Armenia’s Choice

ARMENIA’S CHOICE
by Vyacheslav Nikonov, president of the Politika Foundation
Translated by Elena Leonova

Source: Izvestia, April 5, 2007, p. 6
Agency WPS
What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
April 5, 2007 Thursday

Armenia’s vital elections: maintaining Russia’s influence; Armenian
Prime Minister Andranik Margarian, a true political heavyweight who
held that office for seven years, has died of a sudden heart attack.

Armenia is going into what will be one of the most significant
elections held in the former Soviet Union in 2007.

The sudden death of an Armenian political leader – Prime Minister
Andranik Margarian, a true political heavyweight who held that office
for seven years – is certainly a profound loss for Armenia.

The situation is particularly acute because Margarian, who also led
the ruling Armenian Republican Party (ARP), had his heart attack
in the lead-up to parliamentary and presidential elections. Such
a dramatic turn of events has not only complicated the domestic
political situation in Armenia, but also served to draw attention
to Armenia and the processes under way there. The general public in
Russia clearly fails to appreciate the importance of these processes.

Armenia is going into what will be one of the most significant
elections held in the former Soviet Union in 2007. The outcome of
this election will be very important for Russia.

Armenia is our most reliable partner in the Trans-Caucasus. It is
the only Trans-Caucasus country that hasn’t joined the GUAM alliance
– which is known to be a project aimed at restricting Russia’s
influence in Eurasia. Armenia is one of Russia’s most reliable
allies in the former Soviet Union; it’s a core member of the CIS,
the Euro-Asian Economic Community, and the CIS Collective Security
Treaty Organization. What’s more, it is a sincere partner and ally –
a country where anti-Russian sentiments have never had much public
support. The Armenian diaspora, larger than the actual population
of Armenia, is an influential factor in Russia and many other key
countries – from Iran to the United States.

It’s an open secret that the Trans-Caucasus is becoming a field of
increasing geopolitical rivalry for the world’s leading players. The
United States, which has entrenched itself in Georgia and is building
up its position in Azerbaijan, is becoming a significant factor in
Armenian politics as well. The Trans-Caucasus is gaining importance for
the United States, in light of the long-drawn-out military operation
in Iraq and preparations for other potential military operations
in the Greater Middle East – against Iran, for example (which is
Armenia’s major trade partner). America also considers it important
to promote the interests of its regional allies, primarily Turkey. The
Trans-Caucasus dimension is also clearly increasing in the policies of
the European Union and other European institutions which primarily pay
attention to Georgia, but aren’t ignoring Armenia either. The interests
of Russia and its Western partners aren’t necessarily different,
but they do diverge on the key issue: definitions of policy success
in the former Soviet Union. For Moscow, success means creating a belt
of friendly countries that want closer cooperation with Russia; for
Western countries, success means weakening Russia’s influence in the
CIS and making Russia’s neighbors less inclined to seek integration
with Russia.

In this increasingly complicated situation, it’s very important for
Russia to see certain kinds of political forces in power south of the
Caucasus: forces that welcome constructive cooperation with us. It’s
a dangerous delusion to hope that such forces will win automatically.

Not everything is that simple in Armenian politics.

In a sense, the parliamentary election on May 12 will serve as
primaries for the presidential election. President Robert Kocharian –
a sincere proponent of positive relations with Russia – has served
two terms and cannot seek re-election. The elite and ordinary citizens
alike regard Serge Sarkisian as Kocharian’s successor.

Sarkisian studied philology before the whims of fate made him a
commanding officer in the Karabakh army, and in recent years he has
headed the Defense Ministry and the Security Council. Opinion polls
indicate that most Armenian voters expect Sarkisian to become the
next president. Russia is also satsfied with Sarkisian. A strong but
flexible politician, he has established firm contacts within Russia’s
ruling circles. He is justifiably regarded as a politician who wants to
reinforce cooperation with Moscow. What’s more, the West doesn’t find
him objectionable either. But before Sarkisian can run for president,
the ARP needs to demonstrate its superiority in the parliamentary
election. Sarkisian now leads the ARP.

