Multicultural Iraq: possible?

World War 4 Report, NY
March 25 2006

Multicultural Iraq: possible?
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Sat, 03/25/2006 – 03:34.
A March 23 commentary from Lebanon’s Daily Star:

A foolish new attraction to oppressive Arab nationalism

By Rayyan al-Shawaf

We are at a critical juncture in the history of the Middle East and
North Africa. The continuing and oftentimes violent debate over
Iraq’s national and religious identity has revived the fortunes of
diehard Arab nationalists, who are now clamoring for a return to the
old formula where Iraq was identified as a purely Arab country.

The irony of this is the obvious unsuitability of any ethnic-based
ideology for the multiethnic societies of the Middle East and North
Africa. If Islam under the Ottoman Empire proved unviable as a
political bond because not all the subjects were Muslim, and not all
Muslims were religious, how can Arab nationalism be any good for the
non-Arab citizens of the region, or even for Arabs who do not
identify strongly with their ethnicity?

Fully 20 percent of Iraqis are not Arab, as is the case with a
similar percentage of Algerians, half the Sudanese population, and a
majority of Moroccans. Syria and Egypt also are home to significant
minorities – Kurds and Copts respectively. Yet all these peoples are
officially relegated to second-class status in their societies. The
solution to such systemic discrimination is abandoning the idea that
the state must be Arab or Islamic or anything else. After all,
coloring the state with an ethnic or religious hue serves to create
one or more social underclasses.

Though the problem is to a large extent the marginalization of
non-Arabs and non-Muslims in a predominantly Arab and Muslim region,
this is not the whole story. Even minorities that are both Arab and
Muslim, for example Shiites in Saudi Arabia and in other Gulf
countries, have been oppressed for decades in countries that derive
their legitimacy from Sunni Islam. Similarly, certain Arab
nationalist regimes have oppressed not only non-Arabs, but fellow
Arabs of a different sectarian persuasion. The Shiite Arab majority
in Iraq was disenfranchised under the former, Sunni-led Baath regime,
despite the latter’s Arab nationalist orientation. In Syria, which is
run by a Baath regime under Alawite authority, participation by the
Sunni Arab majority remains controlled.

Non-Arab countries like Israel, Turkey and Iran, where the state
often identifies itself with a specific ethnic or religious group,
are no better. Israel discriminates not only against the Palestinians
of the Occupied Territories, but even against its own Arab citizens,
who make up 20 percent of the Israeli population.

Modern Turkey emerged following the widespread massacre of the
Armenian community, and has in the name of Turkish nationalism sought
to erase the cultural identity of Kurds, who constitute 25 percent of
the population. Alevis, a heterodox Muslim sect, make up 20 percent
of the Turkish population, and like Kurds have traditionally gone
unrecognized.

Islamic Iran not only assigns an inferior status to its Christian and
Jewish citizens, it also discriminates against non-Shiite Muslims.
There is not a single Sunni mosque in all of Tehran, despite the
presence of a large Sunni Muslim minority in the Iranian capital.

As for Arab nationalism, it began as an attempt to forge an
alternative socio-political bond to that represented by Islam, the
ideological underpinning of the Ottoman Empire. Many of its earliest
proponents were Christians, who as subjects of the empire had two
principal reasons for being disaffected: they were neither Muslim nor
Turkish. Though Arab nationalism itself ended up undergoing a process
of “Islamization,” this was but one of many self-defeating
characteristics ingrained in an ideology based entirely on ethnic
affiliation. For while Arabism may have theoretically succeeded in
placing Muslim and Christian Arabs on an equal footing, and can be
credited with making possible the rise of individual Christians to
positions of prominence in countries such as Syria or Iraq, it also
proved a disaster for non-Arabs.

Non-Arab Muslim minorities such as the Amazigh, or Berbers, Kurds,
and Turkmen found themselves officially out of favor. They faced the
prospect of becoming “Arabized” or of being denied political and even
civil rights. Groups that identified themselves as neither Arab nor
Muslim had it even worse: Southern Sudanese, Copts, Jews, and
Assyrians were plunged into a protracted nightmare that saw their
communities ground into anonymity, forcing many to emigrate
permanently. Even Maronites, whose retention of political power in
Lebanon immunized them from utter marginalization, watched with alarm
as Arab nationalist propaganda increasingly portrayed them as a
foreign and sinister element in the heart of the Arab nation.

So Arab nationalism, but also Syrian nationalism and communism (which
were no less destructive), proved to be just as tyrannical and
intolerant as the political Islam of the Ottoman Empire. Despite this
reality, many Arabs continue to cling to these supposedly secular
ideologies as the only buffer against resurgent Islam. Indeed, too
often Christian Arabs and secular Muslims have gravitated toward
nationalism and communism as an attempt to banish the terrifying
specter of an Islamic state.

After all, when democracy is allowed to flourish, they argue, it
results in successes for intolerant Islamic parties, whether in Iraq,
Palestine, or Egypt.

Are Arabs forever doomed, then, to fight one totalitarianism with
another? Will they always be obliged to choose between the lesser of
two evils? Not necessarily. Though it is unwise to ban political
parties with clear religious and ethnic biases, societies can ensure
that the state remains above the fray. They can make it
unconstitutional for any party, regardless of popularity and election
results, to associate the state with a particular religion or
ethnicity. Indeed, states should avoid identifying themselves with
Arab or Turkish or Jewish ethnicity, and Islam or any other religion.

Only then will Arabs and non-Arabs in Middle Eastern societies,
regardless of ethnic and religious affiliation, attain freedom and
equality. Only then will states become states for all their citizens.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.ww4report.com/node/1780

The Educational Fund of the ARS Sponsor-A-Child Program

Phone£ 617-926-5892
Armenian Relief Society, Inc.
FAX£ 617-926-4855
Central Office
e-mail£ [email protected]
80 Bigelow Avenue
Website£ www.ARS1910.OrgWatertown,
MA 02472
Contact: Hamesd Beujekian

The Educational Fund of the ARS Sponsor-A-Child Program

Nearly two decades ago, in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake
of 1988 and the ensuing liberation war of Artsakh, numerous severely
damaged communities of our Homeland were filled with thousands of
orphaned children. In order to relieve — at least partially — the
suffering of these parentless youngsters, in 1992« the ARS started the
Sponsor-A-Child program which — with the generosity of concerned
sponsors and devoted members of ARS entities — after almost
one-and-a-half decades of uninterrupted service, continues to send
annual payments to 3,500 or-phans.

Today, there are less than 300 orphans on our lists in need of sponsors.
Over the past 14 years, around 7,000 orphans have received the
uninterrupted assistance of this program. At this time, in view of the
fact, that the majority of those orphans has already reached an age when
one must think of making a living at a suitable career in a chosen
profession — or trade — as productive members of the community, the
ARS 68th International Convention passed a resolution to create an
Educational Fund for orphans of Armenia and Artsakh who have reached the
age of 18. This fund will become viable through the generosity of
sponsors who are willing to continue their annual contributions of $130,
as well as additional tax exempt donations, promoting the higher
education of these parentless young men and women.

Assured of the assistance of our communities, we invite our fellow
Armenians to remember the ARS Orphans Educational Fund when they make
tax-exempt donations in lieu of flowers, or other occasions. Donations
to this Fund can be done through local ARS entities.

The ARS Central Executive Board appeals to all — members, supporters
and friends — of the Sponsor-A-Child program, to give to its
Educational Fund their moral and financial support, in order to bring a
program, conceived and born in the blood and tears of tragic
circumstances, to an auspiciously beneficial completion.

