ANKARA: Graveyard Claimed To Be Armenian Belongs To Romans

GRAVEYARD CLAIMED TO BE ARMENIAN BELONGS TO ROMANS

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 24 2007

Yusuf Halacoðlu, president of the Turkish Historical Society (TTK),
has announced that a graveyard in Mardin’s Nusaybin district that
had been claimed by the Armenians in fact dates to the Roman period.

During a press conference Halacoðlu said they had appealed to foreign
scientists to come and assist with the opening of the graveyard.

David Gaunt, a scientist from Switzerland, was the only one to
express interest.

Gaunt accepted the offer on condition that the research be conducted
without intervention from the Turkish administration. Gaunt began
studies with the TTK president and delegation on April 24. However
Gaunt soon realized that the photographs of the graveyard he had
seen were different from the graveyard in Nusaybin and thus decided
to return home without taking any soil or bone samples from the grave.

Reading the results of the soil and bone samples tested at Ankara
University’s engineering department, Halacoðlu said Turkish scientists
had determined that the bones to belong to the Roman period.

–Boundary_(ID_X9GLOrU3jiwgoBFgaIq6qQ)–

Sarkisian Lauds OSCE For ‘Objective’ Election Verdict

SARKISIAN LAUDS OSCE FOR ‘OBJECTIVE’ ELECTION VERDICT
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
May 22 2007

Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian thanked observers from the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe on Tuesday for their positive
evaluation of his government’s handling of Armenia’s parliamentary
elections which his Republican Party (HHK) won by a landslide.

"I think that with these elections we solved an important issue,
and I agree that a new standard was thereby set for the forthcoming
[presidential] elections," he was quoted by his office as telling
Boris Frlec, head of the observer mission deployed by the OSCE’s
Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR).

Sarkisian described as "impartial and objective" the mission’s
preliminary conclusion that the May 12 elections were held "largely
in accordance with international standards for democratic elections."

The verdict gave a massive boost to the international reputation of
the Armenian government and the legitimacy of the HHK victory. It
also sharply contrasted with the vote’s assessment by the Armenian
opposition and many civil society representatives.

Virtually all opposition contenders have rejected the official
vote results as fraudulent, alleging widespread voter intimidation,
vote buying and other forms of electoral fraud. The allegations were
echoed on Tuesday by the Dashink (Alliance) party of Samvel Babayan,
the former military leader of Nagorno-Karabakh. The final results
released by the Central Election Commission (CEC) over the weekend
showed Dashink winning 2.5 percent of the vote and only one seat in
the National Assembly.

In a written statement, Babayan’s party claimed that the CEC figures
"do not reflect the will of the people" due to "vote irregularities
registered in numerous polling stations." It also accused Western
observers of turning a blind eye to vote rigging.

The Armenian government’s press service quoted Frlec as insisting
at the meeting with Sarkisian that the elections were a "clear step
towards progress" and expressing hope that the authorities in Yerevan
will look into violations reported by his monitors. In particular,
the HHK, which effectively won an outright majority in parliament,
should consider initiating yet another reform of Armenia’s electoral
legislation, he said.

According to the statement, Frlec also noted that the OSCE mission
is still working on its final election report which is expected to
be issued next month. He had said at a May 13 news conference that
long-term ODIHR observers will specifically "compare" the CEC tally
with vote protocols issued by lower-level election commissions. Some
opposition leaders claim to have already found glaring discrepancies
in the official figures.

The ODIHR-led mission has so far refused to comment on the results
of the data verification. Its preliminary report said counting of
ballots was "bad or very bad" in about 20 percent of polling stations
visited by the foreign observers.

Sarkisian said it is "extremely important" that the observers’ final
findings "contain details and be specific."

The mission spokesman, Ivan Godarsky, told RFE/RL that Frlec met
Sarkisian as part of its "courtesy visits" to leaders of the main
Armenian parties which are aimed at having a better understanding of
the post-election situation in the country.

Rouben Mamoulian and Serguei Paradjanov at U. C. Berkeley

U.C. Berkeley Armenian Studies Program
Contact: Prof. Stephan H. Astourian
Tel.: (510) 643-8872
E-mail: [email protected]

The U. C. Berkeley Armenian Studies Program, the Armenian Film Festival, and
the Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies

Present the Bay Area Premiere of
"Rouben Mamoulian: The Golden Age of Broadway and Hollywood."
and
"Serguei Paradjanov, The Rebel."

Followed by a discussion with the director of these movies
Mr. Patrick Cazals (Les Films du Horla)
Monday, May 21, 2007
145 Dwinelle Hall (U.C. Berkeley) at 7pm
Admission Free

NK Pres: Don’t believe tales that Kashatagh will be returned to Az.

Nagorno-Karabakh President: Don’t believe the tales that Kashatagh
will be returned to Azerbaijan

20-05-2007 21:49:47 – KarabakhOpen

Don’t believe the tales that Kashatagh (Lachin) will be returned to
Azerbaijan, it will never happen. We liberated this territory not to
return. We must reconstruct and develop Kashatagh. The government of
Artsakh and Armenia will always focus on Kashatagh. It is our duty to
reconstruct all the territories that we liberated,’ said NKR President
Arkady Ghukasyan in his address to the celebration of 15 years of
liberation of the corridor of Lachin in Kashatagh on May 18. On this
day a number of events were held to mark the 15th anniversary of
liberation of Kashatagh.

BAKU: Azerbaijan Suffered $7 Billion By Armenian-Occupation Of Lachi

AZERBAIJAN SUFFERED $7 BILLION BY ARMENIAN-OCCUPATION OF LACHIN

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 18 2007

Association for Civil Society Development in Azerbaijan (ACSDA) and
Public Union for Protection of Rights of Migrants and Internally
Displaced Persons in Azerbaijan held a round table on Lachin is
ancient Azerbaijan territory. He said in the prewar period, 63,000
Azerbaijanis lived in the region of Lachin. Gadir Nasirov, head
of Public Union for Protection of Rights of Migrants and Internally
Displaced Persons made a report on the damages inflicted to Azerbaijan
during Lachin’s occupation.

"During the Armenian occupation , one Azerbaijani city, one settlement
and 125 villages were destroyed, rare forest trees in 34 877 ha
territories were cut down and sold abroad. Azerbaijan suffered totally
$ 7 099 526 500 in result of the occupation of its territories by
Armenian forces.

Head of Association for Protection of Azerbaijan monuments Faig
Ismayilov reported on the subject "Armenian plan for Lachin’s
occupation and its fulfillment". According to him, the occupied
territory was of great strategically importance in the plans of
Armenians and Lachin corridor was connecting Karabakh separatists
with Armenia. He said there was special operation for the occupation
of Lachin. "Some days before Lachin’s occupation, its big civilian
settlements were fired by special Armenian military forces. But
Armenians try to cast a shadow on the events and divert international
community’s attention. Lachin, Gubadli, Zangilan, Kalbajar and other
regions were occupied by Armenian Armed Forces".

The round table participants applied to international bodies. The
application called on Armenians to withdraw from Azerbaijani
territories unconditionally.

Russian Foreign Minister To Visit Azerbaijan

RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER TO VISIT AZERBAIJAN

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 18, 2007 Friday

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will pay an official visit to
Azerbaijan on May 21-22, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

Lavrov will meet with Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev, Prime
Minister Artur Rasi-zade and Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov.

The meetings will centre on the "implementation of the top-level
accords on bringing the inter-state relations to a qualitatively
new level by improving interaction in all spheres," the Foreign
Ministry said.

Lavrov and Mamedyarov "will discuss a possibility for deepening the
cooperation within the framework of the CIS, enhancing the coordination
of actions in international organizations".

"There will be review of steps for interaction in the UN, OSCE and
the Council of Europe".

The foreign ministers will also discuss Nagorno-Karabakh settlement.

"Russia is set to assist the sides in the conflict in finding a
compromise solution. But main responsibility for the final choice
of a settlement formula is with the Azerbaijanis and the Armenians,"
the Foreign Ministry said.

Russia "would be ready to support an option of solving the problem
that suits the sides, and in case of reaching a compromise accord it
will act as a guarantor of settlement".

Lavrov will discuss during his visit the matter of the Caspian Sea’s
status, security in the region and prospect for holding the second
Caspian summit.

"The assessment by Azerbaijan’s leader of the current state and
prospects of relations between our countries is important for us. For
Russia, Azerbaijan is an important strategic partner for a long-term
prospect."

"The economic aspect of cooperation is getting an increasing
importance. The high tempo of economic growth in Russia and Azerbaijan
increases the attractiveness of the countries in terms of the
development of mutually beneficial cooperation. Prospects open for
broadening the interaction in the fuel and energy sector, in the
field of research-intensive technology, the innovation activity,
as well as for broadening the economic ties between Russia’s regions
and Azerbaijan," the Foreign Ministry said.

Le Parti Du Premier Ministre Armenien, Serge Sarkissian, En Tete Aux

LE PARTI DU PREMIER MINISTRE ARMENIEN, SERGE SARKISSIAN, EN TETE AUX LEGISLATIVES
par Marie Jego

Le Monde, France
15 mai 2007 mardi

Selon des resultats partiels, lundi 14 mai, le Parti republicain, la
formation du premier ministre armenien, Serge Sarkissian, arrive en
tete, avec 32,9 % des voix, aux elections legislatives qui se sont
tenues en Armenie samedi. Deux autres partis fidèles au president
Robert Kotcharian, celui du milliardaire Gaguik Tsaroukian et la
Federation revolutionnaire armenienne (Dachnaktsoutioun), recueillent
a eux deux 35 % des suffrages.

Le scrutin de samedi est percu comme une repetition generale avant
l’election presidentielle de 2008, lorsque le president Kotcharian
laissera la place, au terme de son second mandat. Le premier ministre
Sarkissian, 52 ans, bras droit du president et très lie a la Russie,
semble en bonne position pour lui succeder.

Pour la première fois depuis l’independance de cette republique
ex-sovietique de Transcaucasie en 1991, les elections n’ont pas
ete entachees de fraudes massives. Leur deroulement a ete salue par
l’Organisation pour la securite et la cooperation en Europe (OSCE)
et par l’Union europeenne (UE), qui parle de " progrès importants ".

L’Armenie est partenaire de l’Union depuis la mise en place, en 2003,
de la politique de voisinage elargi, qui renforce la cooperation
entre l’Europe elargie et les pays qui la bordent au sud et a l’est.

Avant le scrutin, l’administration americaine, pourvoyeuse de fonds
a l’Armenie, avait mis en garde contre toute fraude, indiquant que
les 235 milliards de dollars attribues chaque annee a Erevan, dans le
cadre du Millenium Challenge Fund, pourraient etre remis en question.

Une suspension de l’aide etrangère aurait ete lourde de consequences
pour ce pays depourvu de ressources naturelles, où un tiers de la
population vit avec moins de 1,50 euro par jour.

L’opposition estime, en revanche, que le scrutin ne s’est pas deroule
normalement. Sa principale composante, le parti Pays de la loi,
a denonce des pressions et des cas repetes d’achat de voix. Les
representants de l’opposition a la commission electorale centrale
ont refuse de signer les protocoles de decompte des voix. Dimanche
soir a Erevan, 2 000 manifestants ont reclame une enquete.

–Boundary_(ID_8l0/YUWpIFrZpMFPsbastQ)–

Who Fears The Opposition He Fears For His Position, RPA Press-Secret

WHO FEARS THE OPPOSITION HE FEARS FOR HIS POSITION, RPA PRESS-SECRETARY SAYS

Arminfo
2007-05-16 00:14:00

"The greatest part of the Armenian population connects their future
with the Republican Party of Armenia and its leader Serzh Sargsyan. So,
I do not deny that Serzh Sargsyan will run for president in 2008," RPA
Press Secretary Eduard Sharmazanov said at a press conference, Tuesday.

He said that theoretically RPA is ready to cooperate with all the
political forces. Neither the independent government nor formation of a
coalition is an end in itself for the RPA. E. Sharmazanov said they are
negotiating and possible changes in the parliament will become known
on May 31. Commenting on ARFD’s statement that it has no intention to
participate in the coalition government formally, E. Sharmazanov said:
"I am very glad as nothing must be on formal basis in Armenia from now
on." He said RPA has an unbiased attitude to all the parties. Speaking
of the RPA criticizing Prosperous Armenia party, he said: "Criticizing
a party does not mean underestimating its leader."

Speaking of the election, E. Sharmazanov said that despite the
shortcomings, they were the best election of the 21st century. He
regretted that the United Labour Party failed to enter the parliament
and that the Armenian National Movement party did not participate in
the election as it has rather a serious ideology. He said RPA would
like to see a strong and constructive opposition in Armenia. "Who
fears the opposition, he fears for his position," E. Sharmazanov said.

He pointed out that according to preliminary data, RPA won 65 mandates
and Prosperous Armenia – 26.

Isolated Nation In A Sea Of Instability Puts Its Democracy To The Te

ISOLATED NATION IN A SEA OF INSTABILITY PUTS ITS DEMOCRACY TO THE TEST
Tony Halpin in Yerevan

Sources: Forbes Rich list; amazon.com ; The William Saroyan Society;
Armeniapedia.org; Armeniandiaspora.com
The Times/UK
May 12, 2007

Ballot-Stuffing And Vote-Rigging Have Discredited Past Elections.
This Time Armenia Knows It Must Get It Right

Fifteen years after it regained independence from the Soviet Union,
the tiny Caucasus republic of Armenia faces its most important test
as a democracy.

Ballot-stuffing and fraud have characterised previous elections in
this impoverished country of 3.2 million. The international community
has made clear it will not tolerate a repeat in today’s parliamentary
elections.

Aid to the Yerevan Government, worth hundreds of millions of pounds,
is at risk if international observers judge that the elections have
been neither free nor fair.

Washington has tied the prospect of $235 million (£120 million) to
clean elections. The EU has raised doubts about Armenia’s involvement
in its European Neighbourhood Policy if results are rigged again.

Despite annual economic growth that has hit double digits in the past
six years, the impact of aid cuts would be felt hard in a country
where close to a third of the population survive on about £1 a day.

And yet opposition parties say that the corruption in these elections,
although more subtle than before, has been just as pervasive. Several
have already announced plans for street demonstrations tomorrow,
convinced that the results will be rigged.

Spread out in the valley below Biblical Mount Ararat, Armenia claims
a rich history stretching back to the beginnings of civilisation. It
was the first nation to adopt Christianity as the state religion in
301. But its postSoviet history has been marked by economic collapse,
war, a crippling earthquake and mass emigration.

Neighbouring Georgia became the West’s democratic darling when the
Rose Revolution in 2003 swept Mikheil Saakashvili to power, soon
after the last parliamentary elections in Armenia that were widely
condemned as fraudulent.

Today’s elections are a test for Serge Sargsyan, the Prime Minister,
and his ambition to succeed Robert Kocharyan as President next year. Mr
Sargsyan, with a background in the secret services and the military
as well as being a former Defence Minister, was seen as the country’s
most powerful figure long before he became acting prime minister on
the sudden death of his predecessor, Andranik Margarian, in March.

He knows that he must repair his country’s battered image at a
critical moment for its international reputation. In an interview
with The Times, the Prime Minister, whose softly spoken, almost
reticent demeamour, belies the extent of his control of the country,
expressed confidence that the elections would be the "best in the
history of independent Armenia", but acknowledged that a failure to
deliver clean results would be costly.

"It will be very bad. The political power that forms a government
will be a weak one that doesn’t enjoy the trust of the people and it
will not have confidence in dealing with its international partners,"
he said.

Such international partners are critical for a landlocked country
whose every border is afflicted by instability or diplomatic conflict.

Armenia is in talks to settle the 19-year conflict with neighbouring
Azerbaijan over the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorno Karabakh. Mr
Sargsyan, like Mr Kocharyan, is from Karabakh, and played a central
role in organising military forces that eventually routed the Azeri
Army.

Turkey closed its border with Armenia more than a dozen years ago as
a gesture of support for Azerbaijan. Ankara also refuses to establish
diplomatic relations because of Yerevan’s campaign for international
recognition of the genocide of more than one million Armenians by
Ottoman Turkey in 1915.

Armenia depends on Georgia and Iran for access to outside markets. But
Russia ‘s border with Georgia has been closed since October in a row
over spying, and Armenia fears its economy would be almost completely
isolated if international pressure on Iran over its nuclear ambitions,
particularly from the US, leads to an economic embargo.

Armenia has received $1.6 billion from the US since 1992, making it
one of the largest recipients of American foreign aid per capita,
thanks mainly to its influential diaspora. Iran is a major trading
partner and a vital source of gas supplies.

