Azerbaijan Flexes Muscles In Fast-Growing Caucasus

AZERBAIJAN FLEXES MUSCLES IN FAST-GROWING CAUCASUS
by Sebastian Smith

Agence France Presse — English
March 12, 2007 Monday 5:54 AM GMT

At Baku’s Caravansarai restaurant, once a rest stop on the Silk Road
between Asia and Europe, a flickering blue gas flame symbolises a
new shift in 21st century geopolitics.

These are heady days for Azerbaijan. Lynchpin of Western ambitions
to break the Russian grip on Europe’s energy resources, the ex-Soviet
republic oozes confidence and petrodollars.

Critics believe corruption, poverty, and stifling of political dissent
could yet undermine President Ilham Aliyev’s ambitions.

But Ali Hassanov, a senior advisor to Aliyev, lays out a vision in
which this secular Muslim country of eight million people will connect
Europe to huge quantities of oil and gas right across Central Asia.

"Europe must not only rely on Russian energy," he told AFP at the
presidency in Baku. "We are offering this new route linking Azerbaijan,
Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan."

For EU governments and their US ally, the attraction in this
hydrocarbon version of the Silk Road is the ability to bypass an
increasingly assertive Russia, and ultimately to create a new trade
route between China and Europe.

Azerbaijan is also in the spotlight as a US-friendly Muslim state on
Iran’s northern border, although with some 26 million ethnic-Azeris
in the Islamic republic, Baku is keen to maintain neutrality.

Amid shifting loyalties, a Western strategist might look with
satisfaction at the flames darting from a decorative heater in the
Caravansarai’s old camel stable.

Like many ex-Soviet republics, Azerbaijan had until this year been
heavily reliant on natural gas from Russian behemoth Gazprom. One
third of supplies were imported.

But when faced with a New Year’s demand for a two-fold price increase,
Baku decided to show Gazprom the door. Now all gas — except a
small amount sent from Iran to the isolated Nakhichvan province —
is locally produced.

Analysts say the bold move was as much political as economic, revealing
a steady weakening of Russian domination over the strategic Caucasus.

"It was a very clear signal that they’ve given up on Big Brother,"
a Western diplomat in neighbouring Georgia said.

Azerbaijan is underscoring this challenge by increasing gas exports
to Georgia, whose strongly pro-Western leadership hopes by the end
of the year to phase out all Gazprom imports.

That cements an alliance at the heart of the Western-backed corridor
for oil and gas pipelines built in the last two years from Baku
through Georgia to Turkey and on to world markets.

"I think there is a very good understanding between Georgia and
Azerbaijan. They both need each other to build the energy corridor
and to increase transit and commerce," another Western diplomat in
Tbilisi said.

Last month, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey agreed to build a new train
link that ultimately could bring goods from China to the European Union
in direct competition to the Russian route. Azerbaijan is helping to
finance Georgia’s share.

Longer term, the hope in Azerbaijan is for a gas pipeline under the
Caspian Sea that would bring Turkmenistan’s and even Uzbekistan’s huge
gas fields directly online. "There will be competition," Hassanov said,
"and then Russia would have to lower its prices."

That project remains a long way off. But the flood of petrodollars
from Azerbaijan’s own reserves is driving wild economic growth —
gross domestic product rose 34.5 percent last year — and equally
giddy nationalist enthusiasm.

"Azerbaijan will be the envy of the world. You’ve seen nothing yet,"
predicted Shakir Bagirov, 48, a manager at the Caravansarai restaurant,
a regular lunch spot for British Petroleum employees.

Yet enormous pitfalls lie ahead for Azerbaijan, not least income
inequality, government corruption and rumbling anger over the
occupation of Azeri territories by neighbouring Armenia.

The government also claims it faces a threat from radical Islamic
groups — "not just internally, but from abroad," as Hassanov said,
in a thinly veiled reference to fellow-Shiite Iran.

The more immediate problem, critics say, is the disconnect between
those enjoying the oil boom and those left behind.

Baku, centred on an ancient neighbourhood of stone alleys and mosques,
is frantically being transformed. Jarring sounds of construction work
mingle seven days a week with the hum of traffic jams.

But while such expansion has created many jobs, as many as a third
of Azeris remain in poverty, economists say.

