Croton. Great Britain has, of course, got form in
this area. Long before the recent convenient change of allegiance of
long-jumper Shara Proctor and the other so-called “plastic Brits”, we had
had welcomed the South African runner Zola Budd – who competed for us in
the 1984 Olympics, disastrously as it turned out.

But no less damaging to the idea of the ancient world’s pure amateurism is
the fact that some of the most prestigious wreaths of victory went not to
the athletes themselves but to men whom we would call “sponsors”. The
grandest event of the Games was the chariot race, but the official winner
was not the man who actually did the dangerous work, standing in the
chariot and controlling the horses, but the king, princeling or plutocrat
who had funded him and paid for the training, at no doubt vast expense –
not unlike the Queen’s winners in modern horse-racing. In fact, this was
the only Olympic event at which a woman could claim victory – as one
Spartan princess did in the fourth century BC. So far as we know, she did
not get a victory ode (though she did get a statue at Olympia). But some of
Pindar’s best-known Olympian poems were written to celebrate not athletes
at all, but these rich grandees who had for the most part shown no sporting
prowess whatsoever, just a deep pocket.

The other main myth about the ancient Olympics that Coubertin and his
colleagues promoted was their contribution to world peace and understanding
(or at least, back in the classical period, Greek peace and understanding).
This centred on the so-called “Olympic truce”, which has increasingly been
turned into the model for our own ideal of a gathering of all nations,
friend or foe, under the Olympic banner (an ideal challenged several times
over the last few decades, and under strain again this year with the
question of what to do about Syria). Ancient Greek politics may not have
been quite as messy or confused as the modern version of Messrs Samaras and
Tsipras, but the conflicts of antiquity tended to be waged more in the
style of the Arab spring than of the smoke-filled rooms of Brussels and
Strasbourg. In fact, the ancient Games were by no means consistently marked
by an atmosphere of national or international harmony.

There are, it is true, some ancient references to a cessation of
hostilities to ensure that competitors and their trainers could reach the
Games safely, and in one of the temples at Olympia you could still see, in
the second century AD, a supposedly very early document – almost certainly
a later forgery – that referred to the origins of this “truce”. But how it
was enforced, and by whom, is anyone’s guess. It was a nice symbol, but
athletes travelling across enemy territory to get to Olympia wouldn’t, I
imagine, have got very far by appealing to the “truce” if they were
confronted by a squadron of hostile soldiers. On one occasion, in the
fourth century BC, there was actually a full-scale battle in Olympia itself
during the Games. A force from the nearby town of Elis (which traditionally
ran the ancient Olympics, and no doubt profited from them) invaded the
site, right in the middle of the pentathlon, to get control back from the
rival town of Pisa, which had temporarily taken them over. And the truce
certainly didn’t prevent people exploiting the Games for violent power
struggles back in their own cities. In the 630s BC, there was a coup in
Athens against one of the leading families while they were away competing
in the Olympics (though it was brutally quashed when the competitors
returned home).

In general, the real-life experience of competing in – or, for that matter,
just watching – the ancient Olympics was a far cry from anything that
Coubertin had in mind. The modern Olympics are (officially at least)
committed to the ideal of fair play. However much rivalry there is about
national positions in the medal table, participation is still supposed to
be more important than winning. That is nothing like the ancient Games,
where winning was everything, where there were no prizes for runners up (no
equivalent of silver and bronze medals, that is), and no such thing as
honourable losers. Contestants fought viciously, and cheated. When one
Athenian contestant in the fourth century BC was caught red-handed
attempting to bribe his rivals in the pentathlon, a fine was imposed. The
Athenian authorities thought this so unreasonable that they threatened to
boycott the Games in future – though they were forced to give in when the
Delphic oracle refused to give them any more oracles until they coughed up
the money. The point was that for the ancients the only thing that mattered
was coming first, using any method you could get away with. Pindar even
hints (writing of another set of Games held at Delphi) that the losers
sloped off home in secret, for fear of the taunts and abuse they were
likely to receive from their disappointed supporters or contemptuous rivals.

