Rally Participants in Akhalkalak Bring Demands to Georgian Prez

RALLY PARTICIPANTS IN AKHALKALAK BRING FORWARD DEMANDS TO GEORGIAN
PRESIDENT AND PARLIAMENT

Noyan Tapan
2005-03-15 12:25:00

AKHALKALAK, 15.03.05. A demonstration took place in Akhalkalak
uniting about ten thousand people. The demonstration started at 10:00
AM and lasted till 1:00 PM. After the demonstration the participants
did not dissipate and on the main square a concert with Armenian
national songs took place. After this signatures were collected to be
sent to Mikhail Saakashvili and the Georgian parliament with the
following demands:

– recognition of the Armenian genocide of 1915 by the Georgian
Parliament.

– voting of a law on the protection of National Minorities Rights in
Georgia.

– abandon of the interdiction to teach Armenian history in Armenian
schools and the prohibition of excursions to Armenia for school
children in Armenian schools in Georgia.

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

– return the administrative services to Akhalkalak (such as the
Passport division).

The Organization of the demonstration requests that their demands be
answered until March 31.

Meditations Over War Testify to Baku’s Weakening Position on NK

THE MEDITATIONS OVER WAR AGAINST ARMENIA TESTIFY TO WEAKENING BAKU’S
POSITIONS IN ISSUE OF KARABAKH”

Azg/arm
16 March 05

According to the Azeri mass media, on March 11, Hajigha Nuriev, leader
of the Azeri Islamic Party, said that Azerbaijan should declare Jihad,
a sacred war, against Armenia to liberate the occupied territories. On
March 13, Ilham Aliyev said in the interview to the Turkish Public TV
that “We don’t want any war, but let them know that we are always
ready for a war.”

Such militant statements are not news. The Azeri president, members of
the government and the parliament, political parties and NGOs have
been making such statements since the very day of signing the
ceasefire with Armenia, i.e. May 9, 1994.

If Azerbaijan could fight in the war and would be sure that that would
not be the beginning of its end, it would immediately begin military
actions against Armenia. As they don’t do that it means that they are
attaining political goals. In the beginning, they tried to contrast
the war in the South Caucasus against the efforts of the international
community to maintain peace and stability in the region. They also
strive for leading the process of Nagorno Karabakh settlement in the
direction they want, blackmailing the OSCE Minsk group. They also pose
threats as a pressure measure over Armenia.

As neither the OSCE Minsk group yields the blackmail of Azerbaijan,
nor Armenia is frightened with the threats of the Azeri, the
determination of the Azeris to fight a war becomes a mere
mediation. In other words, Ilham Aliyev is “mediating” “on being ready
for a war. Maybe he thinks that the propaganda aimed to overcome the
psychology of a loser that is functioning in the subconsciousness of
the Azeris is not effective enough. That’s why Aliyev makes frequent
statements about the war against Armenia to comfort his people.

The attempt to comfort testifies to the concern of the Azeris. It
turns into a panic, when the West says that “Azerbaijan lost Nagorno
Karabakh in the war and should abandon this territory.” Zeyno Baran,
head of the International Security and Energetic program at the
Washington Nixon Center, said this atthe sitting of the US Congress
Committee for External Relations. Moreover, emphasized the strength of
the Armenian Diaspora, Mrs. Baran said that the U.S.A can’t exert
pressure over Robert Kocharian or the Armenian government.

This means that the meditations of Ilham Aliyev over unfolding a war
are based on concern. Meanwhile, he involuntarily approves the
statement of Vartan Oskanian, RA foreign minister, who said during the
March 9 press conference”We are in favorable positions in the Karabakh
issue.”

By Hakob Chakrian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Triumph Of Armenian Beauty In Motherland Of Fashion

TRIUMPH OF ARMENIAN BEAUTY IN MOTHERLAND OF FASHION

Azg/arm
16 March 05

It is for the first time that the Armenian beauty Lousine Tovmasian
was awarded the First Prize at Miss Europe competition, yielding to
the 22 years old beauty from Germany who won the title of Miss Europe
2005. On March 12, Miss Europe 2005 competition took place at the
sports palace in Paris. The competition was broadcast by RA Public TV.

The representatives from 36 countries participated in the 58th beauty
contest. Before leaving for Paris, Lousine Tovmasian stated that being
accepted among the best five would be the best result for her. “The
most exciting moment was when they were announcing the names of the
best 12 beauties. After they announced the name of the girl from
Turkey, they announced my name. I was very excited but also very
proud,” Lousine Tovmasian said.

Karen Aristakesian, head of Miss Armenia agency, wasn’t less excited
when watching the competition. “When Lousine was included in the best
five, thatwas already a big victory for us. We didn’t expect that she
would win the first prize,” Karen Aristakesian told.

Charles Aznavour, great singer, was included in the jury. Lousine said
that she learnt about that from the advertisements. The beauty said
that the audience applauded for ten minutes, honoring the great
singer.

“Charles Aznavour played definite role in Lousine’s victory. He stated
from the beginning that he came to support the Armenian beauty. But I
should say that Lousine prepared for the competition rather well,”
Karen Aristakesian said.

Lousine was preparing for the contest with other 36 beauties for
almost a month. She made friends with all the participants during this
period. “I made friends with the girl from Germany, in particular. We
lived in one room anddidn’ t expect that we would compete with each
other in the final stage”, Lousine said. The Armenian beauty stated
that all the participants deserved the victory, but she thought the
representative of England was her main opponent. Lousine received a
dress from one of famous designers as a prize.

Lousine received many suggestions and invitations already in the
preparation stage. She said she is going to stay in her homeland for
the coming week.

The Armenian beauties participated in Miss Europe competition for 7
times and only twice they managed to be included among the best 15.

By Arevik Badalian

U.S. Charges 18 With Alleged Plot To Import And Sell Weapons

United States Attorney
Southern District of New York
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: U.S. ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
MARCH 15, 2005 HERBERT HADAD, MEGAN GAFFNEY
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
(212) 637-2600
FBI
JAMES M. MARGOLIN
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
(212) 384-2715, 2720
NYPD
PAUL BROWN
(646) 610-8800
U.S. CHARGES 18 WITH ALLEGED PLOT TO IMPORT AND SELL
RUSSIAN SHOULDER-FIRED MISSILES, ROCKET PROPELLED
GRENADE LAUNCHERS, AND OTHER WEAPONS
DAVID N. KELLEY, the United States Attorney for
the Southern District of New York, PASQUALE D’AMURO, the
Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Office of the FBI,
and RAYMOND W. KELLY, the New York City Police Commissioner,
announced today the unsealing of a complaint in Manhattan federal
court charging 18 individuals with various weapons trafficking
offenses, including a scheme to smuggle rocket propelled grenade
launchers (“RPGs”), shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles
(“SAMs”), and other Russian military weapons into the United
States for sale. In addition, the defendants are also charged
with conspiring to traffic in machineguns and other similar
assault weapons, and in fact sold eight such weapons during the
course of the investigation. The arrests are the result of a

-2-
year-long investigation that utilized a confidential informant
(“CI”) who posed as an arms trafficker selling weapons to
terrorists. The FBI’s investigation also included courtauthorized
wiretaps on seven different phones and interceptions
of more than 15,000 calls.
Specifically, the 61-page federal complaint unsealed
today in Manhattan federal court charges ARTUR SOLOMONYAN,
CHRISTIAAN DEWET SPIES, IOSEB KHARABADZE, JOSEPH COLPANI, and
MICHAEL GUY DEMARE with conspiring to transport destructive
devices in interstate and foreign commerce. The complaint also
charges 13 other individuals with weapons trafficking for their
roles in supplying SOLOMONYAN and SPIES with machineguns and
other assault weapons, which were then sold to the CI.
The Complaint alleges that SOLOMONYAN and SPIES, with
the help of KHARABADZE, COLPANI, DEMARE, and other unidentified
co-conspirators were actively preparing to import RPGs, SAMs,
anti-tank missile systems, and other military weapons into the
country from Eastern Europe. The CI, it is alleged, had multiple
conversations with SOLOMONYAN and SPIES over the course of the
conspiracy in which the CI indicated that his clients were
terrorists.
According to the Complaint, SOLOMONYAN and SPIES met
with the CI on several occasions in New York City to discuss the
details of their weapons deals, including in-depth discussions of

-3-
the specifications and prices of various weapons that the
defendants could ship into the United States. The Complaint
alleges that, in June 2004, at a meeting in New York City,
SOLOMONYAN provided the CI with a list of weapons for sale that
included RPGs, stinger missiles, AK-47s, and claymore mines. The
Complaint also details numerous telephone calls between the
defendants discussing the inner workings of their plot to bring
weapons into the country. For example, the Complaint alleges
that in January 2005, SPIES spoke on the phone with COLPANI about
providing the CI with an RPG. According to the Complaint, as
recently as late January 2005, SOLOMONYAN discussed importing 200
RPGs from Armenia for sale to the CI.
Most recently, in late February 2005, SOLOMONYAN and
SPIES provided the CI with digital photos of military weapons in
Armenia that they proposed to import into the U.S. for sale to
the CI. The CI was given the name of a Russian website, a user
name, and a password in order to access the 17 digital photos of
the weapons. These photos, which FBI forensics has determined
were taken in late February 2005, included such weapons as two
SA-7b Strella Surface to Air Heat Seeking Anti-Aircraft Missiles;
a Russian AT-4 Spigot Anti-Tank Guided Missile and Launcher; a
120 mm mortar launcher; Russian 73 mm recoilless anti-tank guns;
and fully automatic AK-74 and AKS assault rifles, according to
the Complaint.

-4-
SOLOMONYAN and SPIES were arrested last night after
meeting one last time with the CI to finalize their plans to
travel to Eastern Europe to arrange the importation of the
military weapons. The FBI arrested them before they could travel
outside of the U.S. to obtain the weapons. The FBI is currently
working with Armenian and Russian authorities to secure the
weapons and to arrest the responsible parties abroad.
According to the Complaint, while SOLOMONYAN and SPIES
were actively arranging the importation of the military weapons
from Eastern Europe, they also sold machineguns and assault
weapons to the CI. Utilizing the services of various weapons
traffickers in New York City, Los Angeles, and Florida, the
defendants provided the CI with eight weapons and conspired to
sell the CI many more. As alleged in the Complaint, each weapon
was delivered by the defendants to storage facilities rented by
the FBI on the CI’s behalf. On several occasions, SOLOMONYAN or
SPIES was surveilled delivering the weapons to various storage
locations. Of the eight weapons, three were delivered in New
York City, three were delivered in Los Angeles, and two were
delivered in Fort Lauderdale. The weapons sold to the CI include
an SKS fully-automatic assault rifle; a Norinco Model NHM91; an
Israel Military Industries Model A Uzi; an Interdynamic Model KG-
9; a Norinco AK-47; a Norinco MA-90 Sporter; an AK-47 made by GN
Romarm SA/Cugir; and an AK-47, BA 36 0543, Arsenal, as well as

-5-
two conversion kits intended to convert both AK-47’s into fullyautomatic
machineguns.
SOLOMONYAN, 26, is an Armenian citizen residing in New
York and Los Angeles. SPIES, 33, a South African citizen,
resides in New York. KHARABADZE, 52, is Georgian and resides on
the Upper West Side of Manhattan. They, along with seven other
defendants, will be presented in Manhattan federal court today.
COLPANI, 53, and DEMARE, 50, both live in Florida and were
arrested there this morning.
Besides SOLOMONYAN, SPIES, COLPANI, and DEMARE, the
other defendants charged with weapons trafficking include:
DMITRIY VOROBEYCHIK, 28, of New York; NIKOLAI NADIRASHVILI, 25,
of New York; LEVON SOLOMONYAN, 24, of Los Angeles; ALLAH MCQUEEN,
23, of New York; RAJAB CHAVIS, 25, of New York; GAREGIN
GASPARYAN, 28, of Los Angeles; MICHAEL JIMENEZ, 35, of Los
Angeles; SHAWN JONES, 22, of New York; LEVAN CHVELIDZE, 28, of
New York; VATO MACHITIDZE, 26, of New York; TIGRAN GEVORGYAN, 21,
of Los Angeles; and ARMAND ABRAMIAN, 27, of Los Angeles.
The six individuals arrested in Los Angeles, and the
two arrested in Florida, will be presented in their respective
federal courts and then brought to New York to face the current
charges.
As a result of the various charges in the Complaint,
SOLOMONYAN and SPIES each face a maximum penalty of 30 years in

-6-
prison. COLPANI and DEMARE face a maximum penalty of 20 years in
prison, and KHARABADZE faces a maximum penalty of 5 years in
prison. The rest of the 13 defendants charged in the Complaint
face a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.
Mr. KELLEY praised the efforts of the FBI and the NYPD
for their handling of this investigation. Mr. KELLEY also
expressed his thanks to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,
and Explosives, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement for their
assistance in the investigation.
Assistant United States Attorneys BENJAMIN M. LAWSKY
and MIRIAM E. ROCAH are in charge of the prosecution.
The charges contained in the Complaint are merely
accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and
until proven guilty.
05-52 ###

Immigrant programs starving for support

Windsor Star (Ontario)
March 15, 2005 Tuesday
Final Edition

Immigrant programs starving for support

by Monica Wolfson, Windsor Star

Iraqi immigrant Badri Naser, 25, is so committed to learning English
that she would cut back on groceries before giving up her class.

The married mother of a two-year-old daughter gets free bus tickets
to go to school, but she’s in jeopardy of losing the subsidy because
of budget cuts.

Naser spends $50 a week on food for her family, while a month’s worth
of two-way bus tickets costs $47.

Ceasing to go to school isn’t an option, said Manjola Vasil, 26, who
arrived from Albania eight months ago. She needs to speak English in
order to work, she said.

The free bus ticket program offered by the Women’s Enterprise Skills
Training of Windsor Inc. is just one of many local immigrant services
that providers say is underfunded. The $8,000 bus ticket assistance
will be slashed in half in April and disappear in 2006. Rose Anguiano
Hurst, executive director of WEST, said she’ll avoid nixing the
program if the federal government delivers on its budget promise to
boost funding for immigrant services by $398 million over the next
five years.

Free child care is another essential service newcomers rely on to
attend English classes.

Gayane Avagyan, a 32-year-old Armenian immigrant with a two-year-old
son, said she’d have to give up learning English if the New
Canadians’ Centre of Excellence didn’t provide child care while she
studied.

“It would be very difficult, hard for me,” Avagyan said while her
child played in an adjacent room under the watchful eye of child care
workers who speak three languages each.

Child care could cost Avagyan up to $48 per day if the free
babysitting didn’t exist.

The Excellence Centre cares for about 40 children per language
session, which are held three times a day. Children must be at least
18 months old.

“Infant care is what we are asking the government to fund,” said Reza
Shahbazi, executive director of the Excellence Centre. “Some parents
will have a four-year-old and an infant and can’t take the training
because they don’t have anyone to care for the baby.”

Shahbazi said he needs an additional $300,000, but requests for more
money have been ignored.

Most immigrant service providers said they’d use new funding to
eliminate child care waiting lists and expand employment, settlement
and adaptation programs. The Windsor Essex County Family YMCA/New
Canadians’ Center offers training to help immigrants adjust to
Canadian culture.

“Basic settlement, language, employment, these are key to a
successful transition to a community,” said Dan Pelletier, chief
executive officer of the YMCA.

The federal government has pledged to give Ontario the bulk of new
immigration money, confirmed the Ministry of Citizenship and
Immigration. Officials couldn’t say how much cash Windsor would get.

Windsor’s immigrant population has exploded in the past decade as
24,305 newcomers came here between 1991 and 2001, a 126 per cent
increase from the previous decade.

BOTTOM LINE

According to Citizenship and Immigration Canada, last year Ontario
got $127 million to aid about 133,440 new immigrants. By comparison,
Quebec received $149 million for about 32,489 newcomers. Windsor was
awarded $5.6 million for its 2,418 new immigrants.

Criminal group making false foreign visas liquidated

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 15, 2005

Criminal group making false foreign visas liquidated

MOSCOW

A criminal group that forged foreign visas, including visas to the
Schengen zone and the United States, has been liquidated in Moscow,
the press service of the Interior Ministry’s anti-organized crime
department told Tass on Tuesday.

Although information about the criminal group was available around
six months ago, it took time to catch the criminals red-handed, said
a source from the Interior Ministry.

The passports with false visas were finally confiscated after a
criminal deal involving two citizens of Armenia who were offered
“help” in getting visas to the United States. Both victims were sure
that the visas were genuine. The fraud was disclosed when the two
victims arrived at Sheremetyevo airport, but were banned from a
flight to the United States by Interior Ministry’s officers and the
federal border guard service.

Simultaneously, four criminals involved in the false visa deal were
detained at the Kazan railway station in Moscow. The group consisted
of two citizens of Russia, an Uzbek and another one of Armenian
descent. Documents incriminating the dealers along with the money
paid for the false visas were confiscated.

“It is not the only incident of illegal business in which the
criminal group was involved,” police said.

Criminal proceedings against the criminals have been instituted.

CIS foreign ministers to convene in Minsk on March 18

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 15, 2005

CIS foreign ministers to convene in Minsk on March 18
By Natalia Simorova

CIS foreign ministers will convene in Minsk on March 18 to discuss a
draft program of cooperation in the anti-terrorist fight for 2005-07,
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko said on
Tuesday.

“Russia will present a concept of CIS anti-terrorist cooperation,” he
said. “The anti-terrorist fight is very important for national
security of CIS member countries,” he said.

The CIS reform will be an important item on the agenda. “Russia has
drafted a document on the subject, which presents a coordinated
opinion of CIS member countries,” he said.

The ministers will also discuss a common humanitarian space, he said.
“It is planned to discuss cooperation in education, a concept of
adult education in CIS member countries, and the fundamental status
of some educational establishments of Russia, Armenia and Belarus.
This will broaden relations between higher educational
establishments,” he said.

Cooperation in the fight against illegal migration, tax crimes and
drug trafficking will be also discussed. The ministers will consider
“a unified system of information marking of explosives, ammunition
and firearms,” he said.

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1) AYF Calls on EU Member States to Recognize Armenian Genocide
2) Armenia Ready for De-Mining Mission in Lebanon
3) March for Humanity Reaches Final Preparation Stage
4) Kasparov Quits Chess to Challenge Putin
5) Saakashvili Pledges Jobs for Akhalkalak Armenians after Russian Base
Pullout

1) AYF Calls on EU Member States to Recognize Armenian Genocide

YEREVAN (Yerkir)–Members of the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) held a
demonstration Tuesday in Yerevan outside the European Union office to call on
EU countries to recognize the Armenian genocide and prevent Turkey’s accession
to the Union until it acknowledges the mass killing of Armenians as genocide.
An appeal to EU member states was presented to the representatives of the
office, stressing that the problem is not only about recognition, but also
recovery of historical rights.
The statement continues, `The aim of the first genocide of the 20th century,
which took place in front of the whole world, was to destroy a nation which
was
one of the founders of the world civilization. The world was silent. But there
were people who criticized the indifference of Great States towards the
Armenian Genocide. Despite this, the Great States went on ignoring the
Armenian
Genocide until the second genocide of the 20th century took place.’
It concludes by urging all EU member states `to convict the Genocide of
Armenians so as to prevent the danger of crime against mankind. Let’s not
permit Turkey to enter EU with bloody hands.’

2) Armenian Ready for De-Mining Mission in Lebanon

YEREVAN (Armenpress)–Armenian sappers are prepared to leave for Lebanon on a
de-mining mission in case Defense Minister Serge Sargsian issues such
instructions, confirmed deputy defense minister Arthur Aghabekian.
The request for an Armenian de-mining platoon was voiced Monday by Lebanon’s
ambassador to Armenia during a meeting with the Defense Minister Serge.
Aghabekian said the Armenian defense ministry is able to carry out de-mining
work in Lebanon, as it has a well-trained contingent of sappers thanks to a
modern de-mining center established with the assistance of the US government.
He said the center has all necessary equipment, including sniffing dogs.
Several Armenian sappers are currently in Iraq joining multi-national
occupational forces.

3) March for Humanity Reaches Final Preparation Stage

LOS ANGELES–Less than three weeks from the start of an unprecedented display
of solidarity for the 1.5 million forgotten victims of the Armenian genocide,
the organizing committee of March For Humanity reported Monday that it has
completed the planning and organizing phase of the 215 mile walk.
More than 40 Californians, 17 of which will walk the full 19 days, have
registered as marchers, prior to the beginning of the main recruitment
efforts.

“People of all age groups and many different ethnicities have shown interest
in marching the 215 mile course. This coupled with the outpour of moral and
financial support from dozens of communities including Central California, the
Bay Area, Washington DC, New York, and Boston gives us the confidence that the
March For Humanity will become the march of all justice loving people,” said
Vicken Sosikian, director of March For Humanity.
“The marchers’ heartfelt sacrifices show that even after 90 years of deceit,
denial, and distortion, the Turkish government must come to terms with its
history and finally take genuine responsibility for the 1.5 million victims of
the Armenian Genocide.”
The march, set to begin on April 2 in Fresno, will reach Sacramento on April
21, where marchers, human rights activists, and Armenian American community
members will gather for a rally organized to thank the California State
Legislature and 36 other states’ legislatures for officially recognizing the
Genocide. The “Rally For Humanity” will also promote public involvement in
securing justice not only for the Armenian genocide, but also for all
unpunished crimes against humanity.
“The interest generated about March For Humanity, on the internet alone, has
already surpassed our pre-march expectations,” said Serouj Aprahamian,
coordinator of March For Humanity. “Thousands have visited
, the official site of the march. Hundreds have
completed action alerts and websites, blogs, message boards, and discussion
groups from as far as Europe, the Middle East, and Armenia have been buzzing
with talk about the March For Humanity.
Aprahamian, a full distance marcher, says that the Armenian people living in
the Turkish Ottoman Empire suffered unspeakable and unimaginable horrors and
that this is the least the youth can do to show its solidarity.
For more information about the March for Humanity, visit
or call (818) 507-1933.

4) Kasparov Quits Chess to Challenge Putin

MOSCOW (news.telegraph)–Garry Kasparov, the world’s leading chess player, is
to give up competitive chess and devote his time to Russian politics in an
attempt to bring down the increasingly despotic regime of President Vladimir
Putin.
The man many consider to be the best chess player ever seen is giving up the
international circuit after winning the prestigious Linares tournament in
Spain.
Kasparov is already chairman of the opposition body Committee 2008, a
group of
liberals fighting to halt Russia’s slide to autocracy and to ensure that Putin
resigns when his second term in office ends in three years.
The committee was set up amid growing fears that Putin and his allies,
many of
them placemen from the old KGB, will be reluctant to relinquish office and may
try to manipulate the constitution to hang on to power.
Since the committee was formed a little over a year ago, Kasparov has become
one of the most outspoken critics of the Putin regime on the international
circuit, lambasting its decision to clamp down on the media and its
stranglehold over the courts and parliament.
At a late-night news conference on Thursday, Kasparov finally took the plunge
and declared he was leaving competitive chess for good. He said, “Before this
tournament I made a conscious decision that Linares 2005 will be my last
professional [tournament], and today I played my last professional game.”
He said his final games were “very difficult for me to play under such
pressure, because I knew it was the end of the career which I could be proud
of”.
In comments published on the website of the Russian weekly journal
Yezhednevny Zhurnal, he said: “In chess I have done all I could and even more.
Now I intend to use my intellect and strategic thinking in Russian politics.
I will do all I can to oppose Putin’s dictatorship. It is very hard to play
for
a country with undemocratic authorities. I will be tackling this problem with
those who hold Russia dear and care about it.”
Kasparov, 41, has dominated international chess tournaments since
becoming
world champion at the age of 22.
He said professional chess no longer held any challenges, but he would
continue to play knock-outs and speed chess for fun.
Born Garrik Vainshtein in Baku, Azerbaijan, in 1963 to a Jewish father
and
an Armenian mother, Kasparov began studying at the Soviet Union’s most
prestigious chess school at age 10. After the death of his father, Kasparov
adopted his mother’s surname. At 12, Kasparov became the youngest player to
win
the Soviet junior championship, and became a grandmaster on his 17th birthday.
In 1985, after a 48-game marathon against the champion Anatoly Karpov
ended inconclusively when Karpov’s health failed, he won a rematch to become
the youngest ever world champion.
But Kasparov is often remembered for a rare defeat–against the computer
Deep Blue, a moment many thought marked machine’s superiority over man. Six
years later he drew 3-3 against Deep Junior, which calculated three million
moves per second.
Shay Bushinsky, one of Deep Junior’s two programmers, said Kasparov was
“the closest thing to a computer that I know as a man. Sometimes I think he
has
silicon running in his veins.
“Kasparov has the most incredible look-ahead and memory capabilities I
have ever seen.”
But such skills may not serve him well in the cut and thrust of politics.
Andrei Piontkowsky, a political analyst with the Strategic Studies
Centre,
said: “I have great respect for Kasparov but I do not believe he has a big
future as a politician.
“The qualities that helped him become the world’s greatest chess player
will only hamper his political career.
“He is a fighter, he has defined his stance on the Putin regime and that
is a good thing.
“But considering the state of the democratic opposition a leader
should be
a great communicator and capable of compromises.
“Garry couldn’t even unify international chess, which is split into two
federations.”

5) Saakashvili Pledges Jobs for Akhalkalak Armenians after Russian Base
Pullout

TBILISI (Armenpress)–Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili assured local
residents of Akhalkalak, who are currently employed at the Russian military
bases stationed there, that they will not be unemployed after Russian troops
pull out from Georgia.
`After the pullout of the Russian military bases from Georgia, we will help
all the employees, including local residents of Akhalkalak, get jobs in the
Georgian armed forces. Not a single high-skilled person will remain
unemployed,’ Saakashvili said while visiting the 11th Battalion of the Defense
Ministry deployed in a town of Telavi in eastern Georgia on March 14.
He also reiterated that no troops of any foreign country will be deployed in
Georgia after Russia closes down its bases. Around 4,000 local residents of
Akhalkalak, which is predominantly populated by ethnic Armenians, rallied on
March 13 to protest the withdrawal of the Russian military base stationed
there. Rally organizers said they are seeking to protect the local Armenian
population of Javakhk, and are guided by security concerns and joblessness, as
many locals are employed by the base.
Armenian member of the Georgian parliamentarian Van Bayburdian said he
believes the dissatisfaction of the Akhalkalak inhabitants is not of a
political, but rather a social nature.
According to Baiburtian, “the well-being of about one thousand Akhalkalak
residents depends upon the Russian military base activity, and they fear job
loss.”

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Kasparov: From Chess Hero to Political Zero?

Moscow Times, Russia
March 16 2005

Kasparov: From Chess Hero to Political Zero?

By Tim Wall

In the sometimes genteel, sometimes weird world of professional
chess, Garry Kasparov has been the nearest thing to God for years:
omnipotent, all-seeing, with a mind like a Pentium processor and the
work rate of Hercules on amphetamines.

Like many more or less dilettante chess players, I have followed
Kasparov’s chess career with undisguised awe and at times outright
envy. While I spent too many years of my youth trying in vain to
climb the greasy pole of English junior chess, Kasparov was
conquering the world in his early 20s. When leading Western
grandmasters were giving up chess for accounting in the face of a
post-Soviet influx of their East European counterparts in the early
1990s, Kasparov was trouncing Britain’s geeky challenger Nigel Short
without breaking a sweat.

In many ways, Kasparov represents the ultimate triumph of Soviet
intellectual achievement. Trained by the father of Soviet chess,
five-time world champion Mikhail Botvinnik, he went on to pioneer the
use of computer programs and databases in analyzing chess, which
revolutionized the game during his two decades at the top.

But in the bleaker climate of Russian politics, the country’s media,
political analysts and even some of his fellow liberals see him more
as a dilettante who does not understand the rules of the game and who
has more than one failed political venture to his name, from the
Democratic Party of Russia, to the Liberal-Conservative Union, and
now to the risky Committee 2008: Free Choice. Critics and even
friends of Kasparov have noted an inability to commit to any one
project for a sustained period. In short, everyone seems to be
telling Kasparov: Don’t dabble with the real world, go back to the
safe confines of the 64 squares on the chessboard and the Wall Street
Journal op-ed page.

But if the politicos and media analysts were determined to show that
a chess player could not understand politics, they merely managed to
demonstrate their aptitude for mangling chess metaphors. The imagery
deployed to describe Kasparov’s decision to quit full-time chess for
something like full-time politics — both in the Russian and foreign
press — has been predictably chess-related, conjuring up all of the
limited metaphors in editors’ half-dozen-word chess lexicon. Some
Western newspapers hailed a “stunning move” that was delivering a
“check” to President Vladimir Putin, while other writers went even
further, predicting imminent “checkmate.”

The Chicago Tribune showed off its knowledge of chess and French by
describing Putin as “en prise,” a chess term that means a piece has
been left vulnerable to immediate capture. Meanwhile, the editors of
Britain’s Guardian newspaper headed an otherwise engaging interview
with the hoary old epithet “Endgame.” Ah, the omnipresent endgame —
as in the Yukos endgame or the endgame in Chechnya, by which the
media implies that it’s all over, even if it winds up taking months,
years or decades. As Kasparov could testify were anyone to ask him,
the endgame in chess is one of the most complicated and
little-understood parts of the game, which can take grandmasters a
lifetime to master.

Kommersant, of course, went one better with its typically caustic
headline, “Kasparov Slammed the Chessboard,” alluding to the world
champion’s famous temper tantrums. These are less frequent than in
his youth, it is true, but Kasparov’s recent epithets for Putin, such
as “fascist” and “Caligula,” can hardly endear him to the Kremlin.

It is a paradox, indeed: While chess is often used to describe
conflicts of great complexity, and chess players are rated the most
clever and logical of intellectuals, most of the time their standing
in the practical world is zilch.

Want a classic example of chess players’ unworldliness? Bobby
Fischer, the American world chess champion who beat the Soviets in
1972, now languishing in a Japanese detention center for breaking
sanctions in war-torn Yugoslavia. His behavior in retirement,
straight after winning the world title, ranks as one of the most
bizarre in sporting history, leading most onlookers to conclude —
with more than a little justification — that he was a total nut
case. The image of chess players as inmates of rook-shaped ivory
towers is further sustained by the bizarre record of the current
president of the international chess federation, the mercurial leader
of Kalmykia, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov.

So the idea that Kasparov could help bring some sense of direction to
crisis-wracked Russian liberalism does seem far-fetched to many. As
political analyst Andrei Piontkovsky pointed out this week, if
Kasparov has not been able to bring the warring sides of the chess
world together, how can he hope to succeed in building a political
coalition from Russia’s disparate opposition forces?

Kasparov’s unreconstructed free-market-and-democracy views, which he
likened to those of California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s in a
Wall Street Journal comment Monday, could also require a little
tweaking in presentation if they are to have any effect on Russian
public opinion. And yet, for all its improbability, Kasparov’s
challenge — if not as a potential presidential candidate, then in
his own preferred role as a leading “thinker” — could be far more
successful than Kremlin spin doctors or professional politicians
expect. Stranger things have happened, and stranger characters have
achieved high political office.

Playboy-turned-inheritor of the Bush family legacy, George W. Bush,
now has the run of the White House, and ex-Hollywood action hero
Schwarzenegger is in charge of the world’s fifth-largest economy. And
midlife crises can come in very handy for public figures to reinvent
themselves, too. With his career as a Texas oil executive going down
the drain, George W. turned 40, sobered up, then got himself some
old-time Southern religion and never looked back.

One of Kasparov’s projects over the next year, a book provisionally
called “How Life Imitates Chess,” could give a clue as to how he
plans to apply chess logic to politics. If his preparation for
political combat is anything like that for his chess tournaments,
Kasparov’s opponents should be afraid, if not very afraid. The
stereotype of chess players thinking 20 moves ahead is usually just
that, but it is all too real in Kasparov’s case, as the world’s other
elite grandmasters can testify from their many losses to him where
Kasparov never deviated from home preparation. So instead of working
out powerful opening plays, crushing middlegame attacks and subtle
endgame strategies, Kasparov could be devising economic programs,
working out how to divide his political opponents and probing their
psychological weaknesses.

Do the skills translate? It’s hard to tell, but he certainly could
bring something useful to the debate. Does he need a coach to help
him hone his message? Maybe not so much as Dubya or Arnie did, and
for sure he’ll be a quick learner.

Kasparov was named earlier this month as a possible contender for
president in 2008 by Leonid Nevzlin, Mikhail Khodorkovsky’s chief
lieutenant still at liberty in Israel, along with former Prime
Minister Mikhail Kasyanov and independent State Duma Deputy Vladimir
Ryzhkov. Although as someone born to Jewish and Armenian parents in
Baku, the chances of Kasparov winning might seem remote. Yet there
have been precedents of non-ethnic Russian leaders, from Catherine
the Great to Stalin.

So after the Georgian and Ukrainian revolutions, could
black-and-white be the new orange?

Tim Wall, night editor at The Moscow Times, is a former editor of
British Chess Magazine. He contributed this essay to The Moscow
Times.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Arms smuggling sting shows need for vigilance

Christian Science Monitor
March 15 2005

Arms smuggling sting shows need for vigilance

FBI says bust uncovers efforts to sell Russian weapons in US.

By Ron Scherer

NEW YORK A shadowy arms broker starts negotiating with some Russian
mafia types to buy antitank weapons, surface-to-air missiles,
rocket-propelled grenade launchers, and machine guns. The broker
makes it clear: The weapons are for terrorists in the United States,
probably connected to Al Qaeda. The arms sellers don’t care: Just so
long as they get their money.

But the arms broker actually worked for the FBI as a confidential
informant. And Monday night, the whole scheme as described by US
authorities fell apart for 18 men now accused of trying to smuggle in
an arsenal for $2.5 million.

“It reads like a Hollywood script, but the plot is undeniably real,”
says Andrew Arena, the special agent in charge of the criminal
division of the FBI in New York.

According to the indictment handed down Tuesday, men with nicknames
such as “Soso,” “Jabs,” and “Tiko” claimed to have access to weapons
in such countries as Armenia and Georgia. Over the course of a year,
the men, mostly in the US illegally, began to trust the FBI’s
informant. Authorities say they delivered eight automatic weapons to
storage sheds in Los Angeles, New York, and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Also according to the indictment, they intimated that they not only
could get more weapons, but also had access to weapons-grade uranium.

Security experts say the bust shows that the nation still has to be
vigilant.

“If these people are so inclined, they can get weapons to carry out
serious attacks,” says John Cohen, senior homeland policy adviser to
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. “It’s very scary that there
continues to be an open market for these types of weapons, and it
clearly has to be one of our top priorities to do something about
them.”

At a press conference announcing the indictments, David Kelley, the
US attorney for the Southern District of New York, said the US was
working with foreign governments to try to locate the weapons and
shut down the ring. “It appears to be some rogue folks in the Eastern
European military circles we’re dealing with,” said Mr. Kelley. “It’s
hard to say at this point whether it’s coming directly out of the
military or some sort of black market.”

The sting operation began last March when a confidential informant
alleged to the FBI that a South African man, Christiaan Dewet Spies,
said he had connections to the Russian mafia in New York and Los
Angeles. The paid informant told Mr. Spies he was interested in
buying 10 to 15 rocket-propelled grenade launchers. According to
federal authorities, Spies said he was only interested in selling a
full crate of 2,000 RPGs at a time.

The government alleges that Spies then introduced the informant to
his contact, “Alex,” also known as Artur Solomonyan, an Armenian, in
a Manhattan restaurant. That’s when the serious negotiations began.
According to the indictment, Mr. Solomonyan indicated the weapons
would come from Russia and would take two months or less to get to
the US by ship – at the port of Los Angeles, New York, or Miami. The
informant indicated he was willing to spend $2.5 million.

Their next meeting was in a sauna and hot tub at a Brooklyn spa. At
this point, according to the indictment, Solomonyan said the RPGs
would be known as “fliers,” and he described them as military surplus
from Chechnya. He also said his group already had weapons in the US
earmarked for other customers. If that deal fell through, he is
alleged to have said, then the informant could buy them.

By last summer, the meetings increased. It was here that Solomonyan
is alleged to have offered enriched uranium, which the indictment
says, “could be used in the subway system.”

However, US officials doubt there ever was any uranium. “It was not
followed up … uranium was never discussed again,” said Kelley.

Authorities say the defendants started to revert to code words for
the weapons they wanted to sell. Machine guns became “condos” or
“small properties” or “apartments.” The RPGs became known as “large
apartments.” At yet another time, weapons became known as “cars,”
some with automatic transmissions, according to the indictment.

By late September, the FBI informant had purchased a machine gun in
Los Angeles for $2,000. In October, two military assault rifles were
delivered to a storage area rented by the FBI. By now, a much larger
group of illegal arms dealers were involved, including
African-Americans and Hispanics. The weapons now became “dogs,”
“puppies,” and “toys.” Money exchanged hands, and the government was
wiretapping everything.

At this point, the indictment says, the defendants indicated they
could not leave the country to get larger weapons because they were
apparently in the US illegally. The FBI’s source said he could get
them a “green card,” an immigration work visa. The US Citizenship and
Immigration Services provided the FBI with green cards that were
shown to Solomonyan. “This could be yours,” he was told, says Mr.
Arena.

On Monday night, Solomonyan and Spies showed up evidently to get
their green cards so they could travel overseas. Instead, they were
met by law-enforcement officers who packed them off to jail.

None of the defendants could be reached for comment.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress