Tehran ‘lobbies’ for US talks

Tehran ‘lobbies’ for US talks
By Guy Dinmore in Washington

FT
April 7 2006 03:00
Iran has prepared a high-level delegation to hold talks with the US,
but the Bush administration, which insists negotiations be limited to
the subject of Iraq, is resisting a wide-ranging agenda, Iranian
politicians have told the Financial Times.
A senior Iranian official, Mohammad Nahavandian, has flown to
Washington to “lobby” over the issue, according to a top Iranian
adviser outside the US.
However, the Iranian mission to the United Nations said he was in
Washington on private business.
Iran’s willingness to engage the US on Iraq, regional security and its
nuclear programmes is believed to have the approval of the supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. It represents the most serious attempt
by the Islamic republic to reach out to the US since the 1979 Islamic
revolution.
“There are none and none are scheduled,” Stephen Hadley, national
security adviser, was quoted by a spokesman as saying about the
prospect of talks with the Iranian delegation in Baghdad next week.
A senior Iranian adviser said the Iranian delegation was headed by Ali
Hossein-Tash, the main deputy to Ali Larijani who is secretary of the
Supreme National Security Council and the chief official dealing with
the nuclear issue.
Three other negotiators, all attached to the council, include a deputy
intelligence minister who was previously based in Baghdad, a former
Revolutionary Guards member and Kurdish expert, and a political
specialist.
Mr Nahavandian, a deputy for economic affairs to Mr Larijani, is in
Washington, several Iranian sources told the FT, revealing the rare
presence of a senior Iranian in the US capital. White House and State
Department officials denied all knowledge of his presence.
The Bush administration is resisting pressure from its European allies
to engage Iran directly over its alleged nuclear weapons programme
rather than leave negotiations to the EU3 of France, Germany and the
UK. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the German foreign minister, raised this
with Mr Hadley this week, and Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, is
understood to have spoken about it with President George W. Bush.
Javad Zarif, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations, stressed
Iran’s willingness to talk in an opinion piece published by the New
York Times yesterday. He denied US claims that Iran had a covert
nuclear weapons programme and said Iran was ready for intrusive
international inspections.
“Pressure and threats do not resolve problems. Finding solutions
requires political will and a readiness to engage in serious
negotiations. Iran is ready.
We hope the rest of the world will join us,” he said.
One US insider suggested the Bush administration might agree to
broaden the agenda after an initial meeting restricted to Iraq. The US
offer of talks about Iraq was made several months ago by Zalmay
Khalilzad, US ambassador to Baghdad.
Meanwhile, the US rhetoric is sounding progressively tougher. Nicholas
Burns, under-secretary of state, yesterday accused Iran of being
“expansionist”, “a central banker of terrorism” and directing attacks
on US citizens. Last week, the UN Security Council issued a mildly
worded presidential statement calling on Iran to resume its suspension
of fuel cycle development.
Russia blocked tougher language. John Bolton, US ambassador to the UN,
said yesterday the next step was to pass a legally binding “chapter
seven” resolution requiring Iran to suspend its nuclear programme.
Additional reporting by Negar Roshanzamir in Tehran
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Political Will

POLITICAL WILL

Aravot.am
07 April 06
Passionate speeches of the authority about corruption, GRECO and
GOPAC, seminars and conferences will give results only in a case if
the authority and all official and non official structures want indeed
to realize that fight. It is spoken of «political
will». But just its demonstration seems to me from the sphere
of fantastic.
Let’s observe some characteristic cases. I’m one of the officials of
the ruling clique of the country and support the business of
destroying the House of Cinematography and Writers and building a
multistory building instead. I have supported such business for the
last 3-4 years and earned millions. Why should I display a `political
will’ and won’t earn next million and not support for destroying for
example Opera House or Matenadaran.
Or, for example, I’m a chief of `cadastre’ or `tax service’ and drive
a car which I can’t buy by my 300 year celery. What can me make
display a ` political will’ and not to change my `Mercedes’ with
`Hummer’.
Or, I’m a principal of a school and make the teacher gather money from
the parents of pupils. Where should I find a `will’ inside me not to
do it?
Especially when I’m very important person for the ruling clique
because as the chairman of regional commission, I take part actively
in the falsification of elections.
We approached to a problem in solving which we need in a political
will. It is said that the authorities should display political will
for holding fair elections. But it is as unreal as the case of
corruption is. If I’m an oligarch and fill a post, I’m a wealthy
person and have businesses, why should I refuse of all these for the
reason that some people fill some papers into ballot boxes. I will do
everything for being reelected and for the candidate of the authority
become the president.
In short if a person have something it is excluded that he will
display a will for refusing of it. If certainly he isn’t mad and isn’t
under influence of Tolstoy’s heroes. But those persons are very few in
all over the world.
Aram Abrahamian
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Lavrov: OSCE MG Working at Proposals on Karabakh Issue

