Presidential candidate believes there will be no second round of vot

Presidential candidate believes there will be no second round of voting

2008-02-19 11:24:00

ArmInfo. ‘I voted for National Unity party’, presidential candidate,
Leader of National Unity party Artashes Geghmayan said after voting
at the polling station 9/18. .

The candidate believes there will not be second round of voting. He
explained that on the last days of the campaign ‘all the 8 candidates
except Levon Ter-Petrosyan united since they realized the great danger
the country has faced’.

As regards the rally promised by Ter-Petrosyan for February 20 at
3:00 pm in the city center, Geghamyan said: ‘I think the presidential
candidate, prime minister Serzh Sargsyan will send champagne to the
participants of the rally hinting that he will become president for
everyone, including the supporters of Ter-Petrosyan’.

Washington doesn’t possess information on PKK bases in Karabakh

PanARMENIAN.Net

Washington doesn’t possess information on PKK bases in Karabakh
16.02.2008 14:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Washington is ready to discuss the
possible presence of PKK rebels’ facilities in
Azerbaijan, said Jonathan Henick, public affairs
officer at the U.S. Embassy in Baku.

`We have little data concerning PKK activities in
Azerbaijan. But if our Azeri counterparts show
interest in the topic we are ready to discuss it,’ he
said, adding that the issue was considered at a
meeting of U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for Counterterrorism Frank C. Urbancic and Azeri
Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov in Baku.

`PKK terrorists may have fled to other territories
after the strikes in Iraq. But we don’t possess any
information about it,’ the diplomat said.

Earlier, Turkish Show TV with a reference to sources
in the Israeli intelligence reported that PKK rebels
base in Fizuli and Lachin regions.

Mammadov: Azerbaijan Not To Await Karabakh Resolution 5 More Years

PanARMENIAN.Net

Novruz Mammadov: Azerbaijan not going to await
Karabakh resolution 5 more years
16.02.2008 15:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Talks on the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict resolution should base on the work carried
out heretofore, said Novruz Mammadov, head of the
international relations division at the Azeri
presidential administration.

`Armenia is in a condition when there is no need to
start the work all over again and thus pose extra
problems. On the other hand, a great deal of work has
been done with the assistance of international
organizations. Talks must be continued irrespectively
of who is elected Armenia’s President. Azerbaijan has
not intention to await Karabakh resolution 5 more
years,’ he said, APA reports.

A Cry From Iran

ABC30.com, CA
Feb 16 2008

A Cry From Iran

Saturday, February 16, 2008

By Gene HaagensonFebruary 16th 2008 (KFSN) — A Fresno audience had a
rare look at life and death in one of the world’s most secretive
nations.

Hundreds gathered at the Armenian Presbyterian church to watch a
documentary film called "A Cry from Iran".

The film is about an Armenian minister whose message angered the
Iranian government, and cost him his life.

The story of Haik Hovespian is a modern tragedy. Born of Armenian
Christian parents in Iran, he became a minister, and the leader of
Iran’s evangelical community.

After publicly denouncing the government’s plan to execute another
Christian minister, Hovespian was kidnapped, and murdered. Through a
translator, his widow says Hovespian is a Christian martyr.

Takouhie Hovespian, widow of slain minister, says "Because he knew
why he was being sacrificed, tortured and persecuted& It was mainly
because of freedom of religion that he was martyred."

Haik Hovespian was killed in 1994. Since then several other Christian
ministers in Iran have been killed.

It’s hoped this film will serve as a reminder that religious
persecution continues around the world.

Mgrdich Melkonian, Pastor, says "We understand there are lots of
persecutions, but we’re not very much detailed, we don’t exactly know
what’s going on in which country, or which city but we hear it’s
continuing in some of the parts yes."

The Iranian government has denied any involvement in the deaths of
Christian ministers.

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http://abclocal.go.com/kfsn/story?section=news/l

EU official says Nabucco pipeline project is now ‘more of a reality’

The Associated Press
February 15, 2008 Friday 6:44 PM GMT

EU official says Nabucco gas pipeline project is now ‘more of a
reality’

By SUZAN FRASER, Associated Press Writer
ANKARA Turkey

A top European Union official said Friday that Turkey was fully
committed to an EU and U.S.-backed project to build a natural gas
pipeline from the Caspian Sea region to Europe, and that the venture
was now closer to becoming a reality.

Jozias van Aarsten, EU special coordinator for the Nabucco gas
pipeline project, said however that he would hold further talks with
Turkish officials on a disagreement over a pricing mechanism for the
project.

Turkey has failed to agree on the pricing of the project and is also
opposed to French company Gaz de France joining the consortium that
will build the pipeline.

Turkey has been angered by France’s objections to the mainly Muslim
nation’s bid to join the EU and by French moves to make denying
Armenian genocide a crime. Turkey rejects the label genocide and
insists the mass killings of Armenians at the start of the last
century were the result of the chaos of war.

A delegation, led by a France’s trade minister, is scheduled to visit
Ankara next week to try among other things, to overcome Turkey’s
objections to Gaz de France, the state-run Anatolia news agency
reported.

Nabucco, which would carry natural gas from the Caspian region and
the Middle East to Central and Western Europe, is still in its
initial planning phases. It was devised as a means to diversify gas
supplies and reduce energy dependence on Russia.

The project aims to deliver 30 billion cubic meters of gas from
Central Asia and the Caspian region to Europe through a 3,300
kilometer (2,050-mile) pipeline from Turkey through Romania, Bulgaria
and Hungary to Austria.

Turkish officials have "stressed the importance of the Nabucco
pipeline and they stressed their allegiance of Turkey for this very
important project," van Aarsten told reporters at the end of two days
of discussions with Turkish officials, including Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan.

"After this visit, I can say that this project is more of a reality,"
he said.

Van Aarsten did not rule out the possibility of Gaz de France joining
the consortium at a later time and said he considered Nabucco as a
"stepping stone" toward Turkey’s EU membership.

The consortium is owned by Austria’s OMV, Hungary’s MOL, Turkey’s
Botas, Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz and Romania’s Transgaz. RWE, one of
Germany’s biggest energy companies, joined the consortium earlier
this month.

Construction is scheduled for as early as this year, with operations
starting in 2012. Cost of the project is estimated to be 5 billion
euros (US$7 billion), van Aarsten said.

Questions remain as to whether the Nabucco project can find
sufficient gas supplies to make it worthwhile. In December, Russia
scored a major victory when it signed a deal with Turkmenistan and
Kazakhstan for those countries’ Caspian Sea gas supplies to flow
through Russia, draining the main potential source for Nabucco.

In another blow to Nabucco, Russia also cut deals with Bulgaria and
Serbia for the South Stream pipeline, which would carry Central Asian
gas to Europe.

Van Aarsten said however, he did not regard the South Stream pipeline
as an alternative to Nabucco but said it would help diversify
supplies.

"There is no competition," he said. "The more pipelines, the better."

All-Embracing Collection Of Documents On Nagorno Karabakh Published

ALL-EMBRACING COLLECTION OF DOCUMENTS ON NAGORNO KARABAKH PUBLISHED

Noyan Tapan
Feb 14, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The launching of the collection of
documents "Nagorno Karabakh in International Laws and World Politics"
by Yuri Barseghov, a renowned specialist in law and in international
law or affairs, took place on February 13 at the RA National Academy
of Sciences.

The three-volume collection has been printed with the assistance
of the World Armenian Congress (WAC) and the Union of Armenians in
Russia. The book’s first sample with the author’s signature was given
to the RA Prime Minister, RA presidential candidate Serge Sargsian,
who took part in the launching ceremony.

As Ara Abrahamian, the Chairman of the World Armenian Congress,
said, the goal of collection’s publication is to restore the
truth on emergence and development of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
misrepresented by Azerbaijan, as the truth is necessary to find fair
and juridically grounded solutions.

The collection, which includes documents on Karabakh from the ancient
and medieval period to our days, according to A. Abrahamian, is
unique. He mentioned that it is the first time documents on Karabakh
are presented from historic-legal point of view.

Arman Kirakosian, the RA Deputy Foreign Minister, appreciating the
collection’s significance, mentioned the necessity to present it
to wide public, as well as to translate it from Russian into other
languages.

Radik Martirosian, the Chairman of the RA National Academy of Sciences,
attached importance to the collection’s role in the issue of Nagorno
Karabakh settlement. He also emphasized the personal contribution
of Prime Minister Serge Sargsian in the Karabakh war. According to
R. Martirosian, there should not be change of power in Armenia until
the Nagorno Karabakh problem is finally solved.

CoE Committee Of Ministers President Arriving In Armenia February 25

COE COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS PRESIDENT ARRIVING IN ARMENIA FEBRUARY 25

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.02.2008 18:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of the Committee of Ministers of the
Council of Europe, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovakia Jan Kubis
will be visiting Armenia February 25-26, the RA MFA press office told
a PanARMENIAN.Net

Slovakia assumed the presidency in the CoE Committee of Ministers on
November 12, 2007.