24 March, 2006

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ALMA: Prof. John Malmstad’s Presentation on Martiros Saryan 3/26

Armenian Library & Museum of America
March 22, 2006
PRESS RELEASE
Contact Person: Mariam Stepanyan
Tel: 617.926.2562

Martiros Saryan:
‘European in Asia, Asian in Europe’
Presentation by Professor John Malmstad
4 PM Sunday, March 26, 2006

“Painter of happiness”, “Maestro of colors”, “Great Master of Armenian
art”… Regardless of how one refers to him, Martiros Saryan
(1880-1972) was a true artist. He laid the foundation and established
standard for Armenian national art of the 20th century. The Armenian
Library and Museum of America (ALMA) is paying tribute to the great
Master of Art by hosting a presentation on March 26. Professor John
Malmstad, Samuel Hazzard Cross Professor of Slavic Languages and
Literatures at Harvard University, will deliver a slide presentation
and talk about famed Armenian artist Martiros Saryan and his impact on
the evolution of European and Armenian art. Dr. Malmstad was the 1997
recipient of the Lomonosov Prize, for the book “Mikhail Kuzmin:
Iskusstvo, zhizn’, epokha”, which he had co-authored with Nikolay
Bogomolov, as “best piece of literary criticism or history in Russian
in 1996.”

When exposed to Saryan’s art, one is not simply looking at marvelous
paintings. Rather, one comes in touch with Saryan’s world, with warmth
and light of nature, with diversity of colors, thoroughly felt and
clarified by the painter. Saryan never longed for the doubtful glories
of easy successes, and never mistook painting with taking
photographs. He does not copy nature: he creates it. Saryan himself
thought that “true art was not simply illustration but a great
discovery of the world”. Influenced by Russian, Western European and
Armenian artistic cultures, Saryan was able to fuse the rich variety
of impressions and and traditions into a profoundly individual style
that invariably bore the stamp of his vivid, powerful and
intrinsically positive personality. Known for his saturated colors
(the signature yellow-brown hues and the deep blues), a unique harmony
of shapes and colors, Saryan was a master of composition. French poet
Louis Aragon thought that Saryan’s colors were ! so beautiful that
future generations would assign him a supreme place even higher than
France’s Cezanne and Matisse, because Saryan was the painter of
happiness.

The talk will be held at ALMA’s contemporary art gallery, which
currently showcases the artwork of Ghazaros Saryan, the great grandson
of Martiros Saryan. Ghazaros Saryan is exhibiting a new collection of
oil and water color paintings which provide a link to the past and a
glimpse of the future for Armenian contemporary art.

The presentation will take place at 4 pm on Sunday, March 26 at the
Armenian Library & Museum of America (Watertown Square, 65 Main
Street, Watertown, MA). It is open to public. For more information,
please contact ALMA at 617.926.2562 ext. 3 or email [email protected].

Armenian Library and Museum of America, Inc.
65 Main Street
Watertown MA 02472

Tel: 617 926 2562
Fax: 617 926 0175

Armenian Library and Museum of America, Inc.
65 Main Street
Watertown MA 02472

Tel: 617 926 2562
Fax: 617 926 0175

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.almainc.org
www.almainc.org
www.almainc.org

Armenian prisoner of war repatriated under ICRC auspices

Reuters AlertNet, UK
March 24 2006

ICRC (press release), Switzerland
International Committee of the Red Cross

Armenian prisoner of war repatriated under ICRC auspices

Geneva (ICRC) – On 24 March an Armenian prisoner of war detained in
Azerbaijan was repatriated under the auspices of the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

The operation took place on the road between the Azerbaijani town of
Gazakh and the Armenian town of Ijevan.

The ICRC, participating as a neutral intermediary and in accordance
with its mandate, facilitated the repatriation of the released
prisoner at the request of the Azerbaijani and the Armenian
authorities.

ICRC delegates visited the prisoner of war before the operation to
ensure he was returning home of his own free will.

Since the start of its activities in connection with the Nagorny
Karabakh conflict in 1992, the ICRC has helped repatriate or transfer
656 people, and the organization will support any similar operation
in the future should the need arise.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ICRC: Tuberculosis in prisons: a forgotten killer

ICRC (press release), Switzerland
International Committee of the Red Cross
March 24 2006

Tuberculosis in prisons: a forgotten killer

Prisoners, especially in poor countries, are particularly vulnerable
to infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and TB. In the following
interview, Dr Eric Burnier, who runs the ICRC’s communicable-disease
control programmes, stresses the need to give prisoners access to the
same medical care as the general population.

