Turkey Delivers Ultimatum To Iraqi Government

TURKEY DELIVERS ULTIMATUM TO IRAQI GOVERNMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.04.2007 17:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ After Kurdish region President Masud Barzani’s
statements against Turkey’s territorial integrity and latest terror
actions committed by members of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) when
10 Turkish soldiers died official Ankara protested Iraq government
with diplomatic note, Turkish media appreciated this diplomatic note
as ultimatum.

It said, "If you do not take urgent step against PKK we will act in
accordance with the international law".

The interpretation of this diplomatic expression means if Iraqi
government does not prevent the activities of PKK terrorists, Turkey
will occupy the north of Iraq.

Foreign Minister Abdulla Gul stated the same position in the talks
with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. He condemned Masud
Barzani of provocation and called US to calm down this man. "If you
do not calm him down we will do it".

Following Abdullah Gul’s request U.S. department’s official spokesman
Sean McCormack made a statement where he said Kurdish leader’s
opinions will have a bad impact on Turkey- Iraq relations and joint
fight against PKK. The president of Iraq Jalal Talabani phoned Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He said he regretted on Masud
Barzani’s statement and talked on this issue with him. Jalal Talabani
promised his utmost for the fight against terror organizations.

"We are ready to fight jointly against terror organization". PKK’s
increased activity in the south-east of Turkey and Masud Barzani’s
territorial claims will be discussed in the Turkey National Security
Council’s session.

Iraqi Kurds leader, the chief of Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party
Masud Barzani said that "If Turkey will interfere with Kirkuk affairs,
he will do the same against Diyarbakir," he stressed, APA reports.

Port Kavkaz – Poti Ferry Link To Be Put Into Operation On April 10

PORT KAVKAZ – POTI FERRY LINK TO BE PUT INTO OPERATION ON APRIL 10

Noyan Tapan
Apr 10 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 10, NOYAN TAPAN. The Port Kavkaz – Poti ferry link
will be put into operation on April 10. The Armenian delegation went
to Georgia on this occasion. NT correspondent was informed from the
press service of the RA Ministry of Transport and Communication that
on the same day the ferry will make its maiden voyage from "Kavkaz"
port to Poti.

TEHRAN: New Armenia-Iran railway to cost $1b

Mehr News Agency, Iran
April 7 2007

New Armenia-Iran railway to cost $1b

TEHRAN, April 7 (MNA) — The building of the new railway between
Armenia and Iran will cost $1 billion, Armenia’s acting Transport and
Communication Minister Andranik Manukian said, the Persian service of
ISNA news agency reported here on Saturday.

There is a strong desire to carry out the project, said the Armenian
official, adding, `We are trying to find an investor to complete the
project.’

At present, there exists a railroad between Iran and the former
Soviet republic but since it passes through the Nakhichevan – a
controversial area between Armenia and Azerbaijan Republic – it is
not currently in use, the minister added.

Economic experts believe that given the possible resolution of the
dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan Republic over the
Nagorno-Karabakh region, the building of the new railway would be
uneconomical.

Turkey’s Con Game: US Officials On The Take, FBI Provides Cover

TURKEY’S CON GAME: US OFFICIALS ON THE TAKE, FBI PROVIDES COVER
By John Stanton – Online Journal Contributing Writer

Online Journal, FL
April 6 2007

"Turkey is not as politically stable or as secular domestically
as they would have you believe," said one long time observer of
US-Turkish relations in Washington, DC. "The Turks do not have a
large community across the United States like, say, the Armenians
and the Greeks who have been here a long time. Because of this you
see a very large Turkish presence inside Washington, DC."

Lacking a legitimate national grassroots organization, Turkey has
built a notable presence inside the corridors of power in Washington,
by spreading cash around and buying direct access to key US decision
makers in and out of the US government. It all seems legitimate
enough: campaign donations and junkets for members & staff of the
US Congress (FMOCs); consulting fees to former FMOCs, US military
generals, US State Department employees; and promises of billions
of dollars in contracts to US corporate representatives operating
in Washington. With so much money chasing politicians, consultants
and contractors of all stripes, there’s bound to be some corrupt and
even criminal activity. No seasoned observer of politics anywhere is
completely surprised at the occasional and well-timed conviction of
a white collar criminal.

But Sibel Edmonds’ seems to have stumbled into the really big white
collar crime ring that ties an old George Bush I family friend,
Brent Scowcroft — and his American Turkish Council–in with former
US Ambassador to Turkey Marc Grossman; members of the Turkish Caucus
in the US Congress; Douglas Feith, (once had his security clearance
revoked and was rumored to be watched by the FBI) who once greased arms
sales to Turkey back in the 1990s, is a famed Zionist, formerly of the
Pentagon and now at Georgetown University in Washington, DC; the Bob
Livingston Group (Livingston a FMOC), who has gotten very wealthy via
Turkish business; and Joe Ralston the former USAF general whose bank
account has blossomed after joining Lockheed Martin and being put on
the Turkish payroll as a counter-Kurdish insurgency expert. Finally,
former Speaker of the US House Dennis Hastert seems a natural part of
the ring, whose claim to fame may become that he kept debate on the
Armenian Genocide Resolution off the House floor during his tenure
and was the subject of a Vanity Fair piece.

Many of us have written on Ms Edmonds’ case and after so many
years find it infuriating that the FBI continues to shut her up
behind a State Secret Privilege holding. Taking recent events at the
Department of Justice as guides, it is probably safe to say that Ms
Edmonds’ is being silenced because of some sort of State Embarrassment
Privilege. The Department of Justice, of which the FBI is a subsidiary,
is seeing its credibility quotient crushed under the weight of Attorney
General Albert Gonzales’ arrogance and the adolescent antics of his
staff. Meanwhile at the FBI, Director Mueller is under fire for the
antics of his staff and its abuse of USAPATRIOT Act provisions to
catch common criminals, not "terrorists."

A few thoughts come to mind here. First, the FBI apparently was
illegally monitoring subjects associated, somehow, with the Edmonds’
matter and, perhaps, saving a savory scandal for the right time. J
Edgar Hoover, former FBI director, was skilled at that sort of
subterfuge. If the illegal monitoring allegation is true, that’s
another damaging blow to the Justice Department and the US justice
system.

Second, Ms Edmonds must have stumbled upon the payola racket that
Turkey had been running and there were so many big US names involved
in so many high places that to air that laundry would damage US
credibility not so much abroad, as right here in the USA. Imagine on
one news day FMOCs, active members of the US Congress, US military
personnel, US State Department people, US Justice Department folks
all get nailed for being in on the Turkish gig or at least knowing
about it. And what could be worse than the FBI, DEA and CIA knowing
about it? Foreign intelligence agencies, of course.

Third, if it is true that Turkey is not as secular or as politically
stable as its proponents in Washington and Ankara say, then the whole
Turkey-as-US strategic partner and would-be European Union partner
would be one of the better smoke and mirrors acts sold to the US
public, and the world, in recent memory.

The reality is that Turkey remains a distant and unknown entity for
most Americans, although if Ms Edmonds were allowed to speak freely
it may become a well-known country. It’s a product that is difficult
to sell to citizens here in the USA as a strategic necessity, as a
wonderful vacationland, or as a dynamic society full of business
opportunity. The harsher side to the story is that Turkey has
threatened to invade Northern Iraq/Kurdistan should it declare its
independence, or if an upcoming referendum on oil-rich Kirkuk goes the
Kurds’ way; the Turks brutally repress their Kurdish population; free
speech and tolerance of government critiques are in short supply; and,
in reality, the Turkish military holds the keys to power in Ankara.

Lastly, according to the observer of US-Turkish relations, "It seems
to me that the government in Ankara, Turkey, is always working on
propaganda, on slogans. Trying too hard. If you visit Turkey, you’ll
notice everywhere you go that there is a picture of Turkey’s founder
Attaturk. It reminds me sort of like Soviet times where you’d see a
picture of Lenin everywhere. The Turks spend too much time worrying
about petty resolutions like those recognizing the Armenian Genocide."

John Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in political
and national security matters. Reach him at [email protected].

man/publish/article_1936.shtml

http://onlinejournal.com/art

Turkey Sends Blunt Message To France

TURKEY SENDS BLUNT MESSAGE TO FRANCE
by Judy Dempsey – The New York Times Media Group

The International Herald Tribune
April 6, 2007 Friday

Ankara, angered by Armenian bill, halts pipeline talks

Turkey said Thursday that it was suspending talks with Gaz de France on
joining a major natural gas pipeline consortium, a political move aimed
at putting pressure on both Paris and Brussels that European Union
officials said could further delay one of the biggest energy projects.

Turkey, which is angry about a pending French bill that calls the
mass killing of Armenians during Ottoman rule a genocide, said that
it would await the outcome of presidential elections next month
in France before deciding if it would allow Gaz de France into the
five-nation consortium that is leading the project, the Anatolia news
agency reported, citing the Energy Ministry.

"We will decide according to policies to be followed after the
elections," a senior Turkish Energy Ministry official, who declined
to be identified, was quoted by Reuters as saying in Ankara.

Turkey’s blunt message to France was also seen as a reminder to
Brussels of the strategic importance of the country for the EU’s
energy ambitions at a time when talks on Turkey’s application for
membership to the bloc are going badly. Negotiators are about to
tackle the energy section of the discussions.

One European Commission official, speaking on condition of anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the talks, said Turkey "knows its value
as the major transit country for this project and is making the most
of it."

The official said that the suspension had more to do with politics
than the economics of the project, conceived in 2002 as the EU’s
first attempt at forging a common energy policy.

The consortium wants to build the ¤4.6 billion, or $6.2 billion,
Nabucco pipeline, which would bring natural gas from Iran and the
Caspian sea across Turkey to Western Europe, bypassing Russia. The
project is already a year behind schedule, with completion now planned
for 2012.

OMV, the Austrian energy company that heads the Nabucco consortium,
said Thursday that a feasibility study had been carried out, and
confirmed that it was seeking another partner to share the costs.

"Financing possibilities are currently being evaluated," said Andrea
Hof, a spokeswoman for OMV. The other consortium members include
MOL of Hungary, Transgaz of Romania, Bulgargaz of Bulgaria and Botas
of Turkey.

But she would not confirm that the consortium was holding talks with
Gaz de France, after talks with Total, also based in France, collapsed
this year. "There are ongoing talks with several possible partners,"
she said.

Reached by phone, a spokesman for Turkey’s Energy Ministry confirmed
that the consortium had been holding talks with Gaz de France. But
he declined to comment on any suspension, or if Gaz de France had
been notified.

"We do not want to comment on this because it is a political issue,"
the ministry spokesman said.

Turkey says that claims by Armenia that the Ottoman empire committed
genocide against 1.5 million Armenians during World War I are greatly
exaggerated.

Ankara protested loudly last year after the National Assembly of
France passed a bill that would make it a crime to deny that the
killings amounted to genocide. The bill still has to be approved by
the Senate before becoming law.

In Paris, a spokeswoman for Gaz de France would not comment on
Turkey’s decision, or even confirm that it was negotiating to become
part of the 3,300 kilometer, or 2,050 mile, Nabucco pipeline. "What
we can say is that we are interested in the project," Sabine Wacquez
said. By joining the Nabucco consortium, Gaz de France would be able
to further the diversification of its natural gas supplies.

Gaz de France this year agreed to a contract with Russia’s giant
state-owned energy company Gazprom. Gazprom will for the first time
use Gaz de France’s distribution network to sell Russian natural gas
directly to French consumers. In return, Gaz de France will receive
more Russian natural gas in the form of long-term contracts. France
already gets 16 percent of its total natural gas needs from Russia.

Natural gas accounts for 15 percent of all energy consumption; most
of the country’s energy needs are met by nuclear power.

Turkey, which is almost completely dependent on energy imports, hopes
Nabucco will give it the chance to become an energy hub in Europe. At
the same time, it wants to diversify its energy imports away from
Russia, on which it – like most of Europe – is very dependent.