Belarus CEC Reps to monitor elections in Armenia

National Legal Internet Portal, Belarus
Feb 14 2008

Representatives of Belarus’ Central Election Commission to monitor
presidential elections in Armenia

Representatives of Belarus’ Central Election Commission will monitor
the presidential elections in Armenia on February 19 this year, BelTA
learnt from Secretary of the Central Election Commission of Belarus
Nikolai Lozovik.

`Two members of the Central Election Commission – Oleg Slizhevsky and
Eduard Podolyak – will go to Armenia as members of the CIS mission,’
Nikolai Lozovik noted. The members of Belarus’ Central Election
Commission intend to observe the voting and counting of ballots
processes. They will also attend the final press conference where the
preliminary results will be announced.

The CIS long-term observer mission has been already deployed in
Armenia, Nikolai Lozovik said.

In Armenian Politics, =?unknown?q?Candidates=A1=AF?= Wives Stay Behi

EurasiaNet, NY
Feb 15 2008

In Armenian Politics, Candidates¡¯ Wives Stay Behind the Scenes

Marianna Grigoryan: 02/15/08

Former US President Bill Clinton may have presented his wife and
current presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton to voters as a
"two-for-one" deal, but in Armenia, election campaigns and
candidates¡¯ wives decidedly do not mix.

That message was reinforced February 13, when presidential candidate
Serzh Sarkisian came to a Yerevan church to celebrate a traditional
festival for newlyweds. Public curiosity was aroused not so much by
the sight of the usually phlegmatic prime minister, white rose in
hand, attempting to dance with the brides. The interest came from the
rare appearance of his wife, Rita.

It was perhaps the first time that Rita Sarkisian, a music teacher in
late middle age, has been seen at a campaign event with her husband.

But the Sarkisian campaign says that they do not see her absence as a
political loss.

"What need is there to involve the prime minister¡¯s wife in the
election campaign?" wondered Eduard Sharmazanov, spokesperson for the
governing Republican Party of Armenia, which Sarkisian heads. "It
does not correspond with the tactics that we have adopted. The prime
minister, both during the parliamentary and presidential elections,
was campaigning alone and we think that this is the right approach
for success."

In a traditional, male-dominated society like Armenia, sociologists
say, the notion of a candidate¡¯s wife taking part in a campaign
remains a risky proposition. "Politics in Armenia is viewed as
strictly ¢Æa man¡¯s business¡¯ and, according to our Armenian
mentality, a woman must not interfere with it," commented Aharon
Adibekian, director of the Sociometer polling organization. "By . . .
having [their wives] take part in their election campaigns,
candidates run the risk of it having a negative impact on their
progress, rather than it winning them votes."

Involving a candidate¡¯s family in an Armenian election campaign
would require the use of specialists and consultants, Adibekian
added. "For that, however, one needs to be politically mature in the
first place," he continued. "A wife should also be prepared
politically to know where the limits are, and how to behave."

The candidates — and their wives — largely agree.

Presidential candidate Vazgen Manukian, leader of the National
Democratic Union, describes his wife, Varduhi, a mathematician and
computer programmer, as "completely politically mature," and capable
of providing "serious help" to his campaign, but cautions that
society is not yet ready for such assistance.

"Unlike the way it is in the West, women¡¯s involvement in [public
life] in Armenia is not yet accepted, and sometimes it may be
perceived incorrectly," he told EurasiaNet. Varduhi Manukian
reportedly works on her husband¡¯s campaign, but does not appear with
him in public.

Rival presidential candidate Artur Baghdasarian, who is considered to
be one of the opposition frontrunners, is perhaps the only candidate
who speaks about his family during meetings with voters. But
Baghdasarian¡¯s wife, Anna, the 30-something director of a language
instruction center in Yerevan, is also nowhere to be seen in her
husband¡¯s campaign.

Pregnancy, not cultural prejudice, is the cause, according to Susanna
Abrahamian, spokesperson for Baghdasarian¡¯s Orinats Yerkir (Country
of Law) Party. "[F]or sure, it is not encouraged to go to the
provinces and get emotional in that condition. Otherwise, believe me;
she would be involved as well."

Other wives, however, directly rebuff such a notion. "As an Armenian
woman, I think it would be better that I silently assist my husband,
rather than show political activism," commented Anush Pluzian, the
spouse of presidential candidate Artashes Geghamian, a former mayor
of Yerevan and the chairman of the National Unity Party.

The role of an Armenian woman, continued Pluzian, a lecturer at the
State Engineering University of Armenia, is to understand her
husband, not to "obstruct him."

