Lori Deputy Governor Appointed Deputy Chair of Ra Social Ins. Fund

ARAM KOCHARIAN RELIEVED OF LORI DEPUTY GOVERNOR’S POST AND APPOINTED
DEPUTY CHAIRMAN OF RA SOCIAL INSURANCE STATE FUND

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, NOYAN TAPAN. According to RA Prime Minister
Andranik Margarian’s decree, Aram Kocharian was relieved of the post
of Deputy Regional Governor of Lori and by another decree was
appointed Deputy Chairman of RA Social Insurance State Fund. According
to RA government’s Information and Public Relations Department, by the
Prime Minister’s decree Samvel Gyulbekian was appointed Deputy
Regional Governor of of Lori.

Financial Monitoring to Be Carried Out in Yerevan Comp. Schools

FINANCIAL MONITORING TO BE CARRIED OUT IN YEREVAN COMPREHENSIVE
SCHOOLS THIS YEAR

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, NOYAN TAPAN. A financial monitoring will be carried
out in Yerevan comprehensive schools this year. The monitoring will
contribute to correct realization of school budget, as well as
solution of financial problems emerging during a schoolyear. Kamo
Areyan, Deputy Yerevan Mayor, reported during the April 11 press
conference that the order of implementation of the internal audit of
comprehensive schools this year was also approved. According to the
Deputy Mayor, this will lead to the certain financial independence of
schools excluding inappropriate administrative interference from
without as far as possible. It was mentioned that at present the
expenditures and incomes of Yerevan schools for 2005 are being
approved. This year 8.6 bln drams (about 19 mln dollars) was allocated
from the state budget to the Yerevan educational system, from which
school budgets are formed. K.Areyan said that unlike the previous
years school headmasters also immediately participate in the process
of formation of school budgets this year.

Court Exam of Applications Disputing Results of Bar Assoc. Continues

COURT EXAMINATION OF APPLICATIONS DISPUTING RESULTS OF LAWYERS CHAMBER
ELECTIONS TO CONTINUE ON APRIL 14

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, NOYAN TAPAN. The examination of the applications
that dispute the results of the elections of the Chamber of Lawyers
and its bodies will continue on April 14. Prior to this, the court
will require from 2 unions of lawyers that they present the
voting-papers and the record of the elections, as well as the personal
files of the 12 persons who, according to the claimants, did not
receive any certificates from the highest qalification commission and
therefore cannot be considered lawyers and had no right to participate
in the elections. Granting the claimant Hayk Alumian’s petition, the
court made a decision to require that the unions of lawyers also
present the licence applications made by 93 persons as well as their
replies received. The lawyer Sos Grigorian withdrew his application to
the court on April 11, explaining this by the fact that his claim is
contained in the other applications as well.

The dream of Aland

Ha’aretz, Israel
April 14 2005

The dream of Aland

By Adar Primor

Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed to us this week that he
has a dream – the Irelandization (and Singaporization) of Israel.
Last week, during the visit of Finland’s foreign minister, Erkki
Tuomioja, someone in the Foreign Ministry recalled another dream of
Netanyahu’s, from 1997: the dream of the “Alandization” of Palestine,
or in other words, copying the autonomy model of the Aland Islands –
which are under Finnish sovereignty – in the Palestinian territories.
It would be interesting to know, snickered that same source, whether
Netanyahu would today repeat that original idea.

In Mariehamn, the snow-covered capital of the Aland Islands, there
were recently some people who recalled that Israeli friends from the
Levant had shown an interest in them. The governor of Aland, Peter
Lindback, told of an Israeli ambassador who wanted to learn about the
local police force on the islands. The head of the local
administration, Elisabeth Naucler, told of a visit by Prof. Ruth
Lapidot, former legal adviser of the Israeli foreign minister, who
also came to investigate the local autonomy. Nati Tamir, former
ambassador in Helsinki and at present the ambassador in Canberra,
confirmed Israeli interest in the “Aland model,” and mentioned that
it lasted for several years.

It turns out that Israel is in good company. In a world of multiple
regional and ethnic conflicts, the list of those interested in the
“islands of peace” is a long one. About two weeks ago, the president
of Zanzibar visited Aland in order to learn how to behave vis-a-vis
his mother country, Tanzania. Before him, a long list of delegations,
officials and professors, liberation organizations and government
representatives, representatives of separatist regions and
mother-countries, visited the islands, from Corsica and France,
Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan, South Ossetia and Georgia, the
Crimea and Ukraine, and East Timor and Indonesia – and this is just a
partial list.