PanARMENIAN.Net
Lavrov: OSCE MG Working at Proposals on Karabakh Issue

07.04.2006 23:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Russian and Armenian Foreign
Minister exchanged views on the settlement process of
various conflicts available near the Armenian and
Russian borders. They discussed the situation in the
Near East and Iran’s nuclear program, Russian FM
Sergey Lavrov stated at a joint press conference with
Vartan Oskanian.
In his words, everything within the limits of the
possible should be done to secure the diplomatic
settlement of the problems available. `This refers to
the situation in the Balkans and the negotiation
process on Kosovo. We certainly discussed the Nagorno
Karabakh settlement as well. Russia is one of the
three Co-chairs assisting the parties to reach
mutually admissible agreements. There are some
sketches submitted by the mediators and they are being
considered by the parties at present,’ the RF FM
remarked, reported the RF MFA press service.
Sergey Lavrov also noted that the OSCE MG is
constantly working at the proposals that can be then
submitted to the parties’ consideration. `Over some
understandable reasons we not reveal the details,
since they refer to the parties to conflict only. We
believe that the mediating mission will help the sides
to reach agreement. This is the key to the
settlement,’ the Russian Minister said.
Send instant messages to your online friends
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Amnesty International: CIA Secret Planes Landed in Azerbaijan

PanARMENIAN.Net
Amnesty International: CIA Secret Planes Landed in
Azerbaijan
08.04.2006 01:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Amnesty International, a worldwide
movement of people who campaign for internationally
recognized human rights, has issued a new report on
the CIA secret prisons in foreign states. The 20-page
report contains the stories of seven prisoners, who
were subjected to torture in the secret jails. They
are Arabs and a German citizen of Syrian origin.
The report maintains the data on the flights of the
planes of the third states conveying the prisoners to
the secret jails for most part situated on the
territories of the NATO member states. Among the
countries where the planes landed Russia, Uzbekistan,
Spain, Switzerland, Cyprus, Libya and Azerbaijan are mentioned.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Youth Isn’t Able to Carry Out Decisive Political Actions

AZG Armenian Daily #064, 08/04/2006

Poll
ARMENIAN YOUTH ISN’T ABLE TO CARRY OUT DECISIVE POLITICAL ACTIONS
25% of Youth Avoids Politics At All
This conclusion was made after the recent public poll carried out by
the Sociometer independent sociology center. The public poll was
carried out among 1000 students of different universities at the age
of 18-30 and 100 non-student young people. Democracy and Election
Assistance International Institution ordered the public poll. The
institute has members in 56 countries. The public poll showed the
level of the young people’s political awareness and their political
activeness in the social-economic reforms that currently take place in
the country. The results of the poll responded the question whether
the Armenian young people resemble those in Ukraine and Georgia that
took main part in the color revolutions in these countries. “This was
no direct question but the results of the public poll responded this
question, as well,” Aharon Adibekian, head of the center stated.
According to the public poll, 25% of the Armenian youth avoids
politics at all. They are not interested either in the political
events or in the world, the moral rules of the adults. 75% of them
displays some interest in the political events, follow the news over
TV twice or trice a week or reads newspapers sometimes.
The social activeness level of the youth is considerably higher. 50%
of them is ready to participate in the activities of various
volunteer, students or other organizations. About 10% of the youth are
already members of such organizations, including public, ecological,
legal, or social unions. Only 5% of the questioned stated that they
participate in the political activities. Some are included in the
parties or electoral committees as observers or committee members.
In response to the question what is beyond passiveness of our youth,
Adibekian said that it is conditioned by traditional lifestyle, as
well as by the respect to the elder. The generation that will be
psychologically, economically or socially independent from its parents
isn’t matured yet. Only being independent the young people will be
able to take political decisions and be active in politics.
The questioned youth were extremely discontent with the corruption in
the universities, with social conditions and hardship. But all these
negative factors do not create tension to make them rebel and take
decisive steps to change the life. This is testified by the fact that
the level of young people’s participation in the rallies is too low.
At the same time, at present the large Armenian parties create their
youth branches.
Adibekian said that this factor is an artificial contribution to the
political activation of the youth.
By Karine Danielian
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Government Has no Specified Position in Issue of Selling Armentel

AZG Armenian Daily #064, 08/04/2006

Home
GOVERNMENT HAS NO SPECIFIED POSITION IN ISSUE OF SELLING ARMENTEL
The Greek OTE Company informed on its website about the decision to
sell 90% of ArmenTel shares. Hasmik Chutilian, press secretary of
ArmenTel also confirmed this information. She added that OTE informed
RA Government about its decision, according to the License #60 the
company was given.
Neither RA Transport and Communication Ministry nor RA Government’s
Press Service responded our question about the position of RA
government on this decision of OTE. We can suppose that the government
hasn’t discussed this issue yet, and has no position.
While the government is specifying its position, rumors already
circulate about the probable buyers of ArmenTel. Thus, the Russian
Rostelecom, Vimpelcom, MTS and Megaphone may buy the company. But this
is a mere supposition. First of all, OTE has only announced about its
decision to sell ArmenTel and the process of selling such a large
company lasts long because of documentation issues. It’s noteworthy
that OTE bought ArmenTel for $142 million, and at present the company
costs much more, as large-scale investments have been done here. It’s
not excluded that RA Government will have its own “candidate” for
carrying out purchase of ArmenTel.
By Ara Martirosian
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Antelias: HEHOM organizes general knowledge contest between schools

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:
PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon
Armenian version:
HEHO M ORGANIZES A GENERAL KNOWLEDGE CONTEST BETWEEN THE STUDENTS OF
ARMENIAN SCHOOLS
The Armenian Church University Students’ Association (HEHOM) organized a
general “knowledge contest” between the students of Armenian schools, with
the aim of bringing them together in a social environment.
The contest was held in the Catholicosate of Cilicia on April 1. Students
from Yeghishe Manoukian College, Levon and Sophia Hagopian College,
Haratch-Gulbengian College, Melankton and Haig Arslanian Djemaran, the
Armenian Catholic Hripsimiants School, the Armenian Catholic Mesrobian
School, the Armenian Evangelical School (Beirut), and the Armenian
Shamelian-Tatigian Evangelical School participated in the contest.
Although outside the classroom, the students were able to enrich their
knowledge about religion, geography, literature, science, sports, history
and film in a friendly environment.
The group representing Melankton and Haig Arslanian Djemaran won the first
prize. The second and third prizes were won by the Armenian Catholic
Hripsimiants School and Yeghishe Manoukian College respectively.
##
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the youth
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

NKR Foreign Minister Lays Emphasis on Full Engagement of Karabakh

NKR FOREIGN MINISTER LAYS EMPHASIS ON FULL ENGAGEMENT OF KARABAKH
Lragir.am
08 April 06
On April 7 Georgy Petrosyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs of NKR, met
with the newly-appointed EU Special Representative for the South
Caucasus Peter Semneby.
Congratulating Peter Semneby on his appointment, Georgy Petrosyan
emphasized the role of the European Union in promoting democracy and
maintaining stability in the region.
Peter Semneby informed that the mandate of the EU Special
Representative had been expanded and now includes prevention and
settlement of conflicts.
On the request of the EU Special Representative the foreign minister
of NKR briefed Peter Semneby on democratization in NKR, as well as the
stance of official Stepanakert on the settlement of the conflict,
underlining the necessity of full engagement of Nagorno Karabakh in
the talks.
Expressing concern about recently frequent cases of violation of the
ceasefire at the front line between the armed forces of Nagorno
Karabakh Republic and Azerbaijan, Georgy Petrosyan extended the text
of the statement of the NKR Foreign Ministry, calling Azerbaijan and
Armenia for confirming their willingness to achieve a peace settlement
of the Karabakh conflict.
NKR Special Representation to RA
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Services of Ambulatory-Polyclinic System Will Always Be Free

THE SERVICES OF AMBULATORY-POLYCLINIC SYSTEM WILL ALWAYS BE FREE
Yerevan, April 7, ArmInfo. The services of the ambulatory-polyclinic
system of Armenia will always be free for all categories of citizens,
said Minister for Healthcare Norayr Davidian.
Over the last 15 years the healthcare services were chargeable for
everybody except the indigent. Since the beginning of 2006 these
services have become free. In order to provide free ambulatory
treatment at the polyclinics additional AMD 7 billion (about $14
million) was granted by Government. Minister Norayr Davidian also
informed that last year the polyclinics of Armenia were visited 6,635
million times by the citizens.
The state budget 2006 assigns AMD 39,1 billion to healthcare against
32,9 in 2005. The polyclinics receive the major part – AMD 14,3 billon
of all the financing, 24,7% more than last year.

Silent for too long, the witnesses to evil

Silent for too long, the witnesses to evil

The Independent – United Kingdom; Apr 08, 2006
ROBERT FISK
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN
A quote from the cops. I was in Oslo when I received the SMS on my
Lebanese mobile phone from the country’s Internal Security Forces,
Lebanon’s paramilitary ISF. “Dear citizen,” it began – and I have to
admit, I liked the assumption of Lebanese citizenship. “Starting March
15th, the Internal Security Forces will be dealing strictly with
traffic contraventions. Be co-operative for your safety. The ISF.”
Now I’m sure the “for your safety” bit was just a figure of speech’ I
would be safer in my car if I wore my seatbelt, wouldn’t I? Was that
why my driver Abed met me at Beirut airport strapped into his seatbelt
for the first time? Or was there a threat? That in order to be “safe”
I should be “‘co-operative”?
All the same, I like cops. They know what we journalists want to know
(along, I suppose, with criminals whose own mentality, I suspect, has
a lot in common with policemen and reporters). But in Lebanon these
past few days, we’ve been learning quite a lot about what the cops
know – or knew – about the past: like who killed the Lebanese Druze
leader Kemal Jumblatt.
Jumblatt Senior – as opposed to his mercifully still living son Walid
who is under constant threat of Syrian assassination – was murdered on
16 March 1977, shot dead in his car as he drove near his home in the
Chouf mountains. We all suspected at the time that the Syrians were
involved’ Kemal had turned down an invitation to visit the late
President Hafez el-Assad of Syria in Damascus to discuss the Lebanese
civil war – the equivalent at that time, of refusing Henry VIII a
divorce.
But now along comes my old friend General Issam Abu Zaki, former head
of the Lebanese judicial police, to spill the beans. For General Abu
Zaki – a man so generous he once gave away his much-loved worry beads
because a female friend of mine was rash enough to admire them – turns
out to have been the cop in charge of the Jumblatt murder case.
In 1977, an American car containing drugs had been discovered at
Beirut port, the general has revealed in the Beirut daily AnNahar
newspaper. But outside the gates of the port, the vehicle was stopped
at a Syrian military checkpoint. The Lebanese judicial police later
confirmed that a Syrian intelligence officer based in the Beirut
suburb of Sin el-Fil – a major in rank – stated in writing that he was
in possession of the car.
“A short time later,” Abu Zaki writes, “the car made an appearance in
the Chouf, lying in wait for Kemal Jumblatt as he headed … to
attend a party political meeting. As Jumblatt’s car passed the
American car, the latter pulled out and tailed the Druze leader’s
vehicle. The pursuing car had four people in it, two in civilian
clothes, the other two in military uniforms. Upon leaving the town of
Baaqleen, the suspect American vehicle intercepted Jumblatt’s car.
“Kemal Jumblatt’s bodyguards were bundled into the American vehicle,
and two of the pursuers replaced them… the two cars had barely
travelled 900 metres when something happened that evidently took the
abductors by surprise, for they braked suddenly, as evidenced by the
tyre skid marks on the road left by Jumblatt’ s car. The sudden stop
led to the American car crashing into the back of Jumblatt’ s car. At
this moment the heinous crime took place.”
Jumblatt was murdered with a shot in the head – his brains splashed
over the morning news-paperhehadbeen reading when he was ambushed –
and the killers made their escape. From the knives found in Jumblatt’s
car, Abu Zaki and his cops suspected the attackers intended to take
the Druze leader to a neighbouring Christian village where they would
have cut his throat and thus provoked further atrocities in Lebanon’s
already two-year-old civil war. But Jumblatt struggled with the
Syrians who were forced to shoot him on the spot.
Or so Abu Zaki surmises. Jumblatt’s son Walid told me this week he
believes this story to be true – just as did a Beirut flower seller
called Abu Talib who reported to Abu Zaki back in 1977 that the Syrian
killers had later stopped at a Hamra Street hotel in the city. So too,
apparently, did the Lebanese judicial investigative judge, Hassan
Qawass, who survived an abduction attempt and a missile attack on his
Beirut home when he refused to drop the case.
Alas, a “highly placed legal authority” in Lebanon was later suborned
to close the Jumblatt file.
But now we know a little more about that 1977 murder and so Abu Zaki
wonders whether we will also know the truth about the assassination
last year of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri whose death
is being investigated, in ever more lacklustre a fashion, it seems, by
the UN. Yet it raises other, bigger questions.
Why, for example, don’t cops and diplomats and statesmen come out with
the facts at the time? Why do they wait till their retirement to blurt
out the truth? Why did we only know the truth from the top about
Vietnam after Robert McNamara had become a Grand Old Man of Letters?
Why did we have to wait for decades to know that General Sir Douglas
Haig lied in 1916? Why do we have to wait until 2006 to learn that we
tortured Germans in 1946?
Well, just look at what has happened to John Evans, the US ambassador
to Armenia who – while in office – told the truth about the Armenian
holocaust, the genocide by the Ottoman Turks which killed one and a
half million Armenian Christians in 1915. Before he was elected
president, George W Bush promised the Armenians of America that he
would acknowledge this genocide. Once in office, however, he caved in,
gutlessly calling it a “tragedy” so that he wouldn’t get his fingers
burned by that wonderful democratic Nato ally – and would-be EU member
– called Turkey.
But there was Ambassador Evans on 19 February this year telling
Armenians in the Bay area of San Francisco that “as someone who has
studied it, there’s no doubt in my mind what happened. I think it is
unbecoming of us, as Americans, to play word games here. I believe in
calling things by their name. I will today call it the Armenian
genocide”.
The luckless but over-truthful ambassador has since been constrained
by the State Department to remark that “although I told my audience
that United States policy on the Armenian tragedy (sic) has not
changed, I used the term ‘genocide’, speaking in what I characterised
as my personal capacity”.
Phew! But I think I get it. If you want to spill the beans while in
office, you have to tell the truth only in “a personal capacity”. The
mass rape and slaughter of tens of thousands of Armenian girls in 1915
can only be acknowledged in a “personal capacity”. The mass murder of
Turkish Armenia’s manhood in 1915 can only be conceded in a “personal
capacity”. And even then you are liable to get fired.
Well, I have a little nudge of the arm to make here. In October, I
shall be lecturing in Turkey on the Armenian genocide. I shall be
doing so as Middle East correspondent of The Independent as well as
author of a book whose Turkish edition will carry a whole chapter on
the Armenian holocaust. I don’t have to talk in a “personal capacity”
although I might like to have General Abu Zaki at my side. For what
the Lebanese ISF would no doubt call my “safety”.
If you want to spill the beans while in office, you have to do it in
‘a personal capacity’
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress