Russia is testing West and Crimea could be target

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria
Sept 5 2008

Russia is testing West and Crimea could be target

2008-09-06 01:37:03 –

UNITED NATIONS (AP) – A resurgent Russia is testing the West and
Ukraine’s strategic Crimea peninsula could become a target, the Czech
Republic’s deputy foreign minister warned Friday.
Tomas Pojar said Russia’s strong objection to U.S. missile defense
bases in the Czech Republic and Poland and recent events in Georgia
clearly indicate Moscow’s opposition to
Western influence in the former Soviet Union’s sphere of influence.
«We are being tested,» he told a group of U.N. journalists. «We should
be careful. We should be firm.
Russia drew harsh criticism from the U.S. and Europe for recognizing
two separatist Georgian territories as independent states following a
short but devastating war that left Russian troops in control of a key
Georgian Black Sea port and other locations deep inside Georgia.
The conflict followed an escalation of incidents over many months by
pro-Russian separatists from South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and the
Russian and Georgian military, and was sparked by Georgia’s attempt to
use force to retake control of South Ossetia.
«For us, the events of Georgia were not such a surprise,» Pojar
said. «We were predicting that there may be some escalation. We were
trying to avoid it and warn everyone to be cautious.
The United States, which has been training the Georgian military, has
said it also warned the government against military action.
Pojar Friday raised the possibility of confrontations with Moscow
elsewhere.
«I think that we would not be surprised if in the future similar
events, for example, develop in Crimea,» he said. «We hope that it is
not going to happen, but we think that the situation there is not very
stable, and to provoke more instability would probably not be that
difficult.
The Crimea peninsula on the Black Sea, once a jewel of Russia’s
empire, was a beloved tourist destination in the Soviet era and home
to the proud Soviet naval base in the port of Sevastopol. But in 1954,
control of the Crimea was handed to the then Soviet republic of
Ukraine by leader Nikita Khrushchev, who had lived and worked there
for years. After the 1991 Soviet breakup, it remained part of
independent Ukraine, with an agreement allowing Russia to keep it’s
naval base there.
Pojar said the Crimea could become «some new frozen or unfrozen
conflict because of the situation on the ground, because of the
political demographic and (Russian) military presence in Crimea.
He said there are a lot of similarities to the situation in South
Ossetia, Abkhazia and Armenia’s occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh
region of Azerbaijan.
The United States and the European Union should realize «the strategic
importance of stability and prosperity in Ukraine and in the whole of
Caucuses,» he said.
«I don’t think there should be talk of sanctions» by the West, Pojar
said. «I think there should be strong (Western) presence in Caucuses
and in Ukraine in terms of support of economic stability, recovery of
Ukraine, international presence on the ground, international monitors
on the ground _ and it should be robust.
The Czech Republic supported a donor conference for Ukraine at a
recent EU meeting and Pojar said he hopes it will take place soon.

He praised the U.S. announcement of a US$1 billion aid package for
Georgia as exactly the right way to «move forward.
Pojar spoke to reporters as U.S. Vice president Dick Cheney started a
tour of three ex-Soviet republics _ Azerbaijan, Ukraine and Georgia _
that are wary of Russia’s intentions after last month’s war with
Georgia.
The Czech minister said he came to the United States for the first
round of a strategic dialogue with U.S. government officials on
foreign policy and security issues and defense and development
cooperation.
The Czech government signed a bilateral treaty in July allowing the
U.S. to build a radar base near Prague as part of a proposed
U.S. missile defense system that has been harshly criticized by
Russia.
Pojar said there is «significant opposition» to the treaty in
parliament but the government expects it to be ratified by the end of
the year.
He said the Czech Republic has also almost concluded status of forces
negotiations with the United States. The text of the agreement is with
the lawyers to be checked but the government is not expecting any
problems, Pojar said.

NKR President Visited A Number Of Stepanakert Enterprises

NKR PRESIDENT VISITED A NUMBER OF STEPANAKERT ENTERPRISES

DeFacto Agency
Sept 4 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 04.09.08. DE FACTO. On September 3 NKR President Bako Sahakian
visited a number of capital city’s enterprises and objects.

According to the Central Department of Information under the NKR
President, visiting a flour-grinding complex belonging to Ermy CJSC
and a bread factory, Bako Sahakian familiarized himself with the
works that had been carried out there and an industrial-technical
cycle. The state’s head highly estimated works carried out by a Joint
Stock Company. The President also visited Artsakh Sport Complex and,
familiarizing himself with repair works carried out there, gave
corresponding instructions to the institution’s leadership.

The state’s head was accompanied by NKR PM Ara Harutyunian and other
officials.

Dick Cheney To Take Fight Against Russia’s Oil Dominance To Azerbaij

DICK CHENEY TO TAKE FIGHT AGAINST RUSSIA’S OIL DOMINANCE TO AZERBAIJAN
By Damien McElroy in Tbilisi

Daily Telegraph
02 Sep 2008
UK

Dick Cheney, the US vice-president will arrive in the Caucasus on a
mission to prevent Russia from gaining a stranglehold over Central
Asia’s vast reserves of energy.

As he starts a tour of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Ukraine, Mr Cheney
will try to allay fears that Russia’s campaign in Georgia has fatally
damaged a cornerstone of the West’s energy policy.

That message will be particularly potent in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku,
once the capital of the Soviet oil industry and now a pivotal ally
of the United States.

The Caucasus region, between the gas-rich Caspian Sea and Turkey,
provides the only energy pathway from Central Asia to Europe that
does not traverse Russia or Iran.

"If Azerbaijan tilts to Russia there goes 15 years of US energy
diplomacy," said a Western diplomat in Baku. "Cheney has the history
and personal clout to make this trip clearly focused on energy."

Mr Cheney’s unparalleled reputation as a defender of US interests and
close ties to the oil industry means the vice president is uniquely
placed to deliver a tough message to Russia.

John Hannah, his national security advisor said: "The overriding
priority, especially in Baku, Tbilisi and Kiev, will be the same: a
clear and simple message that the United States has a deep and abiding
interest in the well-being and security of this part of the world."

After European leaders bickered over how to deal with Russia at
a summit on Monday, Mr Cheney will have to shore up Azerbaijan’s
confidence in Western support.

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, the Georgian prime minister
Lado Gurgenidze said that without efforts by Gordon Brown, the EU
position would have been weaker.

"We are aware that the document perhaps would have read differently
if it had not been for the efforts of the British delegation," he said.

The vulnerability of pipelines running from Azerbaijan to Turkey was
dramatically illustrated by Russia’s war in Georgia, when exports
were halted and expatriate energy workers evacuated.

"Russia didn’t need to attack the pipelines running through Georgia
but by stopping the flow west it ensured that the great fears over the
system have been realised," said Andrew Neff, an analyst at research
firm, Global Insight. "Cheney must ensure that Azerbaijan doesn’t
take the wrong message from events in Georgia."

Supplies of Azeri gas are crucial to European efforts to build the
2,000 mile Nabucco pipeline through Turkey to Austria by 2013. Its
inauguration would erode Russian’s dominant role in energy supplies
to Central and Eastern Europe.

America has been a strong proponent of the project. "Without Azeri
gas, the Nabucco pipeline is dead on the drawing board," said Mr
Neff, who concluded that Russia’s campaign in Georgia had given it a
"de facto veto" over energy flows through Georgia.

Russia has already attempted to coax Azerbaijan away from its Western
backers. President Dmitry Medvedev used a visit to Baku in the spring
to herald "co-operation prospects" between the two states.

Gazprom, the large Russian oil firm, has offered to pay market rates
for its gas, which at a time of rising prices is more attractive than
the long-term supply deal prices proposed by the West.

Ilham Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s president, has been solidly pro-Western
since succeeding his father in 2003.

However, despite its rapid economic growth, Azerbaijan remains
vulnerable to Russia intervention in the breakaway enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh. As in the Georgian territories of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia, separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh rely on Russian backing.

Diplomats have urged Mr Aliyev not to succumb to the short-term
pressures of Russian expansionism. "It’s ‘don’t lose sight of the
long-term goal for a short-term fix’," said one official. "Ultimately
Azerbaijan needs direct access to the Western market to remain
independent of Russia."

Senior American conservatives have rallied behind Mr Cheney’s trip,
possibly his last significant act before President George W Bush’s
term ends in January. "The security of Georgia and Azerbaijan are
vital American interests for a variety of reasons," said John Bolton,
a former US ambassador to the United Nations. "Including the critical
corridor they provide to get oil and natural gas out of the Caspian
Basin region without transiting Russia or Iran. Europe should also
understand this key point."

ANKARA: Turk Troubles In Caucasus

TURK TROUBLES IN CAUCASUS
By Michael Reynolds

Sept 1 2008
Turkey

There are abundant reasons for one to expect that Turkey would have
been following events in Georgia and the Caucasus with great diligence.

The outbreak of the Russian-Georgian War earlier this month apparently
caught Ankara as poorly prepared as it caught Washington. The Turkish
Foreign Ministry’s section dealing with the Caucasus reportedly was
virtually unstaffed. The head of the section was in Mosul on temporary
assignment, the section’s number-two spot is empty and has been for the
last six months. The number three was also away on temporary assignment
in Nakhichevan and the other assigned section members were on vacation,
thus forcing on-duty diplomats from other desks to scramble.

This may surprise. There are abundant reasons for one to expect that
Turkey would have been following events in Georgia and the Caucasus
with great diligence. The two countries share common borders and
intertwined histories. Istanbul ruled large chunks of the Caucasus,
including much of Georgia, for centuries, and today there remains
inside Turkey a small but vibrant community of Abkhazians and related
Caucasian peoples. Russia for most of the past three centuries has
loomed over Turkey as its greatest rival and threat, yet at critical
times, such as during the Turkish War of Independence (1919-22), it
has been a key ally. Today Russia supplies somewhere around 70 percent
of Turkey’s natural gas and is Turkey’s second largest trading partner.

Georgia is a transit point for Caspian and Central Asian oil and
gas and as such is critical to Turkey’s ambitions to become an
energy hub and to diversify its own energy supplies. As a member
of NATO, Turkey has been involved in training and supplying the
Georgian military. Finally, given Turkey’s own struggle with Kurdish
separatists, other instances of ethno-separatism and border revision
logically should command Ankara’s keen attention. In short, both
Russia and Georgia are of great strategic, economic, and historic
importance to Turkey, and the principles of territorial integrity and
self-determination over which the Russo-Georgian War was (nominally)
fought are directly relevant to the most sensitive of Turkey’s
security concerns.

Turkey’s lack of preparedness for the Russo-Georgian war is not
coincidental, but instead reflects a long-standing legacy of
Kemalism. The fundamental precept of the foreign policy course
laid out by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, summed up in his famous phrase,
"Peace at home, peace in the world," was that Turkey should bury its
imperial past, avoid foreign entanglements, and focus on internal
development. Thus the Turkish Republic deliberately isolated itself
from its neighbors, especially those to its south and east. It cut
cultural and other ties across the board, and preferred cordial
but distant relations over close involvement and interaction. As a
result, Turkey today has a strong cadre of diplomats, professors,
analysts and others fluent in English and familiar with the United
States and Western Europe, but it lacks the sort of expertise about
its own neighborhood that one might assume it would naturally possess
given its imperial history. Although challenges to this policy of
isolation have emerged on occasion (briefly in the 1950s and perhaps
during the early 1990s), a preference for cool detachment and inward
focus has remained dominant in the Turkish bureaucracy.

There is much to be said for avoiding foreign entanglements, and
the reasoning behind "Peace at home, peace abroad" was anything but
frivolous. Yet self-imposed isolation carries its own costs. Those
costs rose precipitately for Turkey following the end of the Cold
War as its neighborhood underwent tremendous political and economic
transformation. Ignoring the events taking place around it was no
solution. At this time, Turkey’s self-confidence began to grow, and
more Turks began to advocate that their country play a more active
role in its region. One positive development has been the emergence in
Turkey of think-tanks, both official and non-governmental, dedicated
to foreign and domestic issues.

Old habits and institutional practices die hard, however, and playing
an active role in such a complex region is no simple matter. As a
way to break out of the old mindset and gain experience in regional
affairs without great risk, Turkey has been trying to play the role of
mediator in regional conflicts. The architect of this approach is Ahmet
Davutoglu, a former professor and close adviser to Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan who now holds the rank of ambassador. Thus Turkey has
involved itself in negotiations between Syria and Israel. Similarly,
Turkey’s Foreign Minister Ali Babacan has at times tried to position
himself as a broker between the West and Iran.

Erdogan in the midst of the Russo-Georgian War tried to apply a
slightly more advanced variant of this formula by flying to Moscow,
Tiblisi, and Baku and proposing a "Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
Platform." The idea of the platform, which is sometimes also called
a pact, is to bring together the three South Caucasian states of
Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan with Turkey and Russia, and enable
them to mediate and solve their conflicts among themselves.

The idea sounds attractive, but it will not go far. Such pacts
can work only if all members are willing to prioritize stability
and good relations over their other interests. Yet if there is one
thing we know, it is that there is no consensus for stability in the
Caucasus. Russia just mounted a calculated and successful effort to
overthrow the status quo in the Caucasus at the expense of another
putative pact member, Georgia. Russia’s war aims, moreover, extend
beyond altering the balance of power in the Caucasus to restoring
its position as the dominant power in Eurasia and restructuring its
relations with the United States and Europe. Abkhazia and South Ossetia
are pawns in a game bigger than the Caucasus. The notion that what
Russia and Georgia need in order to come to a mutually satisfactory
agreement is a nearby neutral venue for their diplomats to meet
verges on the surreal. Perhaps for this reason, the Russian press
chose to give short shrift to Erdogan’s call for a stability pact,
and instead interpret his visit as signifying support for Russia in
South Ossetia. It was not the finest moment in Turkish diplomacy.

Azerbaijan is another state in the Caucasus that has for some time
been voicing an intense dissatisfaction with the status quo. In recent
months, Baku has been dropping subtle threats that it might seek to
revise it by going to war. In particular, Azerbaijan is dissatisfied
with the outcome of the war it fought with Armenian forces over
Nagorno-Karabakh (to use the most widespread English rendering of
the region’s name), a predominantly Armenian enclave (technically it
held the title of "autonomous oblast" in the Soviet Union) inside the
Republic of Azerbaijan. The Karabakh War started in 1988, i.e. when
the Soviet Union was still in existence, and ended with a ceasefire
some six years later in 1994. During the war not only did Karabakh
break free of Baku’s control, but Armenian forces managed to seize
roughly fifteen percent of the Republic of Azerbaijan’s territory
and expelled the Azeri inhabitants thereof, some 800,000 people.

Since that time, Baku has not been able to achieve any redress through
diplomatic measures. But thanks to foreign investment in its oil
industry it has accumulated some wealth, and has used that wealth to
engage in a military build-up. Whether or not Azerbaijan’s military is
capable of defeating and driving out Armenian forces and restoring the
occupied territories and Karabakh to Baku is by no means clear, but
building frustration among Azeris might tempt them to test their luck.

Turkey and Armenia are the two states in the Caucasus that have the
greatest interest in preserving and building upon the status quo. The
Armenians, i.e. the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) and
the Republic of Armenia, won the Karabakh War and wish to keep their
gains. They would like Azerbaijan and the wider world to acknowledge
the de facto independent NKR as sovereign Armenian territory (either
as part of the Armenian Republic proper or as a separate republic).

Armenia in addition would like to see Turkey lift the blockade it
imposed in 1993 in response to the Armenians’ seizure of Azerbaijani
territory. That blockade has stunted land-locked Armenia’s economic
development, leaving it dependent upon Georgia and Iran for surface
routes to the outside world. The disruption Russia’s invasion
has caused to the operations of Georgia’s ports, rail lines, and
roads (ironically, Turkish goods are among the biggest commodities
imported along those roads into Armenia) has hit Armenia’s economy
especially hard. and underscored Armenia’s isolation and fundamental
vulnerability. Indeed, even before this most recent war, it was clear
that Armenia’s lack of relations with Turkey had left it excessively
dependent upon Russia–an unhealthy situation for any state pretending
to sovereign status. (Indeed, with Armenia already virtually in its
back pocket, one might imagine that Russia may seek to woo Azerbaijan
to its side by compelling Armenian concessions on Karabakh.)

For its part, Turkey since the end of the Cold War has benefited in
numerous ways from the retreat of Russian power and had reason to be
generally satisfied with the state of affairs in the Caucasus prior
to this war. The big exception is the state of its relations with
Armenia. Although Turkey was one of the very first states to recognize
Armenia’s independence in 1991, it never followed up to establish
relations. Several difficult issues divide the two states. One bone
of contention between them is Turkey’s insistence that Armenia
definitively renounce any claims on the territory of the Turkish
Republic. Another is Armenia’s insistence that Turkey recognize the
massacres and deportations from Anatolia of Ottoman Armenians during
and after World War One as a genocide. A third is Turkey’s demand that
Armenia withdraw from the territory of Azerbaijan that it occupies.

A fourth issue is, of course, the blockade. Although the imposition
of the blockade was greatly appreciated by Azerbaijan, which sees
itself as the victim of Armenian aggression, it has harmed Turkey’s
image worldwide by reinforcing the stereotype of the "Terrible Turk"
as a bully. This is something the Turks, never mind the Azeris,
find particularly irksome given that it is the Armenians now who are
occupying territory seized in war. Turkish support for Azerbaijan has
impaired Turkish efforts to counter the lobbying by Armenian diaspora
groups of legislative bodies worldwide to classify the mass deaths of
Ottoman Armenians in 1915 as genocide. Opening the border with Armenia,
some Turkish officials believe, would enable Turkey to thwart these
efforts more effectively.

Economics provides another incentive for Turkey to open its
borders. Turkey’s east is isolated, distant from markets, and remains
underdeveloped. Opening the border with Armenia would provide a boost
to the local economy by enabling cross-border trade. It would also
make available better routing options for oil and gas pipelines
from the Caspian and export corridors to the Caspian and beyond,
and thereby provide a boon to Turkey’s national economy as well.

In a gesture intended perhaps to break the stalemate in
Turkish-Armenian relations, the Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian
invited his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul to come to Yerevan on
September 6 to watch the national soccer teams of the two nations
play a World Cup qualifying match. Gul, some Turks hope, will seize
the moment to initiate a major shift in the region’s diplomacy. Gul
has not yet committed. Were Gul to do so, it would mark a significant
change not just in Turkish-Armenian relations, but even more so in
Turkish diplomacy, which has a tradition of working slowly and with
exceeding caution, and of letting opportunities slip by.

Indeed, with Russian forces now inside Georgia, both Turkey and Armenia
(as well as Azerbaijan) probably already have missed an opportunity to
overcome their differences and to chart a path toward more secure and
prosperous futures for their societies. The Russian state, whether
in its Tsarist, Soviet, and contemporary forms has demonstrated
substantial skill in manipulating ethnic and other cleavages on
its borderlands to weaken its competitors. It is worth remembering
that Russia was involved in the emergence of all of the conflicts
mentioned above (Turkish-Armenian, Azeri-Armenian, Ossetian-Georgian,
and Abkhazian-Georgian) among others. That is not to say that Russia
invented these conflicts. Hardly. At times Russia has expended
considerable efforts to contain and resolve them. But Russia is not
an outsider to them and possesses an intimate familiarity with them–a
familiarity that it can, has, and will deploy to its advantage.

Strength is a relative thing. Sapping the cohesion and power of
one’s potential rivals is often as effective, and occasionally even
more useful, a method for overcoming them than is building up one’s
own strength. There are more fissures for Russia to exploit in the
Caucasus. The Turkish-Armenian-Azerbaijani fissure is an easy one to
exploit. For reasons of history, memory, and culture, all of these
societies remain deeply conflicted regarding relations with each
other. Finding and pushing the buttons to poison the atmosphere and
disrupt any move toward reconciliation is not difficult.

Russia exerts tremendous influence over Armenia, and considerable
influence over Azerbaijan. Turkey, too, is vulnerable to Russian
pressure. Already Turkish businessmen are fretting over the way
increased scrutiny by Russian customs of their goods is harming
Turkish exports and are wondering if such scrutiny is intended as a
message to Turkey to refrain from close cooperation with the United
States against Russia.

Keeping Turkey, Armenia, and Azerbaijan at loggerheads serves Russia
by neutralizing the power and options of its Caucasian neighbors,
keeping them dependent, and blocking the development of the Caucasus as
an alternative corridor for energy and trade. It also serves varied
domestic interests in each of those states. But it does nothing
for those societies aside from depriving them of options for future
development.

It is not clear that Russia’s defeat of Georgia will restore it to
the position of hegemon in the Caucasus, but it will increase Moscow’s
ability to play the role of regional spoiler. Although many Turks and
Armenians retain doubts about the propriety of closer relations between
their countries, important constituencies inside the governments and
societies of the two nations recognize the multiple benefits better
ties would bring. Their difficulty is convincing others that improved
relations are, in fact, conceivable. Thus were Gul and Sarkisian to
meet this September and announce together that they intend that their
states should, together with Azerbaijan, overcome their differences,
their words would have a real impact.

As the larger, more senior, more established, and more powerful state,
Turkey is the better candidate to take the lead in the drive toward
reconciliation. But it is not likely to happen. With Russia inside
Georgia, and the Caucasus reverting again to a theater of Great Power
confrontation, time is running out. Boldness is required. Yet whereas
Moscow drew from its imperial collapse the lesson that fortune favors
the bold, Ankara took from the Ottoman experience the lesson that
extreme discretion is the better part of valor.

www.worldbulletin.net

Total Turnover Of Money Transfers Via ‘HayPost’ Network Amounted To

TOTAL TURNOVER OF MONEY TRANSFERS VIA ‘HAYPOST’ NETWORK AMOUNTED TO 1,7 BLN AMD IN JANUARY-JULY 2008

arminfo
2008-09-01 07:33:00

ArmInfo. The total turnover of money transfers via "HayPost" network
amounted to 1,7 bln AMD in January-July 2008, Director General of
the Armenian National post operator, HayPost CJSC, Hans Boon told
ArmInfo correspondent.

According to him, the internal money transfers of the Armenian state
post operator in 2007 amounted to 10,5 bln AMD. In January – July
2008 internal transfers came to 250 mln AMD. International transfer
turnover in 2007 totalled 2, 6 bln AMD, in January – July 2008 it came
to 1,45 bln AMD. Boon said that the pilot mode of exercising money
transfer system "Blizko" in cooperation with Russian "Svyazbank"
has been successful. To recall, agreement has been reached during
the conference of CIS postal operators in Yerevan in June. According
the agreement, the "Blizko" tranfer system becomes available through
HayPost network, presently on a basis of a pilot program.

Mr. Boon added that one cannot neglect the key role that Armenian
post operator plays for rural inhabitants, who often have Haypost
as the only available operator of cash transactions. "We are going
to ensure our position establishing Postbank", said H. Boon. Haypost
has also strong capacity, noted H. Boon, to cooperate with commercial
banks outside Armenia.

"We have a worldwide span of corresponding banks. That means we
can afford a larger geographical penetration in money transactions,
especially to remote destinations. And there’s always cooperation
between post operators, with an exceedingly high coverage. Say, if
you wish to operate a money transfer to Buenos Aires, you won’t waste
time and space through a chain of banks and countries. The transfer
can be easily accomplished via post", underscored H. Boon.

Railway Traffic To Armenia Via Georgia Restored

RAILWAY TRAFFIC TO ARMENIA VIA GEORGIA RESTORED

arminfo
2008-09-01 13:09:00

ArmInfo. Railway traffic to Armenia via Georgia has been fully
restored, Armenian Transport and Communication Minister Press
secretary Susanna Tonoyan told ArmInfo. She said the timetable of
cargo traffic was because of the explosion of the railway bridge on
Gori-Tbilisi section. The bridge has not been repaired so far. However,
cargo traffic to Armenia was fully restored on 26 August due to an
alternative route. S. Tonoyan outlined that 40 carriages including 3
carriages with petrol, 14 carriages with various commodities and 23
carriages with grain were delivered to Armenia on 1 September. 82
carriages were delivered to the country on 31 August including 2
carriages with petrol, 44 carriages with different commodities and
36 carriages with grain. 108 carriages are on the way to Armenia,
she said.

The Activists May Become Invigorated

THE ACTIVISTS MAY BECOME INVIGORATED

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
30 Aug 2008
Armenia

On the occasion of the Armenia-Turkey football match scheduled for
September the 6th , the Armenian National Congress yesterday released a
statement which runs as follows:

`The Armenian National Congress declares of its intention

a) To terminate, from August 31, 23:00 p.m., the sit-in protest
continuing in the Northern Avenue since July the 4th.

b) To reschedule the republican-wide rally appointed on September 5 for
the next Friday, September the 12th.

c) To restrict the events organized in the Northern Avenue to
`political strolls’ which, till the 12th of September, will start at
19:00 p.m. and last till 22:00 p.m.

We call on all the participants of the sit-in protest and all our
co-thinkers to become invigorated and prepare for the decisive stage of
the struggle.

Lead the struggle till the end! We will win.’

Ring Involved In Counterfeit Plastic Card Transactions Detected In

RING INVOLVED IN COUNTERFEIT PLASTIC CARD TRANSACTIONS DETECTED IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Aug 28, 2008

YEREVAN, August 28. /ARKA/. Armenia’s National Security Service
detained an international criminal ring involving three Romanians and
a Latvian, the Press Center of the National Security Council reported.

In August the group cashed about 263,000 U.S. dollars with counterfeit
plastic cards through ATMs of branches of VTB (Armenia), Anelik,
Unibank and Conversbank in Yerevan and the regions of Armenia, the
Press Center reported.

The National Security Service found 160 counterfeit plastic cards,
a lot of foreign currency and Armenian Drams in hotel rooms of the
group members, says the report. Counterfeit transactions were effected
through bank accounts of clients of Barclays British bank.

According to the report, efforts are made, together with the Interpol
and other international organizations, to completely detect the
criminal activities of the group. Most probably the group ran also
in a number of foreign countries, the report says.

OSCE Office Organizes Summer Camp For Armenian Children

OSCE OFFICE ORGANIZES SUMMER CAMP FOR ARMENIAN CHILDREN

armradio.am
27.08.2008 17:12

Some 80 disabled and socially disadvantaged children from Armenia’s
Syunik province are taking part in a summer camp on "Learning to Live
Together" in Kapan, the provincial capital.

The 10-day camp, which ends this week, was organized by the OSCE
Programme Implementation Presence in Syunik, which is part of the
OSCE Office in Yerevan. The Canadian-owned Deno Gold Mining Company
co-sponsored the camp.

"This camp follows a similar event last year, organized together with
UNESCO," said Garik Chilingaryan, Project Co-ordinator of the OSCE
Programme Implementation Presence. "By having a corporate sponsor
this year, we promote the building of bridges between business and
society. Such connections form a basis for public-private partnerships
that can promote economic and social development".

At the camp, the children learned about the outdoors and the
environment.

The camp aimed to foster independence, self-esteem and social and
life skills, as well as create equal opportunities for vulnerable
groups and support their integration.

An interactive training programme introduced this year helped the
participants, ranging in age from 8 to 13, develop basic leadership
skills and learn how to identify, analyze and solve problems. At the
end of the camp, the children will develop small project proposals
for their communities.=2 0Some proposals will be selected for
implementation, with support from Deno Gold.

Hasmik Kostandyan, 10 a camp participant, said: "I was happy to discuss
the problems of our community and felt important that I can make a
difference by introducing my solution and offering my assistance. I
would like to make something good for the community".

Americans for Artsakh Launches Exec Training in Stepanakert w/AGBU

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Americans for Artsakh Launches Executive Training in Stepanakert with
Support of AGBU

Americans for Artsakh (AFA) recently completed its first of a series of
training courses for government employees in Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh).
The AGBU-funded course, which was held at the NKR Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, was titled "Business English for NKR Diplomats" and took place
from July 20-30, 2008. Sarah Ludwig, AFA Executive Director and also a
language specialist at the International Center for Language Studies in
Washington, DC, conducted the course.

"I commend the AGBU for appreciating the paramount importance of
education and continued professional training. Artsakh remains excluded
from any such international projects, so, on behalf of my government, I
thank the AGBU for stepping up and sponsoring this pioneer training
course," said Vardan Barseghian, NKR Representative to the United
States, who worked with both organizations on this project.

In completing the course, participating members of the Ministry gained
valuable skills in various aspects of working with foreign counterparts,
including giving presentations, conducting meetings, and social
interaction.

Irina Beglaryan, Head of the Department of Multilateral Cooperation at
the Ministry, commented, "The course will be very useful for our future
dealings with foreigners. It will improve our ability to interact with
the international community on many different levels. We hope that AFA
will offer similar courses in other areas, as well."

AFA plans on conducting training courses for NKR government employees to
include disciplines such as international public law, diplomacy, public
administration, economics, and management. In addition, it also
envisages developing a wide range of educational programs at the school
and university levels in order to provide students with knowledge of
global, rapidly developing subjects to which they would not otherwise
have access.

These types of programs will prove to be a crucial part of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s path towards greater development.

Americans for Artsakh is a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization
established to preserve freedom, strengthen democracy, foster economic
development, protect the cultural identity and promote the heritage of
the people of Artsakh. The founding Board of Directors includes: Zaven
Khanjian, President; Dr. Hratch Abrahamian, Vice President; Savey
Tufenkian, Treasurer; Rita Balian, Secretary; and Edward Chobanian.

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest Armenian
non-profit organization. Headquartered in New York, AGBU preserves and
promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through educational,
cultural, and humanitarian programs, annually serving some 400,000
Armenians in 37 countries.

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org