©ICRC
Eric Burnier, the ICRC doctor responsible communicable-disease
control programmes
Worldwide tuberculosis kills close to 5,000 people every day.
2 billion people carry tuberculosis bacillus
425,000 new cases of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis develop every
year

How serious is the problem of TB in prisons?

Twenty years ago it was thought that medical advances would make it
possible to eradicate TB, but the disease has persisted and remains a
very serious problem throughout the world, especially in the prisons
of many countries – the main reasons being overcrowding and the
highly contagious nature of TB. The prevalence of TB in prisons is
much higher than among the general population – in some countries as
much as 100% higher – and in many of these countries TB is one of the
main causes of death in prison.

Of particular concern is the fact that TB is becoming increasingly
resistant to classical drugs, mainly because of inconsistent
treatment or the use of poor-quality drugs.

What is the connection between TB and HIV/AIDS?

The two diseases are very closely linked, and the development of the
HIV/AIDS pandemic is one of the reasons for the upsurge in TB,
especially in Africa. When a person is infected with the HIV/AIDS
virus, his immunity gradually decreases, which makes it easier for
him to become infected with TB or for a dormant infection to become
active again. As with TB, the percentage of HIV/AIDS patients is
particularly high in prison, especially in countries where the
disease is associated with the use of intravenous drugs, as is the
case in the countries of the former USSR.

How did the ICRC become involved in combating TB in the prisons of
the southern Caucasus?

The ICRC is not a medical organization per se and its mission is not
to fight pandemics like HIV/AIDS or TB. Nonetheless, when 10 years
ago, following the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, ICRC delegates
discovered prisoners of war who were suffering and dying from TB in
Azerbaijan, they couldn’t simply denounce the situation and leave it
at that. The disease was spreading and nothing was being done to
contain it. Since the government didn’t have the means to deal with
the problem by itself, the ICRC launched a programme to fight,
prevent and treat TB in the country’s prisons. The programme was
designed together with the ministry of justice and its medical staff.
Over the following years similar programmes were set up in Georgia
and Armenia.

Was it difficult to launch these programmes?

It wasn’t easy, partly because the countries involved were still
heavily reliant on detection and treatment techniques inherited from
the Soviet era, which were giving increasingly poor results. To make
the fight against TB more effective, we had to convince them to adopt
the approach recommended by WHO: DOTS (directly observed treatment,
short course).

Another difficulty stemmed from the fact that in the southern
Caucasus as elsewhere in the world, health problems in prisons do not
fall within the remit of health ministries. In the case of pandemic
diseases like TB, it is essential that a country’s ministries of
justice and health work together. The ICRC has long sought to promote
discussions and negotiations between these two ministries, reminding
them that prisoners are citizens and that as such they must have
access to the same medical care as other members of society.

What role has the ICRC played in designing TB programmes?

The ICRC works closely together with WHO and applies the DOTS
strategy recommended by this organization. As part of this strategy,
TB cases are detected and recorded according to strictly defined
rules, drug stocks are regularly replenished to cope with demand and
drugs are taken under close supervision during the entire course of
treatment. Finally, cases are systematically recorded so that the
situation can be constantly evaluated.

In the three countries of the southern Caucasus, the first thing the
ICRC did was to persuade the authorities to adopt this strategy.
Since they would have been unable to address the problem in all its
complexity or meet the costs involved, the ICRC launched a programme
aimed largely at substituting for them. The programme included
training activities, the provision of drugs and laboratory equipment,
detection services, treatment and follow-up care for prisoners with
TB and the rehabilitation of prison medical facilities.

What were the results?

How DOTS has worked
– In Azerbaijan:
around 7,000 prisoners with tuberculosis have been treated
the tuberculosis mortality rate has fallen from 14% in 1995 to 3% in
2004
– in Georgia
more than 3,000 prisoners with tuberculosis have been treated
the percentage of detainees suffering from tubercolisis has fallen
from 6.5% in 1998 to 0.6% in 2005
How DOTS has worked
– In Azerbaijan:
around 7,000 prisoners with tuberculosis have been treated
the tuberculosis mortality rate has fallen from 14% in 1995 to 3% in
2004
– in Georgia
more than 3,000 prisoners with tuberculosis have been treated
the percentage of detainees suffering from tubercolisis has fallen
from 6.5% in 1998 to 0.6% in 2005

Probably the most remarkable result was to have fully convinced the
medical staff of the justice ministries of the three countries
involved that the DOTS strategy was the right one to use, and that it
was effective not only in developing countries but in other countries
as well. What finally brought them round was the good results
obtained by these programmes (see box).

