Newly-Appointed WB Yerevan office head pledges support

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 16 2007

NEW-APPOINTED WB YEREVAN OFFICE HEAD PLEDGES SUPPORT IN LARGE-SCALE
PROGRAMS IMPLEMENTATION IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, March 16. /ARKA/. Armenian Finance and Economy Minister
Vardan Khachatryan received World Bank Regional Director Donna
Dowsett-Coirolo and newly appointed WB Yerevan Office Head Aristomene
Varoudakis on Thursday. Armenian Finance Ministry’s press office
reports that Dowsett-Coirolo assured the minister that the World Bank
would keep cooperating with Armenia and promoting reformation process
in the republic.
Varoudakis, in his turn, pledged support in large-scale programs
implementation in the country.
Other issues related to Armenia’s economic and financial sectors were
discussed at the meeting as well. M.V.-0–

Kocharyan, Kotayk Gov discuss social-economic situation in region

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 16 2007

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT, KOTAYK MARZ GOVERNOR DISCUSS SOCIAL-ECONOMIC
SITUATION IN REGION

YEREVAN, March 15. /ARKA/. Armenia’s President Robert Kocharyan and
Kotayk mraz Governor Kovalenko Shahgaldyan discussed the
social-economic situation in the region and the programs of its
further improvement.
The Governor informed the President that the yield of community
budgets exceeded the 2006 index by AMD 970mln ($2.7mln), which allows
to solve many social issues, reported the President’s press service.
The sides also discussed the issues of reconstructing 28 schools, one
hospital and six culture palaces in the Kotayk region and supporting
the Vokhjaberd community owners that are located in the landslide
zones.
The President made relevant orders on the discussed issues. L.M. -0–

FM: Violation of people’s right for self-determination in NK issue

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 16 2007

ARMENIAN FM: VIOLATION OF PEOPLE’S RIGHT FOR SELF-DETERMINATION IN
KARABAKH ISSUE

YEREVAN, March 15. /ARKA/. Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
thinks that in the Karabakh issue there is the violation of people’s
right for self-determination.
The Foreign Ministry’s press office reported that Oskanian said this
during the fourth session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
"In the waning days of the USSR, the people of Nagorno-Karabakh opted
for self-determination. The Azerbaijani authorities decided to attack
their own citizens to suppress those calls. And by doing so, they
lost the political and moral right to govern people they considered
their own citizens," Oskanian said. L.M. -0–

Situation in USA around mineral water Jermuk needs specification

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 16 2007

SITUATION IN USA AROUND MINERAL WATER "JERMUK" NEEDS SPECIFICATION

YEREVAN, March 15. /ARKA/. The situation in the USA around mineral
water "Jermuk" needs specification, said RA Deputy Foreign Minister
Arman Kirakosyan, commenting on the prohibition of selling the
mineral water in the USA.
"It is necessary to specify why in the USA there is such a situation
with "Jermuk" after seven years since it has been exported in 2000,"
Kirakosyan said.
"Perhaps only one specific consignment of the mineral water was of
different quality, however, it needs concretization," said
Kirakosyan. He pointed out that reporters should have an essential
role in this issue.
Several days ago the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of the United
States Department warned the American consumers that the mineral
water "Jermuk" is dangerous for health. The widespread statement said
that, in particular, "during several days the use of arsenic can
affect kidneys, liver, skin, cardiovascular system, and its
continuous usage may lead to cancer and death." After the USA, Canada
and Hong Kong also prohibited the "Jermuk" sale.
The RA Minister of Agriculture and "Jermuk" producers treat it an
unfair competition aiming to withdraw the Armenian mineral water from
the American market. L.M. -0–

Armenia must carry out active work regarding NK problem

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 16 2007

ARMENIA MUST CARRY OUT ACTIVE WORK REGARDING KARABAKH PROBLEM AT
DIFFERENT INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION

YEREVAN. March 16. /ARKA/. Armenia must carry out active work
regarding the Karabakh problem at different international
organizations, Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Tigran Torosyan
reported at a press conference on Thursday.
"Of course, the OSCE Minsk Group basically deals with the problem –
Karabakh’s status should be determined by this organization. However,
there are other organizations that we should work with," he said.
According to Torosyan, the necessity in such actions is felt, all the
more that Azerbaijan has been enhancing its efforts and finances at
other international organizations over the last two years.
"These tendencies are dangerous, and we have to intensify our
activity, because there is no confidence that Azerbaijan’s actions
will always be without a result," Torosyan reported. R.O. -0–

Armenian, NKR labor inspection establish partnership

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 16 2007

ARMENIAN, NKR LABOR INSPECTIONS ESTABLISH PARTNERSHIP

YEREVAN, March 15. /ARKA/. State Labor Inspections of Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) have established partnership. The
Public Relations Department, RA Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs,
reports that the two countries’ Labor Inspections have elaborated a
working program.
Head of the RA Labor Inspection Harutyun Harutyunyan reported that
"the support will be both material and moral." Specifically,
personnel training is in progress, and modern equipment will soon be
provided.
On his turn, the newly appointed Head of the NKR Labor Inspection
Karen Tovmasyan said that the problems in the state-employer-employee
relations have been inherited from the past years, when no
centralized control of employers existed. Among the problems are
secret employment, illegal nonpayment or delay of wages, violations
of work contracts. To reveal the problems the Labor Inspection
conducts regular inspections. Tomvasyan pointed out that the NKR
Labor Inspection expects help from Armenia.
The sides expressed hope for further cooperation, which will
contribute to the consolidation of the NKR Labor Inspection.
A delegation of the NKR Labor Inspection arrived in Armenia on March
13 to establish cooperation with Armenian specialists.
The NKR Labor Inspection was established in 2005 at the NKR Ministry
of Labor and Social Affairs. P.T. -0–

BAKU: Azerbaijanis protest against Armenian film in Czech film fest

Today, Azerbaijan
March 16 2007

Azerbaijanis protest against Armenian producer’s film in Czechia film
festival

16 March 2007 [15:35] – Today.Az

An international documentary film festival focusing on human rights
is being held in Czechia.

The film "War and peace" produced by Armenian Hovanesyan was
demonstrated at the festival. The film is about the frames taken by
an Armenian reporter fought in Karabakh and the fates of the people
who fought there after the war. The film is based on falsehood, in
which Armenians are introduced to the European audience as victims.
The film will today be demonstrated in Brno, the second big city of
Czechia.

The members of Azerbaijani Diaspora in Czechia and Azerbaijani
students delivered brochures and information bulletins to the
audience in order to inform them of truth on the Karabakh problem.

Karabakh war veteran Fuad Alkhasov, student of Brno Technical
University Nariman Topchubashov, student of Carlow University Vusal
Hajiyev invited the spectators and Armenians to debate and answered
their questions.

Czechia Culture Ministry is one of the organizers of the festival.
The students officially protested to the ministry for permitting
demonstration of such a film in the festival on human rights.

CT2 channel, Lidovskiye Noviny, Prgue Post, Radio Cesko and other
mass media covers the festival. APA

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/society/38037.html

BAKU: Rice, Gates: `genocide’ bill may damage US security

Baku Sun, Azerbaijan
March 16 2007

Rice, Gates: `genocide’ bill may damage US security

By William C.Mann

WASHINGTON – The U.S. secretaries of state and defense contend that
the security of the United States is at risk from proposed
legislation that would declare Armenians victims of a genocide on
Turkish soil almost a century ago. In joint identical letters to the
speaker of the House of Representatives and two other senior members,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert
Gates said the resolution also could inflict significant damage on
U.S. efforts to reconcile the long-standing dispute between the West
Asian neighbors.

The appeals went to Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi; Rep. John
Boehner, leader of the House’s Republican minority; and Rep. Tom
Lantos, the Democrat who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

`This is an incredibly sensitive issue inside Turkey, and what we are
trying to encourage the Turks to have is meaningful reform of their
dealings with Armenia,’ retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Joseph Ralston,
former Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, told The Associated Press
in an interview Wednesday. `It has huge ramifications for the foreign
policy of this country.’ The Associated Press obtained a copy of one
of the letters Wednesday. It was dated March 7, two days after
Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian was in Washington to visit
Rice and said afterward that `Turkish lobbying at a government level’
threatened to scuttle the resolution.

A Democratic aide said Pelosi, who controls the House agenda, has no
plan to bring the proposal before the House soon. The aide spoke
anonymously because final plans have not been approved. A
congressional staff aide, also speaking without attribution, said it
is understood that Lantos, whose committee would deal with the
resolution, was awaiting word from Pelosi. Both the speaker and
Lantos have been supporters of the legislation. The dispute involves
the alleged deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians during the
waning years of the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of the Turkish
state. Armenian advocates contend they died in an organized genocide;
the Turks say they were victims of widespread chaos and governmental
breakdown as the 600-year-old empire collapsed in the years before
Turkey was born in 1923. The bipartisan resolution was introduced on
Jan. 30. Passage of the resolution would harm `U.S. efforts to
promote reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia and to advance
recognition by Turkey of the tragic events that occurred to ethnic
Armenians under the Ottoman Empire,’ the letters said. They said the
United States is encouraging `our friends in Turkey to re-examine
their past with honesty and to reconcile with Armenia, as well as
security and stability in the broader Middle East and Europe.’

Rice and Gates reminded the lawmakers of repercussions from a vote in
the French National Assembly last October to criminalize denial of
Armenian genocide. `The Turkish military cut all contacts with the
French military and terminated defense contracts under negotiation,’
the letters said. Similar reaction against passage of the House
resolution `could harm American troops in the field, constrain our
ability to supply our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and
significantly damage our efforts to promote reconciliation between
Armenia and Turkey at a key turning point in their relations.’

Turkey has NATO’s second-largest army. The U.S. Air Force has a major
base in southern Turkey near Iraq, which it has used for operations
in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. Between the Persian Gulf War in
1991 and the Iraq war, warplanes from Incirlik Air Base enforced a
flight ban in Northern Iraq against the Iraqi air force.

BAKU: Turkey renovates Armenian church

Baku Sun, Azerbaijan
March 16 2007

Turkey renovates Armenian church

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) – Turkey may host Armenian officials at a
ceremony marking the renovation of the 1,000-year-old Akhtamar
church, one of the finest surviving monuments of Armenian culture,
Turkish media and sources close to the project said Wednesday.

Turkey has invited Armenian officials to attend the ceremony but it
was not clear whether any of them would show up, sources involved in
the renovation said Wednesday, speaking on condition of anonymity
because authorities had not announced or confirmed the invitations.

Turkey’s foreign ministry said preparations for the ceremony were
continuing. It denied reports in the Turkish media that the
government would allow direct flights between the Armenian capital
Yerevan and the Turkish city of Van for the ceremony. Turkey and
Armenia have no diplomatic ties and border crossings remain closed,
but there are regular commercial flights between Yerevan and
Istanbul.

The ceremony will be held on March 29 on the tiny island of Akdamar,
situated on a lake in the eastern city of Van, bordering Iran.

Turkey, under pressure from the EU to improve its treatment of
minorities, began restoring the church in 2005.

Orthodox patriarch ‘confident’ Turkey will improve religious freedom

Serbianna.com, MI
March 16 2007

Orthodox patriarch ‘confident’ Turkey will improve religious freedom

March 15, 2007 (AP) — The spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians
expressed confidence yesterday that Turkey will improve religious
freedom for non-Muslims, who complain of persecution and
discrimination.

Patriarch Bartolomeos I said in a speech at the papal nuncio, the
Vatican’s mission in Vienna, that the Turkish government and most
political parties were showing "goodwill" in answering calls from the
West for greater religious liberties.

"We are confident and do not give up hope that in the immediate
future, ways will be found to solve the problems, which threaten our
existence," said Bartolomeos, who is based in Istanbul.

Christians have frequently complained of discrimination and
persecution in Turkey, most of whose 70 million people are Muslim. An
estimated 65,000 are Armenian Orthodox Christians, 23,000 are Jews,
20,000 Roman Catholic and 3,500 Protestant, mostly converts from
Islam. Around 2,000 are Greek Orthodox.

Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik said on Tuesday after
meeting with Bartolomeos that her country would step up pressure on
Turkey to improve freedom of religion and enhance the protection of
religious minorities.

Bartolomeos said on Wednesday that the Orthodox hierarchy
"emphatically endorses and expects" Turkey’s eventual membership in
the European Union, adding that religious freedom should continue to
be a precondition for EU entry