In the last three months electricity prices have gone up three times,
petrol by double. Although incomes and pensions have also risen
sharply, the average salary is just 139.5 manats (162 US dollars,
124 euros).

"You see all that oil money around, but for we simple people life
is very, very hard," said Ali, 27, at one of the carpet shops in the
picturesque old town. "The politicians take everything they need. Our
president is surrounded by jackals."

Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, a dissident imam and human rights activist whom
police evicted from a 1,000-year-old Baku mosque in 2004, says
the government is stamping out democratic development in order to
monopolise power.

"That radical Islam scenario is a brand that our government uses
because then they get attention from the Americans," he told AFP at
the house where he continues to lead prayers. "They get carte-blanche
to do what they want."

"If it carries on like this, if all this is badly done, there will
be mass protests."

Bagirov, totting up diners’ bills in the Caravansarai, was more
optimistic.

"Everything will be okay in the end. When the rich find their pockets
full, the money will spill and we’ll get it too."

Armenia-NATO Cooperation Marked As Mutually Beneficial By NATO Deput

ARMENIA-NATO COOPERATION MARKED AS MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL BY NATO DEPUTY SECRETARY GENERAL

AZG Armenian Daily
13/03/2007

Armenia and World Integration

Armenia is moving in the right direction and NATO pins big hopes on
the country’s development, today said NATO Deputy Secretary General
for Public Diplomacy Jean Fournet during a lecture in Yerevan State
University.

Referring to Armenia-NATO cooperation, Fournet said that it was
mutually beneficial but none can solve all problems overnight. Reforms
are a long process. The main thing is creativity and non-standard
thinking.

During his lecture about the nowadays challenges and the ways
to surpass them Fournet pointed out that the key challenge to the
modern age of information is globalization. This phenomenon has both
positive and negative aspects. "Today we are living in an unpredictable
world. In the times of the cold war everything was much more definite,"
Fournet said. He noted that globalization provokes competition in all
spheres and consequent fight for brains and the phenomenon of brain
drain. Fournet said that today special attention should be given
to ecology. Many countries are on the verge of ecological disaster
mostly because of ineffective consumption of natural resources. NATO
has long been dealing with ecological problems. In fact, it was one of
the first to realize the need to protect the environment. Among other
challenges are pandemic, emigration, trafficking, mass destruction
weapons and terrorism.

Only by joint efforts will the world countries be able to oppose those
threats. For this purpose they should organize various research rejects
and actively exchange knowledge and experience. They should form not
only military contingents but also peace-making battalions. The
key principles of NATO are cooperation, religious tolerance,
complimentarily and progressiveness.

Killers Of Armenian Citizen Convicted

KILLERS OF ARMENIAN CITIZEN CONVICTED

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
March 12, 2007 Monday

The verdict came into force against seven residents of the Moscow
region, who are accused of the murder of an Armenian citizen out of
ethnic hatred in the commuter train in the Moscow region.

The murder was committed late in the evening on August 9, 2005.

According to investigators, six residents of the Odintsovo district
aged from 19 to 28, including three students of higher and secondary
educational establishments in Moscow, who have radical nationalistic
views, "agreed in advance about joint attacks on people of the
non-Slavic nationality."

They decided to look for a victim in commuter trains of the Belorussky
railway line and video record the scene of beating in order to sell
it later. For two hours they came from train to train, looking for
people with the non-Slavic appearance, until they found Armenian
citizen Samvel Tadevosian.

"Attacking the victim young nationalists started beating him with
legs, hands, metal chain, recording the beating on a digital photo
camera. They seized from Tadevosian a mobile phone, money and
documents, hit him several times in the head and neck with a sharp
piece of the bottle, and the victim died on the spot," a source in
the Moscow regional prosecutor’s office emphasized.

According to investigators, on the same night another two people
fell their victims in commuter trains, including a lieutenant-colonel
of police, from whom the young criminals stole money, documents and
other valuables.

The Moscow Regional Court found the six defendants guilty of murder
and the premeditated moderate damage to health, committed by a group
of people under the preliminary collusion out of ethnic hatred,
as well as of banditry, robbery and stealing of the passport.

The Russian Supreme Court heard the appeal against the verdict and
upheld it. Defendants Maxim and Alexei Osipovs, Vladimir Maluntsev
were sentenced to 11.5, 6.5 and 4.5 years in a general regime prison,
respectively.

Another three defendants, who committed the crimes being adolescents,
were sentenced to 9.5, 9 and 4.5 years in a general regime colony.

The seventh defendant Anton Palamarchuk was sentenced to two years
in an open prison.

Joining NATO Not On Armenia Agenda – Foreign Minister

JOINING NATO NOT ON ARMENIA AGENDA – FOREIGN MINISTER

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
March 12, 2007 Monday

Armenia does not have on its foreign policy agenda the accession to
NATO, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan said.

"The main regulating document – the plan of individual partnership
with NATO is so voluminous and substantive that the implementation of
it will take a lot of time," Oskanyan said at a ceremony of opening
NATO’s information centre in Yerevan that he attended together with
NATO Assistant Secretary General for Public Diplomacy Jean Fourne.

The setting up of the Western alliance’s information centre in Yerevan
is one of provisions of the partnership plan.

"Perception of NATO by a part of the public does not correspond to the
new, altered realities – the present-day NATO has succeeded to adapt,
go away from the Cold War times," Oskanyan said.

He said that the opening of the information centre was needed by
Armenia, as Yerevan pursues a multi-vector foreign policy.

"We have large-scale relations with Russia in the security sphere,
we are in the CSTO (the Collective Security Treaty Organisation)
and simultaneously developing the cooperation with NATO within the
framework of the individual partnership plan. The many-year cooperation
has shown that there is no contradiction in that. By means of this
cooperation we shall be able to make a contribution to consolidation
of security in the region," Oskanyan said.

UMBA And Asue To Implement Several Joint Programs

UMBA AND ASUE TO IMPLEMENT SEVERAL JOINT PROGRAMS

Noyan Tapan
Mar 12 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 12, NOYAN TAPAN. An agreement on implementation of joint
programs was recently signed by the "Independent Analyses Efficiency
and Competitiveness Center" Fund of the Union of Manufacturers and
Businessmen of Armenia (UMBA) and the Armenian State University of
Economics (ASUE). The document was signed by ASUE Rector Yuri Suvarian
and UMBA Chairman Arsen Ghazarian.

Yuri Suvarian told NT correspondent that taking into consideration
the necessity to promote cooperation of the educational sector
and the labor market, it is envisaged to implement grant programs,
economic analyses, expert examinations, training of banking employees,
studies of labor market demand, as well as to organize round tables
and trainings with the participation of businessmen.

Armenia Says No Plans To Join NATO, But Ready For Cooperation

ARMENIA SAYS NO PLANS TO JOIN NATO, BUT READY FOR COOPERATION

Xinhua General News Service, China
March 12, 2007 Monday 3:30 PM EST

Armenia’s foreign minister said on Monday his country does not plan
to join NATO but will cooperate with the alliance, the Interfax news
agency reported.

"We are carefully watching the South Caucasus countries, and by having
a dialogue with NATO we are trying to achieve overall security in the
region," the minister, Vardan Oskanyan, said at the opening ceremony
of the NATO information center in the capital Yerevan.

However, he said, Armenia is not going to join the alliance. "I would
like to stress once again that this issue is not on the agenda of
Armenia’s foreign policy," he said.

Oskanyan said Armenia is cooperating very actively with the alliance
under the Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP).

"The IPAP is quite a serious document, and we focus on it in working
with NATO," he said.

Armenia and NATO agreed on the IPAP in December 2005. The nation’s
Caucasus neighbors Azerbaijan and Georgia have also developed IPAPs
with the alliance.

"Azerbaijan Has To Negotiate With NKR"

"AZERBAIJAN HAS TO NEGOTIATE WITH NKR"

A1+
[09:24 pm] 12 March, 2007

"Azerbaijan will have to negotiate with NKR if they want to see
the Karabakh conflict regulated; Azerbaijan has no way out", Arkadi
Ghoukasyan, President of NKR told the journalists today.

The President of NKR noted that "today’s format is not a real one. It
would be real provided Armenia, Azerbaijan and NKR were engaged
in the negotiation process. French Co-Chair Bernard Fassier fully
realizes that the Karabakh conflict cannot be solved without NKR",
Mr. Ghoukasyan says.

"I am convinced that the OSCE Minsk group Co-Chairs are working and
will continue to work in this respect, but unfortunately they are
not that mighty to solve the problem. Azeris’ stance is also vital
in this view but the country doesn’t want to negotiate with Nagorno
Karabakh", Arkadi Ghoukasyan says.

While referring to Vardan Oskanyan’s announcement according to
which Karabakh is well aware of the negotiation process and the
existing document, Mr. Ghoukasyan said, "Armenia cannot negotiate with
Azerbaijan without the knowledge of Karabakh. It is quite normal that
they keep us informed. But there is one serious problem; as we are
not key participants of the negotiations we are unaware of certain
nuances, which can be decisive in the negotiation procedure. On the
whole, we are aware of the negotiation contents."

In answer to our question whether there is any conflict between the
RA and NKR authorities, Mr. Ghoukasyan said, "There are both minor
and serious conflicts but I don’t want to refer to them and open the
stakes. We never lose hope as our opinions coincide in some issues
and we voice hope we shall come to mutual understanding."

To note, Mr. Ghoukasyan doesn’t have great expectations from the
upcoming meeting of the Armenian and Azeri foreign ministers though
he highlights each meeting.

Negation Du Genocide Armenien: Le Condamne Turc Fait Appel En Suisse

NEGATION DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN: LE CONDAMNE TURC FAIT APPEL EN SUISSE

Agence France Presse
12 mars 2007 lundi 11:30 AM GMT

Le president du Parti des travailleurs turcs, Dogu Perincek, condamne
en Suisse pour negation du genocide armenien, a depose un recours
lundi contre la sentence, a annonce son avocat.

Le chef du petit parti de gauche a decide de faire appel auprès du
tribunal du canton de Vaud (ouest) après avoir ete reconnu coupable
vendredi de discrimination raciale pour negation du genocide armenien
par le tribunal de police de Lausanne.

M. Perincek a ete condamne a une amende de 3.000 francs suisses
(environ 1.860 euros) et, avec sursis, a 90 jours-amende d’un montant
de 100 francs suisses par jour (quelque 62 euros – les jours amende
sont proportionnels aux revenus du condamne, qui peut etre incarcere
en cas de refus de paiement).

A l’issue du procès, Dogu Perincek a annonce qu’il etait pret a aller
jusqu’a la Cour europeenne des droits de l’homme s’il n’obtenait pas
gain de cause auprès du tribunal cantonal ou du tribunal federal,
la plus haute instance judiciaire helvetique.

Le militant turc etait poursuivi pour avoir nie le genocide armenien
dans deux discours prononces en Suisse en mai 2005.

Sa condamnation pour negation du genocide armenien est "une première
mondiale au niveau penal", a estime vendredi un professeur de droit.

Un historien americain avait ete condamne a Paris en 1995 a une amende
d’un Franc symbolique, mais par une chambre civile.

Pour M. Perincek le "genocide armenien" est un "mensonge international"
utilise comme instrument de propagande des Etats-Unis contre la
Turquie.

Defiant les pressions d’Ankara, le Conseil national, chambre basse
du parlement suisse, a reconnu le genocide armenien fin 2003, mais
le gouvernement suisse n’a pas suivi cette decision.

–Boundary_(ID_+HprHClmGOMY+lKsEbtAGw)- –

53% Promise Not To Take Bribes

53% PROMISE NOT TO TAKE BRIBES

A1+
[10:22 pm] 12 March, 2007

"A1+" held polling and suggested its readers answering the question,
"What will you do if you are offered bribes during the pre-election
period? " Over 465 people participated in the polling. The answers
were distributed as follows;

We shall refuse the bribe categorically – 53%

We shall take the bribe but vote for the candidate we want – 30%

We shall take the bribe and obey the order – 4%

We shall inform the corresponding bodies about the bribe – 9%

5% of those surveyed couldn’t give a definite answer.

This week we suggest you answering the question, "What does a candidate
nominated under the majority ticket need?

We expect your active participation.

Le Musee Armenien A Paris Entrouvre Ses Portes

LE MUSEE ARMENIEN A PARIS ENTROUVRE SES PORTES

Le Figaro, France
12 mars 2007

FREDERIC FRINGHIAN est un Armenien de la deuxième generation, un "
Francais d’Armenie " , comme quelque 450 000 autres descendants de
la grande vague de refugies de 1917. À Paris, au rez-de-chaussee du
Musee d’Ennery, dans le cadre delicat d’un hôtel Second Empire, deux
salles donnant sur un petit jardin constituent son musee, celui que
son père Nourhan Fringhian, " Armenien d’Iran vivant a Constantinople
! " avait cree, en 1949, avec quatre ou cinq autres familles cossues
de collectionneurs d’art, emigrees, comme lui. " J’ai ete eleve
dans l’integration , dit-il, mais mon père a voulu que la memoire de
l’Armenie survive et qu’elle se perpetue dans l’avenir. Car, en 1949,
rappelez-vous, l’avenir n’etait pas encourageant.

Le petit Etat armenien etait derrière le rideau de fer et nous n’etions
pas certains de pouvoir y retourner. " C’est Vincent Auriol, alors
president de la Republique, qui accorde a Frederic Fringhian et a ses
amis le rez-de-chaussee du Musee d’Ennery. Le Musee armenien prend le
statut de fondation, mais subit les vicissitudes de son hôte. D’Ennery
ferme pour des raisons de securite, il doit egalement fermer ses
portes. L’Annee de l’Armenie a fourni a Frederic Fringhian une occasion
de le rouvrir pour deux mois et, avec l’aide d’une historienne de
l’art armenienne, Edda Vardalian, chercheur au Musee des manuscrits
anciens d’Erevan, de monter un petit bijou d’exposition, a partir
des vastes reserves (500 pièces) qui dormaient avenue Foch. " J’ai
choisi les pièces non par ordre chronologique mais pour leur valeur
d’usage " , explique-t-elle. Bien evidemment, c’est l’art religieux
qui domine. Les vetements liturgiques, les lourds cols de chasuble et
tiares en velours rouge orne de scènes en argent dore, les reliures de
manuscrits en argent ou en vermeil datent en general du XVII e et du
XVIII e siècle. On remarquera un très beau tau de houlette en ivoire a
deux tetes de canard, tete d’une canne patriarcale et d’etranges petits
oeufs de porcelaine peints, supports de lampes d’eglise. Un minuscule
psautier Les manuscrits, eux, sont souvent plus anciens et dignes de
ceux presentes au Louvre ou a la Bibliothèque nationale. Un recueil
de chants liturgiques (XIV e siècle), un synaxaire (martyrologe), un
minuscule psautier du XVII e siècle. Et, l’imprimerie arrivant très
tard en Armenie, pas avant le XVIII e siècle, une etonnante grammaire
armenienne d’Erzouroum (aujourd’hui en Turquie), datee de 1826, et
basee sur des references religieuses. Une belle vitrine est consacree
a la ceramique de Kutahya et de Sivas, avec des petits relents du
style d’Iznik, auquel les Armeniens ont ajoute une couleur, la leur,
le jaune. Outre des belles armes et des ceintures d’argent ciselees,
des pièces de monnaie parthes du II e siècle av.

J.-C., des monnaies ciliciennes de l’Armenie de Cilicie, du
XII e au XIV e siècle, le musee s’est d’emblee voulu " moderne
". C’est pourquoi la deuxième salle comporte une très belle serie de
peintures d’Aïvazovski, le peintre des marines, des natures mortes
de Zakar Zackarian, sombres et dramatiques, deux delicats pastels de
Chahine et une serie très montmartroise de ses scènes de Paris où le
peintre rejoint parfois Toulouse-Lautrec. Enfin, vous ne manquerez
pas la merveilleuse terre cuite d’Hagop Gourdjian, une Salome Art
deco si ardente, si fière et si sensuelle. Cette parenthèse dans
un long oubli a donne des ailes a Frederic Fringhian qui cherche
maintenant a perenniser ce musee dans un autre local, plus vaste,
sorte de " centre culturel de l’Armenie d’hier et de demain " ,
avec bibliothèque, expositions contemporaines, agence de voyage,
restaurant… " Les Chemins de l’Armenie " jusqu’au 22 avril. 59,
avenue Foch. 75016 Paris. Entree libre. Tel. : 06 79 94 74 89.

–Boundary_(ID_alFFMLhdP+Vhp02PaXJnKw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress