CIS PA Session Due In Saint Peterburg April 3-4

CIS PA SESSION DUE IN SAINT PETERBURG APRIL 3-4

armradio.am
31.03.2008 15:35

April 3-4 the session of the CIS Parliamentary Assembly will be held
in Saint Petersburg. President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe Luís Maria de Puig is expected to participate in
the session. The PACE President intends to have separate meetings
with heads of parliament of the countries participating in the event.

Questions related to the migration in the context of globalization,
human rights and socio-economic issues will be discussed in the
framework of the CIS PA session.

–Boundary_(ID_H4gjLveqmNCFb2KG3LMA8w)–

Armenian-Russian Trade Turnover Totals $ 102.7 Mln In Jan-Feb 2008

ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN TRADE TURNOVER TOTALS $ 102.7 MLN IN JAN-FEB 2008

ARKA
March 31, 2008

YEREVAN, March 31. /ARKA/. Armenian-Russian trade turnover totaled
$102.7mln in January-February 2008 – 19.7% increase.

Armenian exports to Russia amounted to $27.1mln (18.9% of Armenia’s
total exports) in the reporting period – 0.4% decrease compared with
January-February 2007.

Russian imports to Armenia totaled $75.6mln in January-February 2008
– 29.1% increase compared with the corresponding period. At the same
time, Russia’s imports totaled AMD 113.5mln (23.9% increase) or 20.9%
of total imports.

According to the RA National Statistical Service (NSS), Armenia’s share
in Russia’s foreign trade turnover was 15% in January-February 2008.

Thus, Russia remains number one trade partner for Armenia.

The share of the CIS in Armenia’s trade turnover was 34.3% in
January-February 2008 (against 37.2% in the corresponding period in
2007) or $233.5mln – 14.5% increase.

Armenia’s foreign trade turnover increased by 24.3% to $687mln in
the reporting period. Exports and imports totaled AMD $143.6mln and
$543.4mln respectively.

Georgia: Saakashvili Manipulates his Return to Presidency

Mainstream, India
Mainstream, Vol XLVI, No 15
March 29 2008

Georgia: Saakashvili Manipulates his Return to Presidency
Saturday 29 March 2008, by Mansoor Ali

While the US position in the former Soviet republics, which once
constituted the formidable USSR before the 1991 disintegration, has
considerably weakened over the years, Georgia has, in its latest
presidential election in January this year, witnessed the return to
power of President Saakashvili, perhaps the most brazenly loyal
friend of Washington in the region whose antipathy to Moscow does not
bear repetition.

This unrepentant pro-American head of state, whose Georgian
citizenship itself is in doubt in view of his proximity to the US
leadership, mounted every form of propaganda and administrative
pressure on the electorate to win the election. But those did not
succeed; so he finally managed to emerge victorious in the first
round of the presidential poll through ballot-rigging on a massive
scale. Without waiting for the counting of votes from even 100
polling stations he declared himself the President of Georgia once
again, thereby fuelling wide resentment among his political
adversaries and opponents.

The hollowness of the election process has been exposed by not only
the Opposition leaders but impartial foreign – Western – observers as
well. According to a noted Opposition leader, G. Yaindrava, `the
originals of the Election Commission’s protocols do not coincide with
the papers concocted in the Central Election Commission’; by way of
illustration projecting Saakashvili’s falsification, Yaindrava
mentioned the results of voting in the provinces populated by
Azerbaijanis and Armenians – the pro-US leader received almost 100 per
cent votes here although it’s quite well known that he is not popular
in those areas.

Some European Union (EU) observers feel that the election campaign
witnessed many violations from the side of the ruling party:
everywhere administrative and financial resources were
indiscriminately used to garner votes while at the same time there
was tight control over the mass media and irrefutable facts surfaced
about genuine voters being frightened away from exercising their
franchise. On the other hand, as compared to Saakashvili the
Opposition candidates had little scope and opportunity to conduct
effective propaganda campaigns.

Several groups of foreign observers, including those from the
International Expert Centre for Electoral Systems (Israel),
Independent American Centre of Political Monitoring (USA), Central
European Group for Political Monitoring (Great Britain) were of the
considered view that the elections could not be characterised as
democratic, transparent, legal and in conformity with the European
principles of democracy and the norms of international law. According
to German political analyst E. Schnaider, `the elections could not be
called legitimate, even with great reserve. People were threatened
and forced to give their votes to Saakashvili.’