Advertisement

About 25,000 people live in Aland, which is composed of a chain of
about 6,500 islands and lies in the Gulf of Bothnia, between Finland
and Sweden. In 1809, Czarist Russia annexed Finland and Aland, which
until then had been a part of the Kingdom of Sweden. With the fall of
the last czar and Finland’s declaration of independence, in 1917, the
residents of the islands – 95 percent of whom are Swedish speakers,
wanted to reunite with Sweden.

Their request was transmitted to the League of Nations, which ruled
that the islands would come under Finnish sovereignty, but would be
demilitarized and neutralized, and entitled to self rule and full
cultural autonomy. This compromise agreement, which didn’t satisfy
any of the parties in its time, eventually turned the islands into a
dynamic and flourishing autonomy, a unique formula that is considered
the greatest achievement of the League of Nations.

Finns or Swedes? We are Alanders, boast the inhabitants of the
islands today. They watch Swedish television and go to study at
Swedish universities, their mentality is closer to Stockholm than to
Helsinki, but they still root for Finland at hockey games against
Sweden.

For all those seeking the perfect model of government, the Alanders
explain that their system is inimitable. If there is anything to
learn from it, it is the fact that it is sui generis, and apparently,
the same will have to be true of the Palestinian model.

The peace framework which Israel and Egypt agreed upon at Camp David
in 1978 spoke of “full autonomy” for the Palestinians. The Israeli
peace initiative of 1989 spoke of “self rule,” whereas the term on
which Israel and the Palestinians agreed after 1993 was “self
government.” But what was fine before Oslo today arouses profound
disdain.

There is nobody in the Foreign Ministry who will admit that the
Israeli interest in Aland was anything more than a “preoccupation
with a curiosity,” because even Prime Minister Ariel Sharon – who,
according to many, expressed admiration for the creation of the
Bantustans in South Africa, and who writhed (like his predecessors)
among the terms “entity,” “autonomy,” “minimum powers,” and “limited
sovereignty” – understands that there is no serious body today in the
international community that will support anything less than a
Palestinian state with full sovereignty.

And Netanyahu? The finance minister, who is also opposed to the
disengagement, ignored the overtures of Haaretz this week, as though
refusing to awake from his new dreams about the flourishing Israel;
as though refusing, at the same time, to give up the old dream of
Palestinian autonomy, and to accept the reality and the fact that
whether you will it or not, “Aland” is just a dream.

Drastic Changes Are Possible

A1Plus

| 14:54:33 | 13-04-2005 | Politics |

DRASTIC CHANGES ARE POSSIBLE

Answering the questions of the journalists today Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan did not exclude the possibility of drastic changes in the
settlement of the Karabakh conflict. But Oskanyan considers the
announcements of the co-head that the packet of offers is ready a little
exaggerated. `The elements of the packet are being cleared out’, said
Oskanyan.

We also learnt that on April 15 in London there will not be a meeting
Mamedyarov-Oskanyan. `The OSCR Minsk group co-heads will meet me and
Mamedyarov separately, as there are issues they want to clear out, but there
will be no separate meeting Oskanyan-Mamedyarov’, said the RA Foreign
Minister. By the way, he is surprised by the recent attention to the meeting
of the foreign ministers, `This is not the first time I have met Mamedyarov;
there have been many meetings’.

Let us note that that Vardan Oskanyan does not share the optimism of the
OSCE Chairman-in Office Dimitrij Rupel. Let us remind that the matter is
about the announcement of Rupel after the meeting with Arkadi Ghoukasyan
that till summer a new window will open in the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict.

Oskanyan did not want to comment on the question when there has been a
higher pressure from the international community, in 1997 or today. He
announced diplomatically that in 1997 he was the Deputy Foreign Minister and
he did not feel any pressure, neither does he now.

Speaking about Serge Sargsyan’s announcement that the security zone can be
returned in return for guarantees for security, Vardan Oskanyan announced
that the security zone carries out the role of security, and reminded about
his report in the Parliament where he had mentioned that `if the lands must
provide the security for Artsakh, they must be kept, and if they must be
returned for guarantees of security, they must be returned’. According to
the Foreign Minister, this was what the Defense Minister meant.

“Economic Development Doesn’t Affect Poverty Reduction” – Minister

DEPUTY MINISTER ON SOCIAL ISSUES: “ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DOESN’T AFFECT
POVERTY REDUCTION”

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Economic development doesn’t affect
poverty reduction at all and according to this, effective mechanisms
of distribution are necessary. Ashot Yesayan, RA Deputy Minister of
Labor and Social Issues, declared this during the April 11 discussion
on the subject “RA Social Policy in Local Self-Government System”
organized at the office of Seyran Avagian, Adviser to RA President. A
package concerning prior social problems should be worked out and
mechanisms of their solution should be proposed in each region and
community in order to make the RA government’s “Poverty Reduction
Strategic Program” more effective. According to the Deputy Minister,
the goal of social policy is a fair, prosperous and strong
society. And one of the most important components of social policy is
cadre policy. At the same time, A.Yesayan mentioned, no social
officials are prepared in higher schools at present and lack of
specialists is felt in the sphere.

Russian Film Figures Conduct Skill Lessons for Cinema & Theatre

RUSSIAN CINEMATOGRAPHY FIGURES CONDUCT SKILL LESSONS FOR CINEMA AND
THEATRE STATE INSTITUTE STUDENTS

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 11, Daniel Spivakovski and
Mikhail Yevlanov, actors playing the main parts in the films “My
Step-brother Frankenstein” and “Ours,” as well as Sergei Lazaruk,
Chief of RF Cinematography Department, conducted skill lessons in
Yerevan Cinema and Theatre State Institute in connection with the week
of Russian films. S.Lazaruk said that 80 films were released last year
in Russia, 17 out of which were debutes. The same day actors of
Russian Art Theatre after Chekhov also conducted skill lessons at the
Institute.

Russia: `Society Is Afraid of Our Army’

MOSNEWS, Russia
April 13 2005

`Society Is Afraid of Our Army’

Created: 13.04.2005 15:54 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 17:58 MSK, 45
minutes ago

Natalia Kalashnikova

Itogi Weekly

Sergei Borisovich, let’s start with the most recent events.
Kyrgyzstan is not the first, and perhaps not the last reason to say
that the CIS is falling apart.

Despite this, no one is willing to drop out of the CIS. You cannot
deny that.

Still, the CIS is also a system of strategic security which may now,
in light of the new developments, start to stagnate. Can a situation
develop where we will have to defend ourselves from threats emanating
from `revolutionary’ regions?

Let’s start with the fact that the CIS was not created for the
purpose of integration in the first place. There was no such aim. The
CIS was created for a `peaceful divorce’. And in this sense, it has
fulfilled its task. Thank God, we didn’t have a Yugolsavia-type
breakup of the Soviet Union. There were no wars. Yes, conflicts that
originated in the USSR remained: Karabakh, Abkhazia, South Ossetia,
Transdnestr. And with the help of the CIS mechanism, we were able to
freeze these conflicts. Secondly: the CIS was never a
military-political organization, and never aspired to that role.

A lot of CIS members initially didn’t take part in the military
organs of the Commonwealth, for example the Council of Defense
Ministers, which I head…. That is why the question of defense against
threats is not exactly correct. If we speak of defense and security
in the broad sense, then there is only one military-political
organization that deals with these issues in the post-Soviet
territory. This is the Collective Security Treaty Organization. They
have military planning, they ship weapons using domestic Russian
prices, they educate and train for both the regular military and the
special forces. And on the whole, this organization works. So I
wouldn’t say that we have to take action in forming a defense in the
utilitarian sense. But there is a different matter of our
understanding of threats, which have transformed from military or
classical threats to threats that even we in the Ministry of Defense
classify as an uncertainty factor.

So what should we be afraid of?

The uncertainty factor is understood to be a situation, a conflict,
or a process of a political or a military-political kind which can
considerably change the geopolitical situation in regions that are
top priority for Russia or create a direct threat to its security.
These factors include developments in the CIS and countries that
neighbor them. That is why Russia, wholly supporting the
democratization of the Commonwealth states, will take corrective
measures in its military planning in case of domestic instability or
in cases where actions have been taken to bring down democratic
developments there. But on the whole, when talking of post-Soviet
territories today, I don’t see such threats.

Many speak of the threat of migration. But I don’t agree with this
point of view. We need migration. Russia cannot subsist without work
resources, first of all from former Soviet states. The issue is that
they must be regulated in a way that is advantageous to the
government, and not in a way that is advantageous to the migrants.
For example, we made a bold move: we invited CIS citizens to join the
contract army, and after three years of impeccable service they will
get Russian citizenship.

But another `revolutionary’ situation: Ukraine aiming towards NATO
membership…

To join or not to join is the business of a sovereign state, and no
one else’s. We will not interfere in this process, and it is useless
to try to influence it in any way. At the same time, I don’t think
that any CIS country will join NATO in the near future: they are
simply not ready. And NATO is not ready to accept them. Although I
don’t rule out that someday this will happen. And then, some degree
of a reassessment of our policy in relation to these states will
become inevitable. Just as it will entail a change of policy towards
Russia by these states. But once again, this is not an issue for the
next five to seven years, that is certain.

Also, it is hard to foresee what the NATO bloc will be like in five
to seven years. That it will change is absolutely certain. There is
the globalization process, and all the threats that exist today –
terrorism, nuclear proliferation – are beyond the geographic zones of
NATO and Russia.

But not so far from them…

Afghanistan, Iraq…but this was always the case. If we use American
terminology, it is the Middle East and Central Asia.

Still, are there plans to reform the Russian defense machine in
connection with the terrorist threat? In particular, there were
reports recently about the creation of a new special forces unit.

Are approaches and plans towards military development changing? Yes,
they are, and not for the first year. Part of the military forces,
and I stress, only a part, is being rebuilt to accommodate the new
threats. In particular this concerns the mobile units of the special
forces. In Chechnya they have already shown themselves to be very
effective. There are other regions that are worrisome because of the
terrorist threat.

But we are not planning to command nationwide special forces. Inside
the Armed Forces, special forces have already existed for a long
time. So I don’t see the need for changing anything within the
Defense Ministry. A question is often posed: should we create
something on a country-wide scale, a state-level military
organization, not just with the Defense Ministry? In the sense of
joining the special forces with the FSB, the Interior Ministry, to
put them under joint command. But this exists only as an idea – there
are no particular plans in the near future to create something like
this. I am speaking unambiguously, so that there is no speculation or
misunderstanding. But within the Armed Forces, yes, it must be
developed, and modernized taking into account technological
developments and communication, and especially effective kinds of
weapons….

By the way, about expenditure. There is a point of view that says the
country’s budget is too militarized.

The budget is growing…. 564.4 billion rubles ($20.9 billion) has
been set aside for national defense. The increase is over 45 billion
rubles. But apart from this there are social issues….

NATO generals often make statements saying that America as a military
power leads the planet – it is ahead of Europe and Russia….

In terms of our common forces, I don’t believe that our units on the
brigade or battalion level are inferior in their fighting efficiency
to the leading armies of the world. I say this because, first of all,
the character of the latest military conflicts has demonstrated this.
Second of all, there is a false belief that if only professionals, or
contract soldiers, serve in the army, then the effectiveness is
higher a priori. I know a lot of commanders who served in Chechnya
and told me that conscript reserves fought more boldly and
effectively. I am not saying we should use only conscripts in our
troops, especially in the fighting units. You know that we have
implemented a partial recruitment program for our reserve forces so
that we have a professional army to act in major and minor conflicts.
[Once it is complete] we will not send conscripts to conflict zones
at all. By 2008, 133,000 soldiers and sergeants will be on contract,
and there will be some 50 joint armed forces fully formed on a
contract basis. The issue will be solved. The term for conscripts
[who have to serve mandatory time in the army] will be shortened to
one year from the current two.

But the army draft will remain?

We are not planning to get rid of the draft. First of all because it
would be very expensive.

How much would a professional army cost?

Hundreds of billions of rubles – that is a full contract army. Apart
from that, there is this common view that if you replace a conscript
soldier with a contract soldier the problem is solved. This will not
solve anything! Because a contract soldier has an advantage over a
conscript soldier only if he gets military training from morning till
night. Otherwise, he is not a professional. Otherwise, it is a
profanation.

But what keeps contract soldiers from getting military training?

Lack of funds. I return to the idea that from a financial point of
view, the country cannot afford this in the near future. Or it would
take three military budgets that would go only towards salaries and
training for contract soldiers. Then we would have to forget about
re-arming ourselves, about building homes for officers. It’s a
vicious circle. And it’s just one of the reasons. There is another.
We have a large country, 10 time zones. And we cannot have a small
army. We need units capable of combat over all the country’s
territory, taking into account the uncertainty factor that I spoke
about. We have determined that this will take about a million men.
Then, we have and will have strategic nuclear forces, which do not
exist in virtually any European states, except for France and Great
Britain.

>From the view of a layman, this is still a lot.

North Korea’s army is bigger, America’s army is bigger, China’s army
is bigger. And these countries are territorially smaller than Russia.
The armies of Germany and France are much smaller, but, if you’ll
excuse me, these countries are located within one time zone, and they
don’t have the kind of neighbors that we have. We need our Armed
Forces to effectively defend our territory and in some cases as
peacekeeping forces beyond our borders. But this is a political
decision. It is not related to military action.

Back to the draft…

The draft was, is, and will continue to be.

I understand. From the point of view of the state’s capabilities, you
have convinced me. But when one thinks of the individuals, many
simply cringe…

I can say it openly. People are afraid of our army. Society is
afraid. It is a fact.

Hazing…

There is hazing in the army, it has always been there, during the
Soviet years too. It’s just that in the Soviet era no one spoke of
it. It was taboo. At the same time, I can confirm that in 80 percent
of the units of the Armed Forces there is no hazing, because there
are no violations there.

Do you have a special program for this issue?

There are specific thoughts and approaches in this issue. We change
to a one-year term of service, we fill our reserves with contract
soldiers, and the next step will be to have all the sergeants in all
the Armed Forces on a contract. And this includes the junior
commanding officer who is responsible for order and discipline in his
barracks. Moreover, the difference between those who are serving
first year and those who are serving second will be eliminated. Half
a year conscripts attend a training center, the second half of the
year they serve in units. The objective conditions for hazing in this
case are significantly fewer.

Now in terms of numbers. 10 years ago, when our army was bigger,
27-28 percent of the conscript contingent was actually conscripted.
Now this number is 9 percent. This means that in 10 years the number
of people conscripted has decreased three-fold. This is also a fact.
This cannot continue, because that would mean that for every
conscript I would have to issue a medal of honor right at the
conscription office, awarding him as a man honestly fulfilling his
constitutional duty. And 91 percent do not fulfill it! We hold the
record for the number of deferments. We have 28 different kinds of
deferments!

First of all, I want to say that we will not conscript students in
any case. Or graduate students. Medical deferments will remain. But I
believe all the professional deferments must be canceled. I know that
this is a painful [transition]. If you believe the statistics and the
real facts, then our young people are either all sick, or all
talented. And that’s it! There is no one else left.

But a talented driver can be professionally applied in military
service. A balalaika player cannot.

But he can join a military orchestra or ensemble and perfect his
talent every single day, not for two years, but, I repeat, for one.
For some reason, this is also something that people don’t want to
understand: one-year service is not the same as two-year service.
There is a big difference. And knowing the European system well, I
can say that in those countries where conscription has remained, and
it has remained in a majority of states, everyone serves. The
doctorate students and the businessmen serve11 months.

What is the comparison in numbers between professionals and
conscripts?

By 2008, we want to have 70-80 percent contract-based servicemen in
the Armed Forces, and only 30 percent conscripts who will serve one
year.

What about now?

Right now, in order to reach this number, we need 133,000 soldiers
and sergeants who we want to put on a contract basis within three
years….

And so the Red Army is still the strongest?

Yes, exactly, no matter what they say, the Red Army is the strongest.
We have some very good traditions in our army. And you can’t just
thoughtlessly get rid of them.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: PACE rapporteur Report on NK to be discussed at PA OSCE

Today, Azerbaijan
April 13 2005

Report by PACE rapporteur on Nagorno Karabakh to be discussed at PA
OSCE

13 April 2005 [16:10] – Today.Az

A meeting of the Parliamentary Assembly (PA) of the OSCE will be held
in Kopenhagen on 24-25 April, Trend reports quoting Sattar Safarov,
head of the Azerbaijani parliamentary delegation at the PA OSCE, also
the chairman of the standing parliamentary commission on economic
policy.

According to Safarov, the meeting will discuss a report by Goran
Lennmarker, the OSCE rapporteur on Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The issue was numerously adjourned during the previous meetings of
the organization. However, the gathering in Kopenhagen will host
hearings on the report and it will be more probably included in the
agenda of the annual meeting of the PA OSCE,” Safarov underlined. He
voiced his concerns that the report by Lennmarker had not submitted.

“We should get familiar with document prior to the meeting in
Washington. Azerbaijan will perhaps make its proposals and notes on
the report by Lennmarker,” Safarov underscored.

URL:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/news/politics/19018.html

Tbilisi: U.S. envoys pleased with visit to Abkhazia

The Messenger, Georgia
April 13 2005

Tbilisi: U.S. envoys pleased with visit to Abkhazia

American delegation reveals little about talks; Sergei Bagapsh flies
to Russia and rejects notion of meeting with Bush
By Anna Arzanova

Although U.S. officials have said little publicly about their talks
on Monday with separatist leaders in Abkhazia, Georgian officials on
Tuesday said the envoys were pleased with talks and even sparked
reports that the talks were connected with the upcoming visit of U.S.
President George Bush to Georgia.

The U.S. delegation included U.S. Ambassador to Georgia Richard Miles
and U.S. Senior Advisor for Caspian Basin Energy Diplomacy Steven
Mann, who is also the Special Negotiator for Nagorno-Karabakh and
Eurasian Conflicts.

Chair of the parliamentary defense and security committee Givi
Targamadze, who met with the U.S. envoys on Tuesday, reported that
Miles and Mann positively assessed the results of their visit.

According to Targamadze, HE Mann told Abkhaz leaders, including de
facto President Sergei Bagapsh, to provide additional security
guarantees so that IDPs can return to the Gali region. Targamadze
stated the Abkhaz leadership promised to give security guarantees not
only to those Georgians who are currently living in Gali, but to
those who would return there in the future.

Neither Mann nor Miles talked in depth about their visit on Tuesday
except to say that it was Steven Mann’s first visit to the region
and, Mann said, “it was not connected to President Bush’s upcoming
visit.”

His statement tempered earlier speculation that the delegation may
have invited Sokhumi officials to travel to Tbilisi for Bush’s visit.

Targamadze said there was a possibility that the leaders from
Georgia’s separatist states in South Ossetia and Abkhazia would meet
President Bush together with President Mikheil Saakashvili in Tbilisi
on May 10.

“The leaders of these regions may attend the meeting of the Georgian
and U.S. presidents,” Targamadze said, “Saakashvili has already said
that he is prepared for a such meeting.”

In addition to meetings in Parliament, the U.S. delegation also met
with President Saakashvili and Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli on
Tuesday.

The bulk of reports on the meetings came from Givi Targamadze
himself, who said the U.S. group found it was much better to speak
with Baghapsh than with his predecessor Vladislav Ardzinba.
Targamadze reported the American diplomats saw progress but still
want to observe whether or not Bagapsh is “free from Russia’s
influence.”

Based on his meeting with Steven Mann and Richard Miles, Targamadze
enthused that “Sergei Bagapsh did not insult the guests and in
addition was not too categorical.”

Bagapsh flies to Moscow for consultation

Immediately following the visit of the U.S. delegation, Abkhaz
president Sergei Baghapsh departed for Moscow, fueling speculation
that the U.S. delegation had delivered an important statement.

Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, the newly elected
separatist leader said he told U.S. diplomats that Abkhazia will not
change its uncompromising stance over the region’s status as an
independent state.

Instead he reiterated that Sokhumi is ready to discuss only economic
issues with Georgia because negotiations on political issues will
bring the negotiation process to a deadlock.

Baghapsh stated that he is prepared to negotiate with American or
other Western countries over the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict, but the
“most important and main mediator in this issue is Russia.”

He flatly rejected the possibility that the U.S. delegation had
invited him to Tbilisi and, moreover, said he would refuse such an
offer.

“Such an issue has not even been considered. Nobody has even offered
me such a thing. I think that there is not and will not be such a
possibility. We have already said with whom we deal with about our
problems. This is Russia,” Bagapsh said in a phone conversation with
Imedi TV.