TYSON SYMPATHIZES VIC DARCHINYAN
Panorama.am
14:54 24/06/06
“Amateurish box is a duel and professional box is a fight,”
Vakhtang Darchinyan (Vic), 5 times champion in professional
IBF boxing and 4 times world champion in IBO boxing told a press
conference today. Speaking on his upcoming fight with Omar Narvayes,
an Argentinean world champion in WBO boxing, Darchinyan said “he has
had 21 fights, never lost a game, has won by knock-outs a lot but I
will win over him and of coarse by knock-out.”
V. Darchinyan has been living in Australia for 6 years and fights
in professional boxing. He has combated 26 times and has as many
victories, 21 of which by knockouts.
Vakhtang says he is a close friend of world famous Mike Tyson and
the latter promised to be present during his fight with Mexican
Luis Maldonado in Las Vegas. However, before the fight Tyson called
Vakhtang saying that he cannot come promising to follow the game on
TV. The fight ended with the victory of Vakhtang Darchinyan over the
Mexican boxer.
Will The Festival Become Traditional?
WILL THE FESTIVAL BECOME TRADITIONAL?
Panorama.am
14:26 24/06/06
The participants of One Nation, One Culture festival, which launched
yesterday evening, were discontent with the organizational matters
upon their visit to Tsitsernakaberd. They put flowers on the eternal
fire commemorating the genocide victims and also planted a tree in
the fir-tree grove.
Vigen Sargsyan, president assistant, who deals with the organization
of the festival, was not aware of the discontents. Tamar Poghosyan,
who has won the title of unsuccessful culture vice minister told that
discontents are due to large number of participants.
In her words, delegations from 20 countries take part totaling 2000
participants.
“Nothing can be perfect. We deal with 2000 people and each has her/her
own demands, understanding and mentality. Difficulties are mainly
connected with the lack of information. We really have problems in
organizational matters since we cannot provide the level of service
for such mass events. Some think that they will get personal service
cars. There are some groups which have performed on big stages of
the world. We provide whatever we have. We should work with the
delegations and explain them,” T. Poghosyan said.
Olympic Day Of Running Race Held In Yerevan
OLYMPIC DAY OF RUNNING RACE HELD IN YEREVAN
Panorama.am
13:37 24/06/06
Running on the occasion of Olympic day of race started in Yerevan
today at 10.00 from the Republic Square.
The action is held in many countries around the globe and nominates
the anniversary of the establishment of International Olympic
Committee (June 24, 1894). The participants of the race, students
and schoolchildren, will run to Hrazdan stadium. Certificates will be
handed to the first 20 winners of the race. The runners will be met by
the National Olympic Committee of Armenia and other Olympic champions.
The transport movement is partly stopped in the city due to the
race.
Urban Assault Racers Take On Austin
URBAN ASSAULT RACERS TAKE ON AUSTIN
By Kate Alexander
Austin American-Statesman , TX
June 25 2006
Bike race requires blood, sweat and sense of humor
Austin’s urban warriors faced their foe Sunday morning and it was
not the four-foot rubber duckie, with its bulbous head and mocking,
wide-eyed grin.
Though vexing, the rubber duckie and its tendency to tip could be
overcome. Mount Bonnell proved a far greater challenge.
For Team Crazed Armenians, just the idea of the gravity-defying climb
up Mount Bonnell had them questioning their fortitude.
“You want to talk about our strategy?” asked Shant Donabedian, as
they prepared to take off toward the daunting hill.
“Survive,” responded teammate Krikor Deurdulian.
Some 800 competitors in the third annual Austin Subaru Urban Assault
bike race slogged through foam, slip-n-slides and potato sack races
along the 20 to 25 mile trek. One of seven races across the country,
the contest in Austin, the race’s hometown, is by far the largest,
said race director Josh Kravetz. The Dallas contest last month drew
300 racers.
The goal: ride to checkpoints throughout Austin and complete the
various challenges at each destination.