The election campaign is fast-paced, its outcome is by no means
certain, and the death of Andranik Margarian has added to the suspense
by affecting the configuration of political forces in Armenia.

The ARP won’t find it easy to hold its ground, given the accumulated
weariness of voters, even against a background of rapid economic
growth. It should be acknowledged that to a certain degree, the ARP’s
problems in Yerevan are linked to its support for close partnership
with Russia – due to evident disillusionment with the results of
this partnership.

How can we help Armenia? First of all, by treating our partner
responsibly and attentively, taking note of Armenia’s concerns at
the political level and even the level of daily life. Russia should
uphold the rights of Armenians who are living and working in Russia,
prevent any discrimination on the grounds of ethnicity or citizenship,
and ensure their safety. Ethnic hate crimes must be unequivocally
condemned.

It’s also important to solve the investment problem as soon as
possible, and launch actual production at the Armenian industrial
enterprises which have been acquired by Russian companies as a result
of foreign debt repayments or privatization. Otherwise, this situation
could have a negative political effect as well as a negative economic
effect.

Russia’s move to raise natural gas prices has led to obvious
disillusionment in Armenia. A transition to free-market price formation
was inevitable, of course, but Russia might have considered providing
some compensation to its allies for their financial losses.

This year, for the first time, Russia is allocating funding for
foreign aid; in my view, Armenia should be regarded as one of the
chief recipients of this aid.

If all this is done, we will be helping pro-Russian forces in Armenia –
and thus helping ourselves as well.

And let’s not forget the power of words. Armenians still think well
of Russia, and a great deal depends on the words Russia chooses to use.

Armenian Defence Minister Confirmed As New Prime Minister

ARMENIAN DEFENCE MINISTER CONFIRMED AS NEW PRIME MINISTER

Agence France Presse — English
April 4, 2007 Wednesday 4:11 PM GMT

Armenian President Robert Kocharian on Wednesday confirmed former
defence minister Serge Sarkisian as the country’s new prime minister,
the president’s press office said in a statement.

The ruling Republican party nominated Sarkisian, a close ally of
Kocharian and a favourite to replace the president in 2008, for the
post on Monday.

He succeeds Andranik Margarian, who died of a heart attack on March
25 after seven years as prime minister.

Like Kocharian, Sarkisian is from the disputed region of Nagorny
Karabakh and fought in the 1988-1994 war in which Armenia seized the
enclave from Azerbaijan.

Sarkisian also chairs the Republican party’s ruling council and
is expected to play a key role in the party’s campaign for May 12
parliamentary elections.

Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes

CH-CH-CH-CHANGES

South China Morning Post, Hong Kong
April 6, 2007 Friday

Two visiting Russians are giving the historic art of the quick-change
costume act an update, writes Katie Lau

It sounds like a model’s dream come true: being able to slip
effortlessly into one glamorous outfit after another in seconds.

Visiting quick-change artists Sos and Victoria Petrosyan have updated
the traditional performance art by combining fashion, stage- craft and
sleight-of-hand in a display that has dazzled audiences the world over.

In a series of performances over the Easter weekend, the Russian
couple will showcase a collection of evening wear that they whisk on
and off at lighting speed.

A hectic schedule has meant the Petrosyans have to start rehearsals
at a crowded shopping mall immediately after their long flight from
Athens, where they attended a convention alongside top international
magicians such as Ed Alonzo and Juliana Chen. Yet the pair show no
signs of fatigue. Within minutes they’ve cajoled a passer-by into
assisting in their act.

As Victoria is tied up with ropes, the helper is asked to stand in
front of her. Sos raises a piece of cloth to hide them from view.

Within 20 seconds, it’s whipped away to reveal Victoria wearing the
man’s jacket – under the ropes.

Afterwards, the volunteer says: "It’s incredible. They took my jacket
off and I couldn’t see what she did … I’ve never seen anything
quite like it."

Quick-change is to the west what bian lian (face change, which
originated in Sichuan opera) is to China. The art began in Italy in
the 1600s and has since been adopted by comedians, circus performers
and magicians across Europe and incorporated into theatre forms such
as commedia dell’arte.

Styled as "the new generation of quick-change", the Petrosyans
revitalised the form by pumping it up with fashion, modern dance moves
and upbeat music. Their shows feature an assortment of couture gowns
fitted with quick-change devices. Although some artists are keen
to show as many characters as possible, quantity does not interest
the Petrosyans.

"We don’t want to just show how quickly we can do the changes. We
want to tell a story with a combination of movement, dance and magic
tricks. It’s important to make it interesting for the public," says
Sos, a former ballet dancer.

Although the art has hundreds of years of history, he says there’s
plenty of room for innovation. "There’s been big interest in the
genre over the past five years … It has many possibilities we should
explore," he says.

But the 35-year-old is saddened by widespread plagiarism among
quick-change entertainers. "I can’t believe it. They don’t just
imitate our style but also our website, photos and video clips. We
challenge them to not copy each other … Innovation and creativity
is uppermost."

The Petrosyans’ mastery of the craft is as much in their wardrobe
techniques as their agility and timing. The pair spends hundreds
of hours adjusting their costumes to ensure the switches are
super-smooth. "I have to make sure it looks good," Sos says. "We pay
attention to the details. A thousand small things have to be changed
so they all work well in sequence."

Each costume is discarded after six to seven months to keep their
presentation fresh.

With the high turnover of costumes, the Petrosyans have become
proficient designers and tailors. "We’re always shopping for good
fabrics … we travel with a sewing machine," Victoria says.

But the work also means they can’t spend as much time with their two
sons, aged 11 and seven, as they would like. "My elder son said,
‘I want to see my mum not sewing a costume’. You see sometimes it
takes up too much of our time," Sos says.

But the youngsters seem to have inherited their parents’ interest
and talent. Both aspire to be magicians and have already won a number
of competitions.

Sos, who was born in Armenia, learned juggling and quick-change from
his father, a circus performer. It gave them something in common,
he says.

But Sos only found his calling after seeing Russian artists Liubov and
Anatoli Sudarchikovi present a quick-change act with quality fashion.

"[Quick-change] is about doing everything in sequence and it’s the
interesting part of magic," Sos says. "They inspired me to do something
new with the genre."

He was determined to create a total quick-change experience complete
with choreography, lighting and special effects. "It’s not just an
act," he says.

Sos made his debut as a quick-change artist in 1991. Five years later,
his act became a double act when he met Victoria and the couple fell
in love. "I got interested because of him," says Victoria, who was
pursuing a law degree at the time and knew little about magic acts.

Now based in Germany, the Petrosyans have performed in more than 28
countries. When they’re not performing, they attend prestigious magic
festivals and competitions. The pair have won top prizes at events
such as World Magic Championship and the Paris Magic Festival.

>>From next summer, Sos will be spending time in the US in a
collaboration with rap artist 50 Cent. "I want to show this to the
young generation," Sos says.

For all their experience and practice, he admits things occasionally
go wrong.

"Mistakes are common. One time my wife’s costume was supposed to change
from black to red, but she was in blue instead. It was magic for me,"
Sos says with a laugh.

Such crises demand quick wits and improvisation. But it takes more
than that to stay in the business, he says. "You have to love it. If
you don’t and only treat it as a job, it won’t get you anywhere. I
know couples who are in this for money and I look at them 10 years
later. It’s all the same – the only difference is they’re getting
older.

"As in anything you do, you have to have passion. If I’m tired of it,
I’ll stop doing it," he says. "I won’t do it just for money."

Sos and Victoria Petrosyan are at the Atrium, 1/F New Town Plaza,
Sha Tin, at 4.30pm and 7.30pm until Sunday and at 4.30pm on Monday.

Inquiries: 2684 9175 or 2691 6576

GRAPHIC: Credit: David Wong; Sos and Victoria Petrosyan also rope
members of their audiences into their quick-change performances.

Turkey Says Pipeline Talks With GDF Continuing

TURKEY SAYS PIPELINE TALKS WITH GDF CONTINUING

Agence France Presse — English
April 6, 2007 Friday 2:43 PM GMT

Turkey is still negotiating with Gaz de France (GDF) for the French
firm to take a stake in a major gas pipeline project, a foreign
ministry official said Friday.

A press report had claimed Thursday that state-owned Turkish oil
and gas company BOTAS had suspended talks with GDF because of French
pressure to label Turkish action against Armenians during World War
I as genocide.

"This is not a final decision. We understand that the negotiating
process has not yet come to an end," the diplomat told AFP on the
condition of anonymity.

"This is a commercial issue between companies and they will make the
final decision on the basis of financial considerations," he added.

The five-company Nabucco consortium involving BOTAS plans to build
a 3,300-kilometre (2,000-mile) pipeline that will carry natural gas
from the Middle East and Central Asia to the European Union via Turkey
and the Balkans, bypassing Russia.

The other partners are Austria’s oil and gas group OMV, Hungary’s MOL,
Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz and Romania’s Transgaz.

The consortium is seeking a sixth partner in the six-billion-dollar
(4.5-billion-euro) project, expected to become operational in 2012.

The other partners reportedly approved GDF’s participation, but BOTAS
has opposed it because of a French draft law on the Armenian massacres.

A bill was adopted by the National Assembly in Paris in October
calling for jail sentences for those who deny that Ottoman Turks
committed genocide against Armenians during World War I.

It must still go before the Senate, then back to the lower house
before becoming law.

Turkey had at the time threatened unspecified measures against the
bill, which followed a 2001 resolution by the French parliament
recognising the killings as genocide.

In November, the Turkish army froze bilateral military ties with
France over the bill.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in orchestrated
killings between 1915 and 1917 under the Ottoman Empire.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says thousands of
Turks and Armenians were killed in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
troops invading the crumbling empire.

Turkey Downplays Suspension In Pipeline Talks With France

TURKEY DOWNPLAYS SUSPENSION IN PIPELINE TALKS WITH FRANCE

Agence France Presse — English
April 6, 2007 Friday 2:57 PM GMT

Turkey’s suspension of talks with Gaz de France on the French firm’s
possible participation in a major gas pipeline is not a final decision,
a foreign ministry official said Friday.

The official was commenting on a press report Thursday that the
state-owned oil and gas company BOTAS had suspended talks with GDF in
reaction to a French bill calling for jail sentences for those who
deny that Ottoman Turks committed genocide against Armenians during
World War I.

"This is not a final decision. We understand that the negotiating
process has not yet come to an end," the diplomat told AFP on condition
of anonymity.

"This is a commercial issue between companies and they will make the
final decision on the basis of financial considerations," he added.

The five-company Nabucco consortium involving BOTAS plans to build
a 3,300-kilometre (2,000-mile) pipeline that will carry natural gas
from the Middle East and Central Asia to the European Union via Turkey
and the Balkans, bypassing Russia.

The other partners are Austria’s oil and gas group OMV, Hungary’s MOL,
Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz and Romania’s Transgaz.

The consortium is seeking a sixth partner in the six-billion-dollar
(4.5-billion-euro) project, expected to become operational in 2012.

The other partners reportedly approved GDF’s participation, but
BOTAS has opposed it because of the French draft law on the Armenian
massacres.

The bill was adopted by the National Assembly in Paris in October but
must still go before the upper-house Senate, then back to the lower
house before becoming law.

Turkey had at the time threatened unspecified measures against the
bill, which followed a 2001 resolution by the French parliament
recognising the killings as genocide.

In November, the Turkish army froze bilateral military ties with
France over the bill.

The foreign ministry official said "there is no problem in what has
been scheduled in the political and diplomatic field between Turkey
and France."

Senior Turkish and French diplomats will meet for consultations in
the coming weeks, he said, adding that it is up to the army to revise
its own decision on military relations.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in orchestrated
killings between 1915 and 1917 in the final years of the Ottoman
Empire.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says thousands of
Turks and Armenians were killed in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
troops invading the crumbling empire.

Turkey Suspends Pipeline Talks With GDF, Says Decision Not Final

TURKEY SUSPENDS PIPELINE TALKS WITH GDF, SAYS DECISION NOT FINAL

Agence France Presse — English
April 6, 2007 Friday 4:22 PM GMT

Turkey has suspended talks with Gaz de France (GDF) over the proposed
acquisition by the French group of a stake in a major gas pipeline
project, but the decision is not final, a foreign ministry official
said Friday.

A press report claimed Thursday the talks had been suspended because
of a political row sparked by French pressure to label Turkish action
against Armenians during World War I as genocide.

"This is not a final decision. We understand that the negotiating
process has not yet come to an end," the diplomat told AFP on the
condition of anonymity.

"This is a commercial issue between companies and they will make the
final decision on the basis of financial considerations," he added.

The five-company Nabucco consortium involving BOTAS plans to build
a 3,300-kilometre (2,000-mile) pipeline that will carry natural gas
from the Middle East and Central Asia to the European Union via Turkey
and the Balkans, bypassing Russia.

"Negotiations have been complicated and slowed down by the genocide
issue," confirmed another source close to the case.

The other partners in Nabucco are Austria’s oil and gas group OMV,
Hungary’s MOL, Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz and Romania’s Transgaz.

The consortium is seeking a sixth partner in the six-billion-dollar
(4.5-billion-euro) project, expected to become operational in 2012.

The other partners reportedly approved GDF’s participation, but BOTAS
has opposed it because of a French draft law on the Armenian massacres.

A bill was adopted by the National Assembly in Paris in October
calling for jail sentences for those who deny that Ottoman Turks
committed genocide against Armenians during World War I.

It must still go before the Senate, then back to the lower house
before becoming law.

Turkey had at the time threatened unspecified measures against the
bill, which followed a 2001 resolution by the French parliament
recognising the killings as genocide.

In November, the Turkish army froze bilateral military ties with
France over the bill.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in orchestrated
killings between 1915 and 1917 under the Ottoman Empire.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says thousands of
Turks and Armenians were killed in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
troops invading the crumbling empire.

Gorky, L’Oublie De L’Abstraction

GORKY, L’OUBLIE DE L’ABSTRACTION
Philippe Dagen

Le Monde, France
6 avril 2007 vendredi

ARTS

Deux expositions parisiennes font redecouvrir l’oeuvre fondatrice du
peintre, mort en 1948

Arshile Gorky a ete l’un des grands peintres de l’expressionnisme
abstrait americain. Il est l’auteur de quelques chefs-d’oeuvre du
genre, avant De Kooning ou Rothko. Arshile Gorky est neanmoins le moins
connu des artistes de cette generation new-yorkaise. En France, il a
ete peu montre : la dernière fois, c’etait en 1985. Deux expositions
parisiennes, au Centre culturel Calouste-Gulbenkian et au Centre
Pompidou, quoique chacune de dimensions reduites, font aujourd’hui
une bonne introduction a l’oeuvre.

Pourquoi est-elle si meconnue ? Parce que l’oeuvre s’est interrompue
très vite et parce que Gorky a tout fait, de son vivant, pour demeurer
insaisissable – et le reste aujourd’hui.

Sa fin d’abord : en juillet 1948, Gorky, âge de 44 ans, se suicide
parce que sa femme l’a quitte pour le surrealiste Roberto Matta ;
mais aussi parce que le bras avec lequel il peint est paralyse a la
suite d’un accident de voiture et d’une mauvaise fracture ; et encore
parce qu’il souffre des sequelles d’un cancer opere en 1946.

Or, en 1948, son art n’a pris singularite et ampleur que depuis peu.

Ses premières toiles degagees de toute influence datent des annees
1943 et 1944, au moment où il rencontre son defenseur le plus puissant,
Andre Breton. Quatre ans pour edifier une oeuvre, c’est peu.

L’autre raison tient a la vie de l’artiste et a sa manière de se
presenter – de se cacher. En 1904, Arshile Gorky est ne Manoug Adolan
dans un village au bord du lac de Van, en Armenie. Il n’a invente son
pseudonyme que vers 1922, deux ans après son arrivee aux Etats-Unis.

Entre-temps, il a subi avec sa mère et sa soeur le bombardement de
Van par les Turcs. Il a connu les fuites, la misère, la terreur des
massacres commis par les troupes ottomanes. Survivant du genocide
armenien, il a vu mourir sa mère du typhus.

USAGE TROUBLANT DU PASSE

Or, de ces faits dont on suppose qu’ils ont eu une importance decisive
pour lui, Gorky fait un usage troublant. Aux Etats-Unis, il se pretend
parfois russe et ne dement pas toujours ceux qui le croient apparente
a Maxime Gorki. Il affirme avoir ete l’elève de Kandinsky en 1920,
ce qui est impossible. Il suggère que sa peinture ne se comprend
qu’en reference a ses souvenirs d’enfance et dit aussi qu’il revient
au spectateur " d’y trouver sa propre signification ".

Il se reclame si souvent de ses maîtres – Cezanne, Picasso, Miro –
qu’il paraît se placer, par incertitude ou par crainte, en position
de disciple. La critique lui attribue des charmes orientaux, une
sensualite qui serait " le produit raffine d’une tradition francaise
" et, simultanement, le merite d’etre l’un " des très rares peintres
americains " dont l’importance depasse les frontières du pays. Rien
de tout cela ne rend plus clair son cas.

Il vaut donc mieux ne se fonder que sur les toiles et les dessins
montres au Centre culturel Calouste-Gulbenkian et au Centre Pompidou.

On y voit un jeune artiste qui, a partir de la fin des annees 1920,
assimile par l’imitation l’art moderne qu’il decouvre dans les
livres, les revues et les collections new-yorkaises. Picasso l’obsède
longtemps, autant le Picasso cubiste que le pseudo-grec de 1921 et
le quasi-surrealiste de 1932.

LONGUE INCUBATION

Gorky experimente la deformation expressive des corps et des objets
jusqu’aux confins de l’abstraction biomorphique. Des traces de Leger
et d’Helion se reconnaissent, avant que Miro ne devienne decisif
dans le dessin sinueux de symboles sexuels et de formes vegetales
et organiques. Cette periode d’incubation dure longtemps chez Gorky,
comme chez son ami De Kooning.

Elle prend fin pendant la guerre, au moment où l’arrivee des
surrealistes parisiens en exil aurait pu alourdir le poids de
leur influence sur Gorky, comme s’il trouvait enfin la force de se
liberer. Des couleurs très diluees glissent sur un dessin de plus
en plus elliptique. Les allusions au paysage s’allègent jusqu’a
l’effacement. Jardin a Sochi, Cascade, Journal d’un seducteur,
Agonie : il suffit de ces peintures admirables, jamais vues en France
auparavant, et de leur cortège de grands dessins tatoues au pastel
pour etablir la magnificence de Gorky quand, soudain, elle eclate et
rayonne. Une retrospective complète lui sera consacree a Philadelphie
en 2009. En Europe, elle fera etape a Londres, a la Tate Modern. Et
pourquoi pas, enfin, a Paris ?

Centre culturel Calouste-Gulbenkian,51, avenue d’Iena, Paris-16e. Mo
Iena. Tel. : 01-53-23-93-93. Du lundi au vendredi, de 9 heures a 17
h 30. Jusqu’au 4 juin. Centre Pompidou,Paris-4e. Tel. : 01-44-78-12-33.

Du mercredi au lundi, de 11 heures a 21 heures. Jusqu’au 4 juin. 10 ¤.

–Boundary_(ID_KH177/N7yTJwInN3MCNSuw)–

Les 2 Auteurs Du Vol D’Un Monument Sur Le Genocide Armenien Mis En E

LES 2 AUTEURS DU VOL D’UN MONUMENT SUR LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN MIS EN EXAMEN

Agence France Presse
5 avril 2007 jeudi 5:52 PM GMT

Deux hommes, soupconnes d’avoir vole en octobre 2006 a Chaville
(Hauts-de-Seine) un monument de bronze, aujourd’hui detruit, dedie aux
rescapes du genocide armenien, ont ete mis en examen mercredi par un
juge d’instruction de Nanterre et relâches sous contrôle judiciaire,
a-t-on appris jeudi de sources policière et judiciaire.

L’un des deux suspects, arretes mardi, a reconnu les faits, selon
une source policière.

Le monument, une sculpture representant l’alphabet armenien coulee dans
300 kilos de bronze, avait ete dessoudee et enlevee dans la nuit du 13
au 14 octobre 2006, deux jours après le vote a l’Assemblee nationale
d’une proposition de loi penalisant la negation du genocide armenien.

Les enqueteurs ont ecarte toute motivation politique a ce geste,
qui a ete dicte par l’appât du gain, selon une source policière.

Le monument, d’une valeur de 50.000 euros selon la municipalite,
avait ete offert en 2002 a la ville de Chaville par la communaute
armenienne en memoire des rescapes du genocide armenien.

Il n’existe plus, puisqu’il a ete fondu dans une fonderie que les
enqueteurs ont localisee, a explique une source judiciaire.

Les deux suspects, âges de 26 et 24 ans, sont des membres de la meme
famille. Ils avaient deja ete interpelles debut decembre 2006 pour
le vol de tuyaux de cuivre a Issy-les-Moulineaux (Hauts-de-Seine). Au
cours de leur garde a vue en decembre, ils avaient nie leur implication
dans le vol du monument.

Ils ont a nouveau ete interpelles chez eux mardi a Arcueil
(Val-de-Marne) par le service departemental de police judiciaire des
Hauts-de-Seine (SDPJ 92), charge de l’enquete.

L’un d’eux a declare avoir "revendu au poids" le metal du monument
pour une somme qui n’a pas ete precisee, selon une source policière.

"L’affaire n’est pas terminee", a-t-on souligne de source judiciaire,
sans plus de precision.

Les vols de metaux en France sont en forte hausse depuis l’explosion
du coût des matières premières.

–Boundary_(ID_ld4aiIH3Xnq0Gn1tTg 2EYw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iran-West Conflict To Tell On Whole World

IRAN-WEST CONFLICT TO TELL ON WHOLE WORLD

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.04.2007 15:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A conflict between Iran and West over the nuclear
program will influence not only on the South Caucasus but also on
the whole world, said Azer Mursaliyev, the head of the political and
economic department of Kommersant daily. Presently it’s impossible
to give a detailed forecast on the conflict’s possible influence
on the region, according to him. "The nature of the conflict is not
known yet as well as the kind of attacks," he said adding that some
Russia media furnished information on the facilities to be bombed in
Azerbaijan and Georgia. "I don’t think it will help Iran. The scenario
with closing the Strait of Hormuz is more likely. It will be enough
to sink a couple of tankers or barges. Any rebel in American’s rear,
i.e in Iraq, is also senseless. U.S. has the only military power to
fight against Iran – the navy," he said.

"If the U.S. operation leads to change of power in Iran, the
significance of Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan will sharply lower. "Presently
Azerbaijan and Georgia are eyed as the only narrow corridor relatively
free of Russia and Iran’s influence. In case of change of power Iran
will no more be an anti-America state and the corridor will become
unnecessary," the expert considers.
From: Baghdasarian

1147 People Target At 131-Seat Parliament

1147 PEOPLE TARGET AT 131-SEAT PARLIAMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.04.2007 15:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 1147 candidates target at 131-seat parliament. 133
candidates will run by the majority system; 24 parties and one bloc
will run by proportional system. The RA CEC completed the process
of registration of political forces that submitted the essential
documents.

Registration of parties was closed up April 4; registration of
candidates by majority system in 41 electoral districts was finished
April 5. 7 out of 141 candidates were rejected, IA Regnum reports.