Viktor Dallakian: Ardarutiun Faction’s MPs Are Not Going To Lay Down

VIKTOR DALLAKIAN: ARDARUTIUN FACTION’S MPs ARE NOT GOING TO LAY DOWN THEIR MANDATES

Noyan Tapan
May 18 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 18, NOYAN TAPAN. The Ardarutiun (Justice) faction has not
received any proposals to lay down its mandates. Faction Secretary
Viktor Dallakian gave such a reaction on May 18 to the information
published in press, according to which from the moment of putting
in application on resignation from the post of RA NA Speaker Artur
Baghdasarian has started negotiations with the parliamentary opposition
and persuades them to lay down their mandates.

Personally V.Dallakian considers that it is the MPs having received
their mandates “in an illegal way” that should lay them down. According
to him, the MPs of the Ardarutiun faction have deserved their mandates
and unless the parliamentary elections were falsified the faction
would have a majority at the parliament. “As for laying down mandates,
this is a serious political action that would take place, for instance,
after the April 2004 events, then in the situation after the falsified
referendum on the constitutional amendments. In the given case,
I think there can be no such a statement of the question by us,”
Viktor Dallakian declared to the journalists.

Surb Karapet Church Of Jrarat Restored

SURB KARAPET CHURCH OF JRARAT RESTORED

Noyan Tapan
May 18 2006

HRAZDAN, MAY 18, NOYAN TAPAN. Works of restoration of the Surb Karapet
church of the Jrarat district of the marz center (Hrazdan) of Kotayk
will be finished the next year. Works being continued already for
more than a year are implemented on the initiative and under the
patronage of Ashot Gevorgian, a former inhabitant of the city of
Hrazdan, living at present in Moscow. It is envisaged to re-open the
church during the celebrations dedicated to the 180th anniversary
of foundation of Jrarat. Stepan and Grigor, sons of Melik Sheko,
migrated here in 1827 founded in Jrarat (formerly the village of
Melik or Rndamal). The Surb Karapet church which was built still in
the 16th century was reconstucted by new settlers. But during the
Soviet years, the church was made a storeroom, then was gradually
destroyed. Fortunatly, the most part of stones of the church walls
was kept and is used in the restoration works.

BAKU: Today 14 Years Passed Since Occupation Of Azerbaijan’s LachinR

TODAY 14 YEARS PASSED SINCE OCCUPATION OF AZERBAIJAN’S LACHIN REGION BY ARMENIANS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 17 2006

Today 14 years have passed since Azerbaijan’s Lachin region was
occupied by Armenians. Lachin is situated in the south-west of
Azerbaijan, on the border with Armenia.

It was established as an administrative region in 182603 hectares
of territory in 1930 (APA). According to statistics of 1989, there
lived 51,6 thousand people and according to 2003 statistics it had
68.1 thousand people. The highest top of the region is Gizilboghaz
Mountain (2823 m). There are Jura-Anthropogenic deposits in the
region. The Hakari is the largest rive in Lachin. It has fertile
sorts of soil. There are bushes, lawns and broad-leaved mountain
forests. After becoming displaced persons, the regions’ population
has settled in 53 populated areas.

Azerbaijan’s Ecology and Natural Resources Ministry there are natural
springs Turshsu-, Galaderesi, Aghanus, Khirmanlar, Tigig, Tursh-tigig,
Nureddin (have high yielding), Naghdali and Hajikhanli.

Rare historical and architectural monuments, Garagol State Reserve
and other preserves in Lachin are in Armenia’s occupation now. There
are three mercury beds-Narzanli, Chilgazchay, Saribulag (with total
reserves of 1124 tons), Hochaz marbled limestone, two tuff beds
(Aghoglan, Ahmadli) wit total reserves of 5125 cubic meters, Lachin
limestone beds with total reserve of 4457 tons, Novruzlu clayey bed
with total reserve of 998 thousand cubic meters, Gushchu pumice-stone
beds (2144 thousand cubic meters), Yukhari Hakarichay sand-gravel
beds (15 794 thousand cubic meters) and other mineral deposits in
the region.

Lachin has 33285 hectares of forests reserve lands, 26647 hectares
are forest, which constitutes 80.05%.

The Ministry has found out that Armenians cut red oak trees in Pijanis
and Hajishamli forest and sold to France for making tuns for brandy
production. Old nut trees in the region are also being cut and sold
for Iran for furniture production.

In Hajilar-Sadinlar village, Armenians have cut 65 hectares of forest,
burnt houses and destroyed graveyards.

Tajik Deputy Defence Minister Off To Russia For CIS Security Body Ta

TAJIK DEPUTY DEFENCE MINISTER OFF TO RUSSIA FOR CIS SECURITY BODY TALKS

Asia-Plus news agency website, Dushanbe
17 May 06

Dushanbe, 17 May: The first deputy defence minister, the chief of the
General Staff of the Tajik armed forces, Lt-Gen Ramil Nodirov, has left
for the Russian capital [Moscow]. A working meeting of chiefs of staff
of the armed forces of CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organization]
member states will take place in the CSTO’s unified headquarters in
Moscow on 18 May.

A source in the Tajik Defence Ministry has told Asia-Plus that the
participants in the meeting intend to discuss prospects for the
development of the CSTO’s military component. In particular, the
training of national [military] contingents, as well as improvement
of the system of commanding the collective rapid deployment forces
of the Central Asian region will be discussed.

Chiefs of staff of the armed forces of Russia, Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan will participate in the meeting.

Armenia And Diaspora To Tackle National Tasks

ARMENIA AND DIASPORA TO TACKLE NATIONAL TASKS
by Tigran Liloyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 16, 2006 Tuesday 02:21 PM EST

The ways for Armenia and the Armenian diaspora jointly tacking national
tasks were in the focus of attention at the meeting of Armenian
President Robert Kocharyan and members of the General Council of the
World Armenian Congress and the organization’s president Ara Abramyan.

Robert Kocharyan dwelt especially on the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict and international recognition of the Armenian genocide, the
presidential press service told ltar-Tass. The president hailed the
fact that the initiatives of the World Armenian Congress concentrate
increasingly on Armenia and assume nation-wide character.

Ara Abramyan posted the Armenian president on the work of the Tuesday
meeting of the General Council of the World Armenian Congress.

Members of the Council made assurances that they were ready to do their
utmost for fulfilling national tasks and advanced their proposals.

Abramyan said computer classes in 600 secondary schools and other
educational establishments of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh had been
set up with the assistance of the World Armenian Congress and the Union
of Armenians of Russia. This programme is spread to the diaspora. Such
classes have been set up in the Armenian community in Brazil and will
also be formed in Argentine. Computer centres for invalids, orphans and
children from the poor families have been set up in Armenian regions.

Deep Water Robot RT-1000 Reaches Seabed At A-320 Crash Scene

DEEP WATER ROBOT RT-1000 REACHES SEABED AT A-320 CRASH SCENE
by Dmitry Nezdorovin

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 16, 2006 Tuesday

The RT-1000 deep water robotic device has reached the seabed in the
Black Sea at the site of the crash of the Armenian airbus A-320 in
order to spot and lift from the water two flight data recorders of the
plane, the operation’s technical support headquarters told Itar-Tass
on Tuesday.

According to the head of the Russian Transport Ministry’s sea and
river transport agency Rosmorrechtrans, Alexander Davydenko, the
RT-1000 had earlier not taken part in such operations and only lifted
from the seabed geological samples of less than 20 kilogrammes from
minor depths. “In these conditions the robot is capable of lifting
the plane’s fragments under 12 kilogrammes and two flight recorders
weighing seven kilogrammes each,” Davydenko indicated.

RT-1000 is c complex consisting of three parts, the largest is a
container with control equipment. The next segment with photo and
television equipment will go to the bottom of the sea and examine it.

The third device is a hydraulic elevating manipulator working in all
directions. “The RT-1000 is working at a depth of up to 500 metres
in an area of 20×20 metres. The robot will inspect the territory by
inches,” said the Rosmorrechtrans head.

The operation is conducted from board the Navigator special ship.

Three Strong Quakes Take Place Near Indonesia

THREE STRONG QUAKES TAKE PLACE NEAR INDONESIA

Yerevan, May 17. ArmInfo. A 6.8-point earthquake took place 260 km
south-east of Sibolga, Indonesia May 16 08:58 PM local time, reports
the National Seismic Protection Service of Armenia.

In the epicenter the magnitude was 9-10 points on 12-point scale
(MKS-64). The quake was followed by two more tremors – 5.6 and 4.9
points. No reports of casualties or following tsunamis yet.

Nor Zhamanakner Party Representative Refutes Statement About Party’s

NOR ZHAMANAKNER PARTY REPRESENTATIVE REFUTES STATEMENT ABOUT PARTY’S COLLAPSE AND QUALIFIES ITS AUTHOR AS “AGENT”