"I don¡¯t think that my going to voter meetings together with my
husband would bring any big change or provide any major help," she
said. "I¡¯d better stay at home."

That view is reflected in other aspects of the country¡¯s political
life. More than 52 percent of Armenia¡¯s population of 2.97 million
are women, according to state statistics, but, in terms of women¡¯s
participation in politics, Armenia ranks last in the South Caucasus.
Women comprise 9.2 percent of the members of the country¡¯s 131-seat
parliament, compared with 11.3 percent in Azerbaijan and 9.4 percent
in Georgia. Only one woman has ever run for president in Armenia ¡î
Dignity Party leader Lyudmila Harutiunian in 1998 ¡î but she withdrew
from the race well before election day.

Even for a former First Lady, Lyudmila Ter-Petrosian, wife of
opposition candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian, appearing in the public eye
is less than an easy fit. A German language specialist by training
who once worked as a radio journalist and now heads a charitable
non-governmental organization, Mrs. Ter-Petrosian stands with the
crowds at her husband¡¯s rallies, occasionally in the back rows.

On this point, and possibly no other, the Ter-Petrosian and Sarkisian
campaigns agree.

"At this moment, when the election campaign is on, there are perhaps
more important things than the inclusion of the first president¡¯s
wife in the front rows [at a rally]," affirmed Ter-Petrosian campaign
spokesperson Arman Musinian. "There is no need for that."

Practices vary in the region, though. Georgian President Mikheil
Saakashvili¡¯s Dutch-born wife, Sandra Roelofs, was featured
prominently in his recent re-election campaign, singing folk songs at
rallies or collecting voters¡¯ written requests. In Azerbaijan,
Mehriban Aliyeva, wife of President Ilham Aliyev, is a member of
parliament, though reportedly considered off-limits for media
criticism.

In Armenia, psychologist Elina Asrian says that voters can perhaps
more readily accept scenes from a candidate¡¯s home life than of
women as independent political forces, or a candidate¡¯s closest
advisor.

"Political ads and election campaigns in Armenia are built on the
principle of ¢Æhero vs. anti-hero¡¯ and here it is, indeed, not
correct to involve wives," Asrian commented. "For Armenians, a family
is accepted as something sacred, and on that level there is hardly
anything higher."

In keeping with that trend, the Ter-Petrosian campaign has reportedly
issued a DVD about the ex-president¡¯s family life, while the rival
Baghdasarian camp says that one about the 39-year-old former
parliamentary speaker will be appearing soon.

But will they win votes? It all depends on the "correct"
presentation, stresses election strategist Armen Badalian. "Because
no matter how much they talk about European integration," he
concluded, "we are still an Asian country."

Editor¡¯s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the
ArmeniaNow.com weekly in Yerevan.

Foreign Minister Horrified Member Of Parliament

FOREIGN MINISTER HORRIFIED MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT

Lragir
Feb 13 2008
Armenia

On February 13 Member of Parliament Stepan Safaryan, Heritage Party,
stated at the Pastark Press Club that as a citizen of Armenia he was
horrified by the interview of the foreign minister Vardan Oskanyan
with Shant TV. The reason was Oskanyan’s comment on the plan to
exchange Meghri revealed by the first president Levon Ter-Petrosyan.

According to Stepan Safaryan, Vardan Oskanyan said Armenia had given
such a response regarding Meghri that since 2000 this option has not
been discussed in the framework of the settlement of the conflict.

Stepan Safaryan says what caused his horror is that Vardan Oskanyan
used to deny that Meghri had never been considered at all. And if now
he announces something else, Stepan Safaryan says there is reason
to worry. He certainly thinks there is no issue of Meghri but at
the same time he says the Armenian government is being adventurous
regarding the Karabakh issue. Stepan Safaryan thinks that October 27
might have been the result of this adventurousness. As an analyst he
says several years ago he analyzed relying on U.S. State Department
information that the Armenian government had become involved in such
an adventure regarding the Karabakh conflict that the only way to
escape it was October 27. Stepan Safaryan says evidence to it is the
statement by one of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in November 1999
during the OSCE summit in Istanbul that if October 27 had not happened,
an agreement on the resolution of the conflict would have been signed.

As to how the Heritage Party will act if Levon Ter-Petrosyan whom
it endorsed wins the election but his approach contradicts to the
approach of the Heritage Party, Stepan Safaryan says for the time
being their approaches are in harmony since the first president has
stated that the resolution of the conflict should be based on the
decision of the people of Karabakh. However, if Ter-Petrosyan and the
Heritage Party disagree over tactical issues, the Heritage Party will
not deviate from its approaches, Stepan Safaryan says.