Two Laws To Eliminate Freedom And Independence

TWO LAWS TO ELIMINATE FREEDOM AND INDEPENDENCE

A1+
[09:24 pm] 25 September, 2006

Tomorrow the NA special session will discuss two draft laws
regulating the Mass Media field which have been processed without the
participation of the concerned sides. Neither are the workers of the
field aware of the content of the laws.

According to specialists, there are a number of provisions in the
drafts about "Amendments to the RA Law on Television and Radio
and Amendments to the RA Regulations of the National Commission on
Television and Radio" which contradict the RA Constitution jeopardizing
freedom of speech. RA NA deputy, author of the present Law on
Television and Radio Shavarsh Kocharyan has also mentioned about it.

"This is a draft which is highly explosive and which will explode
immediately after it is adopted. On the one hand, the authors of
the amendments confirm the "innocence" of the TV channels they own
after which they eliminate the other channels; on the other hand they
privatize the TV and Radio sphere once and for all. From now on all
the outsiders will be excluded from the sphere.

For us, this is another anti-constitutional process which they must not
get away with. This is a peculiar imitation of independent television
and Mass Media; on the one hand private TV Companies (hand-picked
by them, of course) are given licenses, and on the other the whole
field is monopolized by the government.

All this will result in a terrible mess and anarchy inside the
system. This is a document which will become a way of sanction for the
whole TV-Radio field" said Mesrop Movsesyan, head of "A1+" TV Company,
about the new draft amendments.

1 Injured, 6 Cars And Water Pipeline Damaged In A Blast Nearby Nairi

1 INJURED, 6 CARS AND WATER PIPLINE DAMAGED IN A BLAST NEARBY NAIRIT

Panorama.am
13:16 25/09/06

An explosion was reported near Nairit, a giant rubber-producing factory
in Yerevan, on Saturday. The blast shocked the nearby communities
and caused considerable damage. Fortunately no human fatalities were
reported. One citizen has been injured, 6 cars have been damaged
and damage has been caused to the water pipelines and the sewage. A
criminal case has been instituted into the case.

Yerevan Rescue Services received an emergency call at about 7 p.m. on
Saturday saying something exploded near Noragavit graveyard. The
rescue team arrived and several top officials also hurried to the
place of the incident, among them Yerevan Mayor Yervand Zakharyan,
Minister of Regional Administration H. Abrahamyan.

Nature Protection Minister V. Aivazyan. Minister of Health N. Davidyan
and several others.

Initial reports said an underground explosion took place in Nairit
collector without outburst of fire.

The composition of the substance that caused the blast is under study
now.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Poverty Alleviation Program Fails To Solve Many Problems

POVERTY ALLEVIATION PROGRAM FAILS TO SOLVE MANY PROBLEMS

Panorama.am
13:32 25/09/06

Three years after the poverty alleviation program is adopted and
implemented, social experts say that it fails to regulate many problems
in communities.

"Great many of people have stayed out of the process, institutions
stay behind of rapid developments and are partly unavailable for
people. Social aims have got less importance compared to financial
and economic aims. Many people still lack jobs, which will bring them
dignity. These programs must be brought down to community levels to
assure more sensitive social system," Ashot Yesayan, an expert in
the field, said.

He also said many people in the communities do not know laws to protect
their rights. Yesayan pointed out to the need of consultation services.

Mission Armenia, a public organization, unveils the results
of its study saying 80-90 percent of problems are solved within
communities. "It is our responsibility to go to communities. The key
to challenges is there," Yesayan said.

Parliamentary Group Takes Steps To Combat Election Fraud

PARLIAMENTARY GROUP TAKES STEPS TO COMBAT ELECTION FRAUD

Panorama.am
15:14 25/09/06

"Supreme Council" parliamentary group has disseminated a statement
telling about its pre-election initiatives. The group, headed by Ruben
Torosyan, denounced both the opposition and the authorities saying,
"the opposition is busy with insignificant issues." The statement
tells about steps taken by Supreme Council to contribute to elections.

Particularly, the group has submitted a case in the first instance
court with a charge against "idleness of the president." The statement
says that the constitutional order was violated in the country with
Defense Minister Serzh Sargsyan joining the Armenian Republican
Party (HHK). HHK’s activities must be banned, the initiators think,
and that should have been done by the Armenian president. However,
the latter failed to do so, the statement says.

The group has also applied to the Central Electoral Committee pointing
out that Armenian Revolutionary Federation has failed to register
with the State Registry before 2003 elections.

As another initiative, Supreme Council applied to the Russian Embassy
to Armenia saying that the Chairman of the Union of Armenians in Russia
"sets an example of violating the Armenian law to the foreigners."

The group also sent a notification to the general prosecutor’s
office saying the office has failed to issue decisions on seven
member of Central Electoral Committee who have reportedly violated
the Election Law.

The initiators also address to the ambassadors accredited in Armenia
and heads of international organizations urging them to sign a
memorandum "on respect of the Armenian legislation during the upcoming
elections." Torosyan and other initiators think that "some of them
and the observers of respective countries have violated the Armenian
legislations during the last elections and the Referendum having an
immediate impact on the results."

Armenian Opposition Blames Top Leadership In Links With Criminal Str

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION BLAMES TOP LEADERSHIP IN LINKS WITH CRIMINAL STRUCTURES

Panorama.am
17:56 25/09/06

A number of opposition parties of Armenia condemned today the top
leadership of the republic in criminalism. In the words of Garnik
Margaryan, leader of Motherland and Honor Party, the party has
established an anti-criminal initiative. "A document issued by our
party directly names supporters of criminalism in Armenia. On the
basis of facts, the name of Serzh Sargsyan was mentioned. However,
until now we have received no response," Margaryan said.

Moreover, he said the people which the document blames in links with
criminalism, were awarded with state awards recently.

Arthur Abraham To Keep Away From Boxing For Six Months

ARTHUR ABRAHAM TO KEEP AWAY FROM BOXING FOR SIX MONTHS

Armenpres
Sept 25 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS: Germany’s Armenian-born Arthur
Abraham who overcame a broken jaw Saturday to retain his IBF
middleweight title against Colombia’s Edison Miranda, will keep away
from the ring for six months, a time period which doctors say is
necessary to heal his broken jaw.

Abraham was awarded the winner after fighting from the fifth round
on spitting blood and unable to close his mouth. Abraham, 22-0 with
17 knockouts, pounded Miranda through the first four rounds, and won
with scores of 114-109, 115-109 and 116-109 from the three judges.

Miranda, 26-1 with 23 knockouts, apparently broke the Armenian-born
German’s jaw with a right late in the fourth round. The ring doctor
said he faced an operation. In the fifth round, Miranda intentionally
headbutted him and Abraham went over to the edge of the ring to let
blood pour out of his mouth.

After that his coach Ulli Wegner kept telling the 26-year-old Abraham
he had to hold out the whole 12 rounds or his title would be gone.

U.S. Visa Applications To Be Submitted Electronically

U.S. VISA APPLICATIONS TO BE SUBMITTED ELECTRONICALLY

A1+
[11:59 am] 26 September, 2006

The United States Embassy in Yerevan is making the transition from
hand-written visa applications to computerized visa applications. This
will mean that applicants will not have to wait as long for their
interviews once they submit their applications, because the consular
staff will not have to spend time entering their data into the
computers.

Starting immediately, applicants who submit the Electronic Visa
Application Form (EVAF) for U.S. nonimmigrant visas will be given
preference for appointments. And beginning November 1, 2006 the EVAF
will be required for ALL U.S. nonimmigrant visa applications.

The electronic form (EVAF) requires the same information as the
current, printed form, which is called the DS-156. The EVAF is
available on the Internet at at no cost.

The form must be filled out on-line. Then the completed form must
be printed and brought to the consular section at the time of the
visa interview.

Applicants using the EVAF must fill out the form before scheduling
a visa appointment, because they must give the EVAF barcode number
when scheduling.

When applicants use the EVAF, they help our consular posts improve
the visa services we provide our customers. The EVAF, which has been
online for more than three years, allows for quicker and more accurate
data entry. Our customers do not have to wait for us to enter the data,
and therefore can have their interviews more quickly.

Information must be typed into the EVAF in English.

However, instructions in Armenian and Russian are available on the
consular web site at There are many locations
where you can use a computer to access the Internet to fill out and
print the form. These include Internet cafes, schools, universities
and public-library computer centers, and the American Corners currently
located in Yerevan and Gyumri.

Beginning Nov. 1, 2006, only applications prepared using the EVAF
system will be accepted by the consular section in Yerevan.

http://evisaforms.state.gov
http://usa.am/consular.

WB And Armenia Negotiate Terms Of Second Judicial Reform Credit Prog

WB AND ARMENIA NEGOTIATE TERMS OF SECOND JUDICIAL REFORM CREDIT PROGRAM

Armenpress
Sept 25 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS: Arthur Tunian, head of an office
set up to supervise implementation of a set of judicial reforms funded
by a World Bank credit, said the government of Armenia and the World
Bank are negotiating the terms of a second judicial reform credit.

Tunian said the second credit is expected to amount to $20-25 million
and will run for five years. He said an agreement on release of
$800,000 advance for preparation work was signed and sent to Armenian
National Assembly’s ratification.

The second credit will be used to repair around 30-31 court buildings
and construct 10-111 new premises. Apart from construction works the
second credit program envisages also purchase of new equipment.

Tunian said the government of Armenia and World Bank are pleased
with the outcome of the first $11.5 million worth credit program
that was used for construction, repair of court houses in Armenia
and furnishing them with new modern equipment.

He said part of the second credit will be used for installment of a
test voice system for recording of court hearings.

Breaking In Breakaway Republics

BREAKING IN BREAKAWAY REPUBLICS
Alan Kasayev

RIA Novosti
25/09/2006 13:22 MOSCOW

Although 15 years have passed since the dissolution of the Soviet
Union, the Russian, European and, to a degree, international public
are still undecided over the future of its most forlorn remnants –
the breakaway republics of Nagorny Karabakh, South Ossetia, Abkhazia
and Transdnestr.

When the former Soviet republics proclaimed independence and joined
the United Nations, nobody in that organization and outside it
wondered whether the rights of the new members of international law
were legitimate. It was at that time that Georgia, Moldova, Armenia
and Azerbaijan appeared on the political map as independent entities.

Those autonomous republics incorporated in the former Soviet republics
that were dissatisfied with the process spoke up against it. The
result was wars, which they won, but only de facto.

Officially, they are breakaway, unrecognized states, a status they
are desperately trying to shed.

The outcome of the Transdnestr referendum was predictable for the
republic’s population, Moldova, Russia, and many countries in Europe
and America. More than 90% of the population confirmed their desire
to continue building an independent state with a view to joining
Russia. Unfortunately, little will change for them in practical terms.

Russia, Ukraine, the OSCE, the European Union and the United States
have tried, separately and jointly, to settle relations between the
recognized Moldova and unrecognized Transdnestr. The latest idea
provided for maximum autonomy of Transdnestr as part of Moldova,
with its own parliament, interior offices and a kind of national guard.

These Transdnestr institutions are to be preserved if Moldova joins
the EU (hypothetically) and NATO (probably), or proclaims neutrality.

The possibility did not materialize, because of the actions of either
Transdnestr or Moldova or Russia. It does not matter now who was to
blame, because everyone is now waiting to see what will happen after
the referendum.

It is much easier to predict what will not happen. The military
conflict will not escalate, because Moldova will hardly want, or be
able, to fight anyone now. No decision will be made to incorporate
Transdnestr into Russia, because they do not have a common border,
and neighboring Ukraine does not need additional pockets of instability
on its border.

So why was the referendum held? The Transdnestr authorities want
to create a powerful internal impetus for a new stage of their
unrecognized existence. Besides, the referendum was expected to
remind the world about the Transdnestr and other similar problems
within the former Soviet borders, notably South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

These former autonomous republics of the Georgian Soviet Socialist
Republic want to resolve their age-old problems. South Ossetians want
to reunite formally and culturally with North Ossetians. Abkhazians are
proclaiming to Russia and the rest of the world their unwillingness
to be part of Georgia. The bloody clashes of 1991-1993 actually
resulted in independence for South Ossetia and Abkhazia, but the
international community continues to consider them parts of Georgia,
although belligerent and separatist ones.

South Ossetia has scheduled a referendum on its status for November
12. It can be marred by bloodshed, which is an unacceptable price
for independence. The unstable Georgian government might proclaim
the referendum illegitimate and plan a powerful lightning military
strike to resolve the problem.

Meanwhile initiators of referendums hope that the population’s will
expressed in them will be respected by international organizations.

The recent referendum in Montenegro resulted in a new state that
became a UN member. A referendum in Kosovo is approaching, which may
create another recognized state in the Balkans. The United States
and the European Union, leading sponsors of the Kosovo peace process,
do not conceal their interest in this outcome. At the same time, they
refuse to support similar referendums in Transdnestr and South Ossetia.

Nagorny Karabakh somehow stands out among self-proclaimed republics.

Unlike Abkhazia, Transdnestr, and South Ossetia, it has long been a
separate issue on the international agenda due to active involvement
of a UN member state, Armenia. But the Nagorny Karabakh issue
strengthens the position of those who believe that we are witnessing
another escalation of a very important problem in global politics,
and theoretical and practical international law. When shall we be
guided by the UN Charter’s fundamental principle on a nation’s right
to self-identification and when do we abide by the 1975 Helsinki
Declaration, which guarantees European borders from changing?

Since the UN was established in 1945, over 70 new countries have
appeared in the world, or one sovereign member a year on average.

Each time a candidate needed an influential sponsor to achieve
international recognition. The Soviet Union used to be one during
the de-colonization era. When its influence faded, the United States
continued in this role. In fact, the Helsinki agreements have been
violated many times since 1989, first in Yugoslavia, then in East
Germany, and later in the Soviet Union. But the UN still recognized
them as legitimate. Does it mean that the Montenegro and Kosovo
scenario is in line with today’s mainstream global policy and that
Transdnestr, South Ossetia, Abkhazia and, perhaps, Nagorny Karabakh
will be recognized?

This outcome is not at all certain. In the 1990s, national and
territorial changes were accompanied by the collapse of the world’s
bipolar structure and supported the emerging unipolar world with
America’s hegemony. The reforms in the Balkans do not so much follow a
scenario of the U.S., which fully dominated the world just five years
ago, as they abide by the interests of the new international power
center represented by the stronger EU. With Washington’s consent,
of course. So…

So the fate of true independence and recognition of Transdnestr
and other territories around Russia will not be decided through
referendums. It will depend on whether Russia becomes a real partner
for the EU and the U.S., at least in Greater Europe, from the Atlantic
to the Urals, in the near future. So far we have seen Moscow’s powerful
advance towards the heights of global politics. But there is still
a long way to go. Russia has recovered a consultative vote with the
right of veto. Neither the European Union nor the U.S.

can settle the Kosovo issue or any other national and territorial
problem without taking Moscow’s opinion into account. But they are
still unable to fully accept its views. So the best decision is not
to make any unequivocal decisions.

The most important goal is to prevent a bloodshed. Moscow, Washington
and Brussels agree on this. Will they be heard in Chisinau, Tiraspol,
Tbilisi and Tskhinvali?