At the Rowing Dock on Town Lake, one member of the team had to mount
the enormous rubber duckie as the other person swam them , duckie in
tow, to a buoy and back. The duckie was rarely cooperative.
Other challenges had the teams searching for plastic aquatic animals
in a vat of foam, riding mini-bikes through an obstacle course and
running a potato-sack race.
At the same time, the competitors had to decipher the clues to three
local landmarks. The clues led them to Mount Bonnell, the University
of Texas Tower and Treaty Oak.
The first two-person team to collect the beads at all 10 checkpoints
and return to Run-Tex on Riverside Drive won.
That honor went to doctors Lee Chilton and Brannan Smoot, who repeated
their victory from the first urban assault race in 2003.
Team Inaugural winners said the key to their dominance is planning.
“You win the race in the days before it and not on the day of,”
Smoot said.
Chilton left a good chunk of skin on the asphalt near the corner of
Barton Springs Drive and Lamar Boulevard when he hit a grease spot
in a parking lot and took a tumble off his bike. But a little blood
dripping down his leg did not slow them down. They completed the race
in just over an hour and a half.
CIS, EurAsEC, SCO, CES And Others: Genesis Of Post-Soviet Integratio
CIS, EURASEC, SCO, CES AND OTHERS: GENESIS OF POST-SOVIET INTEGRATION PROCESSES
Regnum, Russia
June 25 2006
A session of EurAsEC Interstate Council presided by Byelorussian
President Alexander Lukashenko convened in Minsk on June 23. The
agenda has been announced beforehand: the heads of states discussed
Uzbekistan’s access to the organization, creation of the Customs union,
and the concept of EurAsEC’s international policy were discussed.
EurAsEC is an international economic organization whose functions
are to form common external custom borders of its founding countries
(Byelorussia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan),
developing a common foreign economic policy, tariffs, prices, and
other constituents of common market functioning. A treaty on EurAsEC
foundation was signed on October 10, 2000 in Kazakhstani capital
Astana by presidents of Byelorussia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
and Tajikistan. In May 2002, a EurAsEC observer status was granted to
Moldavian and Ukrainian leaderships on their request, later Armenia
also received the status.
EurAsEC is an open organization. It could be accessed by any state
that will not only take on responsibilities defined in the Convention
on the foundation of the Community and other conventions effective in
the framework of the Community, but will also take efforts to meet
these obligations. EurAsEC observer status is granted to a state or
an international (intergovernmental) organization on their request.
EurAsEC is a successor of the CIS Customs union that is fully
consistent with the UNO principles and international legal norms. It
is designed to effectively promote the process of creating by the CIS
Customs union member countries of a Common Economic Space (CES) and
coordinating their approaches to the integration into international
economic and trade system.
Among the top near-term EurAsEC priorities are:
1) transport: solving the problem of common tariffs, increasing
commodity traffic, simplifying customs rules, completing internal
official procedures on the signed conventions, and creating
transnational forwarding corporations;
2) power industry: joint exploration of hydro-energy complexes in
Central Asia, solving the problem of energy and water supplies,
and creating a common energy budget;
3) workforce migration: assuring migrants’ social protection, creating
an effective system of regulation and control of workforce migration,
combating migration-related crime, solving problems due to migrants’
and their employers’ taxpaying;
4) agro-industrial complex: coordinating agricultural policies of
EurAsEC member countries, creating a common grocery market of Community
member countries, reducing transporting expenses, and establishing
new market institutions in the field.
Interestingly, EurAsEC creation and functioning is considered one of
the most successful projects within the CIS. On June 7 2006, Community
Secretary General Grigoriy Rapota said that the Minsk session would
become decisive in EurAsEC formation and development.
He also informed that a Customs union contractual base of 12 agreements
had been developed on the expert level, 16 more agreements still were
to be adopted. Discussing access of EurAsEC member states to the WTO
was also planned to be discussed at the meeting. “How the Customs union
can be married to accessing WTO? There are several options,” Rapota
said. “First is to create a Customs union, with its eventual access to
WTO. Another option is to join WTO independently, coordinating member
countries’ positions with all others, thereby minimizing possible
‘damage.'” Rapota also said that almost everything was ready for
the Customs union establishment; time schedules and development pace
remained to be set.