Another very positive result is that prisoners are now screened for
TB upon their admission to prison. Each prisoner is examined and if
he presents TB symptoms and the TB bacillus is detected in his
sputum, he is given a treatment course and placed in isolation.

At present, the ICRC is gradually pulling out of these programmes and
handing them over to the authorities. The existence of the Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria makes it easier to do
this now than it would have been 10 years ago.

How do you deal with treatment resistance?

Treatment resistance is a very serious problem since it means that we
must resort to drugs that are very costly, have secondary effects
that make them more complicated to use and must be taken for a much
longer period of time. With the classical DOTS treatment, we can cure
any TB patient not resistant to DOTS drugs in six to eight months.
But when a patient is resistant, he must take second-line drugs for
up to two years, which is very costly and entails considerable
difficulties. In the countries of the southern Caucasus we worked
together with other organizations – in particular Germany’s overseas
cooperation service – to find adequate solutions to the problem of
treatment resistance.

How has the ICRC’s role changed in recent years?

The ICRC has been playing an increasingly supportive role in the
southern Caucasus, backing up the authorities in their efforts to
combat TB in prisons on their own. It is also helping the governments
involved to obtain the necessary funding.

In other parts of the world – Africa, in particular, where increasing
use has been made of the DOTS strategy over the past 20 years – the
ICRC adopted this supportive role from the very start, while at the
same time reminding the authorities that prisoners, as citizens, are
entitled to the same drugs, follow-up care and attention as the
general population. Whatever a prisoner may have done to deserve his
sentence, his punishment is to be in prison and not to become
infected with a potentially fatal disease like TB.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

From many views, a unique vision

Merrimack River Current, MA
March 24 2006
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

>From many views, a unique vision
By J. C. Lockwood/ [email protected]
Friday, March 24, 2006 – Updated: 03:02 PM EST

They say every picture tells a story and it probably does, but that
story – any story – can be told in any number of ways. This is the
guiding principal behind “Stories as One,” a intriguing multi-media
piece being presented next week at the Firehouse Center.

The production began with a series of paintings of the human form
by Gordon Przybyla. The stories at the heart of the paintings were
interpreted by jazz pianist Vardan Ovsepian, then grew further,
incorporating several other voices – cello, violins and bass – and
becoming the Vardan Ovsepian Chamber Ensemble. And then the dancers,
and then the Celtic harp and flute.

“It just got bigger and bigger,” says Ovsepian, the Armenian-born
pianist who has been teaching at The Musical Suite since graduating
from Berklee College of Music in 2000. “It’s still growing. And it’s
still not finished composition.”

The final piece of the puzzle in the project, is the audience.

The project, which will be staged one night only, attempts to
weave together the spontaneity and the instinct of jazz improvisation
with the traditions of European art music. The idea is that the
observer is immersed in an atmosphere of illumination, form, color
and movement synchronized to Ovsepian’s original score. The different
interpretations combine into one uber story, which is what the
audience takes away with it.

Przybyla, a graduate of the Pratt Institute, is a filmmaker,
photographer and a painter who deliberately keeps his biography
sketchy. Ovsepian has released three CDs on the Fresh Sound – New
Talent label. In September 2001, the label launched the artist with a
solo piano CD Abandoned Wheel, which included all original
compositions inspired by music of Philip Glass and Brad Mehldau. A
year later, Vardan was invited to bring his quartet for a recording
of his second CD, Sketch Book, with a special guest Mick Goodrick. In
2004, the Barcelona-based label Fresh Sound released Akunc featuring
his quartet and a cellist Agnieszka Dziubak.

This is not first time their work has been linked. The pianist used
one of Przybyla’s sketches in the liner notes for “Sketchbook,”
Ovsepian’s last release. And Ovsepian also composed a short
six-minute piece for the soundtrack to “Dance,” Przybyla film.

The idea for “Stories As One” came to Ovsepian when he was at one
of Przybyla’s exhibits last year. Initially, the idea was to have
some Przybyla works on stage during one of Ovsepian’s concerts, but
the painting visceral impact of the pianist. “They just blew me
away.” he says. ”

There will be nine paintings shown, projected onto 6-by 9-foot
screen. They will be the visual element to seven stories inspired by
the paintings. The music will not be set pieces. There will be a lot
of improvisational work involved. After a certain amount of time, the
images will begin to “melt away” on the screen, giving the pianist 45
seconds to finish his thoughts.

“I know the music will be wonderful,” says Przybyla. “The
question is the mechanics of it all.” Ovsepian agrees. “A lot of it
is more ‘what key is it in’ that what the meaning it.

“Stories As One” marks the premiere performance of the Vardan
Ovsepian Chamber Ensemble (VOCE) is a newly formed group comprised of
violins, cello, flute, double bass, percussion and piano.Musicians
include violinists Nancy Assad, Megumi Sasaki, and Michele Walther,
cellist, Fabrizio Mazzetta and bassist, Joshua Davis.The choreography
and dance performance will be by Julie Pike Edmond and Andrea M.
Blesso.

Interested?

“Stories as One,” a multimedia show featuring jazz, painting and
dance, takes place at 8 p.m. March 31 at the Firehouse Center in
Newburyport. Tickets are $15, $12 for students and seniors and $10
for member of the Society for the Development of the Arts and
Humanities. For more information, call 978-462-7336 or log onto

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.firehouse.org.

Outpost at the foot of Mount Ararat

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 24, 2006 Friday

OUTPOST AT THE FOOT OF MOUNT ARARAT;
Armenia is the only CIS country whose border is manned by Russian
border guards

by Oleg Falichev

AN INTERVIEW WITH LIEUTENANT GENERAL SERGEI BONDAREV, COMMANDER OF
THE DIRECTORATE OF BORDER GUARDS OF THE FEDERAL SECURITY SERVICE IN
ARMENIA; An interview with Lieutenant General Sergei Bondarev,
Commander of the Directorate of Border Guards of the Federal Security
Service in Armenia.

Russian border guards’ departure from the Tajik-Afghani border left
Armenia the only CIS country whose border is manned by servicemen
with the Russian tricolor badges on uniforms. The four detachments of
Russian border guards in Armenia have accumulated unique experience
in specialist selection, training and in service side by side with
the Armenians. What is Russia doing on somebody else’s border? How
does its presence there align with the state and national interests?
Here is an interview with Lieutenant General Sergei Bondarev,
Commander of the Directorate of Border Guards of the Federal Security
Service in Armenia.

Question: On what legal grounds do Russian servicemen man the
Armenian border? How are the Russian units here staffed? How do they
function?

Sergei Bondarev: Russia and Armenia signed a treaty on the status of
Russian Border Guards in Armenia and the terms of their functioning
here in 1992, soon after the collapse of the Soviet Union. As a
strategic partner of the Russian Federation, Armenia delegated the
powers of protection of its borders with Turkey and Iran to Russian
border guards.

Certain nuances were taken care of right away. For example, we agreed
that units of the Russian Border Guards would also include citizens
of Armenia. The units were staffed fifty-fifty until recently, but we
are reducing the Russian contingent now. These days, contract
servicemen from Russia account for only 40% of the complement.

The treaty also resolved the matters of maintenance and funding.
Russia and Armenia split sponsorship fifty-fifty.

Along with everything else, Armenia is a member of the CIS Collective
Security Treaty. We perform security maintenance functions here
within the framework of this document too. Yet, saying that only we
protect the border here would be wrong. Citizens of Armenia outnumber
Russians more than two to one already. As a matter of fact, even the
question of joint border protection under Russian aegis is on the
agenda now.

Should we depart, others will come in no time at all. That forces of
the West would dearly like to come here is clear. It and the fact
that a great deal of technical and other assistance is being showered
on the Armenian national army. American assistance is particularly
generous. The Americans do not spare money to buy special equipment
including all sorts of monitors and meters for crossing points on the
Georgian-Armenian and Armenian-Iranian border.

Question: What is the length of the border our and Armenian
servicemen man together? What is the situation there? What forces and
means do you deploy?

Sergei Bondarev: We protect 375 kilometers of the state border here,
including 330 kilometers of the border with Turkey and 45 with the
Islamic Republic of Iran. Russian and Armenian servicemen together
man the air traffic control center in Evartnots airport, Yerevan.

Generally speaking, the situation on the border is tranquil. Our
border guards detained 187 trespassers in the period since January 1,
2005. Ninety per cent of them were detained in Evartnots.

As for other parts of the border, we detain 10 to 12 trespassers
there every year. They are mostly bound for Armenia, men eager to
return to its territory without papers. There are lots of them
nowadays. Armenians by origin, they seek shelter in Armenia for some
reason or other.

As for the forces and means, we have and we deploy four detachments
of border guards here. Two detachments (the Gyumri and Armavir) are
the oldest in the Border Service. They already celebrated their 80th
anniversary. The Artashat and Megri detachments are 50 years old.
There are 59 outposts on the borders. Numerical strength of the group
is 4,500 men.

In the meantime, we are helping with establishment of the Armenian
Border Troops. The Armenian’s have two detachments of border guards
at this point, one on the Georgian border and the other on the
Iranian. Armenian youth study at military institutes of Border
Service in Moscow (up to a dozen enroll every year).

Question: Are there plans to use Russian servicemen on the
Armenian-Georgian border that attaches additional importance in the
light of Georgia’s hostility?

Sergei Bondarev: This question has never been brought up for
consideration. The Armenian leadership is doing what it can to
fortify this part of the border as it is. Fourteen outposts were
built there, and I can tell you that it cost the Armenian budget a
lot. Border protection there is tight. In short, I do not think that
the matter will be raised in the foreseeable future.

Question: You say our border guards are helping with establishment of
the Armenian Border Troops. Well, they are bound to become a
self-sufficient structure sooner or later. What then?

Sergei Bondarev: According to the treaty, parts of the state border
will be turned over for protection to the Armenian Border Troops as
they are developed. The situation on the Armenian state borders being
what it is, the matter may be safely shelved for the time being. I
dare say that our help and assistance will remain handy for a long
time yet. That is why we speed up the training of Armenians for
contract service on the border even though the institute of contract
service in the Armenian national army is but in the early stages of
development.

Armenia faces a lot of problems with its borders yet. Say, the
Azerbaijani-Armenian border requires a great deal by way of finances
and personnel. This particular border is more than 900 kilometers
long. Units are deployed there, units that have to be maintained,
staffed, and provided for. We are protecting the borders with Turkey
and Iran, and that’s a great deal of assistance to the Armenians.

Question: Are there attempts to gather sensitive information,
including data on how the Russian contingent is functioning, from
across the border?

Sergei Bondarev: As for intelligence services, we all know that they
did not go out of business with the end of the Cold War. We
established close contacts with Turkish and Iranian border guards for
the purpose of border regime observation. All the same, vicious
clashes between units of the Turkish national army and Kurd gunmen
that take place near the border worry us greatly.

Several attempts to smuggle drugs were thwarted at the crossing point
on the Armenian-Iranian border. Mules are probably testing this
particular channel nowadays. Should they decide we are weak, traffic
there will swell. We hope it will never happen. By the way, we are
expecting the head of our Drug Enforcement Committee here in late
March. All these matters will be discussed then.

Generally speaking, the Armenian-Iranian border is difficult to
protect with all its mountains, gorges, and chasms. There is only one
crossing point and one bridge operating along 45 kilometers of the
border. We always bear this in mind. In fact, borders are manned in
so tight a manner practically nowhere else, not even in Russia
itself. Outposts here are responsible for between 1.5 and 3
kilometers of border. All of them are outfitted with elaborate alarm
systems. If we leave, I cannot vouch for efficiency of all of that
without Russian servicemen. Neither can I vouch for where drugs will
end up. Probably in Russia.

Question: What can you say about smuggling as such. It is becoming a
problem everywhere.

Sergei Bondarev: As for smuggling, we encounter it on the
Armenian-Iranian border. Not a great deal of it, not on a scope that
would make us particularly worried. Cattle smuggling is a problem
here. We even ran a special operation in the responsibility zone of
the Gyumri Detachment last year and prevented the driving of cattle
across the border.

>From our folders:

Sergei Pavlovich Bondarev was born in the family of an officer of
Border Guards in the Chita region in 1958. He finished the
Dzerzhinsky Supreme Command School of Border Guards of the KGB
(1979), Frunze Academy (1989), Academy of the General Staff of the
Russian Armed Forces (2002) with distinction. Bondarev began his
career in the Border Guards as outpost second-in-command and
eventually became second-in-command of the Caucasus Regional
Directorate of the Federal Security Service and commander of the
territorial department in Makhachkala. Bondarev became chief-of-staff
of the Group of Border Guards in Armenia in August 2002, and its
commander on July 15, 2003. Bondarev was awarded the Order Of Merit.
He is married with two children.

Source: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kurier, No 11, March 22 – 28, 2006, p. 7

Translated by A. Ignatkin

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BTC Regular Sector Being Filled with Oil

PanARMENIAN.Net

BTC Regular Sector Being Filled with Oil

24.03.2006 22:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ BTC Co started the filling of the
regular sector of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline
with Azeri Light oil. Last week the filling of the
sector between PST-2 and PST-3 started. `The shipping
of the first tanker with Azeri oil from the port of
Ceyhan is scheduled for this spring,’ BP said,
reported Trend. To note, 5.5 million barrels of oil
has been pumped by March 1, 2006. 10 million barrels
are essential for the complete filling of the oil pipeline.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Normalizing Armenia-Turkey Relns Favorable for Yerevan-Baku Relns

PanARMENIAN.Net

Normalization of Armenia-Turkey Relations Favorable for Yerevan-Baku
Relations

25.03.2006 00:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `The normalization of the Armenia-Turkey relations
will have a positive impact not only upon the economy and internal
political and ideological situation in Armenia but also upon the
Armenian-Azerbaijani relations. The more Armenians benefit from the
cooperation and good neighbor relations with Turkey the less political
forces in Armenia will build the policy of hostility towards Turkey
and Azerbaijan,’ Azeri political scientist Zardusht Alizade stated in
an interview with PanARMENIAN.Net. In his words, in this case those,
who specialize in `the eternal Armenian-Turk animosity’ in Baku and
Turkey, will have to fall silent.

`Integrating Europe is a good example. But counter steps are
essential. Armenians are convinced that Turkey should acknowledge the
events of 1915 with all the consequences. Turkey for its part
considers that Armenia should stop being an instrument in the hands of
anti-Turkish forces, first of all the Russian special services and
right-wing conservative parties in Europe,’ Alizade said.

At the same time he stressed he is a cautious optimist and sets hope
upon `the reason and the sense of historical prospects of the Armenian
people.’ `Presently Armenia’s position doesn’t give ground for
optimism,’ he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Prisoner of War Repatriated under ICRcC Auspices

A1+

ARMENIAN PRISONER OF WAR REPATRIATED UNDER ICRC AUSPICES

04:20 pm 24 March, 2006

Geneva (ICRC) – On 24 March an Armenian prisoner of war detained in
Azerbaijan was repatriated under the auspices of the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The operation took place on the
road between the Azerbaijani town of Gazakh and the Armenian town of
Ijevan.

The ICRC, participating as a neutral intermediary and in accordance
with its mandate, facilitated the repatriation of the released
prisoner at the request of the Azerbaijani and the Armenian
authorities.

ICRC delegates visited the prisoner of war before the operation to
ensure he was returning home of his own free will.

Since the start of its activities in connection with the Nagorny
Karabakh conflict in 1992, the ICRC has helped repatriate or transfer
656 people, and the organization will support any similar operation in
the future should the need arise.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress