To Mr. Sergey Kalantaryan, Head of Mayilyan Election Headquarters

TO MR. SERGEY KALANTARYAN, HEAD OF THE ELECTION HEADQUARTERS OF NKR
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE MASIS MAYILYAN

30-06-2007 16:48:47 – KarabakhOpen

We hereby inform in answer to your letter to the NKR Central Electoral
Commission that in accordance with the powers vested in it by the NKR
Electoral Code, its May 20, 2007 decision N 35/135 on the order of
election campaign of presidential candidates, parties and alliances
registered under the proportional system and parliamentary candidates
running under the majority system and the June 20, 2007 decision N
37/150 on the order of providing airtime for the election campaign of
the candidates running in the July 19, 2007 NKR presidential election,
the Central Electoral Commission regulates the order of election
campaign of the candidates through the media and the order and
schedule of providing airtime on the public channel, which is mainly
observed.

As to control on the Public Television and Radio for compliance to the
order of the election campaign, according to Article 21 Point 7 of the
NKR Electoral Code, the NKR Public Television and Radio Council must
provide control. The Central Electoral Commission has recommended the
NKR Public Television and Radio Council to observe Article 11 of the
NKR law on television and radio and prevent similar breaches of the
election campaign by the Public Television of Artsakh.

BAKU: Program of AGO Monitoring Group Visit to Azerbaijan Announced

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
June 30 2007

Program of AGO Monitoring Group’s Visit to Azerbaijan Announced

Azerbaijan, Baku /corr. Trend E.Huseynly / Within the visit to the
region, the AGO Monitoring Group of the Council of Europe’s Committee
of Ministers will arrive in Baku on 4-7 July, the Foreign Ministry of
Azerbaijan reports.

The Ministry stated that the permanent Swiss envoy to the Council of
Europe, Per Shoygen, was elected as the Chairman of the group. The
group includes the ambassadors of Germany, Ebergad Kelsh, France,
Bruno Gen, Latvia, Peteris Elferst, Romania, Stelian Stoinan and
Russia, Alexander Alexev. They will be accompanied by the employees
of the Council of Europe’s Secretariat. Within the visit, the group
is expected to meet with Azerbaijan’s President, Ilham Aliyev, Head
of Presidential Administration, Ramiz Mehdiyev, Chairman of the
Parliament, Oktay Asadov, Foreign Minister, Elmar Mammadyarov,
Chairman of the Central Election Commission, Mazahir Panahov,
Chairman of the National TV and Radio Council, Nushiravan Maherremly.
The program of the group’s visit also includes attending the round
table `Activity of court system’ which will also be attended by the
Chairmen of Azerbaijan Constitutional Court and Supreme Court,
Chairman of the Bar Association and Commissioner on Human Rights.

The agenda of the meetings will include issues regarding the
relations between Azerbaijan and the Council of Europe, as well as
implementation of the obligations undertaken before the Council of
Europe. Discussions will take place over the free press in
Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, electoral legislation,
activity of local executive powers and courts.

BAKU: Azeri pressure group accuses intellectuals of "treason"

Azeri pressure group accuses intellectuals of "treason"

Turan news agency
29 Jun 07

Baku, 29 June: The so-called "people’s diplomacy" mission to Karabakh
led by the Azerbaijani ambassador to Russia, Polad Bulbuloglu, was
organized by the country’s authorities, the Karabakh Liberation
Organization has said in a statement.

The authors of the statement think that "the line of treason" appeared
after the presidents’ meetings in St Petersburg and Istanbul. For this
reason, [President] Ilham Aliyev’s team should go and national forces
should all put forward this demand, the statement said.

The authorities which have taken a treacherous position are trying to
use prominent representatives of the Karabakh intelligentsia to achieve
their goals. "Those who regard themselves as intellectuals should not
be involved in these games. Polad Bulbuloglu, Farhad Badalbayli, Kamal
Abdulla, Azarpasa Nematov and Ilham Fataliyev allowed themselves to be
used and disgraced themselves," the statement read.

The authors of the document called on conscientious people to brand the
pseudo-intellectuals and spit at their faces at first opportunity.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

President Kocharyan to leave for Rostov-on-Don

Presidnet Kocharyan to leave for Rostov-on-Don

armradio.am
29.06.2007 14:21

June 30 RA President Robert Kocharyan will leave for Rostov-on-Don to
participate in the informal meeting of the Heads of CIS member
countries, President’s Press Office informs.

Together with the heads of CIS states Robert Kocharyan will be present
at the horse-race for the Prize

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

A. Arzmanyan’s Lawyer Says Nat’l Sec. Service Took Coercive Measures

Alexander Arzmanyan’s Lawyer Says National Security Service Took
Coercive Measures to Family of His Client

arminfo
2007-06-29 16:36:00

"My client does not give testimonies as the National Security Service
took coercive measures to his family from the very beginning," Hovik
Arsenyan, the lawyer of Alexander Arzumanyan, the former foreign
minister charged with money laundering, said at the "Pressing" Club,
Friday.

He said the former head of the foreign political department is
indignant that the criminal case was lodged without warning. "They
could invite him, interrogate as a witness. In the meanwhile, they
started from the search," the lawyer said.

On July 2 the First Instance Court of Center and Nork Marash
communities will consider the petition of the National Security Service
Investigation Department for prolongation of Arsen Arzumanyan’s term
for 2 months.

Amendments to laws on TV and Radio and state dues do not concern RFE

Amendments to laws on TV and Radio and state dues do not concern Radio
‘Liberty’ as it is not broadcasting: RPA Board member

arminfo
2007-06-29 16:21:00

Amendments to the Laws on TV and Radio and State Dues do not concern
the Radio "Liberty" as it is not a broadcasting company, member of the
Republican party’s Board Galust Sahakyan said at today’s
press-conference.

He said that the broadcasters do not complain of the Law change since
these amendments proceed from their personal interests and he thinks
that they are not aimed against activities of the Radio
"Liberty" as he did not notice any negative displays in its work over
many years. He agreed with the opinion of some deputies and experts
saying that seventyfold increase of the state dues for
retransmission or broadcasting is really high. G. Sahakyan emphasized
that this problem should be discussed in details and solved.

Rye Brook economist attends national security seminar

Rye Brook economist attends national security seminar

Westmore News, Rye Brook, NY
By: Jananne Abel June 27, 2007

Rye Brook resident Vahan Janjigian, vice president and executive
director of Forbes Advisory Group, Inc. in New York City, recently
participated in a week-long national security seminar sponsored by the
U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa.

Janjigian was one of approximately 160 business, government, media and
academic leaders from across the country who took part in the seminar
from June 4-8. The fiveday annual seminar is the capstone event of the
10- month curriculum at the Army War College, the Army’s senior
educational institution.

"It was the best experience I have ever had in my life," said
Janjigian. "It was unbelievable. I have always had a positive feeling
about the military, but this reinforced it."

While the principal purpose of the seminar is to permit the War
College student body to hear a "civilian viewpoint" on defense
matters, it also gives participants an opportunity to meet and
exchange views with the nation’s future military leaders. During the
week participants were assigned to one of 20 student seminar groups to
discuss national security issues.

In inviting civilians to attend this course, "they tried to identify
people they think are influential and can express opinions on
U.S. security issues and relay how the U.S. military feels on issues,"
said Janjigian. "They are trying to improve their image. One way to do
it is to have better relationships with civilian people who would
benefit and relay that."

Unlike with the Vietnam War where people were against the military,
Janjigian said with the Iraq War he doesn’t believe people are against
the military but against the administration, largely because military
service is voluntary.

Topics covered at the seminar ranged from Iraq to the War on Terrorism
to the rising power of China, to education in the U.S. falling behind
that of other countries. It also addressed misconceptions about the
military, said Janjigian, making it clear that the armed forces are
not just full of minorities who are there because they have nothing
else to do.

Among those invited were 40 military officers from foreign countries
ranking from colonel to brigadier general, two of whom were in
Janjigian’s small seminar group, one from Saudi Arabia and one from
Botswana, near the horn of Africa. Others hailed from Great Britain,
Germany, Kuwait, India, Pakistan, Jordan and Egypt.

"The discussions we had were pretty amazing, quite passionate," said
Janjigian. "People feel strongly on certain issues."

"There was a tremendous amount of debate," he added. "I was impressed
with the diversity of opinion and how passionate these officers
are. These are people who take orders at the end of the day, but I was
impressed with how independent thinking and intelligent they are."

Several seminar participants have performed tours in Iraq and some
were returning to Iraq last week.

"Obviously I am concerned for their safety," said Janjigian. "It was
indeed an honor to have spent time with these individuals who
regularly sacrifice so much for their country and often receive little
thanks in return."

Back in October, students from the Army War College went to New York
City to call on different businesses and one of the groups visited
Forbes. Janjigian, an economist who writes a column about the economy
and the stock market, was asked to meet with them.

"I’m sure I was nominated [for this month’s seminar] through that
contact," he said.

The U.S. Army War College was established in 1901 in Washington, D.C.,
"not to promote war, but to preserve peace." The college relocated to
Carlisle, Pa. in 1951. It prepares senior officers to serve in the
highest command and staff positions in the armed forces of the United
States.

Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink’s murder trial opens Monday

Agence France Presse — English
June 30, 2007 Saturday 3:03 AM GMT

Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink’s murder trial opens Monday

by Nicolas Cheviron

The trial of 18 people charged with involvement in the murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink opens behind closed doors here
Monday, with his lawyers complaining that several security officials
they say should also be tried are not among the accused.

The central figure of the trial is trigger man Ogun Samast, who has
admitted to killing Dink by shooting him twice in the head and once
in the neck on a busy Istanbul street on January 19, in front of the
offices of his bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos.

The unemployed 17-year-old Samast, who said he came to Istanbul to
kill Dink from his native Trabzon, where he was known for his close
ties to ultranationalist circles, faces 18 to 24 years in jail for
the murder and a further 8-1/2 to 18 years for belonging to a
terrorist organisation.

The prosecution did not seek life because Samast is minor, which is
also why the trial is closed to the public.

Two men accused of being the leaders of the far-right group and
ordering the murder, Yasin Hayal and Erhan Tuncel, could be jailed
for life without the possibility of parole if found guilty.

The 15 others on trial face jail sentences of seven-and-a-half to 35
years.

Before being arrested for the Dink murder, Hayal had already served
jail time for the 2004 bombing in Trabzon of a McDonalds restaurant
in which six people were injured.

He faces a separate trial for having threatened Turkey’s 2006 Nobel
Literature laureate Orhan Pamuk, whose views on the World War I
massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire are unpopular in
Turkey.

Notable for their absence in the dock, according to Dink family
lawyer Fethiye Cetin, are several unnamed security officials.

"Members of the security forces in Trabzon, where the killing was
planned, in Istanbul, where it was executed, and in Ankara, where the
intelligence was gathered, were not included among the accused," she
told a news conference Friday.

"And this despite the established fact that they had links with the
suspects, failed in their duty, concealed evidence and even sought to
vindicate the murder and the murderer," she said.

"Hrant Dink’s murder trial is a critical test of the Turkish
judiciary’s independence," the international rights organisation
Human Rights Watch said in a statement Friday.

"The Turkish judiciary must hold accountable any security forces
responsible for negligence or collusion in the murder," it said.

Dink, 52, had drawn the ire of the Turkish far right for having
openly argued that the mass killings of Armenians in the dying days
of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917 constituted genocide — a
label most Turks despise and Turkey officially rejects.

The murder sent the country into prolonged shock, and more than
100,000 people from all walks of life took to the streets of Istanbul
on the day of Dink’s funeral, chanting "We are all Hrant Dink" and
"We are all Armenians."

Dink’s friends and followers said they plan to hold a rally in his
memory near the courthouse where his murder trial opens on Monday.

ANKARA: Turkey expresses regret over Greek president’s statement

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
June 29 2007

Turkey expresses regret over Greek president’s statement on Armenian
issue

Ankara, 29 June: Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Levent Bilman on
Friday [29 June] expressed regret over Greek President Karolos
Papouliyas’s statements written on the ‘journal’ of Tsisernakaberd
monument about the 1915 incidents, and his statements in Yerevan
during his visit to Armenia.

"The statements in question consist of groundless allegations based
on distortion of the historical facts," Bilman said in a written
statement while responding to a question.

Bilman said, "biased stance of Greece as regards to 1915 incidents
was registered under a decision adopted by Greek parliament. Greece,
which carried out violence and atrocity in Anatolia during War of
Liberation, does not have the right to recommend Turkey to take
lesson from the history."

"Such kinds of approaches do not contribute to the endeavours to
establish a friendship and cooperation atmosphere between the two
countries but have a negative impact on the process of normalizing
relations between Turkey and Armenia."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Soccer: Derry not relishing Armenian adventure

Belfast Telegraph Saturday Newspaper, UK
June 30, 2007
COM Edition

Derry not relishing Armenian adventure

DERRY City will be up against it when they take on Armenian champions
FC Pyunik in the Champions League.

"It wasn’t an ideal draw," said Derry chairman Hugh McDaid who was at
the qualifying round draw in Switzerland. "But there’s nothing we can
do about it, so we’ll just have to get on with it."

The Armenians play a similar season to the League of Ireland through
the warmer months.

Much of the recent League of Ireland success in Europe has been put
down to the summer season with the players up to speed for the early
rounds unlike, say, those in the Irish League.

It might very well have been a factor in Derry’s wins over Gothenburg
and Gretna last summer.

But that won’t be the case this year with Pyunik 16 games into their
season and sitting on top of the table. Formed in 1992, they have won
the title nine times and this will be their seventh appearance in the
Champions’ League.

Derry director Michael Burns feels the draw is a "nightmare" for the
club.

Burns, the club’s secretary, revealed the pairing "could not have
been worse" for City both on and off the field.

He said: "It couldn’t be worse. Logistically speaking it’s a
nightmare. We are having to charter a plane, we’ve got a hotel sorted
and we’re still trying to get the transportation sorted out.

"Some of our people have played in Georgia in the past. One of our
players Paddy Mc-Court, a Northern Ireland Under-21 international,
was in Armenia and he has already spoken about the difficulties we
could face over there.

"You are basically talking about going to the Middle East, it’s
neighbouring Iran which is as far away in Europe as you can go. It is
a nightmare, it’s going to cost us an absolute fortune.

"You are talking about the full length of Europe and the vast
majority of clubs at this stage of the Champions League are not
wealthy."

And if the thought of crippling costs and traumatic travel
arrangements were not enough, City also face the daunting prospect of
trying to defeat a side which boasts nine Armenian internationals.

"They have nine players in the Armenian national squad at the moment
and are 16 points clear in their own league which means they are by
far and away the best team in Armenia," he added.

"The city they play in is the size of Dublin. Dublin has half a dozen
good quality football clubs so to be the best club they must be
pretty good."

But Burns is confident the club will summon strength from their loyal
travelling support.

"There is always a lot of interest," he said. "We have a bunch of
very hardcore, dedicated fans who travel all over the world with us."