Because of its location between Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia,
Turkey has become strategically important for the energy ambitions
of both the EU and Russia.

Russia has already built the Blue Stream natural gas pipeline that
reaches Turkey by running under the Black Sea. Gazprom now plans to
extend this pipeline up through Romania and Serbia into Hungary with
Hungarian support, even though Hungary is a member of the Nabucco
consortium.

Ferenc Gyurcsany, the prime minister of Hungary, and Vladimir Putin,
Russia’s president, agreed last June to extend the Blue Stream pipeline
to Hungary.

During an interview last month, Gyurcsany said Nabucco was "a dream.
An old dream. We cannot heat apartments with dreams." He also said
that an extended Blue Stream project was much better organized.

Turkey has made threats against France before. After the vote in the
National Assembly, Turkey’s armed forces said that they would freeze
bilateral ties with its NATO ally. But officials at NATO say that
there has been no sign of any change in French-Turkish relations.

–Boundary_(ID_Y7yxxmNl+IB7xbgt7DPfHQ) —

Famous Companies Present Bids For Construction Of New Turbine Of Yer

FAMOUS COMPANIES PRESENT BIDS FOR CONSTRUCTION OF NEW TURBINE OF YEREVAN TPP

Noyan Tapan
Apr 04 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 4, NOYAN TAPAN. The packages of technical and financial
proposals of the companies, which have presented thier bids for
construction of the heat-and-gas turbine of the Yerevan Thermal
Power Plant (TPP) under the 15 bln 917 mln yen (about 150 mln USD)
credit program of the Japanese government, will be opened on April
30. TPP Director Hovakim Hovhannisian told NT correspondent that from
7 companies that presented their bids for participation in the tender,
two consortiums formed from the following companies: Mitsui (Japan), GS
(South Korea), Alstom (Germany) and Siemens (Germany), Samsung (South
Korea) and Sumitomo (Japan) have entered the qualification stage.

According to him, the tender results will be known within 90 days after
the opening of packages. H. Hovhannisian said that foreign currency
rate changes will not affect the cost of the program, becuase the sum
for construction of the turbine is provided in Japanese yens. It is
envisaged to finish the program in September 2009.

He noted that the Yerevan TPP is now operating at only 20% of its
capacity.

Sarkisyan Appointed New Armenian Prime Minister

SARKISYAN APPOINTED NEW ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER

ITAR-TASS, Russia
April 4 2007

YEREVAN, April 4 (Itar-Tass) — Armenian Defence Minister Serzh
Sarkisyan has been appointed the new prime minister, according to a
presidential decree released on Wednesday.

The post has been vacant since March 25 when Prime Minister Andranik
Margaryan, the head of the Republican Party, died from heart failure.

He had held office since May 12, 2000.

On March 26, the president accepted the resignation of the government
and instructed its ministers to continue to carry on until a new
government is formed.

Sarkisyan, 53, was appointed defence minister in May 2000. Prior to
that, since November 1999, he was National Security Council secretary.

He has been the chairman of the Republican Party Board since July 2006.

Under the Constitution, the government has to be formed within 20
days of the appointment of the prime minister.

MFA: FM Oskanian Receives Sergey Lavrov, FM of Russian Federation

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

03-04-2007

Foreign Minister Oskanian Receives
Sergey Lavrov, Foreign Minister of Russian Federation

On April 3, Foreign Minister Oskanian received Sergey Lavrov, the Foreign
Minister of Russian Federation, who is in Armenia on a two-day official
visit.

Welcoming the guest, Minister Oskanian stressed the importance of the
permanent dialogue established between those who lead the foreign relations
processes of the two countries. He pointed out that this dialogue provides
for the deepening of the beneficial cooperation that exists between Armenia
and Russia.

Sergey Lavrov expressed his satisfaction with the high level of
Armenia-Russia relations, as well as with the productive collaboration in
the framework of international organizations. He also pointed out that the
wide-ranging bilateral agenda includes cooperation in the spheres of
economy, culture, education and tourism.

Within the context of economic relations, the Ministers discussed the
ongoing implementation of economic projects proposed the last time the two
presidents met.

The Ministers also talked about the prospects of economic progress, noted
that there is a significant increase in trade between the two countries
since 2006. The two stressed the importance of securing dependable and
economically efficient transport communication, which will support the
implementation of bilateral and multilateral projects.

Minister Oskanian and Minister Lavrov discussed a number of issues on
regional security and stability, expressing their readiness to establish an
atmosphere of confidence in the South Caucasus. In this context, the
colleagues focused on the latest developments in the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict settlement process. The Russian Foreign Minister especially
underlined that the mediators’ positions on the conflict settlement
coincide, which benefits the resolution process.

The two also exchanged views on the situation surrounding Iran, on Kosovo,
on Russian-Georgian relations, as well as on ongoing reforms within the
framework of the OSCE and the CIS.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Georgia: Tbilisi Ups The Ante Over South Ossetia

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Georgia: Tbilisi Ups The Ante Over South Ossetia

By Liz Fuller

March 29, 2007 (RFE/RL) — The Georgian leadership has announced at
least three successive proposals since September 2004 for resolving
its conflictwith the breakaway unrecognized republic of South Ossetia.

All have been rejected.

Now, Tbilisi is seeking the backing of the international community to
establish a pro-Georgian interim administration in South Ossetia in a
bid to sideline the de facto administration of Eduard Kokoity, the
republican president whom Tbilisi regards as a Russian puppet.

Frozen Approach

Meanwhile, the EU was scheduled on March 27 to discuss a new plan that
advocates diverging approaches to expediting a solution to the frozen
conflicts in both South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Under former President Eduard Shevardnadze, the Georgian leadership
concentrated its energy on seeking, first through Russian mediation
and then with the assistance of the so-called Friends of the UN
Secretary-General group of countries (France, Germany, the United
Kingdom, the United States, and Russia) a solution of the Abkhaz
conflict that would enable the estimated 200,000 or more Georgians who
fled the region during the 1992-93 fighting to return to their homes.

The conflict with South Ossetia, by contrast, was kept on the back
burner. After the Rose Revolution in November 2003 and the ouster six
months laterof Aslan Abashidze, the autocratic ruler of Ajara,
however, Tbilisi began focusing in earnest on South Ossetia.

An attempt in the summer of 2004 to bring the region back under
Tbilisi’s control by force of arms backfired badly, costing the lives
of several dozen Georgian Interior Ministry troops and precipitating
the dismissal of Interior Minister Irakli Okruashvili, himself a
native of the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali.

Addressing the UN General Assembly on September 21, 2004, just weeks
after the botched Georgian military intervention, President Mikheil
Saakashvili outlined a three-stage plan for resolving the twin
conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

That plan entailed confidence-building measures; the demilitarization
of the conflict zones — to be followed by OSCE monitoring of the Roki
tunnel linking South Ossetia and Russia, and the deployment of UN
observers alongthe border between Abkhazia and Russia; and the
granting to the two regions of"the fullest and broadest form of
autonomy." This, according to Saakashvili, would protect the Abkhaz
and Ossetian languages and cultures, and guarantee self governance,
fiscal control, and "meaningful representation and power-sharing" at
the national level. Both unrecognized republics rejected that offer
outof hand.

Four months later, in January 2005, President Saakashvili unveiled a
revised and expanded peace plan for South Ossetia during an address to
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. The full text of
Saakashvili’s plan was posted on his website
() in late March 2005.

It comprised "a constitutional guarantee of autonomy, which includes
the right to freely and directly elected local self governance –
including an executive branch and a parliament for South
Ossetia. South Ossetia=80=99s parliament will…control…issues such
as culture, education, social policy, economic policy, public order,
the organization of local self governance, and environmental
protection."

South Ossetia would also, Saakashvili said, have representatives in
the national government, parliament, and judiciary. He further said
Tbilisi was ready to discuss with the South Ossetian leadership
"innovative ideas," including free economic zones, and to permit that
leadership to tailor its economic policies to local needs.

Transition Period

Saakashvili proposed a three-year transition period during which a
mixed Georgian-Ossetian police force would be set up under the
guidance of international organizations, and the South Ossetian
military would be absorbed into the Georgian armed forces.

He appealed to the OSCE, the Council of Europe, the European Union,
the United States, and Russia to support and facilitate the peace
process. But Kokoity again dismissed Saakashvili’s offer. Kokoity said
he was ready for dialogue with Tbilisi "on equal terms," and to expand
economic cooperation with Georgia, but he added that South Ossetia
does not need Georgian humanitarian aid.

Saakashvili’s refloated the revised version of his original peace
proposal at a conference in Batumi in July 2005 on conflict resolution
to which Kokoity claimed he was not invited.

Then, in October 2005, Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli
outlined to the OSCE Permanent Council in Vienna yet another rewrite
of Saakashvili’s peace proposal.

Just how it differed from earlier drafts is not clear, but Russian
Foreign Minister spokesman Mikhail Kamynin criticized it as inferior
to the proposal that Saakashvili unveiled to the UN General Assembly
in September 2004.

Kokoity responded in December 2005 by floating a three-stage peace
proposal of his own, which the Georgian authorities initially
lauded. But efforts to convene a meeting between Kokoity and
Noghaideli to discuss details failed.

Meanwhile, Georgia launched a parallel two-track campaign to have the
Russian peacekeeping contingent deployed in the South Ossetian
conflict zone withdrawn, and to bring U.S. and EU representatives into
the ongoing talkson resolving the conflict conducted under the
auspices of the Joint Control Commission (JCC).

That body comprises government representatives from Russia, Georgia,
South Ossetia, and the Republic of North Ossetia, which is a subject
of the Russian Federation. OSCE representatives also regularly attend
JCC meetings.

Dueling Elections

No progress was registered toward resolving the conflict in 2006. In
November 2006, Kokoity was reelected for a second term as de facto
president with 96 percent of the vote.

The same day, however, the Georgian electorate of South Ossetia
participated in a parallel ballot in which they elected their own de
facto president, Dmitry Sanakoyev. Sanakoyev served as defense
minister and then as prime minister for several months in 2001 under
Kokoity’s predecessor, Lyudvig Chibirov, but left South Ossetia for
Moscow after Kokoity came to power.

The international community did not acknowledge the election of either
Kokoity or Sanakoyev as legal and valid. But that did not deter
Saakashvili from announcing in his annual address to parliament in
mid-March that he intends to embark on "peace talks" with Sanakoyev,
who has established a parallel government based in the village of
Kurta.

The pro-Saakashvili Rustavi-2 television channel on March 26 quoted
Saakashvili as saying he plans to set up a "temporary administrative
unit"in South Ossetia that would oversee the economy and social
services, help maintain law and order, and participate in talks on the
region’s future status within Georgia.

If those talks reach a conclusion, Saakashvili continued, "real
elections" will be held throughout South Ossetia. He added that within
days, the Georgian government will ask parliament to draft the
appropriate legislation on the temporary government.

In an interview published on March 26 in "The Georgian Times,"
Sanakoyev outlined his own vision of South Ossetia’s future. He
reaffirmed his commitment to resolving the conflict peacefully, but at
the same time said Kokoity has no options other than resigning or risk
being deposed.

Alternative Choice

Sanakoyev admitted that neither he nor the administration he heads is
regarded as legitimate, but said he thinks that will change given that
"wehave managed to create an alternative to the Kokoity authorities
who are leading the Ossetian people into an abyss."

He said his administration hopes for economic ties with Russia,
especially neighboring North Ossetia, and that "we are going to
develop our economy onthe basis of raw materials" in light of the
region’s untapped hydroelectric capacity.

In one key respect, however, Sanakoyev’s plans appear to diverge from,
and go far beyond, what Tbilisi is offering: he said he wants "federal
relations," which Tbilisi has consistently rejected in the case of
both South Ossetia and Abkhazia. (The Georgian Constitution defines
Georgia as "an independent, unified, and indivisible state.")

And, while Sanakoyev expressed "understanding" for Tbilisi’s
unhappiness with the JCC as a format for talks, he said he still
believes that commission "has great potential for [promoting]
reconciliation and disarmament."

Meanwhile in Brussels, Ambassador Peter Semneby, the EU’s special
representative for the South Caucasus, has overseen the drafting of a
landmark 60-page blueprint for resolving both the Abkhaz and South
Ossetian conflicts. T

hat plan advocates diverging approaches to the two regions, in tacit
acknowledgment of the very real differences between the leaders of
South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

While the former are widely regarded by international diplomats and
experts as opportunistic, entirely subservient to Moscow, and mired in
dubious, possibly even criminal economic activities, the latter are
seen as politically sophisticated and desperately seeking the backing
of the international community to lessen their dependence on Moscow —
currently their sole ally — and broaden their leeway in ongoing
UN-mediated talks with Tbilisi.

In line with that perception, what RFE/RL’s Georgian Service on March
22 dubbed the "Semneby plan" seeks to persuade the Abkhaz of the
economic and social benefits of reaching an accommodation with
Tbilisi.

It also envisages establishing new customs structures to put an end to
smuggling across the borders of both republics and, in South Ossetia,
policing the porous border with North Ossetia to preclude the shipment
of Russian weaponry to the South Ossetian military, according to a
March 20 analysis on euobserver.com.

http://www.president.gov.ge

Akhtamar’s Surb Khach Church Inaugurated

AKHTAMAR’S SURB KHACH CHURCH INAUGURATED

AZG Armenian Daily
29/03/2007

Akhtamar Church Inauguration

Yesterday took place the official inauguration ceremony of the Akhtamar
Surb Khach (Holy Cross) church. Turkish media, CNN-Turk and "Milliet"
newspaper, reported the event under the following titles: "Church of
Akdamar Opened as a Museum" and "Museum of Akdamar Inaugurated". Note:
‘akdamar’ is Turkish for ‘a white vein’.

As it was planned, Culture and Tourism Minister of Turkey Attila
Koc, head of Cultural Values and Museums Orhan Duzgun, Governor
of Van Ozdemir Cakacak and Patriarch of Constantinople Mesrob II
Mutafian took part in the inauguration ceremony. To the event were
also present US Ambassador to Turkey Nancy Makeldovny, Ambassador
of Israel Pinhas Avivi, the Armenian delegation and numerous other
guests – intellectuals, politicians and culture workers.

The leading mass media of Germany, Belgium, Denmark, Lebanon, Italy,
Russia, Holland, Britain and the USA also reported the event.

Head of Cultural Values and Museums Orhan Duzgun, who was to speak
fisrt, in his speech said that the Turkish Government in its pursuit of
restoration and repair of historical monuments has not forgot about the
Armenian people, who have lived alongside Turks of hundreds of years.

Archbishop Mesrob Mutafian expressed his gladness about the restoration
of the church. "This successful restoration displays all the attention
of our government that is paid to all historical monuments without any
discrimination. The restoration of the building, which has not been
perceived as a place prayer for 90 years, according to its original
look is indeed welcome. Each prayer said in this place will contribute
the rapprochement of peoples," he added.

The Patriarch again made a demand that once a year a divine service
be held in the church and a celebration on the Akhtamar isle. He said
he believes that the Government of Turkey will meet this demand.

Van District Governor Cakacak said that the town is the most possible
place in Eastern Turkey to become a sight of tourism, as it has been
the cradle of various civilizations. He explained the restoration of
Surb Khach by Turkey’s respect for history and culture.

Last word on the ceremony belonged to Minister Koc. He said that the
restoration of the church will contribute the recognition of Van and
assured that the Government of Turkey will continue restoring and
repairing the historical monuments in the country.

In the meanwhile the police of Van arrested the five organizers of
a protest action in the town port against reopening of the newly
reconstructed church.

After the ceremony a foreign reporter asked Patriarch Mutafian
whether the cross of the church will be restored in its place. The
priest replied: "Some day, maybe". Culture Minister Koc, answering the
same question said that the question is to be settled by a scientific
commission. He was also asked whether the annual celebration of "Surb
Khach" holiday will be permitted by the authorities. The Minister
answered that he is not the single person to decide.