Then we have the case of Dieter Boden, a prominent German diplomat
heading the OSCE Observer Mission in Georgia. A day after the voting,
the OSCE observers gave a positive evaluation of the election.
Subsequently Boden said in an interview to the newspaper Frankfurter
Rundschau: `We are receiving more and more reports from our observers
about widespread and serious violations during vote counting in the
election. These include gross, careless and deliberate rigging, for
example, in Batumi.’ In his opinion, the situation in the Georgian
Central Election Commission (CEC) was one of chaos.

On why the OSCE gave a positive assessment of the Georgian
presidential poll a day after the vote, Boden proferred an
explanation even if it did not carry much conviction: `Those serious
violations were not yet exposed by that time.’

He also urged the Georgian Opposition to submit to the OSCE and the
Georgian CEC the facts they have at their disposal confirming
electoral rigging. He felt the CEC was the only body which could
revise the election results and declare them invalid.

Boden’s credentials are impeccable: he enjoys the reputation of being
Georgia’s loyal friend, a person well acquainted with the situation
in the country: he headed the OSCE mission is Georgia in the
mid-nineties; he was a Special Representative of the UN
Secretary-General in Georgia from 1992 to 2002 – currently he is
working for an international observer mission of the OSCE Office for
Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR).

However, whatever Boden may belatedly say, the Western community
members from the US have preferred to `close their eyes’ to the
electoral violations and finally accepted Saakashvili’s victory.

THERE is yet another striking development: according to the country’s
Central Election Commission (CEC), 48 per cent of the voters took
part in the elections and of them 72.5 per cent voted in favour of
the country joining the NATO, that is, only about one-third of
Georgians want their country to join the Alliance – this exposes the
failure of the massive pro-NATO propaganda of the state’s power
structures, a majority of the political parties, NGOs; it further
brings out the unreliability of the research conducted by several
sociological services claiming that 80 to 90 per cent of the Georgian
population was ready to vote for the NATO. In this context Georgia’s
expeditious entry into the NATO is fraught with unforeseen
consequences: observers maintain that such a move on the part of
Tbilisi would not only worsen Moscow’s present ties with Washington
but also lead to internal violence, problems with regard to the
legality of deployment of American contingents on Georgian territory
and counteractions and counter-campaigns against full scale
deployment of American bases in the country.

Nonetheless, what is beyond dispute is a weakening of Saakashvili’s
position. This is an objective reality without any subjective
colouring or bias manifest in the presidential poll outcome. The
Opposition, on its turn, is able to comprehend its own power to shape
events and has thus started preparations to seriously compete with
the ruling party taking into consideration the forthcoming
parliamentary elections in Georgia to be held shortly.

Meanwhile there is another apprehension: wide international
acceptance of the presidential election result and direct support to
the Saakashvili regime from the side of the West could influence his
line of action in relation to Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Observers
and analysts fear Saakashvili may regard the Western behaviour as
giving him a right to permissiveness and he could thus be prompted to
take a risk in using force in order to solve the problem of
`separatist regions’. Such apprehensions and fears cannot possibly be
brushed aside.

.html

http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article608

Kasparov calls anti-Kremlin =80=98alternative parliament’

Kasparov calls anti-Kremlin =80=98alternative parliament’
Web posted at: 3/28/2008 8:25:48
Source ::: Agencies
MOSCOW =80¢ A coalition of anti-Kremlin parties led by former chess champion
Garry Kasparov will hold an `alternative parliament’ in May, a spokeswoman for
The Other Russia group said yesterday.
The unofficial assembly, probably in Moscow, is in protest at the number of
parties disallowed from contesting last December’s parliamentary elections,
Marina Litvinovitch said.
`This will effectively constitute the first meeting of the National Assembly,
‘ she claimed. `This assembly must reunite all the groups excluded by the
system.’
`We consider the current parliament does not represent all of Russian society
since some movements were unable to participate in the (parliamentary)
elections because their parties were not registered and because the ballot
conditions were unfair,’ she said. Kasparov’s Other Russiacoalition includes
his own United Civil Front, and the far-left National Bolshevik Party.
The alternative parliament is due to met on May 17-18, while two preparatory
conferences are scheduled-one for the liberal opposition in Saint Petersburg
on April 5, and another the following day in Moscow for leftwing groups.
Several parties, such as the Greens, were prevented from standing in the
December 2 parliamentary election. A total of 11 parties finally made the
ballot, while only four received sufficient votes to win seats in the Duma.
Meanwhile, three rebels were killed Thursday in a raid on a village in
Russia’s turbulent Dagestan province, a news agency reported, citing the local
branch of the FSB federal security service.
The Peninsula

"Only Way For Overcoming Domestic Political Tension Is Dialogue," Re

"ONLY WAY FOR OVERCOMING DOMESTIC POLITICAL TENSION IS DIALOGUE," REPRESENTATIVE OF PAP SAYS

Noyan Tapan
March 28, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 28, NOYAN TAPAN. Serious political priorities are
stipulated in the agreement of the coalition formed a few days ago
by four parliamentary parties. This statement was made by Naira
Zohrabian, a member of the Bargavach Hajastan (Prosperous Armenia)
faction of the RA National Assembly, at the press conference, which
was held on March 28. She also expressed hope that the coalition will
work productively and will settle the problems set in front of it.

According to her, both the opposition and the authorities including
the Prosperous Armenia Party, are responsible for the events, which
took place on March 1 in Yerevan. Naira Zohrabian mentioned that the
Prosperous Armenia Party sees a dialogue between all the interested
sides, including the radical opposition, as the only way out of the
existing domestic political tension. "Any problem, including that on
setting free those under arrest, should be settled during a dialogue
at a round table," she mentioned.

However, in the opinion of Naira Zohrabian, bringing forward
a precondition for starting a dialogue by the radical opposition
creates an impression that the opposition refuses a dialogue.

Suren Sureniants Continues Hunger-Strike

SUREN SURENIANTS CONTINUES HUNGER-STRIKE

Noyan Tapan
March 28, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 28, NOYAN TAPAN. Suren Sureniants, a member of the
Hanrapetutiun (Republic) party’s Board, continues hunger-strike for
the fourth day. As NT correspondent was informed by Arsen Babayan,
the Spokesperson of the Penitentiary Department of the RA Ministry
of Justice, S. Sureniants’ health condition is normal, he is under
permanent control of doctors. All demands of S. Sureniants have been
fulfilled, the investigator, the representatives of the Ombudsperson,
deputies have visited him.

It should be mentioned that S. Sureniants has been arrested for
organizing and holding a mass event by violation of the order
established by the law.

Armenian Law-Enforcement Agencies Search 14 Wounded People Run Away

ARMENIAN LAW-ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES SEARCH 14 WOUNDED PEOPLE RUN AWAY FROM HOSPITALS

arminfo
2008-03-27 17:42:00

ArmInfo. After getting medical aid 14 people wounded as a result of
the mass disorders on 1-2 March in Yerevan, ran away from hospitals.

As press-secretary of Armenian prosecutor general, Sona Truzyan, told
ArmInfo, they had given false information about their personality
and place of residence. "The preliminary investigation structure
is taking measures to disclose personality of those people and to
clarify circumstances why they gave false information, ran away
from the hospital, and why they were wounded’, – Sona Truzyan’s
press-release says.

The Disillusion Of Universal Human Rights

THE DISILLUSION OF UNIVERSAL HUMAN RIGHTS
Sharief Ali

UNLV The Rebel Yell
1812
March 27 2008
NV

Why humanity and compassion are never reason enough to care about
the rights of others

When discussing all of the injustices transpiring daily all over
the world like, murder, human trafficking, slavery, kidnapping,
starvation and so on, people in today’s society like to assume that
international human rights are universally held norms. Although there
are some who view these "norms" as new forms of western imperialism,
the general consensus is that every human being is entitled to certain
unalienable rights.

There are many interpretations over the different meanings and concepts
of what international human rights entail. Rather than international,
the only true universal rights are what philosophers have called
"natural rights" for centuries – rights that no government can give
you or take away. But I do not believe in "international human rights"
as a term because it simply seems to be a mechanism of control by
state governments and/or a justification for infringement on state
sovereignty by hegemonic powers when convenient or necessary, but
not for moral purposes.

The basic argument in defense of human rights interventions, is that
humans should not suffer while the world stands and watches. After
the Nuremberg trials, the global community was supposed to make sure
that human rights violations and genocides like the holocaust and
the Armenian genocide were never to happen again.

But the argument against this is one that resembles something
Darwinistic. The world has no responsibility to help stop human
rights violations around the world, and that people who are dying,
suffering, enslaved, starving and so on have to work it out themselves
and whatever happens, will work itself out in the end.

Basically, we have no place.

So as much as people and organizations talk about human rights,
why do powerful governments only mention a select few cases?

Because they mention ones in which political expediency matters.

The powerful countries of the world only care about human rights when
they can gain something from an intervention, like money and power,
instead of good will. That is why the U.S. decided to relieve Iraqis
of their human rights woes and not the Koreans living under the rule
of the world’s worst lunatic – Kim Jong-Il.

Case in point: President Bill Clinton felt compelled to stop the
starvation of millions of people in Somalia in 1993. Clinton was
so compelled, that the U.S. intervened militarily in Mogadishu to
ensure that UN and other ‘human rights groups’ food rations were
being delivered to those in need, and not hijacked by warlords. To
the average person, this cause seemed noble, but to many Somalis, U.S.

intervention was not seen as noble, but rather as an attempt to gain
access to Somalia’s vast wealth of natural resources such as oil.

So how important to the world are international human rights?

In the U.N.’s Declaration of Human Rights, there are definitely broad
interpretations of rights that are cultural, and ones that are natural
or seemingly universal. These natural rights are based on the basic
belief that no human beings should deny other human beings the right
to life or liberty, self-determination, the right to clean water, and
protection against slavery in all its forms; however, there cannot
be any truly universal right. To start, in order to implement these
rights, there must be some inter-governmental organization that has
the ability to enforce them; but any such body would be infringing
on individual states’ autonomy and sovereignty.

Secondly, individual human rights come second to the survival of
a state.

Of course any state would sign on to the declaration of human rights,
because which state would want to have that negative spotlight
focused on them by any state or alliance of states? But when it
comes to ensuring basic human rights to its citizens, any state is
concerned more with its own well being than the well being of its
citizens. Basically, if a state’s citizens’ rights must be compromised
in order to ensure the security or hierarchy of a state’s government,
than that is what will happen, and it’s what happens today in every
corner of the world with the U.S. being no exception.

States come first, inhabitants come second.

Unfortunately, in our "civilized" world, it seems like human beings
are anything but civilized. Rather than truly be in the interest of
humankind, international human rights have just become another tool
used to pass specific political agendas. Yes, there are those who
do genuinely care to make a difference, and they can – but only on
a limited scale unfortunately.

It is not in any governments’ interests to ensure that all of their
citizens are guaranteed certain unalienable rights, although that
would be the morally correct approach. Because in a capital-driven
world, morals and ethics really have no place; the dollar is king,
and we are all subjects.

But is there nothing that can really be done?

Only each one of us can individually answer that.

http://www.unlvrebelyell.com/article.php?ID=1

Catholicos Aram I Receives Delegates Of Primate Of Assyrian Orthodox

CATHOLICOS ARAM I RECEIVES DELEGATES OF PRIMATE OF ASSYRIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH

Noyan Tapan
March 27, 2008

ANTILIAS, MARCH 27, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. On March 25
Catholicos Aram I received the two bishop representatives of
His Holiness Patriarch Zagga I Yuas, the primate of the Assyrian
Orthodox Church in the Great Cilician House. During the meeting the
two bishops consulted with Catholicos Aram I concerning a number of
important issues.

As the Mother Church of Antilias reports, after listening to the
patgam of the Patriarch, Catholicos Aram I introduced his own points
of view concerning the existing issues and passed his friendly wishes
to Patriarch Zagga I on the occasion of the Saint Resurrection festival
through the two bishops.

Today Gusts Are Expected

TODAY GUSTS ARE EXPECTED

KarabakhOpen
26-03-2008 10:15:51

Today strong gusts are expected, warned Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan
yesterday during the meeting of the commission for elimination of
consequences of the hurricane on March 25.

During the meeting the governors of the regions reported the
damage caused by the hurricane. According to the prime minister,
the information they provided needs to be corrected. By preliminary
information, the damage caused by the hurricane is about 250 million
drams.

It was noted that in the region of Martuni 1430 houses were damaged,
the roofs of 150 houses have no cover at all. In the region of
Askeran the number of damaged houses is 1287, in Shushi 22. A house
was destroyed by the hurricane in the village of Her-Her, Martuni. The
village administration provided temporary lodging to the family.

In Stepanakert, 638 buildings were damaged, including 177 blocks,
436 detached houses and 25 offices.

According to the mayor of the capital Vazgen Michaelyan, reconstruction
started as soon as the gusts calmed. 70 builders were invited from
Armenia for quality repair.

In the capital the repair of transmission lines continues. In about
85 percent of the city electricity has been connected, the mayor said.