So, if the ancient Olympics were a rough and sometimes brutal experience
for the competitors (deaths in the boxing and wrestling contests were not
uncommon), they were a decidedly uncomfortable one for the spectators too.
The Games seem to have attracted crowds of visitors, but there were hardly
any decent facilities for them: it was blisteringly hot, with little shade;
there was no accommodation for the ordinary visitor (beyond a no doubt
squalid and overcrowded campsite); and the sanitation must have been
rudimentary, at best, given the inadequate water supply to the site, which
could not even guarantee enough clean drinking water to go round.

But this is where the Romans come in. The likes of Coubertin lamented the
Roman influence on the Games; they deplored the growth of a professional
(and lower) class of competitor, as well as the malign influence of the
Roman emperors themselves (who were occasionally known to take part in
events and were supposed to have had the competition rigged so that they
could win). For the spectators, though, it was the sponsorship of the Roman
period – some of it devoted to “improving” the facilities for visitors

that made the Olympic Games a much more comfortable and congenial
attraction to visit. True, as Lucian attests in his story of Peregrinus,
the Romans did not solve the problems of traffic congestion, but they
installed vastly improved bathing facilities, and one rich sponsor laid on,
for the first time, a reasonable supply of drinking water. Herodes Atticus,
a Roman senator who was Athenian by birth, built a whole new conduit to
carry water from the nearby hills, leading into a large fountain in the
middle of the site. Predictably, perhaps, some curmudgeons thought this was
spoiling the Olympic spirit. According to Lucian, Peregrinus in some of the
speeches he made on a previous visit to the Games, denounced Herodes
Atticus. In a typically ancient misogynist vein, he accused Herodes of
turning the visitors into women, when it would be better for them to face
thirst (and the possible diseases that came with it) like men. For most
visitors, though, an efficient Roman fountain must have been a blessed
relief.

For much of the period of Roman rule, Roman grandees and their friends
bankrolled the Olympic enterprise (which seems to have eaten money in the
ancient world, too, even without any ridiculously expensive opening
ceremonies or security operations). Nero, who has had a bad press for,
among other things, shifting the date of the Games so that he could
conveniently compete himself, subsidised new facilities for athletes, and
King Herod (the infamous one) is known to have come to the financial rescue
of the Olympics in 12BC. In some ways the character of the Games continued
with little change. Roman princes safely entered the chariot-racing
competitions, just as the princes of the Greek world had half a millennium
earlier. Great athletes may well have outstripped the achievements of their
predecessors. In AD69, for example, a man called Polites from modern Turkey
won the prize for two sprint races and the long distance – a considerable
achievement given the different musculature required. Apparently it was the
first time it had been done in almost a millennium of Olympic competitions.
And there was the same disdain for losers. One poem of the Roman period
pillories a hopeless contestant in the race in which everyone ran dressed
in armour. He was so slow that he was still going when night fell, and got
locked in the stadium overnight – the joke was that caretaker had mistaken
him for a statue.

But in other respects the Romans worked towards an Olympics that is much
more like our own than the earlier “true Greek” version. Whatever his other
faults, Nero tried to introduce some “cultural” contests into the Games.
The Olympics had always been (unlike other Greek athletic festivals)
resolutely brawny, with no music or poetry competitions. Nero didn’t
succeed in injecting much culture for very long (it soon reverted to just
athletics) but, knowingly or not, the 19th-century inventors of the modern
Olympics took over his cultural aims. It’s easy to forget that in the first
half of the 20th century, Olympic medals were offered for town planning,
painting, sculpture, painting and so on (they have long since entered the
ranks of “dead” Olympic sports, along with tug of war and running deer
shooting). Coubertin himself, under a pseudonym, won the 1912 gold medal
for poetry with his “Ode to Sport”. It was truly dreadful: “Sport thou art
Boldness! / Sport thou art Honour! / Sport thou art Fertility!” =85

The most lasting contribution of the Romans, though, was to make the
Olympics, as we now think of them, truly international. That was, in a way,
a byproduct of the Roman empire and the (more or less compulsory)
internationalism that came with it. But if the classical Greek Olympics had
been rigidly restricted to Greeks only, Roman power opened up the
competition to most of the then known world. It is a nice symbol of this
that the last named victor at Olympia in 385AD, the prizewinner in the
boxing contest, was a Persian from Armenia called Varazdates.