Noyan Tapan
May 15 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 15, NOYAN TAPAN. No one has left either the youth wing
or the women’s board of the Nor Zhamanakner (New Times) Party. Party
Vice-Chairman Alexan Minasian made such a statement at the May
15 press conference refuting the statement by head of party’s
Malatia-Sebastia branch Arsen Amirkhanian who has left the party
recently and declared that the Nor Zhamanakner Party is breaking
down. According to A.Minasian, besides the above-mentioned person,
there are more than 10 “agents in their party and they gradually
get rid of these agents”. According to him, by introducing agents
the authorities try to intimidate the party that was the first
one to speak about carrying out a revolution. Alexan Minasian also
informed that the Nor Zhamanakner Party is going to organize a rally
dedicated to the problems of the Armenians of Javakhk on May 30 in
Aznavour Square. According to his information, it is possible that
the Armenians can leave Javakhk as 10 thousand Meskhetians are to be
settled there. According to A.Minasian, the Nor Zhamanakner Party is
not going to conclude an alliance with any party at the forthcoming
elections. As for the possible cooperation with the Orinats Yerkir
(Country of Law) Party, according to him, the time will show whether
this will take place or not.

RA President Presents Present Stage Of Settlement Process Of Karabak

RA PRESIDENT PRESENTS PRESENT STAGE OF SETTLEMENT PROCESS OF KARABAKH CONFLICT TO OSCE SECRETARY GENERAL

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 15 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 15, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. RA President Robert
Kocharian received on May 13 Marc Perrin de Brichambaut, OSCE
Secretary General, who visited Armenia on the occasion of opening of
the “Melange” project for liquidation of the rocket fuel remained in
the territory of Armenia still from the Soviet times. The President of
the republic welcame the OSCE Secretary’s General visit and appreciated
effeciency of the cooperation with the OSCE in the sense of volume,
level and prospects. As Noyan Tapan was informed by the President’s
Press Office, the interlocutors discussed in details the developments
taking place in the OSCE region and the process of reforms of the OSCE
structure. At the guest’s request, the President presented the present
stage of the peaceful settlement process of the Karabakh conflict. He
attached importance to the circumstance that the problem settlement
takes place within the OSCE framework and a rather effective format
has been chosen. The Armenia-Turkey relations were also touched upon.

Harper Making His Mark In Foreign Policy Landscape

HARPER MAKING HIS MARK IN FOREIGN POLICY LANDSCAPE
by George Koch, For the Calgary Herald

The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
May 14, 2006 Sunday
Final Edition

When the Danish Muhammad cartoons controversy erupted in early
February, the days-old Conservative government’s equivocal response
disappointed those hoping for a tough answer to terrorist apologists
and Islamist radicalism. Would this become the default mode of a weak
minority government?

Barely three months later, it’s looking like a mere opening stumble
by a not yet fully staffed government. Since then, the Conservatives
have made a series of moves — some small and symbolic, others big
and important — that add up to a sharp departure from the indecision,
inconsistency and political correctness of the Liberals.

The latest item triggered outsized controversy. Last month, the
government issued a statement commemorating the Armenian genocide,
which peaked in 1915. Noting the Armenian people’s “terrible suffering
and loss of life” from Turkish actions that Canada officially considers
a “crime against humanity,” the four-paragraph statement was signed
by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

It barely made Canadian news, but it quickly outraged the Turkish
government, which recalled its ambassador and is expected to boycott
joint air force exercises later this year.

Whatever one’s views on the Armenians’ tragic past, Harper’s
statement hardly suggested timidity. Indeed, since mid-February, the
Conservatives have cut a veritable swath through the foreign policy
landscape, including:

n Harper’s visit in mid-March to Canadian troops fighting in
Afghanistan;

n Suspension in late March of the $25 million in annual funding to the
Palestinian Authority, after the terrorist group Hamas came to power;

n Adding the Sri Lankan Tamil Tigers to Canada’s list of prohibited
terrorist organizations, which the Liberals had refused to do;

n The plan, announced in the recent budget, to arm Canada’s border
guards (also after years of Liberal refusal);

n The increased defence budget;

n Casting a March UN vote in favour of Israel;

n Condemning Iran’s president after he called for Israel’s
annihilation;

n A more favourable attitude towards the United States, culminating
in the recent agreement on Canada’s softwood lumber exports;

n The acknowledgment of the Armenian genocide.

“We’re thinking hard about foreign policy, partly because there’s a
lot of interest among Conservative party members in foreign policy,
including earlier policy resolutions,” says one senior government
official, who spoke to the Herald on a background basis.

Some of these are now becoming government policy. For example, the
Conservative party in 2004 resolved to recognize the Armenian genocide.

Harper’s showing up in Afghanistan — at considerable physical risk
— wasn’t a mere stunt. He’s been in the thick of nearly all the
recent moves. According to a recent article in the Western Standard,
following the evidently rigged elections in Belarus in March, Harper
also over-rode Foreign Affairs bureaucrats and personally toughened
Canada’s official response.

“We understand that Canada is not some island on which we can live
in splendid and peaceful isolation,” Harper told the House of Commons
in his response to the Throne Speech in early April.

