Karabakh Gained Independence On Same Legal Basis as Azerbaijan Did

KARABAKH GAINED INDEPENDENCE ON THE SAME LEGAL BASES AS AZERBAIJAN DID

Azg/arm
2 April 05

Vahram Atanesian and Gagik Petrosian, president and vice-president of
Standing Commission of Foreign Relations of the National Assembly of
NKR, called a press conference yesterday to speak about March 29-30
hearings in the National assembly of Armenia.

Vahram Atanesian underscored reports of RA foreign and defense
ministers that confirmed once again Armenia’s unshakeable stance in
the Karabakh issue, mainly focus on peaceful solution, excluding any
possibility of uniting Karabakh with Azerbaijan, inadmissibility to
leave Karabakh as an enclave and an international guarantee for
security.

Atanesian pointed out that the political forces of Armenia, regardless
any home issues, are united in standpoints over Karabakh issue and are
above every partial approach.

Atanesian said that the NKR foreign minister Arman Melikian presented
views of NKR whereas they spent their time in Armenia meeting
colleagues from both coalition and opposition.

Speaking of his personal approach, Atanesian noted that though two
separate state structures emerged after the collapse of the USSR, the
world community has recognized so far only one of them –
Azerbaijan. One cannot agree with this, as recognition of the
Azerbaijani Republic with Nagorno Karabakh in its structure will mean
recognizing the Soviet Azerbaijan.

Gagik Petrosian in his turn said that his views deal with the legal
status of NKR and that this aspect should be stressed in the talks. In
this regard, he emphasized fixing a state border with Azerbaijan.

Vahram Atanesian said that they were surprised to see such an
emotional attitude of colleagues in Armenia to former OSCE co-chairman
Vladimir Kazimirov’s political wordings. Atanesian said that though
Kazimirov is in retirement, he presented his countries views on the
Karabakh conflict.

Answering a question concerning the possibility of holding an
independence referendum, Atanesian said that it was held in December
10 of 1991 and there is no need of a new referendum. But if
international structures insist on it then we shall not turn it down;
the most important thing is to reconfirm the will of Artsakhi people.

By Kim Gabrielian in Stepanakert

Rally In Javakhk

RALLY IN JAVAKHK

Azg/arm
2 April 05

On March 31, despite the hindrances from the Georgian officials and
the Georgian Police, a rally took place in Akhalkalak (Javakhk,
Georgia) uniting several thousand people. The Georgian Police put up
roadblocks to hinder the potential rally participants to get to
Akhalkalak from the villages. At 9:00 AM the Police sealed off the
central square in Akhalkalak. However, after some verbal exchanges
with the people and the organizers of the rally, they opened the
square at 11:00 AM. At this time, about six thousand people had
gathered. Towards the end of the rally, the participants already
reached about nine thousand people.

United Javakhk accounted for the results from the last rally, which
took place on March 13 in front of the participants:

1 – The passport services have been returned to Akhalkalak, the tax
services have followed.

2 – Georgian officials agreed to include Armenian history classes in
the curriculum of the Armenian school in Georgia.

United Javakhk furthermore demanded that in the Akhalkalak and
Ninotsminda areas the Armenian language be granted official status on
a par with the Georgian language.

United Javakhk will fight with all constitutional means for the
fulfillment of the demands from March 13 and which did not encounter
the needed response from the Georgian authorities:

1) Recognition of the Armenian genocide of 1915 by the Georgian
Parliament.

2) Voting of a law on the protection of National Minorities Rights in
Georgia.

3) Demand not to withdraw the Russian Military Base in Akhalkalak (as
it represents a major stability and economic factor for the region).

United Javakhk called upon the All Armenian Catholicos to give Javakhk
the status of a separate Diocese.

The participants furthermore called upon Armenians worldwide not to
forget about their kin in Javakhk and to pay attention to the problems
in Javakhk.

And a plea was directed at the Armenian Government to further and help
as much as possible the economic development of Javakhk.

Social Union – “United Javakhk”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

AAA: Memo to Armenian-American Organizations

Armenian Assembly of America
122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

April 1, 2005
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
Email: [email protected]

RE: Assembly Memo to Armenian-American Organizations

The Armenian Assembly would like to bring to your attention the
following memorandum from Board of Directors Chairman Anthony
Barsamian to Armenian-American organization leaders regarding the
irresponsible charges leveled against Assembly and fellow Armenians,
during this the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. Also
attached is a correspondence from Executive Director Ross Vartian to
the editors of Asbarez Daily in answer to a recently published
commentary.

TO: Armenian-American Organizations
FROM: Anthony Barsamian; Chairman, Board of Directors
RE: 90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide
DATE: 3/30/05
_______________________________________________________________________

The Armenian Assembly deeply regrets that on the eve of April events
throughout the United States to commemorate the 90th Anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide, a series of false attacks have been made
against fellow Armenians. While the Assembly is compelled to respond
to each communication, know that this is precious time that should be
invested instead in our common efforts in support of 90th events
across the country. We trust and hope that this partisan
disinformation campaign will cease because we have much to do together
as a pan-Armenian community throughout the year on genocide
commemorations, on a congressional resolution and on genocide
education.

In messages to various audiences this past week, irresponsible charges
have been made, including:

1. In a letter to Armenian-American Organizations, the phrases
“acknowledgment without consequences”, “genocide without justice” and
“recognition without consequences” were attributed explicitly to a
“handful of Armenians”. No Armenian organization and no Armenian
individual would support Turkish admission of the Armenian Genocide
without just resolution. All Armenians assert that Turkey must bear
responsibility as the successor state of the Ottoman Empire. The
Republic of Turkey will one day acknowledge the Armenian Genocide.
Turkish admission will be followed by direct dialogue between the
governments of Armenia and Turkey to determine the consequences.

2. A communication sent out to Congressional offices in concert with
an editorial in Asbarez falsely asserts that a study commissioned by
the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) absolves the
Republic of Turkey for the crimes of the Ottoman Empire. This is not
the case, as the following quote from the Study indicates. “We
emphasize further that this memorandum addresses solely the
applicability of the Genocide Convention to the Events. It does not
purport to address the applicability to the Events of, or the rights
and responsibilities of concerned individuals or entities under, any
other rubric of international law or the laws of any nation.”

3. In an Asbarez commentary of March 24, the Armenian Assembly was
accused of “helping the Turks get away with the murder of 1.5 million
Armenians”. This concluding charge against the Assembly is outrageous
and malicious. As the entire community is well aware, the Assembly
has been in the forefront of every serious effort to pass a
congressional genocide resolution. The Assembly is also working side
by side with the all national Armenian-American organizations in
support of April 24 commemorations throughout the United States. And
finally, the Assembly is working collaboratively on the proposed
content and strategy for the next congressional resolution to affirm
the US record on the Armenian Genocide.

Once again, we genuinely regret this campaign. Together with all
Armenian-American organizations, the Assembly is ready to focus
instead on our vital work without further distractions.

###

March 30, 2005

Letter to the Editor
Asbarez Daily
Salpy Mardirossian Armenian Center
419 West Colorado Street
Glendale, California 91204

To the Editor:

RE: “The Big Why On the Eve of the 90th Anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide”

Your March 25th commentary on the above subject constitutes a new low
on misrepresentation of the facts and on the position of the Armenian
Assembly. Just in case some of your readers missed your irresponsible
core charge against our organization, you opined that the Assembly is
“helping Turkey deny justice to the Armenian people”. How is the
Assembly doing this? By urging Members of Congress to invoke a study
published by the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ)
that affirmed the fact of the Armenian Genocide. The ICTJ study
declared that “the Events, viewed collectively, can thus be said to
include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the
Convention, and legal scholars as well as historians, politicians,
journalists and other people would be justified in continuing to so
describe them.”

As the Assembly has done over the decades of our support for
congressional reaffirmation of the truth, our organization references
third party judgments on the fact of the Armenian Genocide. In this
particular communication to Congress, we relied on four factors:
President Reagan’s 1981 Proclamation that affirmed the Armenian
Genocide, President Bush’s April 24 statements that employ the
textbook definition of genocide without using the word, the statement
of 126 Holocaust and Genocide scholars declaring that the Armenian
Genocide is an “incontestable fact” and the ICTJ statement quoted
above.

Neither the separate nor the combined effect of these citations in the
Assembly’s request to Congress to properly characterize this crime
against humanity as genocide can be fairly portrayed as “denying
justice to the Armenian people”. There can be no question that the
Assembly will continue to seek official, full and irrevocable
U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide – and the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation knows this as our organizations work side by
side on the 90th commemorative planning committees across the United
States and as the Assembly works collaboratively with the ANCA on the
Armenian-American community’s next effort in support of a
congressional resolution.

As to the Asbarez charge that the ICTJ findings “let Turkey completely
off the hook for Genocide,” the commentary fails to use the following
quotation regarding redress that contradicts the charge. According to
the ICTJ study, “It does not purport to address the applicability of
the Genocide Convention to the Events of, or the rights or
responsibilities of concerned individuals or entities under, any other
rubric of international law or the laws of any other nation.” The
Turkish government is not “off the hook” – not for its global denial
campaign, not for its intimidation of other governments and its own
citizens, not for its recent passage of a law criminalizing public
discussion of the Armenian Genocide and certainly not for dealing with
the consequences of its inevitable acknowledgment of the Armenian
Genocide.

Sincerely,

Ross Vartian
Executive Director
Armenian Assembly of America

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership
organization.

NR#2005-038

www.armenianassembly.org

All-ASA Genocide Recognition Committee – April Events

SATURDAY, March 23, 2005
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

All-ASA Genocide Recognition Committee
c/o UCLA Armenian Student Association
Kerckhoff Hall Room 146
308 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Contact: Raffi Kassabian
E-mail: [email protected], [email protected]

Armenian collegiate student groups join forces for genocide awareness, justice

LOS ANGELES, CA – Next month, area Armenian college students will gather to
commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. The
All-Armenian Student Association’s Genocide Recognition Committee, a
coalition of collegiate Armenian student groups, has been busy organizing
two major events set to take place this April. Aside from smaller
projects, the committee has organized two major events; an educational
panel presentation and an candlelight vigil for the southern California
student community. On April 7th, the CSU Long Beach campus hosts a panel
on human rights atrocities and genocide denial.

“Since Long Beach State holds such a diverse community it is of great
importance to hold a panel that reviews how denial and ignorance of
genocide affect cultures and people all around the world,’ explained Lisa
Narinian, president of the CSULB Armenian Student Association and
representative to the committee.

The panel discussion will feature faculty from local universities who will
address the Armenian Genocide, Rwandan Genocide and its continuation in the
Democratic Republic of Congo, the genocide in Darfur, as well as the Women
of Juarez.

The following Thursday, the UCLA campus’ Bruin Plaza will serve as the site
for the 2005 All-ASA Candlelight Vigil. Hosted each year at a different
college campus, this year’s vigil will feature a reenactment of a genocidal
death march, performances by UCLA students, and the premier of an
educational video feature commissioned by the committee. The event will
also feature UCLA Professor Paul Von Blum, a specialist on media and
genocide, as well as rapper Knowledge from the Axis of Justice, a
non-profit, social justice organization formed by Tom Morello of Audioslave
and Serj Tankian of System of a Down. Local student and community groups
have been invited to participate and table at the event.

However, the panel presentation and the vigil will not be the first
genocide-related event of the year for many of the committee’s
participating organizations. The UCLA Armenian Student Association has
also been addressing the impact of past genocides on current affairs. In
February, it co-hosted a similar panel presentation on genocide denial as
coalition student groups concerned about the genocide in Darfur. The event
drew over 150 students and members of the faculty.

“When groups of people are systematically oppressed, and targeted for
destruction, it is our duty as humans to do something. Genocide and denial
seems to run hand in hand,” noted Matthew Sablove, a member of the Darfur
Action Committee at UCLA. “Students can lead the way for social justice as
well as social change to stop the current genocide in Darfur.”

Earlier in November this academic year, the USC Armenian Student
Association, another Genocide Recognition Committee participant, co-hosted
a reception and book signing featuring Colgate University Professor Peter
Balakian and his NY Times Bestseller, Burning Tigris. The event was held
in conjunction with the opening of USC’s Edward L. Doheny Jr. Memorial
Library exhibition documenting the Near East Foundation’s relief efforts –
commonly cited as an example of one of the first world-wide humanitarian
relief efforts in the global age – to help survivors of the Armenian Genocide.

The committee also addresses issues regarding education about the Armenian
Genocide such as its proper inclusion in human rights-related curricula and
exhibitions such as the local Museum of Tolerance.

“The Museum of Tolerance issue is a continuing source of concern to the
student community,” explained Arineh Der Petrosian, president of the
Glendale Community College Armenian Student Association and representative
to the committee. In 2003, college students protested the lack of a
permanent and prominent exhibit on the Armenian Genocide at the
museum. The GCC ASA supported their efforts by collecting 1,500 signatures
in support of this initiative.

“As of today, there is still no permanent exhibit. We think it is
important that the student community continues to work on this issue. The
lack of an adequate and prominent acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide
in a place like the Museum of Tolerance only serves to embolden deniers of
all genocides.”

But in the end, much of the collective effort has been leading up to this
April’s events.

“The panel and the vigil being organized by the committee are critical not
only because they mark the April anniversaries of such tragedies as the
Armenian Genocide, Rwandan Genocide, and Holocaust, but also because we are
living in a world today in which genocide is being committed, specifically
in Darfur,” emphasized Raffi Kassabian, chair of the committee and
president of the UCLA Armenian Student Association. “I think this is a
clear illustration that if people continue to turn a blind eye or deny such
atrocities the cycle of genocide will continue to turn.”

MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE All-ASA GRC Events in April:

“All-ASA Panel Presentation – The Blind Eye: Genocide & Denial”
at the Soroptomist House, CSU Long Beach Campus
THURSDAY, April 7th @ 7:30pm
– featuring: presentations on the Armenian Genocide, Rwandan Genocide,
genocide in Darfur, and the Women of Juarez
– for more info contact: CSULB ASA – c/o Lisa Narinian <[email protected]>

“2005 All-ASA Candlelight Vigil”
at Bruin Plaza, UCLA Campus
THURSDAY, April 14th @ 7:30pm
– featuring: genocide reenactments/recollections, performances, speakers,
and a newly commissioned educational video montage
– for more info contact: UCLA ASA – c/o Raffi Kassabian <[email protected]>

PHOTO # 1:

CAPTION # 1:
Pictured from Left to Right: Raffi Kassabian (UCLA Armenian Student
Association), Ani Nahapetian (UCLA Armenian Graduate Student Association),
Ara Krikorian (Loyola Marymount University ASA), and Arineh Der Petrossian
(Glendale Community College ASA). Not pictured are representatives from
the AEO, ARF-SSA, CalPoly ASA, CalTech ASA, CSULB ASA, CSULA ASA, UCI ASA,
UCR ASA, UCSC ASA, USC AGSA, USC ASA, Woodbury U. ASA and other All-ASA
participating organizations.

http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/agsa/photos/2004-2005/031905grc-pr-photo01.bmp

ACC students host genocide commemoration

PRESS RELEASE
Arapahoe Community College (ACC)
5900 South Santa Fe Dr.
PO Box 9002
Littleton, CO 80160-9002

Contact: Cindy Murphy
Media Relations Specialist
3/30/05
Phone: (303) 797-5709
E-mail: [email protected]

ACC students host genocide commemoration

Phi Theta Kappa honor students at Arapahoe Community College (ACC) will
host “The Greatest Crimes of the 20th Century: Genocide/Holocaust
Commemoration” on Thursday, April 21 at 7 p.m. The public is invited to
attend this free event. Donations will be accepted for the American Red
Cross to assist the survivors of genocide in Sudan, Africa. The program
is co-sponsored by Armenians of Colorado, Inc. and supported by the
Holocaust Awareness Institute at the University of Denver.

The event will commemorate the 90th and 60th anniversaries of the
Armenian and Jewish genocides, respectively, of the 20th century.
Genocide is the deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial,
political or cultural group. The Armenian genocide was organized and
perpetrated by the Turkish government between 1915 and 1923.
Approximately 1.5 million Christian Armenians were murdered. The Jewish
genocide, better-known as the Holocaust, was perpetrated by Nazi Germany
during the period of 1939 – 1945, resulting in the deaths of
approximately 6 million Jews, Poles, gypsies and other minorities.

Keynote speakers for the evening will be first generation American-born
Armenian Ken Alikian, whose parents survived the Armenian Genocide, and
Holocaust survivor Walter Plywaski. Phi Theta Kappa chapter president
Simon Maghakyan will present briefly on the cultural genocide that
destroyed thousands of Armenian churches and historical monuments.
Armenia was the first nation to adopt Christianity as the state
religion.

Phi Theta Kappa is the international honor society for two-year
colleges. Sigma Phi, ACC’s chapter, is organizing this genocide
commemoration within Phi Theta Kappa’s Honors Topic for 2004-2006,
“Popular Culture: Shaping and Reflecting Who We Are.” The program is
intended to point out that popular culture is not always positive.
Popular ideas, such as Nazism and Pan-Turkism, that were assimilated
into cultural belief systems resulted in deaths of millions of innocent
people.

“The Greatest Crimes of the 20th Century: Genocide/Holocaust
Commemoration” will be held in the Waring Theater on the second floor of
ACC’s main building at 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive. Parking permits will not
be required to park in ACC lots during this special event. For more
information, or to make advance arrangements for access accommodations,
call 303-797-5955.

Russian-Armenian organized crime ‘like the 1930s New York mob’

CDAF, France

jeudi 14 octobre 2004

Russian-Armenian organized crime ‘like the 1930s New York mob’

By Jason Kandel

GLENDALE — It wasn’t the price of cucumbers but murder that Eddy
Gyulnazaryan and his pals were talking about that day back in March 2001 in
the backroom of his Atlas Pick pickle factory.

Rival Russian-Armenian gangs were at war and Gyulnazaryan, a beefy
40-year-old family man with the gift of gab, wanted some people killed.

As he fired off several rounds into a stack of phone books, Gyulnazaryan
made an offer that couldn’t be refused — a $5,000 contract to “eliminate” a
man who had gotten under his skin.

What Gyulnazaryan didn’t know was that one of the pals was wired. He had
turned and become a confidential informant working with an organized crime
task force that was able to use this information to win convictions of the
ringleader and five others on charges of solicitation of murder.

At least 14 murders, 100 attempted killings and seven kidnappings have been
blamed on Russian-Armenian gangsters operating across the San Fernando
Valley region since 2000. The groups are fueled by lucrative white collar
frauds — including credit card, immigration, auto insurance, cigarette tax
evasion, identity theft, welfare and health care.

“They’re very much organized criminals. They’re very violent. They’re
dangerous,” said Glendale police Sgt. Steve Davey, who heads the Eurasian
Organized Crime Task Force, comprising federal, state and local authorities.
“They’re not afraid of using violence to solve their disputes. They shoot up
homes and cars. It’s like the 1930s New York mob.”

According to court documents and interviews, Gyulnazaryan wanted to hire hit
men to kill four unidentified men, two from Long Beach. There also was a
plan to hire jailed Latino gang members to kill two of his rivals, Emil
Airapetian 25, and Armen Sharopetrosian, 26, who were also in jail.

Authorities said “there have been many documented shootings” between the
rival Russian-Armenian gangs in recent years.

Police said in court documents that they believed Gyulnazaryan’s group was
“heavily involved in credit card fraud, MediCal and Medicare fraud, check
fraud, drug trafficking, extortion and numerous shootings, assaults and
other violent crimes … and have access to large sums of money obtained
through their various criminal enterprises.”

A break in the case

The FBI got their break when Gyulnazaryan asked one of his closest
allies, with whom he had previously worked on auto insurance fraud
scams, if he would carry out a hit.

That man, who was not identified, had been an informant for the FBI
before. From then on, he agreed to wear a wire and secretly record
conversations among the group.

Offers of up to $20,000 were made to “eliminate” members of rival criminal
organizations. But the jailhouse killings proved too complicated to carry
out.

In March 2003, police raided the homes of Gyulnazaryan and his associates
Gayk Tadevosyan, 40 ; Gagik Galoyan, 55 ; Anthony Armenta, 25 ; Andranik
Safaryan, 24 ; and Edgar Hatamian, 23. Gyulnazaryan pleaded no contest
Thursday to solicitation of murder charges and was sentenced to 15 years in
prison. The others pleaded no contest to solicitation of murder charges and
were sentenced to prison terms ranging from three to nine years. Galoyan
received a nine-year suspended prison sentence and five years’ probation.

Galoyan had grown up with Gyulnazaryan in Armenia and went into business
with him at the pickle factory, which closed down two years ago.

“These guys have come from Armenia. They have known each other for years.
They have grown up with each other,” said Galoyan’s attorney, Fred
Minassian. “My client is known in the Armenian community as an elder
statesman. In no way is he a mobster.”

Gyulnazaryan’s attorney, Michael Levin, said his client is not violent and
did not head up an organized crime ring.

“My client has got a big mouth. He likes to talk. But what the (police) got
on tape makes him sound like Tony Soprano,” he said. “He’s a hard-working
family man.”

Russian mob history

Authorities said Russian mobs became more and more prevalent in the
United States in the 1990s as people from former Soviet bloc countries
began emigrating here. They settled in New York, Brighton Beach, Fla.,
and Los Angeles. Up to 6,000 people are connected with 15 loosely
organized crime groups in the United States that include Ukrainians,
Lithuanians and, locally, Armenians.

In Glendale, where about a third of the 204,000 residents are Armenian,
police estimate that there are about 500 Armenian criminals connected to
organized crime.

Police have been challenged in trying to crack the rings because of a lack
of resources, a lack of familiarity with the culture and victims too afraid
to report the crimes.

Sukharenko Alexander, a senior fellow of the Organized Crime Study Center of
the Far East State University, said Russian-Armenian syndicates are part of
large international crime networks. They have seemingly infinite resources
and escape routes to countries with no extradition treaties.

“This allows them to launder huge amounts of money, smuggle drugs and stolen
vehicles, and import criminals to carry out contract murders and fraud,”
Alexander said.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s Detective Alex Gilinets, who works the Major
Crimes Bureau, said the groups are not always bound by strict rules or
regulations like the old-time mobs and can be more violent.

“It’s, who can I make my next big buck with ?” Gilinets said.

Sara Vinson, a criminal intelligence analyst with the state Justice
Department’s Eurasian Organized Crime unit, said victims are too scared to
come forward.

“Their fear of organized crime groups is bigger than their fear of our
criminal justice system,” Vinson said. “A lot of them have family back home
that they can’t protect, and they have that hanging over their head.”

LAPD Detective Martin Pinner is having a hard time getting witnesses to come
forward from a murder in North Hollywood. Karapet Ksadzhikyan, 50, was
ambushed by two men in a suspected mob hit as he walked to his bread
delivery truck outside his home in the 13000 block of Archwood Street on
Nov. 24.

“No one cooperates,” he said. “No one’s saying anything. No one knows
anything.”

Glendale police and city officials, including Mayor Bob Yousefian, himself
an Iranian-Armenian-American, has been pushing for more cops, especially
Armenian-speaking officers, to fight the scourge.

But they face an uphill battle. Many deny there is an organized crime
problem.

“We don’t have the manpower to dedicate officers to task forces,” Yousefian
said.

“We’re getting to the point that we have this huge elephant standing in the
middle of the room, and we all have closed our eyes. Everybody is saying
there is no elephant there. We have an issue. We need to deal with it.”

Russian investments in Armenia voiced

RosBusinessConsulting, Russia

Russian investments in Armenia voiced

RBC, 01.04.2005, Yerevan 14:21:58.

Russia invested some $67.204m in Armenia’s economy in 2004, which accounted
for 21.99 percent of foreign investments in this country, the ARKA news
agency has reported. According to the Armenian statistics service, direct
Russian investments totaled some $48.69m. Russia invested approximately
$91.832m in Armenia in 2003, including some $68.429 in direct investments.

The total amount of foreign investments in Armenia was some $305.551m
in 2004, including $226.72m in direct investments in the industrial sector
of the economy.

Ukraine, Russia post highest yoy inflation in Feb – Statistics

Interfax

Finance & Business

Apr 1 2005 12:26PM

Ukraine, Russia post highest yoy inflation in Feb – Statistics committee

MOSCOW. April 1 (Interfax) – Ukraine and Russia posted the highest
year-on-year inflation in the month February: 13% for Ukraine and 12.8% for
Russia, the Commonwealth of Independent States Inter-governmental Statistics
Committee reported.

Moldova posted 12.7% year-on-year inflation in February, Belarus 12.6%,
Azerbaijan 12% and Georgia 9.2%.

Kyrgyzstan posted the lowest February inflation at 2.9%. Next-lowest was
Armenia (4.8%), followed by Tajikistan (5.3%) and Kazakhstan (6.9%). The
committee had no inflation figures for Uzbekistan or Turkmenistan.

Average February inflation throughout the CIS was 12%. [RU EUROPE EEU ASIA
EMRG ECI MCE RET UA BY AZ UZ TM KZ TJ AM] cf

Dancing to Amman’s new rhythm

Jordan Times

Friday-Saturday, April 1-2, 2005

Dancing to Amman’s new rhythm

Ahmad Y. Majdoubeh

Has Amman changed? Is Amman changing? Yes.

All cities in the world change. Political, economic, social, demographic and
other factors affect size (with respect to both area and population), rhythm
and culture of cities. We live in a fast-changing world, and expansion and
diversification are quite natural.

Amman, however, is changing at a faster pace than most cities. It is
expanding physically in all directions, encompassing suburbs outside its
suburbs. Its population, due to natural and abrupt causes, is fast
increasing. But it is also becoming the hub of all kinds of regional and
international activities: political, economic, technological.

Look at traffic. Aside from the few morning hours on Fridays, and the late
night hours, its roads are – despite the large number of tunnels,
overpasses, bridges, new avenues and streets – extremely busy. Look at
people’s activities: primarily shopping, dining out and visits. Their
momentum has also increased immensely.

Look also at the number of students (from the country, the region and
abroad) who come to study at its schools and universities, the number of
patients who come for medical treatment, the number of people who come to
conduct business, the number of tourists. There are big increases at all
these levels.

The story of Amman, in fact, is a story of big cities, changes and
expansions – from the start. The other day, I was rereading Abdul Rahman
Munif’s masterpiece about Amman, `A Tale of City’. It is an autobiographical
novel describing the early days of Amman: primarily the 1930s, 1940s and
1950s, when the farthest point was the First Circle in Jabal Amman. Where is
Amman’s farthest point now? I think it is impossible to tell.

The point here is that in each decade of the past century, Amman went
through a big shift and a big change. Amman of the 1980s was very different
from that of the 1970s, and that of the 1990s was very different from that
of a decade earlier. Amman today is very different from that of even two
years ago.

Where is it heading? Where will this city with no borders stop? We started
with Amman, and for some time now we have been talking about `greater’
Amman. Many people would view this expansion positively, despite the
discomforts. Amman, from the start, has been a home to those who lost their
homes (like Circassians, Palestinians, Armenians, and others). Additionally,
due to its attractive political, economic, educational and social
environment, it has attracted all types of individuals and groups who have
found a haven in it. Furthermore, Amman’s variety and diversity, this ever
changing, ever expanding rhythm, have made it a very special city – in
addition to its physical location, its hotels, restaurants, markets, ancient
ruins.

For its inhabitants, however, and this is the point I wish to stress here,
the shifts and changes that the city witnesses need to be complemented by
shifts and changes in people’s way of dealing with life in the city on a
daily basis.

My theory (hypothesis if you like) has been that most of us who have come to
Amman from the countryside or the badia (a majority of Amman’s inhabitants)
have not prepared ourselves (mentally, psychologically, as well as with
respect to training and know-how) for living in an urban centre. For year,
maybe even until now, we have treated Amman as an extension to the
countryside or the badia. Such false assumption has had its grave
consequences, in addition to the discomfort, the chaos, the bad planning,
etc.

This is one level of the problem. Another has to do with the fact that we
have not taken the shifts and changes over the decades into account. We have
been living in Amman decade after decade in the same way, as if the city’s
rhythm were constant or static when, in fact, it has been dramatically
changing. This has created a gap, a rift between our ways and that of the
city. As a result, our relation with it has not been one of harmony or
complementarity, but of difference, tension and some alienation.

Amman is a real cosmopolitan city. It is also a great city, which has its
charms and challenges. We need to catch up with it, and dance to its tune
and rhythm, so that life in it will be both less discomforting and more
enjoyable.

Friday-Saturday, April 1-2, 2005

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian President Visits Georgia

Civil Georgia, Georgia

Armenian President Visits Georgia

Georgia, Tbilisi / 2005-04-01 12:49:49
President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan will pay an unofficial visit to
Georgia on April 1, Secretary of the National Security Council of Georgia
Gela Bezhuashvili told reporters.

He said that bilateral and regional issues will be discussed during talks
between Armenian and Georgian Presidents.

Gela Bezhuashvili also said that the issue of Armenian community living in
Georgia, mainly in south-western region of Samtskhe-Javakheti will also be
discussed during the meeting between the two Presidents.