Iran Has No Obstacles To Developmemt Of Its Relations With Armenia,

IRAN HAS NO OBSTACLES TO DEVELOPMEMT OF ITS RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA, MAHMUD AHMEDINEJAD STATES

Noyan Tapan
Mar 19 2007

MEGHRI, MARCH 19, NOYAN TAPAN. Following the Iran-Armenia gas
pipeline opening ceremony on March 19, an agreement on cooperation
for construction and operation of hydropower plants on the Arax River
was signed between the two governments. Then a joint press conference
of the presidents of the two countries Robert Kocharian and Mahmud
Ahmedinejad took place.

R. Kocharian said that the opening of the gas pipeline is an historical
event which opens a new page in Armenian-Iranian relations. "After
independence, Armenia encountered great difficulties – war, blockade,
energy crisis. Today these difficulties are somewhat vague in our
memory but we all remember the good will of the Iranian people and
authorities and their willingness to help us. Our relations are
proceeding in a systematic way, and we are grateful to the Iranian
side for such attitude," the Armenian president said. He noted that
only 10 years ago the energy systems of Armenia and Iran were not
interconnected while today the matter concerns construction of a
second high-voltage line.

Expressing satisfaction over the opening of the gas pipeline, the
Iranian president said: "I’m glad that we have the opportunity to open
a gas pipeline, provide a new service to the Armenian people and take a
great step in development of Armenian-Iranian relations. Over the past
15 years, the bilateral relations have undergone a development. The
peoples of the two countries are prepared to further develop and extend
bilateral relations. I think these projects realized have strengthened
even more the friendship and links of our two peoples." According to
M. Ahmedinejad, during his short visit, issues related to bilateral
relations, previous programs were discussed, new agreements in new
spheres were reached. "Iran has no obstacles to development of its
relations with Armenia," he stated.

Assessing the current level of bilateral relations, the Armenian
president said that active political contacts are done through
intergovernmental commissions. "It is crucial to form a sensitive
field in our relations and try to implement economic programs which
will link our economies not only in trade but also in infrastructure
sphere. This is the essence of our relations, political contacts
and steps taken in the sphere of economy and it presupposes serious
prospects in terms of developing our bilateral relations."

In response to the question: "Which projects do you give
preference?" the Iranian president said that development of bilateral
relations in energy, economic, commodity turnover, water resources
and communication sectors was discussed, and respective expert work
will start soon in these sectors. "We view development of the two
countries in the interest of the peoples of our countries and for
the benefit of regional stability and security," he said.

Yerevan Police Downplay First Pre-Election Violence

YEREVAN POLICE DOWNPLAY FIRST PRE-ELECTION VIOLENCE
By Karine Kalantarian and Hovannes Shoghikian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
March 19 2007

Police in Yerevan on Monday confirmed reports about a violent dispute
between activists of Armenia’s two main establishment parties, but
claimed that none of their senior figures was involved in it.

Armenian newspapers reported over the weekend that the incident
occurred in the city’s southern Erebuni district on Thursday
and involved the local leaders of the governing Republican Party
(HHK) and the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) of businessman Gagik
Tsarukian. Citing unnamed government sources, they said the district’s
Republican prefect, Mher Sedrakian, and a group of his loyalists
attacked and beat up the head of the local BHK chapter, Harutiun
Karapoghosian, after he refused to stop his party’s aggressive
campaigning in the blue-collar area.

The row reportedly degenerated into a mass fight between local HHK
and BHK activists and ended only after police intervention. President
Robert Kocharian, who is believed to control the BHK, was said to
have held an emergency meeting with the top HHK leader, Defense
Minister Serzh Sarkisian, and the chief of the Armenian police,
Hayk Harutiunian, later on Thursday.

But according to the chief of Yerevan’s police department,
Major-General Nerses Nazarian, what happened was a mere "dispute of
friendly character" in which neither Sedrakian nor Karapoghosian had
any role. "There was really a dispute between local young people,"
Nazarian told a news conference. "They have differing views on
elections and other minor differences, but they are neighbors and
friends."

"But we managed to settle that minor dispute. They were warned against
causing more such incidents," he said.

Nazarian added that four men were detained and taken to the local
police station for questioning. "They asked us not to turn their
friendly relationship into criminal prosecution," he said. "Their
parents were invited to the police station, and they also talked to
each other … In the end, they shook hands, hugged each other and
were allowed to go."

Launching criminal proceedings against them would therefore be a
"very bad thing," reasoned the police general.

Erebuni has for years been considered a de facto fiefdom of Sedrakian,
who has extensive business interests in the district and is regarded
as a crime figure by some media and opposition leaders.

Sedrakian, who is better known to locals as Tokhmakhi Mher, actively
campaigned for the HHK’s and Kocharian’s victory in the 2003
parliamentary and presidential elections.

Sedrakian narrowly survived an apparent assassination attempt in July
2003 when his car was rocked by a bomb. Nobody was ever prosecuted
in connection with the blast.

The latest Erebuni incident was the first reported instance of violence
between representatives of the HHK and the BHK. It will stoke lingering
speculation about a potentially bitter rivalry between the two parties
that are likely to grab the largest number of seats in Armenia’s
next parliament.

Neither party officially commented on the incident on Monday. But one
senior Republican described it as a "provocation against both parties"
which he said was organized by the opposition Orinats Yerkir Party
of former parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian. Gagik Melikian did
not elaborate.

Mher Shahgeldian, Orinats Yerkir’s deputy chairman, laughed off the
allegation. "This is an absurd statement," he told RFE/RL. "What is
Orinats Yerkir to do with their relations?"

Many local commentators are convinced that the leaders of the HHK
and the BHK will agree on a mutually acceptable outcome of the May 12
parliamentary elections despite their somewhat frosty rapport. Some
suggest that such an agreement has already been reached.

"I don’t see a confrontation between us," noted Melikian. "What I
see is a honest and open competition."

Nazarian was also asked to comment on another brawl that reportedly
took place at a private Yerevan college last week between two groups
of young men led by sons of Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian and
Minister for Local Government Hovik Abrahamian. He insisted that none
of the participants of the "dispute over a girl" is related to either
influential official.

"Two guys were in love with the same girl," said the Yerevan police
chief. "A dispute broke out between them. The university management
tried to separate them, but they threw chairs at each other and one
accidentally hit the pro-rector."

Armenia, Iran Open Key Gas Pipeline

ARMENIA, IRAN OPEN KEY GAS PIPELINE
By Ruzanna Stepanian in Agarak

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
March 19 2007

President Robert Kocharian and his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad inaugurated on Monday a long-awaited pipeline that will
allow Armenia to import natural gas from Iran and ease its strong
dependence on Russian energy resources.

Lighting a symbolic torch, the two leaders officially opened the first
Armenian section of the pipeline during a ceremony held in Agarak,
a small Armenian town on the Iranian border.

The ceremony was delayed by four hours because rain and fog prevented
a helicopter carrying Ahmadinejad and other Iranian officials from
crossing into Armenia. They had to arrive by car.

"This is a historic event. We have turned a new page in
Armenian-Iranian relations," Kocharian declared at an ensued joint
news conference.

Ahmadinejad likewise called the event a "big step" in the development
of bilateral ties. "I am very happy and grateful to Almighty God for
enabling us to open the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline and to provide a
new service to the people of Armenia," he said. "I told my good friend
[Kocharian] that we are very happy because he is happy, the government
of Armenia is happy, and the people of Armenia are happy," he added.

Work on the 40-kilometer section of the pipeline, connected to
a 100-kilometer stretch built on Iranian territory, began in
late 2005 and was financed by a $34 million loan provided by the
Iranian government. The Armenian side is to repay it with supplies of
electricity. The two governments agreed to build a third high-voltage
transmission line connecting the power grids of the two neighboring
nations for that purpose last year.

Officials said Armenia will initially be able to receive only up to
400 million cubic meters of Iranian a year, or less than a third of
its current gas imports from Russia. That capacity will rise to 2.3
billion cubic meters a year after the planned construction of the
pipeline’s second, much longer Armenian section.

Yet even that volume will hardly allow Armenia to re-export Iranian
gas to Georgia and other countries, something which seemed a real
possibility several years ago when the pipeline’s diameter was
projected at 1,500 millimeters. The Armenian government reportedly
agreed to cut it to just 710 millimeters under pressure from Russia
which feared losing its status as the region’s main gas supplier.

Yerevan is also widely expected to grant Russia’s state-run Gazprom
monopoly ownership of the newly built pipeline as part of a complex
2006 deal that reinforced Moscow’s grip on the Armenian energy
sector. Some analysts wonder whether the pipeline will actually boost
Armenia’s energy security under these circumstances.

Ahmadinejad and Kocharian, who made sure only journalists from Armenian
and Iranian state televisions could ask them questions, did not comment
on implications of the likely Russian control of the facility. The
two leaders spoke instead about what they see as huge progress made
in the development of Armenian-Iranian relations over the past decade.

"The peoples of the two countries are determined to further develop
their ties," said Ahmadinejad. "I believe that this [pipeline] project,
which we are putting into practice, will further reinforce friendship
and ties between our peoples."

"As recently as ten years ago our energy systems were not connected to
each other," argued Kocharian. "Now we are talking about constructing
a third high-voltage line and signed today an agreement to build a
hydro-electric plant on the river Arax [marking the Iranian-Armenian
border.]"

Kocharian gave no details of the multimillion-dollar energy project
that has long been discussed by Yerevan and Tehran. Iran’s Energy
Minister Parviz Fattah announced last July that construction of the
Arax plant will get underway "in early 2007."

Chairman Of Nor Zhamanakner Expects To Receive Answers To Many Quest

CHAIRMAN OF NOR ZHAMANAKNER EXPECTS TO RECEIVE ANSWERS TO MANY QUESTIONS FROM AUTHORITIES

Noyan Tapan
Mar 19 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, NOYAN TAPAN. As a citizen of Armenia, Chairman of
Nor Zhamanakner Party Aram Karapetian has many questions to ask to
the authorities.

Stating this at the March 19 press conference, NZP Chairman also
said that RA Prosecutor General’s Office either does not answer
parties’ applications or gives answers not having legal grounds. And
A. Karapetian, for instance, would like to find out, whether it is
right that a non-registered sum of 6 mln USD is received from illegal
actions of Customs Service each month in Armenia, which is distributed
among officials of various levels in the future.

In A. Karapetian’s words, NZP does not agree to the conclusion,
according to which the Armenian pilots are to blame for the accident
of A-320 plane which took place in 2006 May in Sochi. The party is
going to apply to RF Embassy in Armenia and Russian Foreign Ministry
with this issue. A. Karapetian said that a criminal case had been
instituted at RA Prosecutor General’s Office in connection with this
case, but the results have not been published up to present.

NZP is also going to apply to U.S. Embassy in RA, U.S. State Department
and FBI with the issue of citizens of Armenia arrested last year in
U.S. with the accusation of illegal sale of arms. As A. Karapetian
mentioned, according to party’s information, "many interesting people"
from Armenia are also involved in this case.

A. Karapetian also said that according to some rumors, resident of
Yerevan Hayk Israelian arrested lately as a defendant on the case of
murder of Shahen Hovasapian, Head of RA State Tax Service Investigation
Department, is connected with Levon Sargsian ("Lyov of Mill") who in
his turn stands close to Defence Minister Serge Sargsian. According
to the same rumors, the information on H. Israelian’s participation
in the above mentioned crime has been provided to law enforcement
bodies by one of pro-governmental parties.

Agreement On Establishment Of Diplomatic Relations Between Armenia A

AGREEMENT ON ESTABLISHMENT OF DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS BETWEEN ARMENIA AND CONGO SIGNED

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 19 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. A Joint Declaration
on Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between the Republic of
Armenia and the Republic of Congo was signed by the ambassador of the
Republic of Armenia and the ambassador of the Republic of Congo. NT
was informed from the RA MFA Press and Information Department that
the agreement was signed at the RA Representative Office in the UN
on March 15.

Two Centuries Of U.S. Power Politics In The Middle East

TWO CENTURIES OF U.S. POWER POLITICS IN THE MIDDLE EAST
By Mohamed Elshinnawi

Voice of America
March 19 2007

A popular view of current U.S. policy in the Middle East is that
the Bush Administration, in using force to bring democracy to Iraq,
has drastically changed the course of America’s relations with the
Arab and Muslim world. But a new book contends U.S. involvement in
the Middle East has a surprisingly long and turbulent history.

In his new book, Power, Faith and Fantasy: America in the Middle East,
Israeli-American historian Michael Oren examines two centuries’ worth
of archival documents and the personal letters of prominent Americans
dating back to the founding fathers. What he finds is that the United
States’ preoccupation with the Middle East is no modern phenomenon,
but one rooted in the earliest days of the republic.

"I think it’s impossible to understand American involvement in Iraq
today without going back into American history," Oren says. "I mean
way back, to the 18th century, to the 1700s, to understand that
America has been using power in the Middle East since the day of
its inception. America began its involvement in the Middle East on a
military leg," Oren points out. "In the 1770’s, about 20 percent of
American foreign trade went through the Middle East and that trade
was falling prey to pirates, who were operating out of four North
African states, which are today Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya."

Indeed, as Michael Oren notes, the first American soldiers to die in
a battle overseas were killed by those Arabic-speaking pirates during
their running battles from 1783 to 1815. So, too, the first marine
operation in an American foreign war was against Arabs in Tripoli,
North Africa, in 1805.

Oren says that while the U.S. played a prominent role in the Middle
East during World War I, it was not a military role.

He points out that American missionaries were operating in the Middle
East for about a century before World War I. "They were building
schools, building hospitals," he explains. "Some Americans built
the Middle East’s most modern universities. The American University
of Beirut and the American University of Cairo were built by these
missionaries."

Historian Michael Oren, a visiting professor at Harvard and Yale
universities, says America’s decision not to go to war against the
Ottoman Empire during World War I was largely faith-based.

"When the United States entered World War I in the spring of 1917,"
Oren explains, "President Woodrow Wilson had to decide whether to
declare war against all of the Central Powers: Germany, Austria and
Hungary, and the third ally in that alliance was the Ottoman Empire.

Both houses of Congress strongly urged Wilson to go to war against
the Ottoman Empire, but Wilson was the grandson, the son and the
nephew of Presbyterian Christian ministers. U.S. missionary groups
sent representatives to the White House to tell President Wilson:
if you go to war in the Middle East against the Turks, they will do
to our missionaries what they have been doing to the Armenians."

Michael Oren adds that Wilson did not want the American missionaries
to be massacred, and decided not to go to war in the Middle East. His
decision ultimately gave Britain and France a much freer hand to
redraw the map of the region after the war.

Early U.S. support for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine
is another American policy that has influenced the dynamics of the
Middle East for centuries. Oren says the Puritan settlers from England
were among the first members of the Israeli lobby. They urged John
Adams, the second American President, to envision 100,000 Israelites
conquering Palestine. Later, Oren writes, Woodrow Wilson would aspire
to restore the Holy Land to the Jews. When President Truman recognized
the United Nations-mandated state of Israel in 1948, he did so, Oren
recalls, with a sense of sense of historical and religious destiny.

Michael Oren points out that Saudi Arabia’s first king, Abdul Aziz ibn
Saud, had bluntly warned President Franklin Roosevelt before Israel’s
birth that Arabs would die fighting to resist a Jewish state, and,
Oren says, he was right. Since 1948, a succession of wars between
Israel and its Arab neighbors has forced the United States to undertake
perennial peacemaking efforts.

"America has led the search for Arab-Israeli peace going back to the
Truman administration in 1940s," Oren says, adding few administrations
have succeeded. "We have learned from Jimmy Carter’s experience in
the 1970s — which was one of the few cases in which America — that
the prerequisite for a successful diplomatic process are an Arab and
an Israeli who are very strong in their own countries and who are
committed to the process."

Oren notes that it was America’s missionary contacts with Arab
countries that laid the groundwork for U.S. oil interests in the
region. He says the American relationship with Saudi Arabia started
with American missionaries traveling in the 1890s to the Arabian
Peninsula, where they built hospitals and provided health care to
Bedouins, including Saud, the head of that tribe. When the search
for oil began in 1928, Orens says, Saud gave the American companies
the contracts to prospect for oil.

"It is oil that leads America to adopt many of its policies," the
author says, "even the many controversial policies, such as supporting
autocratic Arab regimes as a part of the American search for stability
in the Middle East that will allow a continuous flow of oil."

Michael Oren believes Americans have always been enthralled by the
Middle East, as much by the exotic fantasies of magical genies and
flying carpets as by its ancient history and authentic cultural
attractions. The region, he says, has impressed some of America’s
greatest writers.

Samuel Clemens, for one, came to the Middle East and afterward
published his collected dispatches from the region under the title
"Innocents Abroad," using his new pen name, Mark Twain. That book
became the number one best selling book in the second half of the
19th century.

In Power, Faith and Fantasy: America in the Middle East, historian
Michael Oren describes a long but unfinished history. Oren predicts
that with its continued dependence on oil, its resolve to crush radical
Islamic terrorism, and its enduring missionary zeal to promote more
open societies, America’s engagement with the peoples of the Middle
East is likely to continue for many years to come.

[Michael Oren was interviewed on VOA’s Talk to America program.]

15 Thousand Users In Yerevan Not Installed Water Meters

15 THOUSAND USERS IN YEREVAN NOT INSTALLED WATER METERS

Noyan Tapan
Mar 19 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, NOYAN TAPAN. About 15 thousand user of water
supply services in Yerevan have not installed water meters and
pay for services depending on the gap size of the water supplying
pipe. Abgar Yeghoyan, Chairman of Consumer Rights Protection NGO,
told NT correspondent about it.

According to him, the minimum amount of payments calculated by this
method makes 90 thousand drams a month. In his opinion, the debts of
such water users to Yerevan Water company are bad debts.

A. Yeghoyan said that Consumer Rights Protection NGO proposed to the
company management its own version of the problem’s solution: these
users should install water meters and pay up to 20% of debt owed,
while the rest of the debt should be remitted. In his words, Yerevan
Water company’s management gave preliminary agreement to install
water meters of needy user at the expense of the company. There are
about 2,000 such users.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iran-Armenia gas to be launched today

Iran-Armenia gas to be launched today

ArmRadio.am
19.03.2007 10:13

Iran-Armenia gas pipeline will be put into commission today. The
opening ceremony will be attended by the Presidents of the two
countries. Director of the `High-Tension Electric Networks’ Sahak
Abrahamyan told Armenpress that the 40 km long sector of the gas
pipeline on the Armenian territory has been completed.

It’s worth mentioning that in the first stage it is envisaged to
transport 300-400 million cubic meters of gas. In the future it will
be possible to increase the volume to 2.5 billion cubic meters.

ANTELIAS: The Int’l Seminar on Dialogue of Cultures, Civilizations

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

THE ARMENIAN CHURCH PARTICIPATES IN THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR ON DIALOGUE
OF CULTURES AND CIVILIZATIONS
03/15/2007

The international seminar ‘Dialogue of cultures and civilizations: the
bridge between human rights and moral values’ convened in Paris, March
13-15.

The seminar was organized by the World Public Forum ‘Dialogue of
Civilizations’, under the patronage of UNESCO. There were over 250
representatives of international NGOs, scientists, experts, religious
leaders from 25 countries.

The Armenian Church took an active part in this conference. The
Catholicosate of All Armenians, Echmiadzine, Armenia, was represented by
Rev. Fr. Vazken Nanian, Dean of the Spiritual Djemaran at St. Etchmiadzine.
The Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia, Antelias, Lebanon, was
represented by Archbishop Sebouh Sarkissian, Primate of the Diocese of
Tehran, and Ms. Teny-Piri Simonian, a senior staff of the World Council of
Churches.

##
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Information Blockade Against Heritage Still in Force

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

March 19, 2007

Information Blockade Against Heritage Still in Force

Yerevan–Two television stations have recently phoned the press department
of the Heritage Party to invite its chairman Raffi K. Hovannisian to appear
on their political programs. It seems fairly bizarre that following their
eighteen month-long blacklist of Hovannisian, these stations have begun to
tender invitations in the few days that he is absent from the country. The
brief absence, incidentally, had already been publicly announced by Heritage’s
press secretary.

If these invitations are genuine, and not mere publicity stunts, those and
all television companies will have the opportunity to host Raffi Hovannisian
upon his imminent return. Only when these opportunities are realized will we
declare that the presidential blockade has been somewhat relaxed. The fact,
however, that other Heritage officials–who, by the way, are all in the
country–are still refused television airtime leaves much room for doubt.

In a recent news conference, speaker of parliament Tigran Torosyan stated
that Raffi Hovannisian’s absence from television is due to his frequent
absences from the country. First, we should point to the fact that the
travels of Armenian politicians like Mr. Torosyan (which are far more
extensive than Hovannisian’s travels) somehow do not prevent television
stations from covering and broadcasting their activities–not for seconds or
minutes, but for numerous hours. Second, Hovannisian’s trips are far too
rare to explain–let alone justify–an information blockade. Third, they are
always based in the defense of national interests; in his current travels,
Hovannisian is addressing Armenian issues at Clark University and the
University of California, Los Angeles. Mr. Torosyan’s statements, which come
in the process of a clearly illegal and unethical blackout, reflects a
disdain, based on disinformation, of his fellow citizens.

In the same news conference, Torosyan conveyed regret that the debate
between him and Hovannisian, as organized by A1 Plus Television Company, had
been postponed. We consider this a pledge to take part in the discussion and
are happy to announce that Hovannisian will be ready to participate in this
television debate when he returns in a few days.

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land. Its
central office is located at 31 Moscovian Street, Yerevan 0002, Armenia,
with telephone contact at (374-10) 536.913, fax at (374-10) 532.697, email
at [email protected] or [email protected], and website at

Heritage Press Department

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am