“We want Canada to be a player, at home and abroad, on the great
challenges of the day.” In his speech to the troops in Afghanistan,
Harper referred specifically to the Canadians killed in the World
Trade Center atrocity on 9/11.

The Conservative government is reorganizing Canada’s foreign policy
around two concepts: that foreign policy must advance Canada’s
interests, and that it should promote four fundamental principles.

Described in the Throne Speech, they are freedom, democracy, the rule
of law and human rights. The new foreign policy concept, and the way
it’s being carried out, almost sounds like an emerging Harper doctrine.

“Foreign policy is what we do outside the country to influence the
behaviour of foreign actors,” says the government official. “It’s a
tool, because we intend to get something out of it — like improved
relations with the U.S.” One beneficial outcome, he argues, was the
recent softwood lumber deal.

It’s a sharp departure from the Liberals’ vision of foreign policy
which, like that of former U.S. president Bill Clinton, seemed driven
primarily by the desire to accommodate various domestic interests. A
classic example was senior Liberals appearing at fundraisers for the
Tamil Tigers’ domestic front group.

In addition, former prime minister Paul Martin’s international approach
was so scattered it became virtually ineffective. A Conservative
official notes incredulously that Martin’s otherwise all-powerful
prime minister’s office (PMO) had no foreign policy section. Martin
PMO officials considered foreign affairs just politics and spent
their time “chasing headlines.”

At its worst, the Liberal approach was largely about striking
fashionable poses in highly visible settings — such as Martin
cavorting with Bono, or calling for relief of African national debts
— while doing little or nothing. “Soft power” in practice was as
oxymoronic as the words suggested.

The Conservatives are intent on concentrating Canada’s middle power
resources on a limited set of achievable objectives. Government
officials describe it as a “team effort.”

Day-to-day activity is handled by Foreign Affairs Minister Peter
MacKay and his department. Stockwell Day, foreign affairs critic in
opposition and now minister of Public Safety, is involved in files
such as banning the Tamil Tigers and arming Canada’s border guards.

The prime minister “maintains a keen interest” in foreign policy and
runs big-ticket items affecting Canada’s direction in the world.

Harper’s key officials include Ian Brodie, chief of staff; Mark
Cameron, manager of policy; and Keith Fountain, Cameron’s policy
adviser for foreign affairs and national security.

It meshes with the Harper government’s broader campaign to advance
the Conservative agenda in small steps, equal parts symbolism and
substance, that don’t require legislation (the budget being a major
exception), avoiding open confrontation with the opposition parties.

It’s been dubbed incrementalism.

Incremental, yes, but not necessarily uncontroversial. The statement on
Armenia may have repeated concepts introduced in previous parliamentary
resolutions. The prime minister’s imprimatur, however, was new.

The Armenian genocide, in which 600,000 to 1.5 million Armenians died
at the hands of Turkish army units and government officials during the
First World War, may seem like a 90-year-old historical curiosity. But
in the Middle East, it’s fraught with meaning. Armenia is the world’s
oldest officially Christian nation, having maintained its culture
and religion amid centuries of expansion by Islam. Today Armenia
is a struggling country with mostly Muslim neighbours, including
totalitarian and soon-to-be nuclear-armed Iran.

Turkey continues to deny what it did to the Armenians was genocide.

Turkey’s foreign ministry has accused Harper of displaying a “gravely
prejudiced attitude.”

Turkey is also where the Muslim caliphate was dissolved after the
First World War, and which al-Qaeda and other groups are fighting
to re-establish.

Harper’s comments are very likely circulating among the chat rooms,
websites and e-mails of radical Islamists the world over, and they
are certain to regard them as provocative.

Canadian government officials say they do not think the issue will
increase the risks to Harper, or Canada. “The radical Islamists
already want to kill the PM,” notes one. “And Canada is already on
al-Qaeda’s top five list (of potential target countries).”

Meanwhile, the emerging Harper doctrine will continue to flesh
itself out. Reportedly, Harper will soon deliver a major speech on
Afghanistan. Some believe he may press China to improve its planning
and co-operation concerning anticipated pandemics such as the bird
flu. Canada will likely continue to push reform of the UN.

The government might list additional groups as banned terrorist
organizations, or move to expedite deportations of known criminals
and bogus refugee claimants with possible terrorist ties.

Thanks to better relations with the U.S., American authorities might
allow Canada Customs to station officers at U.S. airports to pre-clear
home-bound Canadians (as U.S. Customs does at Canadian airports).

Although most Canadians don’t seem to have noticed the Harper doctrine,
at the prime minister’s current foreign policy pace, it’s unlikely
to remain obscure for much longer.

George Koch is a Calgary-based freelance writer. More of his articles
can be read at his weblog,

www.drjandmrk.com.