TBILISI: Ambassador Says US Against Georgian Partnership With Iran

AMBASSADOR SAYS US AGAINST GEORGIAN PARTNERSHIP WITH IRAN
By Keti Sikharulidze

The Messenger, Georgia
Nov 28 2006

Tefft says "long term" partnership with Iran "unacceptable"

Georgia’s interest in a long term relationship with Iran to receive
natural gas seems to be unacceptable for the United States.

Speaking with the Georgian weekly newspaper Kviris Palitra over
the weekend, US Ambassador John Tefft said that Georgia’s long term
relationship with Iran was a problem for the US.

Kviris Palitra quoted Mr. Tefft as saying "Last year, Georgia had no
choice after the explosion of the main gas pipeline to import gas from
Iran. It was an emergency situation and the United States understood
the situation, though Georgia’s long term partnership with Iran is
unacceptable for us."

Speaking with the paper, the US diplomat noted that the US’s position
was based on the UN Security Council resolution on Iran and the
latter’s nuclear enrichment program.

However, the Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli stated on Monday, he
sees no problem in signing a long term agreement with Iran.

"It is natural that we will have relations in the energy sector
with Iran, moreover, we will exchange our electricity with Iran,"
stated Noghaideli.

Tefft’s statement seems to contradict an earlier one by US Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs,
Matthew Bryza, who while visiting Georgia on November 17 noted that
while the US was pursuing their policy towards Iran, they did not
want Georgia or Armenia or any other country to be in a situation
where it does not have energy for the winter.

"If Georgia, under such pressure [to pay high gas prices to Russian
Gazprom], feels it has to look elsewhere for gas, looking first
and foremost to Azerbaijan as a supplier, we understand that. If
Azerbaijan is contracting the gas from a variety of suppliers be it
Russia, Iran or Azerbaijan it is a separate issue," stated Bryza.

However commenting on Bryza’s statement to Kviris Palitra, Tefft
claimed that Bryza’s statement was misinterpreted.

Tefft’s statement became one of the leading issues at the parliament
bureau session. One of the leaders of the opposition Democratic Front
faction, Zviad Dzidziguri, demanded a parliamentary hearing on this
issue, however, the bureau did not approve Dzidziguri’s request.

"We are in a very difficult situation. The president is against buying
gas from Gazprom for USD 230, and if our strategic partner [the US] is
against purchasing gas from Iran, what is the alternative? Shah Deniz
gas is hardly enough for Turkey and Azerbaijan," stated Dzidziguri.

Speaking with journalists, ruling party member Nika Gvaramia said
Georgia would consider everybody’s advice, though the decision will
be made solely by the Georgian government.

"The main task is to help our population get through the winter and
I think our government will succeed. I think our decisions will be
justified in political arena," said Gvaramia.

Meanwhile Gazprom announced they will increase the price to Europe
reports Russian newspaper Vedomosti. According to the paper, 1000
cubic metres of natural gas to Europe will cost USD 293 for 2007.

"Gazprom plans to export 157 billion cubic metres of natural gas to
Europe in the coming year, which is 20 percent more than in 2006,"
reports the paper.

Gazprom also increased the price of gas for Russian ally Belarus to
USD 200 per 1000 cubic metres.

BAKU: Jonathan Henick: "US Want Peaceful Solution Of Nagorno Karabak

JONATHAN HENICK: "US WANT PEACEFUL SOLUTION OF NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT"

Today, Azerbaijan
Nov 28 2006

"The US wants the peaceful solution of Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

"All three co-chairs try for this. The reason why Matthew Bryza did
not come to Azerbaijan is that trying to achieve peaceful solution he
regularly meets with Azerbaijani and Armenian communities of Karabakh,"
US Public Affairs Officer to Azerbaijan Jonathan Henick told the APA.

He did not take his stance on the problem of sanctions by the US in
case Azerbaijan demands its territories by war.

"We only want peaceful solution of the problem. This the best way and
at the same time Ilham Aliyev’s position. As to sanctions, I can not
make any statement about it," he said.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/33186.html

Occupation Is A Crime

OCCUPATION IS A CRIME
By Laura Taylor

Cornell University
The Cornell Daily Sun, NY

Nov 28 2006

Today, Israeli Vice Premier Shimon Peres will be addressing members
of the Cornell community in Bailey Hall. According to the CIPAC
website, one of the event’s sponsors, the former Prime Minister will
be discussing, "Israel and the prospects for peace in the Middle
East." The visit of such a major foreign leader is sure to be a
packed event.

However, outside Bailey Hall there will also be a number of Cornell
students, Ithaca College students and community members protesting
against Peres. But why protest the proclaimed "man of peace"?

My fellow columnist Jeff Purcell elaborated on one of the many
reasons yesterday in his column, "Peres’ Apartheid Past," which
detailed Israel’s support of Apartheid South Africa while Peres was
Prime Minister.

CIPAC and others praise Peres as a Nobel laureate for the peace prize
he won in 1994 jointly with Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin. However,
they do not discuss the fact that, in 2002, members of the Nobel
committee publicly opposed Peres’ actions as a member of the Israeli
cabinet in the re-occupation of Palestinian territory. Hanna Kvanmo,
a Nobel committee member, stated that, "what is happening today in
Palestine is grotesque and unbelievable. Peres is responsible, as
part of the government." Committee members expressed regret that,
in response to Peres’ actions, the peace prize could not be recalled.

There are numerous other reasons to oppose Peres, from his role in
developing nuclear weapons in Israel to his work to help cover up
the Armenian genocide in order to establish political ties with Turkey.

However, the protest today will not just be a protest against Peres
exclusively. It will also be a protest against the Israeli government
and its actions in Palestine.

Unfortunately, many Americans, including some on the left, are not
aware of the horrors that occur against Palestinians on a daily
basis. They see the results of suicide bombers in Israel prominently
featured on the news, but not the daily horrors of living in Gaza
or the West Bank. Those who may begin to question Israel’s actions
towards the people of Palestine often silence their dissent for fear
of being labeled an "anti-Semite."

When discussion on the issue of Israel and Palestine emerges, it is
important to note the distinction between being Israeli and supporting
Israel’s policies. There are some Israelis who oppose the government’s
policies and stand in solidarity with the people of Palestine, with
some even refusing to serve in the Israeli Army.

In the same vein, there is a distinction between supporters of Israel
and Jewish people. Not all Jewish people support the state of Israel,
despite the fear of being called anti-Semitic by people of their own
religion and ancestry.

In order to explain why I will be protesting Peres tomorrow, there
are many things that I could discuss. I could go into the origins of
Zionism, and the collaboration of some early Zionists with anti-Semitic
leaders. I could discuss the creation of the state of Israel and the
unequal distribution of land between Arabs and Zionists. However,
those things are in the past. I could debate for hours with supporters
of Israel about the history of Zionism and Israel, and nothing would
be gained.

What matters most, both to the people there and to activists here,
is what’s happening in Palestine today. If life was wonderful for
the Palestinians now, Israel’s past transgressions might seem less
pressing.

But life is not wonderful for the people of Palestine today.

Appalling would be a better description of the daily struggles they
must face.

Although Israel claims to have withdrawn from Gaza and the West
Bank, Palestinians continue to live under occupation. There are
many facets to the occupation, which Israel claims are needed for
"security." In reality, they are methods for control of the people of
Palestine Checkpoints serve as a major restriction on the day-to-day
lives of Palestinians. The vast majority of these checkpoints are
set up between Palestinian towns and villages and are exclusively
for Palestinians. People are often held up for hours at these
checkpoints at random, then suddenly allowed to pass. This makes it
nearly impossible to go to school or have a job outside of your own
small town, crippling the Palestinian economy.

There are also separate highways for Israelis and Palestinians, and
each group has different license plates to ensure that they are driving
on the "correct" highway. It is no surprise that the Israeli highway
is much better maintained. Beyond being a daily frustration, it is also
a subtle reminder to Palestinians that they are less than Israelis.

Roadblocks. Settlements. Outposts. The Wall. The list of tactics by
which the Israeli government seeks to upset the lives of Palestinians
goes on and on. What it adds up to is an Apartheid state, in which
there are two classes of citizens: Israeli and Palestinian.

It can be difficult to support the cause of justice in Palestine,
especially when the U.S. media and government are so consistently
pro-Israel. Often, it is easier to shy away from the topic and focus
on "safer" issues. However, we cannot ignore our duty to stand
in solidarity with the people of Palestine, in opposition to the
oppressive Israeli regime.

If you believe in justice, come to Bailey Hall at 2:45 pm today to
proclaim: "From Iraq to Palestine, Occupation Is A Crime."

Correction: In last week’s column on the tasering incident at UCLA,
I mistakenly referred to the Iranian-American student involved in
the incident, Mostafa Tabatabainejad, as Arabic. I do not know the
ethnicity of Tabatabainejad, as Iran has a diversity of ethnicities
within its borders. I sincerely regret the error.

Laura Taylor is a senior in the School of Industrial and Labor
Relations. She can be contacted at [email protected]. Kind of a Big
Deal appears Tuesdays.

http://www.cornellsun.com/node/20251

Armenia: Opposition MP Forecasts Start Of War Between The Rich And T

ARMENIA: OPPOSITION MP FORECASTS START OF WAR BETWEEN THE RICH AND THE POOR

Regnum, Russia
Nov 28 2006

Passing the law ‘On amortization for public and state needs’ initiated
a war between the rich and the poor; leader of Armenian Democratic
Party, opposition MP Aram Sarkisyan stated to a REGNUM correspondent.

According to him, the law had negative consequences even before it was
passed. Pointing to the situation arisen as a result of amortization
in connection with construction of Northern and Main Avenues, the
oppositionist mentioned that people received there compensation which
did not correspond with real estate’s market prices. He stressed that
active ‘dragging’ the bill at parliament was aimed at amnestying
violations made as a result of implementing an anti-constitutional
governmental decision. "These people will receive a kind of indulgence
for their deeds," he believes.

Stressing that the current law determines paying out compensations
at the level of market prices plus 15%, Aram Sarkisyan pointed to
necessity of granting real estate in place where owner of the realty
to be alienated lived. Additionally, the law determines that decision
on amortization for public needs should be made by government and not
parliament on the basis of some-organization’s proposal; the latter is
unacceptable. According to Sarkisyan, vivid interest of ruling clique
in passing the bill is caused by fact that, at present, everything
has already been sold in the country; only land remains to be unsold;
authorities need it to fill their own pockets.

It is worth stressing, the law ‘On amortization for public and state
needs’ was passed on November 27 in its third and final reading. 70
MPs voted for the law; two abstained from voting. Opposition boycotted
the voting.

Georgia On His Mind

GEORGIA ON HIS MIND
by Nikolas K. Gvosdev

The National Interest Online, DC
Nov 27 2006

Reading former UN ambassador Richard Holbrooke’s essay in today’s
Washington Post once again confirmed for me the faith-based nature
of so much of U.S. foreign policy. The world is as we declare it to
be; inconvenient facts and on the ground realities are ignored or
airbrushed away.

Holbrooke wants Washington to make the relationship between Tbilisi
and Moscow a key organizing principle of the U.S.-Russia relationship
("The European Union and the United States must make the continued
freedom and independence of Georgia a test case of the Western
relationship with Russia" is the specific quote.)

One problem, of course, is that nothing has ever been cut and dried
or simple about the Russia-Georgia relationship, certainly not since
the Middle Ages when Georgia’s feuding kings and princes besought
the Russian tsars to cross the mountains and become involved in
Caucasian affairs.

I am always struck by the Rashomon effect when reading advocacy
pieces of this type. Russia, in the view put forth by Holbrooke, has
no legitimate economic, security or political interests whatsoever
in the region and should not only accept but subsidize the existence
of hostile regimes by providing energy at below-market prices and
facilitating guest workers whose subsidies sent from Russia make up
at least 30 percent of Georgia’s economy.

Given his logic, I await his follow-up op-ed where he advocates
the immediate creation of a free-trade agreement with Hugo Chavez’s
Venezuela and the sale of U.S. oil to Cuba at below-market rates. And
his outrage over the suspension of rail and road links between Russia
and Georgia-correct me if I am wrong, but I haven’t read much from
the ambassador recently holding Turkey to task for its blockade of
democratic Armenia or Ankara’s continued unwillingness to implement
UN Security Council resolutions calling for its troops to be withdrawn
from Cyprus. But I forgot-those are different cases.

And if Russia is "black", then Mikheil Saakashvili’s Georgia must be
"white". He, of course, realizes that this characterization is a bit
difficult to say with a straight face, so a partial inoculation
with the truth-reference to less than perfect efforts on the
part of the Georgian government in promoting democracy-is thrown
in. Let’s be candid. As I wrote at the time of the Rose Revolution,
for Saakashvili’s government to be effective, it would, of necessity,
have to become more Putin-esque.

Honest observers with no personal, professional, political or business
stake in spinning Georgian realities are prepared to be much more
blunt. In the current issue of The National Interest, Parag Khanna
and Lawrence Groo warn:

"The lesson is that Western powers must be careful whom they back
in so-called revolutions, for they risk giving a carte blanche to
self-serving executives who are far from democratic champions.

"Nowhere is this more evident than in Georgia, site of another
Western-endorsed regime change that took the form of the 2003 "Rose
Revolution." Riding a wave of popularity after the ouster of Eduard
Shevardnadze, young and Western-educated Mikhail Saakashvili has
since taken every opportunity to profess democracy in theory while
often ignoring it in practice. Opposition newspapers, TV stations and
NGOs have been intimidated and shut down, while ironically Western
funding for such groups has dried up due to the presumed success of
the Rose Revolution. Under the pretext of Russian meddling in the
disputed province of South Ossetia and its cut-off of gas supplies,
Saakashvili maintains a powerful secret police, used more for shaking
down his opponents than for internal security. While Saakashvili’s
administration has achieved some success in reforming antiquated
business regulations, his appointment of loyal judges has undermined
the judicial system’s independence, and the constant musical chairs in
the cabinet has made it difficult to know who is leading on important
policy reform efforts at any given time."

But since so many of the color revolutions of the past few years have
run out of steam-Georgia is arguably the only success story left on the
books, and so it has acquired exaggerated importance. And so, just as
Washington did with Saakashvili’s predecessor Eduard Shevardnadze, who
in his day was also vigorously defended as pro-American, pro-democratic
and pro-Western-until nearly his last day in office-when suddenly
Shevardnadze was rewritten to being a pro-Moscow despot-so with
Saakashvili-his vices must be hidden and his virtues exaggerated.

If Georgia is so important to U.S. interests and values-a case this
essay still does not make-I would have much greater respect for
his call for stronger action if he would honestly call on Americans
and Europeans to shoulder the real burdens that changing Georgia’s
geopolitical realities would entail. But Georgia is for Holbrooke and
others an unwelcome symptom of how the world is changing. Reading
through his essay one cannot help but be struck how strongly he
desires the world to return to its mid-1990s state-where the United
States could depend on a quiescent China, a debilitated Russia,
a pre-occupied Europe to set the international agenda with only a
minimal amount of cost and effort on America’s part.

And also, it was so much easier for the U.S. during those halcyon days
to ignore problematic double standards and to say that the view from
Washington is the sole reality. This is why he complains: "Today,
by contrast, Russia has threatened to veto a U.N. Security Council
resolution that would give Kosovo independence and has spuriously
linked Kosovo’s status to that of Abkhazia and South Ossetia."

Spurious? That is very much in the eye of the beholder.

As I wrote in a response in Foreign Affairs last year:

"The United States insists that the Kosovo case is unique, but others
are by no means obliged to see things Washington’s way. Indeed, it is
difficult to see how the Kosovo precedent can be limited. The case for
independence rests on two foundations: first, that the revocation of
the province’s ethnoterritorial autonomy in 1989 created a legitimate
case for armed rebellion and ultimate separation, and second, that
Kosovo’s de facto independence for the past six years should be
recognized de jure to end the province’s nebulous status."

I can find no logical way to argue objectively that one formerly
autonomous region comprised of an ethnic group different from the
titular majority of the larger state which had its autonomy revoked
by an ultranationalist president and which has enjoyed de facto
independence with the support and active intervention of outside
powers deserves independence while another one does not.

Why can’t, in this matter, Holbrooke and others just be honest with
their readers? Drop the moralizing, drop the self-righteousness,
and simply say, U.S. policy in the matter of the frozen conflicts is
based on a mix of favoritism and perceived self-interest.

But moralpolitik is such a comfortable perch. I particularly enjoyed
one of his closing comments, that "We will not sacrifice the interests
of a small country that has put its faith in Western values for the
sake of energy supplies or U.N. votes."

That’s not why the voters returned the Democrats to power in the
House and Senate. Perhaps the ambassador should consult a few U.S.

opinion polls about what ordinary Americans feel their priorities
are. Lower energy costs, keeping a workable international coalition
against terror and stopping the spread of weapons of mass destruction
top the list.

It’s also hypocritical, to say the least. The Clinton Administration’s
policies toward Africa are proof positive of that-fledging democracies
ignored in favor of backing regional strongmen and keeping the vital
flows of energy and other commodities to world markets. (Perhaps that
yet another one of the "exceptions.")

I start to feel like a broken record. Let me close with what I wrote
in the most recent issue of the Journal of International Security
Affairs on the matter of the "Russia debate":

"Given our commitments elsewhere, the goal of the United States ought
to be to strengthen the states of the periphery to give them a greater
degree of independence and leverage vis-a-vis Russia, rather than to
hold out quite unrealistic expectations that the West is prepared
to break them out of the Russian sphere altogether-or support them
against Moscow in violent conflicts where the U.S. has little or
northing at stake.

"Those who argue that we do not have to choose between our values or
interests (or at least to assign priorities)-and who suggest that
increased pressure on Russia both promotes our values and enhances
our security-have to present compelling evidence that this strategy
has a reasonable chance of success (or that the consequences will be
minimal). …

"But a more confrontational approach with Russia can only be justified
if this clearly serves the vital interests-not the hopes and dreams-of
the United States."

I think the Holbrooke essay fails all of these tests.

Nikolas K. Gvosdev is editor of The National Interest.

.aspx?id=13098

http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article

ANKARA: Rwanda And Algeria Accuse France For Genocides In Africa

RWANDA AND ALGERIA ACCUSE FRANCE FOR GENOCIDES IN AFRICA
By Mukremin TASCI, JTW

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Nov 28 2006

Rwandan President Paul Kagame on Saturday repeated accusations that
France was implicated in his country’s 1994 genocide in a television
interview. Algerian President and Prime Minister also accused France
last month of committing genocide in Algeria during the colony time.

"France is implicated in the genocide, there is no doubt about that,
no one can have doubts," Mr. Kagame told French TV channel i-Tele in
an interview broadcast on Saturday.

Rwanda accuses France of training soldiers it knew would later commit
genocide though France denies any wrongdoing, saying its military
intervention helped Rwandans.

Mr Kagame told i-Tele:

"On the extent, the degrees of implications, the people involved,
the way in which French institutions were involved, these are aspects
which will be examined… France is a superpower so it thinks that it
is always right even when it is wrong… We have a will and a reason
to fight for our rights and we will."

The latest diplomatic flare-up between the two countries arose earlier
this week when French anti-terrorism magistrate Jean-Louis Bruguiere
called for Kagame to stand trial at a U.N. court over the killing of a
former Rwandan president. Mr Bruguiere also issued arrest warrants for
nine of Mr Kagame’s associates over the 1994 shooting down of a plane
carrying former Rwandan president Juvenal Habyarimana. Rwanda says
that the decision is politically motivated and counter French attack
against the Rwanda claims. Mr Kagame has denounced Mr Bruguiere’s
comments as the `justice of bullies, arrogance’.

* ALGERIA ALSO ACCUSES FRANCE

Not only Rwanda, but also Algeria also says that the French caused
genocide in Africa. Relations between France and Algeria remain
strained due to the Algerian Genocide committed by France during the
colonial period. French President Jacques Chirac has rebuffed Algerian
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s demand that France apologize for its
"long, brutal and genocidal" rule. Bouteflika officially named the
French period as "cultural and political genocide of the Algerian
identity".

During a visit to Algiers in the second week of November 2006, French
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, the leading ruling party candidate
in the 2007 presidential vote, said he couldn’t "ask children to
apologize for the faults of their fathers." Sarkozy and his party
accuses Turkey for the Ottoman past and Sarkozy strongly support
a bill which makes crime to reject the Armenian genocide crimes in
Turkey. Algerians argue that France should first face with its own
crimes before judging the other countries.

Algerian historians estimate that more than 1,5 million Algerians
were massacred by the French Army.

The Algerian war for independence began in 1954, and the French army
largely crushed the rebels by 1958. Civilian massacres and the use of
torture undercut support for the war in France, resulting in General
Charles de Gaulle’s decision to quit Algeria.

* FRANCE DOES NOT WANT TO APOLOGIZE

French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy was on an official visit to
France’s former colony Algeria last week. Sarkozy placed a wreath at
a monument for Algerians killed in their war for independence and
then he visited a monastery in Tibhirine where seven French monks
where killed in 1996. In only eight years, 1.5 million Algerians died
during their country’s fight for independence between 1954 and 1962.

Torture was widespread.

The Algerian government has urged France to apologize for the killings
and suffering during 130 years of colonial rule.

While the Algerian government has called on the French to recognize
"the number of victims and the looting of riches" and "the deletion of
national identity," Sarkozy preferred to talk about the "dark moments"
of the colonial era and suffering on both sides.

Sarkozy, a leading candidate for the French center-right political
world to run for president next year, has strongly supported France’s
recent notorious bill criminalizing the denial of an Armenian genocide
at the hands of the Turks during World War I.

During his trip Sarkozy preferred to focus on an initiative to lift
visa restrictions for Algerians traveling to Europe. Both the French
interior minister and the Algerian leadership avoided talking too
much on the two topics cooling relations between the two countries:
Algeria’s call for an apology and the postponement of a 2005 bilateral
friendship treaty.

The treaty was pushed aside after France passed a law last year
requiring textbooks to talk about the "positive side" of French
colonialism. An embarrassed Chirac quashed the law but relations
have suffered.

Instead, both sides preferred to talk about Sarkozy’s trip in terms
of a "necessary" friendship between the two countries "condemned"
to a mutual future, said Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika.

RA Foreign Minister To Pay Visits To Brussels, Strasbourg, Paris And

RA FOREIGN MINISTER TO PAY VISITS TO BRUSSELS, STRASBOURG, PARIS AND TEHRAN IN DECEMBER

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 28, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
will leave for Brussels on December 4 where he will take part in the
OSCE Foreign Ministers’ Council sitting to be held on December 4-5.

V.Oskanian will leave for Strasbourg on December 6 where his meeting
with Terry Davis, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe,
other high-ranking officials of the Council of Europe is envisaged.

V.Oskanian will return Brussels on December 7 where he will meet with
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the NATO Secretary General. The RA Foreign
Minister will leave Brussels for Paris the next day, on December
8, where he will participate in the events dedicated to the 100th
anniversary of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU).

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Foreign Ministry’s Press and
Information Department, V.Oskanian’s working visit to the Islamic
Republic of Iran is scheduled for December 17.

Armenian Parliamentarians Express Gratitude To Their French Colleagu

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARIANS EXPRESS GRATITUDE TO THEIR FRENCH COLLEAGUES FOR ADOPTION OF LAW CONDEMNING DENIAL OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 28, NOYAN TAPAN. On November 28, RA National Assembly
Speaker Tigran Torosian received Head of the French National Assembly’s
France-Armenia Deputy Friendship Group, Francois Rochebloine, group
member Alen Muan Bersan and group Secretary Jean-Pierre Delaunay. He
highly estimated the efforts of the French parliament aimed at right
perception of issues delicate for Armenia, in particular, adoption
of the bill determining a punishment for denial of the Armenian
Genocide. In Tigran Torosian’s words, indeed it is aimed at not
punishing individuals, but expresses a precise attitude towards such
phenomena for the purpose of preventing them.

NA Speaker informed the guests about Armenia’s position on Nagorno
Karabakh settlement and on Turkey. He said that more favorable
situation has been formed at present for solving the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict: principles of nations’ self-determination and territorial
integrity were opposed to each other for a long time and now the
Minsk Group Co-chairs propose a resolution where these principles
are confronted with each other. Touching upon relations with Turkey
T.Torosian said that Armenia is for normal relations without any
preconditions but Turkey puts forward preconditions, which, naturally,
is unacceptable.

F.Rochebloine who visits Armenia for the 15th time mentioned the
great progress Armenia has in all spheres after the 90-s.

At the meeting, they also touched upon issues of cooperation of
Armenian and French delegations in PACE.

According to the report submitted to Noyan Tapan from RA NA Public
Relations Department, the same day the Armenia-France Deputy Friendship
Group met with members of NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations
and RA NA Armenia-France Deputy Friendship Group.

Highly estimating the current level of Armenian-French many-sided
relations Committee Chairman Armen Rustamian attached importance
to further development of interparliamentary relations. Expressing
gratitude for the bill condemning denial of the Armenian Genocide, he
mentioned that it raised to a new level the international community’s
attention towards the Armenian Genocide. A.Rustamian expressed the
hope that the change in the staff of the U.S. Congress in favor of
deputies with a pro-Armenian position will enable to give more serious
attention to the problem of the Genocide in the U.S. as well.

Mher Shahgeldian, Head of Armenia-France Deputy Friendship Group,
also expressed gratitude to the French parliament for adopting the
law determining a punishment for denial of the Armenian Genocide. He
attached importance to necessity to cooperate in the sphere of economy,
to use the French experience in electoral processes.

Iranian Minister Of Agroculture: There Are Considerable Opportunitie

IRANIAN MINISTER OF AGRICULTURE: THERE ARE CONSIDERABLE OPPORTUNITIES FOR ARMENIAN-IRANIAN COOPERATION IN AGRICULTURE

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 28, NOYAN TAPAN. During the November 28 meeting
of the Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margarian and the Iranian
Minister of Agriculture Mohammad Reza Eskandari, the sides spoke about
the extension and development of cooperation between the two countries
in various spheres. Noting the the age-long friendship of Armenia and
Iran, the historical and cultural similarities and close links form
a solid basis for developing the relations in an atmosphere of mutual
respect and trust, the Armenian prime minister and the Iranian minister
of agriculture attached special importance to mutual high-level
visits and the active work of the Armenian-Iranian intergovernmental
commission in terms of giving all this a practical character.

On behalf of his country’s government, the Iranian minister expressed
gratitute to the Armenian government for the balanced position that it
shows in international structures with respect to Iran-related issues.

The interlocutors spoke with satisfaction about the qualitative
progress registered in the bilateral economic relations in recent
years, underlining the cooperation in the energy sector: construction
of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, operation of the third high-voltage
line, the hydropower plant on the Arax River to be built jointly,
and in the transport sphere – construction of a new Armenia-Iran
alternative road, which will facilitate the transportation and make
Armenia more attractive for north-south transit transportation. The
sides also pointed out the importance of the construction of a railway
line between Armenia and Iran, the actively developing relations
and cooperation among various administrative territories of the two
countries and the joint programs being implemented in a number of
spheres, including agriculture that may play quite an important
role. In the Iranian minister’s words, there are considerable
opportunities for partnership and experience exchange in agriculture.

Mohammad Reza Eskandari attached importance to the agreement on plant
protection and phyto-sanitary quarantine between the two governments,
the agreement on cooperation in the sphere of livestock farming, and
the mutual understanding memorandum to be signed with the RA Ministry
of Agriculture during this visit. He said that these agreements and
memorandum will become a new stimulus for further cooperation.

According to the RA Government Information and PR Department, at the
conclusion of the meeting, the sides expressed their willingness to
put into practice the high-level agrrements reached through mutual
visits and the work of the intergovernmental commission and the
working groups.

Armenian Singer To Take Part In BBC Competition

ARMENIAN SINGER TO TAKE PART IN BBC COMPETITION

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 28, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. 17-year old
singer Silva from Armenia will take part with I Like song in the BBC
competition. The author of the song is Silva’s sister Mane, and her
brother Edgar recorded the song.

The BBC competition is called The Next Big Thing: young gifted singers
who can become stars in future are named with that term in the world
of show business.

Peter Gabriel is the superstar involved in the awarding commission.

He has worked for years in the genre of "world music," studies art of
different peoples, cooperates with musicians from all the continents.

The world famous musician has joint works with Armenian artists
as well, particularly, with duduk players (duduk is an Armenian
national pipe).

The commission chose the best 20 from 1100 recordings: Silva’s
song is among them as well. The best singer is chosen with
the help of computer vote in the following internet site:
thing/.

According to Radio Liberty, the vote finishes at 20:00 according to
Yerevan time, on November 28.

BBC will announce names of the best 6 singers on November 29 and 30,
and the winner will become known on December 9.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/thenextbig