"A deterioration in American-Iranian relations is a very undesirable
development for us. We are concerned not only because Iran is our
way to the outside world but also because of our economic cooperation
. . . all of this would be in jeopardy," Mr Sarkisyan said.

His Republican party is expected to emerge as the largest in the
131-seat parliament, which it controlled in coalition with two other
groups after the 2003 elections. Its principal rival this time is
Prosperous Armenia, a party established only a year ago by Gagik
Tsarukyan, a millionaire businessman and former world arm-wrestling
champion.

Mr Kocharyan encouraged the burly oligarch to set up his party,
apparently to draw support away from opposition groups. Critics have
repeatedly accused Mr Tsarukyan’s team of buying votes, but he also
seems increasingly popular with ordinary Armenians who admire his
muscular physique and business acumen.

About 5,000 cheered him at a final campaign rally in his home town of
Abovian, a bleak community about 15 miles outside the capital. Many
had been drawn to the event by the offer of lottery tickets to a draw
for prizes that included a car, televisions and dvd players.

Mr Tsarukyan told the crowd that he was a man of action not words
and that he would not be making "empty promises like those other
politicians". His assistant underlined his style by announcing:
"We are not buying your votes, we want clean elections. But because
Mr Tsarukyan has a good heart, he is giving two ambulances to the
town today."

The 2003 elections sparked street protests that were broken up
violently by police. Several opposition parties boycotted parliament,
arguing that it was illegitimate.

This time round, opposition leaders say that teachers and other
public employees have been threatened with the sack unless they
support the ruling party, while television stations, which are under
strong official influence, have been heavily biased in favour of
pro-Government candidates. TV advertising rates have risen sharply.

Others have alleged dirty tricks. The Rule of Law Party, seen as
one of the more serious opposition contenders, complained that its
telephones were being tapped by the Armenian National Security Service.

An attempt was made to discredit party leader Artur Baghdasaryan
when a newspaper close to the authorities published excerpts
from a clandestine recording of a restaurant meeting between Mr
Baghdasaryan and a senior British diplomat. President Kocharyan
accused Mr Baghdasaryan of "treason" for comments on the tape urging
the international community to declare the elections unfair.

Mr Baghdasaryan, a former Speaker of Parliament who now opposes the
regime, said: "I have always said that Armenia has international
commitments and if it doesn’t respect them then there should be a
reaction. The traitors of our country are the ones who rig elections.

"Serious grounds have been created for falsifying the results this
time because the inequalities in the campaign have been so great that
there is no possibility for fair competition.

"We have been ready to tolerate all this, but at least let the election
day be fair. If there are irregularities then we will go out on to
the streets to struggle for our political rights."

Compatriates

— Cher, real name Cherilyn Sarkisian, is of Armenian extraction. She
travelled to the country to support relief workers after the
devastating earthquake in 1988

— Kirk Kerkorian, an Armenian-American investor with a fortune
estimated at $10 billion (£5 billion), played a central role in
shaping Las Vegas

— William Saroyan (1908-81), the son of Armenian immigrants, wrote
Pulitzer prizewinning plays and stories of American life in the
Great Depression

— Garry Kasparov, below, was born to an Armenian mother in Baku,
Azerbaijan, in 1963. The one-time world chess champion is a political
opponent of President Putin

— Jack Kevorkian, voluntary euthanasia advocate, was born to Armenian
parents. Currently imprisoned in Michigan for second-degree murder
of a patient whose suicide he assisted

— Aram Khachaturian (1903-78), the composer of symphonies, ballets
and the famous Sword Dance, was born to Armenian parents in Georgia

–Boundary_(ID_h7+O09Z2a+ZM5AFogglUMw)–

Moscow Anticipates Deepening Of Partnership Relations With Armenia

MOSCOW ANTICIPATES DEEPENING OF PARTNERSHIP RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA

ArmRadio.am
15.05.2007 16:05

Moscow anticipates deepening of mutually beneficial partnership
relations with Yerevan, ITAR-TASS was told at the Russian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs on the occasion of the parliamentary election
in Armenia.

"Moscow expects that the multifaceted and mutually beneficial
partnership relations with Armenia will deepen. The agreements reached
during the recent meeting of the Armenian and Russian Presidents will
serve as am impetus for this," representative of the Russian MFA noted.