The CIS has essentially accomplished its historical mission. And the
fact that a number of CIS member countries – seriously or jokingly –
announced their intent to exit the organization since the beginning of
2006 is yet another evidence of the trend. Nobody is questioning such
intentions; in fact, Russia’s authorities themselves openly admitted
that the CIS had been created for the “civilized divorce” of the former
union republics. They also pointed out to the fact that it is thanks
to the CIS that former Soviet republics managed to escape repeating
the Balkan-style “blood-bath divorce” on the post-Soviet space.
A lot of CIS “subsidiaries” have been created right inside the CIS
all along its existence: Customs union, Central Asian union, Eurasian
union, the Russia-Belarus Union State, and, of course, GUUAM-GUAM.
For different reasons, the only effective structure within the CIS is
CSTO which is a military, military-political, and military-technical
rather than economic cooperation organization. In other words, at
least for the six CIS member countries, the set of challenges and
risks of the current period appeared to be a better unifying factor
than the desire to join efforts catching up with economic development
of the world “economic locomotives” and improving welfare of their
own peoples.
That is why, frankly speaking, as early as when the projects on
EurAsEC and CES creation started to emerge, they were envisioned
as prototypes of some political and economic future of CIS and all
the integration structures that were created within it. Only with a
greater accent on purely economic aspects, rather than military and
military-related ones, due to the necessity of developing cooperation
in such a sensitive field as establishing national security of member
countries from the viewpoint of joint resisting the attacks of the
terrorist “international.”
The year 2006 is, however, a decisive one in many respects. May be that
is why we sense the tension and hear public apprehension voiced in a
number of western capitals, related directly to the efforts to take
steps towards further EurAsEC development? All the more so, toward the
development of SCO that is, we believe, is also one of the integration
structures that arouse within the CIS, despite the Chinese membership?
The western creature (some argue that it is a purely a U.S.-Turkish
strategic project) in the face of GUUAM kicked the bucket after
the so-called “Andijan events,” when the Uzbekistani leadership got
disappointed in the U.S. tutelage over the “democratic processes”
in Central Asia. First, the leadership almost immediately drew the U.S.
military base out of the Uzbekistani territory. Second, it also did
not hesitate to withdraw from GUUAM, which automatically returned
the bloc to the embryo state. Third, on January 25, it formalized
Uzbekistan’s full-fledged membership in EurAsEC. This was how the
initiative to create and raise a U.S.-Turkish Trojan horse within the
CIS to counterweight the growing Russian influence on the Eurasian
space collapsed.
True, instead of GUUAM-GUAM, the CIS public received a set of two odd
symbiotic structures: the Organization for Democracy and Economic
Development-GUAM (ODED-GUAM) and the notorious Commonwealth of
Democratic Choice (CDC). If one looks at them closely, they will
notice that “geographically speaking,” the only aim of creating
these quasi-structures (whose member countries have very little in
common economically) is imposing strict limits on Russia’s room for
maneuver in the Baltic and Black Sea regions, as well as fencing
these reservoirs from other CIS countries who decided not to put
bets on the openly anti-Russian integration structures created in
the post-Soviet space.
It is hard to believe that the proposed ODED-GUAM and CDC projects
would create “alternative” to Russia suppliers or transit zones of
energy carriers in the post-Soviet space, as is apparently desired
by the Washington gurus of the “Baltic-Black Sea union.” For all the
projects put forward by Baltic, Ukrainian, and Georgian spokespeople
could be at best described as economically unprofitable from the
start. Indeed, they are not at all economic in their nature: they
just broadcast of the anti-Russian political trend that has become so
popular today to the west, north-west, and south-west of the modern
borders of the Russian Federation.
The senseless strategic projects are not viable, no matter how many
states were pushed in their boundaries by the authors of the projects,
and how much money was assigned for the waste paper.
Speaking frankly, today, both the patrons of ODED-GUAM and CDC and the
heads of member states of these structures do not have as much time as
they used to have in the 1990s when foundations for the anti-Russian
strategic projects were laid in the post-Soviet space.
Really well-grounded Eurasian projects mentioned above, like EurAsEC,
CES, and, of course, the SCO are a different story. In fact, CSTO
and SCO have started cooperation, at least, in the issue of joint
resistance to the international terrorism.
Today, it is becoming ultimately clear that in some of their aspects
the original plans of EurAsEC, CES, and CSTO creators also crashed,
since it was assumed that, sooner or later, Ukraine would become
a qualified member of these integration projects. As we can see,
the “revolutionary” leadership of the modern Ukraine is even ready
to induce the emergence of intra-national “demarcation lines,” as
long as it “breaks away” and becomes the updated “sanitary cordon”
designed to “restrain” Russia and her allies. As for the Ukraine’s
desire to trench herself all along the Russian-Ukrainian border, it
is reminiscent of a swift-flowing episode of regressive schizophrenia,
just as the revived talks about Kievan Rus being a historical precursor
of Ukraine, not of Russia.
Therefore, we must give up the hope that the Ukrainian leadership at
some last moment will “jump on a departing train,” realizing that
all the western roads, except for the one to NATO, are blocked by
exactly economical barriers richly seasoned with political reasoning
about the Constitution of the United Europe not being ratified. In
this case, perspectives of EurAsEC and CES, rather than of CSTO,
are more interesting, although these days in Minsk issues are being
discussed at the CSTO, not CES Heads of states’ council.
If we manage to resolve issues impeding activities of EurAsEC member
countries, then, keeping in mind that the Community is in its essence
an expanded CES option, we should also remember that the structure
still remains open for new memberships, i.e., to everyone, including
states that have never been CIS or former USSR members. Comparing
the levels of interstate negotiations, especially for the last 6-8
months, one will notice that countries that have never been former
USSR members are interested not only in SCO but also EurAsEC.
Opinions have already been voiced that the Ukraine itself (apparently,
the country will soon also depart from its observer status in the
Community) could be replaced in the margins of the structure by
Iran who already has an observer status in the SCO and continues to
develop ties and cooperation almost with all the CIS member countries
bordering it.
Thus, the Minsk summits will really become decisive ones. But not
only for the EurAsEC further development. Essentially, the issue at
stake is about what the geopolitical layout in the post-Soviet space
may become on the eve of G8 summit in St. Petersburg coming July.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
BAKU: Azerbaijan To Earn $140bln For 20 Years
AZERBAIJAN TO EARN $140 BLN FOR 20 YEARS
AzerTag, Azerbaijan
June 25 2006
By estimation of international financial institutions, Azerbaijan
will earn $140 bln only from the oil projects for 20 years.
“Azerbaijan will take advantage of these opportunities to strengthen
the army, so that any moment it could win our occupied lands back. I
have no doubt about that and hope that our policy will lead to this,”
said President Ilham Aliyev at the graduation ceremony at the Heydar
Aliyev High Military School.
According to the President, Armenia gets nothing by temporizing.
“The time is not working for them, and on the contrary, the time is
on our side” said the President.
“Azerbaijan will never put up with separation of Nagorno-Karabakh
from Azerbaijan, and will restore its territorial integrity by either
peaceful or military means.”
BAKU: Armenia’s Non-Constructive Stance Does Not Allow Resolving Con
ARMENIA’S NON-CONSTRUCTIVE STANCE DOES NOT ALLOW RESOLVING CONFLICT
AzerTag, Azerbaijan
June 25 2006
Speaking at the graduation ceremony at Heydar Aliyev high
military school President Ilham Aliyev said that resolution of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is the number one
problem for Azerbaijan.
“Unfortunately, there is no progress in this sphere. Indeed, the
talks are going on; the talks are being held within some framework.
However, they are all not effective because we cannot achieve any
results” said President Ilham Aliyev in his speech.
According to the Head of State, Azerbaijan’s commitment to the
negotiations for over ten years demonstrates its constructivism.
Despite occupation of Azerbaijani lands and the fact that over 1
million Azerbaijan became refugees and IDPs because of the Armenia’s
policy of ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijan, our country is trying
to take advantage of all the available opportunities for peace.
Therefore, Azerbaijan’s stance in the negotiations is very
constructive. Unfortunately, Armenia’s non-constructive stance does
not allow us to resolve this conflict.
“I reiterate that we highly appraise the efforts of the international
community, their decisions including the activity of the OSCE
Minsk Group. Indeed, they try to secure an agreement. Armenia’s
non-constructive stance, disregard for the international legal norms
do not allow to settle the conflict. In this case, Azerbaijan should
make some corrections in its policy. Our patience is not endless,”
added the President.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
"Live Free Or Die"
“LIVE FREE OR DIE”
By: Preston Taran*
AMIN – Arabic Media Internet Network
June 25 2006
This simple phrase is something that should be taken to heart by the
Palestinian people. By now it should be clear to the Palestinians,
that aside from words by a few European leftists, they are clearly
alone. Remember, they cannot be fed by these words. Whether Hamas
recognizes Israel or not, they will still be without help. During
the two Intifadas worldwide support was minimal. Not even their Arab
brothers helped them. Perhaps, Arab states are fearful that many
aspects of the Palestinian people are more advanced than their own
societies (a free press, but for how long?)
South Africa received support and obtained their independence. The
Armenians, though ignored eventually obtained a state of their own.
The list of successful independence movements is endless. The
Palestinians in comparison are forgotten and ignored. Perhaps, they
have a poor public relations section in their ministry, both now and
in the past.
The Palestinian people are starved in more ways than one. Not only
is their economy in shambles, but even their military ordnance is
pathetic. Their childlike rockets are useless and only give the
Israelis an excuse to pummel them with real firepower. What is next?
A civil war?
Should they not look at themselves and say that even if they accept
the Israeli state, they will not be free? Freedom is earned with
unselfish sacrifices by the community as a whole; not with wishful
thinking and platitudes.
What is to be done? I have come to the conclusion that the immortal
words “Live Free or Die: Death is Not the Worst of Evils” is something
that is quite relevant at this fateful juncture in history.
These words of American Revolutionary war hero General John Stark in
1809 (the hero of the Battle of Bennington in August, 1777) should be
taken to heart. Stark knew that life was pointless without the basic
freedoms given to us by the Creator. Having a beating heart is not
the only criteria for living.
The Palestinian people have not one corner of their rump state safe
from Israeli aggression. The children and others die on a daily basis,
so we can no longer say that to be militant will cost lives. A greater
effort must be made to obtain their rightful place in the community
of nations. Palestinian life is already cheap in the eyes of the world.
It is time to do anything that any people desiring to be free would
do. Ultimate sacrifices must be made, as they were in our American
Revolution and for that matter during our Civil War. Men sacrificed
their lives so a nation united and free could come into being. Yes,
to live as a slave is a far worse proposition than to be sacrificed
in order that a sovereign Palestinian state becomes a reality.
* Preston Taran is a writer and editor living in New York.
SOAD Calgary Bound
SOAD CALGARY BOUND
By MIKE BELL — Calgary Sun
Jam! Showbiz, Canada
June 25 2006
For System Of A Down, the vacation is over.
Now, it’s time to roll up the sleeves and get back to work.
Well, in order to get ready for summer vacation.
Which, um, will precede an extended vacation.
Don’t question it, or even attempt to make sense of it, just be
thankful the Armenian-American metal band is returning to our fair
city for a ‘Dome show Monday.
And for those who were lucky enough to catch the band nine months
ago in the same venue, drummer John Dolmayan says that first break
in SOAD’s schedule bodes well for their return visit.
“We haven’t toured for over seven months and we have a lot of desire
to get out there and play onstage again,” Dolmayan says from his home
during a break in his World Cup-viewing.
“So we’ll probably have a little bit more energy than we had last time.
“Last time we came out it was after about five months of touring,
and you know how it is, you just burnout after awhile, you get tired.
“Although you may not have noticed it, we feel like near the end
of the tour we get a little tired — now you’re catching us on the
beginning of the tour.
“Nice and fresh.
“Although,” he says jokingly, “you’ll have to deal with whatever
cobwebs are there …”
Of course, those who caught the quartet’s incredible show last
September will take them however they can get them, especially because,
since that show the band released its second album of 2005 Hypnotize,
the companion piece to the earlier dropped Mezmerize.
With the pair of albums and a year of touring, burnout was
understandable.
That’s also the reason after the brief tour they’re embarking on,
SOAD will follow it up with a stint on this year’s Ozzfest, something
Dolmayan likens to summer camp for bands, because of its easy pace
and enjoyable atmosphere.
And then, once those shows wrap up, the band will take an extended
hiatus, which the Lebanese-born drummer estimates will last more than
two years.
While there have been rumours the break will be permanent, fuelled
further by confirmation guitarist Daron Malakian is starting a new band
Scars On Broadway — with bassist Shavo Odadjian a likely member —
Dolmayan says the temporary cessation of SOAD business will likely
further the band’s career.
“It’s hard to maintain focus after so many years of doing the same
thing over and over again,” he says. “We need a break from each other
as well as the whole scene and the pressures of being in a band that’s
at the level were at.”
As to how he’ll spend the next couple of years, Dolmayan says he
won’t pursue a musical project of his own, noting he has no wish to
be a songwriter, even admitting he’s not that good at it.
“Everyone’s got a position, and I’m happy with mine.”
Instead, he’ll spend the time doing something else he loves.
“I’m starting a comic book company based on the Internet …,” he says.
“That’s what I’ll be pretty much diverting most of my attention to.
It’s my other passion — I love music and comics are what I’ve also
been into since I was a kid.
“I’m a nerd, man. I’m staying true to my nerd roots.
ANKARA: Greek Cypriot Ambassador Was Not Welcome In Azerbaijan
GREEK CYPRIOT AMBASSADOR WAS NOT WELCOME IN AZERBAIJAN
Mehtap Cicekcar (JTW) With Hurriyet 23 June 2006
Journal of Turkish Weekly
June 25 2006
Greek Cypriot Ambassador to Moscow, Leonidas Pantelides, met with
frustration on a trip he took two days ago to the Azerbayjianian
capital of Baku to attempt to block decisions made in support of
Northern Cyprus at a meeting of Islamic Conference Organization
(IKO-ICO) foreign ministers. Pantelides was reportedly unable to
receive a hotel room in Baku, and spent the night going between bars,
restaurants, and the streets of the capital. The Greek Cyprus has
made efforts to prevent any co-operation between the European Union
and Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan had started direct flight to the Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) last year.
According to sources in Turkey, Ankara had known that the Greek
Cypriots would be sending a representative to the ICO meeting,
and had contacted Baku authorities to ask that the Greek Cypriot
representative be blocked from the meeting.
When in fact the Greek Cypriot authority did send Pantelides, the Azeri
leadership told him that they would not extend accreditation to him for
the ICO conference, and that all the hotels in the capital were full.
At a previous IKO conference in Yemen, a Greek Cypriot ambassador did
succeed in entering into proceedings, even attempting to participate
in a commemorative group photograph, though he was discovered by the
Turkish delegation at the last moment.
Meanwhile, one of the results from the ICO conference in regards to
Northern Cyprus was a firm proclamation in support of the entity, with
a stress on the necessity of lifting current isolationary blockades
on the northern side of the island.
It is also reported that Azerbaijan is not happy with the close
relations between Greek Cyprus and Armenia. Both states signed
aggrements including military and intelligence co-operation.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress