Armenia To Get $4.7 MLN From Millennium Challenge Corporation

ARMENIA TO GET $4.7 MLN FROM MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION

ARKA
Oct 8, 2008

YEREVAN, October 8. /ARKA/. Armenia plans to get $4.7mln from
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) in the third quarter (Q3), said
Ara Hovsepyan, general director of Millennium Challenge Account-Armenia
(MCCA).

The money will serve for water supply projects and reconstruction of
water mains.

MCCA will invite bids for reconstruction of six water mains in ten
days. The rest of the money will be allocated for feasibility studies,
Hovsepyan reported.

Part of the investments will be allocated for final repairs of the
Armavir-Isahakyan-Gyumri road. MCCA plans to launch new construction
projects next spring.

Projects on gravity water supply and pumping stations are under
way. MCCA also plans to reconstruct the drainage system in Ararat
Valley by next spring. Hovsepyan added.

According to an agreement signed on March 27, 2006, MCC is to allocate
$235.65mln for Rural Road Rehabilitation and Irrigated Agriculture
programs in Armenia within five years.

MCC will allocate $108mln for the Irrigated Agriculture Program. The
corporation granted Armenia $22.5mln as of September 30, 2008.

Eurasia In Global Network

EURASIA IN GLOBAL NETWORK

ARKA
Oct 8, 2008

YEREVAN, October 9. /ARKA/. Eurasia in the Global Network, a
competition of internet portals and websites of the CIS and Baltic
media, will kick off as part of the 10th Eurasian Teleforum on
November 5-10.

The organizers of the event are the Eurasian TV and Radio Academy
and the Russian RIA Novosti News Agency.

The competition aims at promoting the CIS online media, raising public
awareness of Eurasian cooperation and boosting online communications
in post-soviet countries. The objective of the competition is to raise
the rating of the CIS and Baltic online media. The three nominations
for the competition are as follows:

– Promotion of Tolerance

– Successful Youth-Targeted Media Management

– Best Youth-Targeted Online Project

Everyone is welcome to participate in the competition. The winners
and nominees will get various awards and will have an opportunity
to attend two-year training courses in RIA Novosti and get a free
subscription to the RIA Novosti news and a CD collection of the
agency’s newsreel materials and diplomas of honor.

For participation, turn to RIA Novosti or send an e-mail to
[email protected]; [email protected].

Tehran: Iran To Begin Gas Exports To Armenia

IRAN TO BEGIN GAS EXPORTS TO ARMENIA

IranMania News
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Iran

LONDON, October 8 (IranMania) – A National Iranian Gas Export Company
(NIGE) official has announced the country’s immediate plans to begin
gas exports to Armenia, PressTV reported.

?Iran plans to annually export some 1.1 bln cubic meters of gas to
Armenia and the amount will eventually be increased to 2.3 bln cubic
meters by 2019,? the director of the engineering affairs of the NIGE
Company, Rasoul Salmani said.

The head of National Iranian Gas Export Company had earlier said that
the country would be able to provide Armenia with the gas it needs
for the coming winter.

Iran will pump three mln cubic meters of gas to Armenia this
winter,? said Reza Kasaei-Zadeh in an interview with ISNA news agency.

Armenia’s Minister of Energy, Armen Movsisyan, has said that the
capacity of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline project would increase to
2.5 bln cubic meters per year.

The Iranian-Armenian pipeline would guarantee Armenia’s energy safety
by increasing the capacity of the Kadzharan-Yerevan section of the
pipeline by November 2008, Movsisyan added.

The Iran-Armenia gas pipeline officially became operational on
March 19, 2007 by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Armenian
President Robert Kocharian.

The project will provide Armenia with an alternative to the gas it
now imports from Russia.

President Sargsyan Leaving For Bishkek

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN LEAVING FOR BISHKEK

armradio.am
09.10.2008 11:57

President Serzh Sargsyan is leaving for Bishkek today to participate in
the sittings of the Council of Heads of State of CIS member states and
the Interstate Council of the Eurasian Economic Community (EvrAzES).

The delegation headed by the President of Armenia comprises Foreign
Minister Edward Nalbandian, Permanent Plenipotentiary Representative
of Armenia in CIS structures, Armenian Ambassador to Belarus Oleg
Yesayan, other officials.

The sitting of the Council of CIS Presidents will be opened with the
meeting of the Heads of State, which will be followed by a meeting
in an enlarged format.

The Commonwealth leaders will discuss a broad framework of issues
related to the strategy of economic development of CIS until 2020,
cooperation in the energy sphere in 2009, as well as the further
development of the Commonwealth and the cooperation between member
states in different spheres.

In the capital of Kyrgyzstan President Sargsyan will participate
in the sitting of the Eurasian Economic Community. Armenia has the
status of an observer in that organization.

Obama’s Principled Stance On Genocide Prevention Echoes In Debate II

OBAMA’S PRINCIPLED STANCE ON GENOCIDE PREVENTION ECHOES IN DEBATE II

armradio.am
09.10.2008 12:05

Sen. Barack Obama, who emerged the clear victor in Tuesday’s second
Presidential Debate, reiterated his principled stance on Genocide
prevention around the world in response to a question from moderator
Tom Brokaw.

Tom Brokaw asked the candidates what their "doctrine" would be "in
situations where there’s a humanitarian crisis, but it does not affect
our national security," such as "the Congo, where 4.5 million people
have died since 1998," or Rwanda or Somalia.

Obama responded by saying that in such cases, "we have moral issues at
stake," adding that of course the US must act to stop genocide. "When
genocide is happening, when ethnic cleansing is happening and we stand
idly by, that diminishes us," said Obama adding that US intervention
must be coordinated with allies around regions.

With Sen. Obama expanding his lead in national and battleground state
polls, as well as electoral map projections, the conventional wisdom
has been that Senator McCain needed a game-changing performance in
the second Presidential Debate of 2008 to save his campaign.

According to snap polls released immediately after the debate,
Senator McCain did almost nothing to improve his standing in the eyes
of voters.

The second Presidential debate was conducted in a town-hall format
which is generally seen as Senator McCain’s strength. Once again,
Senator Obama was able to overcome an inherent disadvantage and
demonstrate to the American people his ability to lead this nation.

"Armenian-American voters, along with voters across the country,
witnessed a stunning performance by Senator Obama tonight," stated
Jeff Marootian, Political Director of Armenians for Obama. "For the
past 3 days, Senator McCain’s campaign has engaged in some of the
most vile and underhanded character attacks in American political
history. In the face of that storm, Senator Obama maintained his
composure and refused to engage in smear tactics, instead focusing
on the issues and explaining to America what his plans are for the
economy and healthcare," continued Marootian.

Questions during the debate ranged from the economy, healthcare,
foreign policy, energy policy, and taxes. The debate also offered
voters the opportunity to ask the questions themselves, rather than
the moderator, Tom Brokaw of NBC News.

Areen Ibranossian, Chairman of Armenians for Obama, commented on the
debate as well. "What’s interesting to me about these debates is the
style, temperament, and worldviews of the candidates. Senator John
McCain continues to demonstrate he is more comfortable attacking and
demeaning Senator Obama then he is in explaining what his plans for
America are," commented Ibranossian.

Baku: Iqbal Aghazade: "Azerbaijan Must Take A Principal Position In

IQBAL AGHAZADE: "AZERBAIJAN MUST TAKE A PRINCIPAL POSITION IN THE RESOLUTION OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT"

Today.Az
09 October 2008 [14:38]
Azerbaijan

"The effectiveness of the activity of the Minsk Group depends on
Azerbaijan’s position", said presidential candidate and chairman of
Umid Party Iqbal Aghazade.

He noted that Azerbaijan must take a principal position in the
resolution of the Karabakh conflict for the OSCE Minsk group to take
real steps.

"This organization will not take negotiations, discussions or any other
concessions in the resolution of the Karabakh conflict in ordinary
situation. Azerbaijan must take its position for the OSCE Minsk Group
to follow it. Even if the co-chairs are replaced in the Minsk Group,
it will have no effect.

Azerbaijan must take definite steps for the progress in the conflict
resolution", noted he,

Aghazade said that such an attitude to the Minsk Group is reflected
in his election platform.

Hilda Tchoboian And Peter Semneby Hold Meeting

HILDA TCHOBOIAN AND PETER SEMNEBY HOLD MEETING

armradio.am
09.10.2008 12:13

Peter Semneby, the EU special envoy to the South Caucasus, and Hilda
Tchoboian, the Chairperson of the European Armenian Federation,
held a meeting in the framework of the regular consultations that
take place between the Euro-Armenian NGO and EU institutions.

The main focus of their talks was the recent geopolitical unrest in the
South Caucasus, the renewed interest in improvement of Turkey-Armenia
relations, and the challenges faced by Georgia’s ethnic Armenian
population.

Both Tchoboian and Semneby reiterated their common interest in
eventually seeing the normalization of regional cooperation in South
Caucasus, particularly in the wake of the Georgian crisis. The
President of the European Armenian Federation, however, informed
Mr. Semneby of her organization’s scepticism about Turkey’s proposed
"Caucasian Platform for Stability and Cooperation," noting that, until
now, Turkey has primarily been a destabilizing factor in the region,
as evidenced by its blockade of Armenia and its pro-Azerbaijani bias
in the Karabagh conflict.

"In the context of the emergence of a new balance of power in Caucasus,
Turkey is seeking assert for itself a role as an intermediary between
Europe, Russia and the Caucasian States" stated Hilda Tchoboian.

"But it’s hopes are clearly not supported by the facts on the ground
which include recent statements by its Minister of Foreign Affairs
stressing Turkey’s intention to make Armenia pay dearly for the
opening of the border, in particular, by stopping the international
process of Armenian Genocide recognition," she added.

Many observers consider the apparent goodwill displayed recently by
Turkey toward Armenia to be driven primarily by the domestic power
struggle between Kemalists and Islamists and their competing efforts
to assert primacy in guiding their nation’s foreign affairs, not any
sincere interest in materially improving relations with Armenia.

With regard to Georgia, the Federation’s President shared with Semneby
the urgent concerns voiced by the country’s Armenian minority.

"After their defeat in South Ossetia, we need to be mindful that
nationalistic elements of Georgian society and the Georgian power
structures could target the ethnic Armenians community as scapegoats"
explained Hilda Tchoboian. "Georgia has compelling interest in
moving toward a policy of respect for the rights of minorities –
especially those of the ethnic Armenians of Javakhk – as per its
commitments to the Council of Europe. Trying to build a centralized,
unitary state in the 21st century is simply unrealistic for a diverse,
multiethnic country such as Georgia" concluded the president of the
European Armenian Federation.

The Federation holds that the EU has a vital role to play in
implementing confidence building programs in Georgia.

Armenian Genocide Museum Of America Announces Major Research Library

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF AMERICA ANNOUNCES MAJOR RESEARCH LIBRARY DONATION

armradio.am
09.10.2008 14:45

Two donors, who presently wish to remain anonymous, have gifted
the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA) with an exceptional
collection of books and other printed material focused on the Armenian
Genocide and its documentation.

The collection of several thousand rare and out-of-print books and
other documents is slated for transfer to the AGMA in time for the
opening of the museum in 2010. AGMA will include a complete facility
to support ongoing research at the museum.

The remarkable collection contains many valuable items including maps,
photographs, and other historical evidence reflecting acquisitions,
research, and exploration across numerous archives.

In making their gift to AGMA, the two donors stated: "Indeed, the
very raison d’être of this collection is that everyone needs to know
that there is a massive amount of documentation on what happened
to the Armenians. At the same time, there is also ample testimony
that they were able to overcome the attempt to annihilate them and
to recover from such unprecedented adversity. And, all this with a
great deal of help from the U.S.A. What better place to show this
than in Washington, DC?"

The donors hope that the gift will serve as an incentive for others
to contribute relevant works as well. Collection development is a
major objective of=2 0the AGMA library. Accepting the donation,
AGMA Trustee and Building and Operations Committee Chairman Van
Krikorian, said: "We are thrilled to receive this astounding gift of
an entire library of specialized publications concentrating on the
Armenian Genocide. The donors’ monumental achievement in creating
this collection and tremendous generosity in choosing the AGMA as
the home for the collection represent a true match made in heaven."

Krikorian went on to say: "This collection of works ranging in their
coverage from the mid-1800s to the present has personal meaning
for a variety of reasons. First, this specialized Armenian Genocide
collection is destined to constitute the foundation of the museum
library. Second, the donation of this entire pre-existing collection,
along with our own Assembly and ANI materials, and in light of the
help we are getting from the Near East Foundation and the Armenian
Genocide Museum in Yerevan, and others, immediately puts AGMA out
front in Washington for running the type of research center that we
plan and need to support the museum, its exhibits and activities. Our
donors have established a standard of sharing with this extraordinary
donation in the same community-minded spirit of Anoush Mathevosian,
Hirair Hovnanian, and the Kechejian family, which we hope others
will emulate."

The library donors are scientists with advanced degrees, one with
Armenian roots and the other with no such roots but with a20fervent
interest in human rights, peace, and social justice. The gift is being
made in memory of the parents of one of the scientists. They were from
the same small mountain village in the Kharpert region of Armenia. One
was a Genocide survivor; the other was a "gamavor" or volunteer from
America who served in the Armenian Legion or Legion d’Orient.

This special collection will significantly expand the holdings of
the Armenian National Institute (ANI), which has been serving as
the research facility of the AGMA. ANI is already the beneficiary
of the oral history project conducted by the Armenian Assembly of
America in the 1980s, which also sponsored in the 1990s, the first
comprehensive collection of 37,000 pages of U.S. documents from the
National Archives issued on microfiche with a 476-page guide to the
documents, both published by Chadwyck-Healey, Inc.

Over the years, ANI has also acquired important archival holdings
from around the world.

–Boundary_(ID_XA8BgpQ76G3uhjkcLkvXrg)–

EU Too Divided To Solve Frozen Conflicts, Azerbaijan Says

EU TOO DIVIDED TO SOLVE FROZEN CONFLICTS, AZERBAIJAN SAYS
Valentina Pop

EUobserver.com
Oct 8, 2008, 09:25 CET
Belgium

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS – Oil and gas-rich rich Azerbaijan, home of
another frozen conflict with its neighbouring Russian ally Armenia,
does not consider the EU as a feasible peace broker in the region,
Azeri deputy foreign minister Araz Azimov has said.

"The European Union is a powerful economic and political union of
states, but in terms of acting in a united way, the EU is not there
yet, especially in an environment that changes rapidly. The EU it
is not able to act in an instrumental way", Mr Azimov said on his
expectations of possible EU involvement in finding a solution for
the frozen conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The senior official made the comment at a conference organized in
Brussels by the European Policy Center on Wednesday (8 October).

The conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which still occupies
the Azeri region of Nagorno-Karabakh, is currently mediated by the
so-called Minsk group, created by the Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) in 1992 and headed by France, Russia
and the United States.

Other members of the Minsk group include Belarus, Germany, Italy,
Portugal, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, Turkey as well as Armenia
and Azerbaijan themselves.

"In the Minsk group there is a majority of EU countries and we do
take their position into account. We need the EU’s influence as an
international actor, but we don’t think the EU is a feasible partner
in the Minsk group," Mr Azimov explained.

The EU’s special representative to Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia,
Peter Semneby, confirmed that the bloc "remains supportive of the work
of the Minsk group" but didn’t see as probable any change in terms
of the EU joining the body as a full participant in its own right.

He dismissed the idea that the EU was unable to respond "forcefully"
and "united" to crisis situations however, considering that in the
recent war in Georgia it proved "very much able" to show "political
will" in brokering a ceasefire agreement and in quickly deploying an
observer mission on the ground.

Mr Semneby noted that it is the first European Security and Defence
Policy (ESDP) mission deployed on former Soviet union territory,
designed to "stabilize the situation" after an "acute war."

EU role unclear

The status of the EUobservers remains unclear if Russians are to pull
back by 10 October from the security zones and not granting them access
into the two separatist enclaves, Azerbaijan’s Mr Azimov countered.

"I think Russians will withdraw from the buffer zones, because they
have no interest to stay. The six points [of the ceasefire agreement]
will be implemented more or less, but then what will happen with
South Ossetia and Abkhazia?" he asked.

"The main lesson of 08/08 [the day Russia sent troops into Georgia,
following the attempt by the Georgian military to take over control of
South Ossetia] is that the stability of the region is put under a big
question mark, while separatist movements are being further promoted,"
the Azeri diplomat said, adding that it will be important what happens
in Geneva on 15 October, when diplomatic talks are scheduled on the
status of the two Georgian breakaway regions, whose independence has
been only recognized by Russia and Nicaragua.

Mr Azimov spoke of the need for the EU to reconfigure its approach to
Azerbaijan and start implementing the existing mechanisms from a 2006
energy partnership, not just talk about how important his country is
for the bloc’s energy security.

Azerbaijan is not aiming, like Ukraine or Georgia, to become a member
of the EU, but could very well imagine "common areas for trade,
economy, transport," he explained, "as far as is procedurally possible
without entering the membership discussion."

West loses influence in Caucasus

While the Azeri minister talked about his country’s ability to
"balance" between its close ally US, but also Russia and Iran,
emphasising "stability" and "political responsibility," Mustafa
Aydın from the University of Ankara bluntly said that the region
has dropped the whole idea of democratisation and Euro-Atlantic
integration following the Russian invasion of Georgia.

"There is no talk of democratisation in the Caucasus any more. If
authoritarianism worked in Russia, why not in the Caucasus as
well? All the countries, including Turkey, have adopted a careful
rhetoric towards Moscow, with ‘stabilisation’ being the key-word,"
Mr Aydin said.

Vladimir Socor from the NGO the Jamestown Foundation and a long time
expert on the region said the "EU is by far not matching Russia in
soft power in Azerbaijan" and the wider region.

The conflict in Georgia damaged the confidence of investors in the
Caucasus energy corridor – the only direct link the EU has with the
oil and gas-rich Caspian countries without passing through Russia –
he explained.

He talked of the need for the EU and US to subsidise pipelines such
as the planned Nabucco gas pipeline, which would bring Caspian gas
to the European markets.

Nabucco sweetener criticised

Mr Socor criticised the incipient idea in the outgoing Bush
administration to re-route Nabucco through Armenia instead of Georgia
as a "sweetener" for getting an agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh.

Mr Azimov reassured the audience that such plans are not realistic,
since a part of the project passing through Azerbaijan and Georgia
to Turkey is already built.

He stressed that the government in Baku still supports the project,
"but it shouldn’t be the only one caring about Nabucco," calling on
the EU to step up efforts to build the pipe.

–Boundary_(ID_rc4IgOf79+O47gixmsSBFw)–

Sergey Lavrov: Georgia’s Withdrawal From CIS Will Have No Negative C

SERGEY LAVROV: GEORGIA’S WITHDRAWAL FROM CIS WILL HAVE NO NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES

armradio.am
09.10.2008 15:22

Georgia’s withdrawal from the CIS will not harm the organization, the
Russian foreign minister said on Thursday, suggesting that Tbilisi’s
participation in the post-Soviet alliance had been malign in recent
years, RIA Novosti reported.

"Georgia’s membership of the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS) in the past few years has been aimed at the erosion of the
Commonwealth, rather than its consolidation, so I cannot see any
negative consequences for our organization," Sergei Lavrov said after
a CIS foreign ministers’ meeting in Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan.

Georgia notified the CIS executive committee of its desire to quit
the organization on August 18, 2008. The move came after a five-day
war with Russia over the Georgian breakaway republic of South Ossetia.

Its withdrawal will come into effect next August.

The CIS currently comprises Russia, Georgia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Moldova, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan. Ukraine is a founding and participating country but
technically not a member state.

Turkmenistan holds associate status.