But there is a sting in the tail of this Greek vs Roman story of the
Olympic Games. For it was not only the hopelessly confused Baron de
Coubertin who lionised the Greek achievement in the Olympic Games; nor was
he the first to do so. At the same time as the Romans were ploughing money
into the Olympics and making it effectively an international Roman
celebration, authors of the Roman period were already inventing the
romantic image of the great old Greek days of Olympic competition. Writing
in the second century AD, Pausanias – a Greek born under the Roman empire –
devoted two volumes of his 10-volume guide to the noteworthy sites of
Greece to the monuments of Olympia. He sees the place almost entirely
through classical Greek spectacles. He is the source of most of our stories
about the notable Olympic achievements and heroes of centuries earlier. He
doesn’t even mention Herodes Atticus’ splendid and useful Roman fountain,
which he must have seen as he walked round the sanctuary. Even Peregrinus,
when he was speechifying near Olympia in 165AD, about to throw himself on
the pyre, was comparing himself to the great tragic heroes of “classical
Greece”, centuries earlier. The Games have been a nostalgic show for longer
than we can imagine. It has probably always seemed that they were better in
the past.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/jun/22/olympic-games-ancient-modern?INTCMP=SRCH

Envoy Asks Iran, Armenia to Waive Visa Requirements

Envoy Asks Iran, Armenia to Waive Visa Requirements

10:28 | 2012-06-24

Foriegn Policy

TEHRAN (FNA)- Yerevan’s Ambassador to Tehran Girgor Arakelian called
on Iran and Armenia to remove visa requirements in a move to
facilitate visits by the two countries’ nationals.

“We hope that visa requirements will be annulled for the two
countries’ citizens,” said Arakelian in a meeting with the
governor-general of Iran’s Northwestern province of East Azerbaijan on
Sunday.

Also at the meeting, the envoy noted the Iranian interior minister’s
upcoming visit to Armenia in the next 15 days, and stressed that the
trip would further reinvigorate and develop ties between the two
neighboring states.

He also said that “the Iran-Armenia joint economic cooperation
commission will soon be set up in Yerevan”, reiterating that his
country welcomes increased interaction and cooperation with Tehran.

Arakelian also voiced Armenia’s willingness to boost cooperation
between the two countries’ neighboring provinces as a useful move.

In recent years, Iran and its Northern neighbor Armenia have boosted
coopration, signed agreements on energy cooperation and agreed to
cooperate in technology and research and to enhance ties in commerce
and economy.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Armenian counterpart
Serzh Sargsian pledged in December 2011 to further expand “high-level
relations” between their nations and, in particular, give new impetus
to the implementation of joint energy projects that have fallen behind
schedule.

Film: "Here:" Ben Foster in an Armenian Romance

Seattle Weekly (Washington)
June 20, 2012 Wednesday

Here: Ben Foster in an Armenian Romance

by Karina Longworth

Will (Ben Foster)-a lone-wolf American cartographer on contract to
collect data on the ground to match to satellite maps in Armenia’s
rural, disputed Eastern territory-is bailed out of a
lost-in-translation situation by beautiful, feisty,
Armenian-born/Paris-schooled photographer Gadarine (Lubna Azabal).
Soon the attractive pair hits the road, both armed with tools-her
camera, his satellite-enabled measurement whatsits-to map the land
according to their respective instincts. At more than two hours,
Braden King’s languid, vignette-driven road movie moves slowly and
deliberately-all the better to invoke the disorientation of characters
who are venturing off the grid both geographically and emotionally,
their perspectives skewed by booze and new lust.

The drama is occasionally interrupted by saturated montages, set to
narration that aims to poetically evoke the film’s key themes-namely,
the blinkered romance of travel, the impulse to capture the ineffable
in tangible forms, the conflict between “ground truth” and authentic
experience. The dreamy, feverish beauty of these sequences just barely
balances the pretension of the exposition. The film falters the
further it drifts from that overheated, slightly delusional mood; the
more precisely it’s scripted, the less it feels true. (In a
relationship-spat scene, the lovers basically shout “We’re from
different worlds!” at each other.) But the actors have incredible
physical chemistry, and Here can be captivating when King sticks to
exploring the conquering instinct-over land, in love-by setting their
budding relationship against the unknowable landscape and allowing the
imagery to speak for itself.

Lawyers Protest

LAWYERS PROTEST
Susanna Petrosyan

Vestnik Kavkaza
June 22 2012
Russia

More than 500 lawyers representing the Lawyers Chamber of Armenia
carried out a day-long strike on June 11 as a protest against
lawlessness in the judicial system, first of all against unacceptable
methods of work in the Court of Cassation. In late May the group of
lawyers decided to establish a commission which should investigate the
most outrageous violations in the judicial system and present proposals
on settlement of the issues at the Court of Cassation. But later,
lawyers decided to use radical measures against judicial outrage. The
aim of the strike is to draw the attention of the juridical power to
these problems.

The participants of the strike explained that none of the measures
taken earlier – claims to various departments, publications in the
mass media, and so on – helped, as they were ignored.

The lawyers stated that the strike was caused by amendments made in
2007 to the Judicial Code, which defined new criteria for considering
cassation claims. According to the lawyers, the Court of Cassation
interprets unclear criteria as it wishes and doesn’t explain refusals
to consider: “Such activity of the Court of Cassation leads to
juridical uncertainty. Even if there is no corruption at the stage
of cassation claims consideration, the double standards used by the
Court of Cassation, at least, do not dispel doubts that corruption
lies at the basis of these principles. That is why the crisis of the
judicial system is deepening,” the lawyers’ statement says.

One of the participants of the protest, Gevork Gezalyan, says that if
the Court of Cassation doesn’t reconsider its policy, doesn’t stop
using double standards and carrying out personally-focused legal
proceedings, a full-scale defense couldn’t be provided.

Unfortunately, the view that courts are corrupt and take bribes from
defendants for delivering the verdicts they need is widespread in
Armenia. “If society knows that judges, prosecutors, and inspectors
do not take money, bribery will become extinct,” the chairman of
the Lawyers Chamber, Ruben Saakyan, says. He believes that many
shortcomings of the judicial system could be fixed by decisions of
the Court of Cassation.

The lawyers think that it is the Court of Cassation that is
responsible for the vicious methods of work of investigation offices
and prosecutors, for the unacceptable situation in the Court of Appeal,
and for constant violations at all proceeding levels.

“The protest was directed not only against the Court of Cassation,
but also against other constituents of the justice system. But why
do we address our requirements to the Court of Cassation? Because we
know that if the judicial system takes the right position, neither
the police nor prosecution will commit lawlessness,” a member of the
initiative group, Lusine Saakyan, confidently claims.

In response to the lawyers’ protest, an aide to the Court of
Cassation’s chairman, Sergey Marabyan, stated that the action against
the Court of Cassation is politically colored: “From a professional
point of view, the statements presented are beyond the legal sphere
and have a political character. The lawyers’ actions were similar
to an unreasonable smear of the authorities.” Marabyan explains that
lawyers cannot strike against the courts, because the courts are not
the employers of the lawyers.

Of course, a one-day strike of lawyers couldn’t raise a great wave of
protest. The management of the Court of Cassation and judges didn’t
response to the protest and didn’t show readiness to cooperate with
the lawyers. However, the action has no analogues in Armenia and is
important for judicial reforms. Perhaps similar protests will appear
in the future.