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AAA: Armenia This Week - 03/19/2004

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  • AAA: Armenia This Week - 03/19/2004

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK
    Friday, March 19, 2004

    PRESIDENT PROMISES CRACKDOWN ON CORRUPTION
    President Robert Kocharian this week criticized Armenia's law-enforcement
    bodies for not being "active and resolute" enough in fighting crime and
    corruption. The criticism came as Kocharian appointed his close ally Aghvan
    Hovsepian as Prosecutor-General, the position he held between 1998-99 before
    being forced to resign by Kocharian's political opponents. Kocharian said
    that he expects the law-enforcement bodies to follow through in
    investigating corrupt practice revealed by the Presidential Oversight
    Service.

    Earlier in the week, head of the Service Vahram Barseghian publicized
    results of 2003 inspections, revealing abuse of office and misappropriations
    of public property by the customs, transportation, justice and local
    government officials. Barseghian particularly singled out the Mayor of
    Gyumri Vartan Ghoukasian, who is accused of misappropriating apartments
    built for earthquake victims. Ghoukasian, who was one of Kocharian's key
    backers in the last elections, is now facing potential criminal charges and,
    if convicted, would be removed from the post. Already dismissed is head of
    Armenia's forest administration, also accused of corruption.

    Last November, Armenia's three-party coalition government adopted an
    anti-corruption program and the officials have repeatedly pledged to fight
    the problem. While organizations such as Transparency International have
    noted some headway against corruption in Armenia during Kocharian's first
    term, much of the Armenian public remains skeptical.

    According to a recent poll conducted by the U.S.-funded International
    Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES), a full 44 percent of 600 people
    contacted in Yerevan, Vanadzor, Ararat and Goris never heard of the
    government's anti-corruption plan, while 74 percent were unaware of its
    content. Half of those polled did not view the plan as confirmation of the
    government's intention to fight corruption. (Sources: Armenia This Week
    10-25, 11-22-02; 6-27, 10-10, 11-7; Arminfo 3-3, 18; RFE/RL Armenia Report
    3-12, 18; Noyan Tapan 3-19)

    GEORGIA, AJARIA STEP BACK FROM BRINK
    The central government of Georgia and authoritarian leadership of the
    Ajarian autonomous republic this week came to the brink of armed conflict
    before striking a new power-sharing deal. The standoff had immediate
    repercussions throughout the region, with Ajaria's Batumi port virtually
    shut down for days and traffic rerouted through Georgia's only other port of
    Poti. Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili ordered a blockade of Ajaria
    and both sides mobilized forces after Saakashvili and his security retinue
    were barred from entering the republic by local police loyal to Ajarian
    leader Aslan Abashidze. Saakashvili and Abashidze have been at loggerheads
    for some time, and pro-Saakashvili forces in Ajaria have in recent months
    intensified campaigning for Abashidze's ouster.

    While Armenian companies mostly use the port of Poti for their import and
    export operations, Batumi's long-term closure could have potentially
    overloaded Poti leading to delays and price increases, especially on
    gasoline. The Armenian government publicly urged both sides to settle their
    differences peacefully earlier this week. In the meantime, Armenian
    companies rerouted shipments of diesel fuel from Ukraine, while another ship
    with Armenia-bound sugar was stranded in the port of Batumi.

    In a deal described as a "temporary truce" by most observers, Abashidze
    reportedly promised Saakashvili to stop pressuring opponents in the run-up
    to parliamentary elections next week and share more of the profits from the
    Batumi port and border crossing with Turkey. The deal came following intense
    diplomatic pressure from Russia, Turkey and the United States to avoid an
    armed confrontation.

    Abashidze, who has ruled the ethnically Georgian and traditionally Muslim
    Ajaria as his fiefdom for over a decade, has close relationships in both
    Russia and Turkey. There is a Russian base in Ajaria and Turkish officials
    have claimed that under Soviet-Turkish treaties Turkey has a right to
    intervene in Ajaria (as well as Nakhichevan). But both Georgian officials
    and most legal scholars deny that Turkey has any such right. (Sources:
    http://www.civil.ge; RFE/RL 3-15, 16; Interfax 3-15, 17; Arminfo 3-15, 17;
    RFE/RL Armenia Report 3-16, 17; Eurasia.net 3-18; Ekho 3-19)

    KARABAKH HOSTS CHESS TOURNAMENT
    A first major international sporting event concluded this week in
    Stepanakert amid largely unsuccessful efforts by Azerbaijan to undermine it.
    The Tigran Petrosian memorial tournament brought together some of the
    strongest chess players from Armenia, Latvia, Georgia, Iran, Poland, Russia
    and Switzerland. Petrosian, an Armenia native, was the world champion for
    much of the 1960s, before being defeated by Boris Spassky. Spassky, now a
    French national and retired from the game, was the guest of honor at the
    Stepanakert tournament.

    Chairman of the International Chess Federation, FIDE, Kirsan Ilyumzhinov
    sent a letter welcoming the competition as contributing to the "unique
    Armenian chess culture." One of the world's strongest chess players, Garry
    Kasparov, welcomed the selection of Stepanakert as the site for the
    tournament as another confirmation that Karabakh has overcome the difficult
    post-war legacy. Kasparov, who is an ethnic Armenian on his mother's side,
    was forced to flee anti-Armenian violence in his native Baku in 1990.

    The Azerbaijani government put pressure on chess federations of
    participating nationals to recall their players and judges, claiming that
    their participation was "illegal." Two players, a Georgian and Iranian were
    forced to withdraw towards the end of the tournament, which Spassky
    described as a "real chess holiday."

    In the end, Armenia's Karen Asriyan narrowly won the hard-fought series with
    six out of nine possible points. Bartlomiej Macieja of Poland was a close
    second with 5.5 points and Gabriel Sargsian of Armenia was third with 5
    points. (Sources: www.karabakh2004.com; Azat Artsakh 3-8, 10; RFE/RL Armenia
    Report 3-9; Turan 3-10; Day.az 3-12; Artsakh TV 3-18; Ekho 3-19; Noyan Tapan
    3-19)

    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
    122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
    (202) 638-4904
    E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org
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