Uzbekistan Asks U.S. To Close Air Base

UZBEKISTAN ASKS U.S. TO CLOSE AIR BASE
by Vladimir Socor

Eurasia Daily Monitor — The Jamestown Foundation
Tuesday, August 2, 2005 — Volume 2, Issue 150

On July 29, Uzbekistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs delivered a note
to the U.S. Embassy in Tashkent, asking the United States to vacate
the Karshi-Khanabad air base, withdraw the troops and materiel from
Uzbekistan, and terminate the 2001 bilateral agreement within 180
days. The document did not state the reasons for this demand.

The six-month deadline is broadly consistent with the timeframe
suggested by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s top foreign policy
adviser, Sergei Prikhodko, at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization’s
(SCO) July 5 summit, which orchestrated this anti-U.S. move.
Prikhodko declared, “Several months, up to a year and a half” would
be an adequate deadline for the U.S.-led coalition to close its bases
in Central Asian countries (see EDM, July 6).

Some Russian officials were quick to gloat. Defense Minister Sergei
Ivanov urged the United States sarcastically “to make up its mind:
how many years will the war in Afghanistan go on: 20, 30, or 250
years?” Professing to link the American military presence in Central
Asia solely to the operations in Afghanistan (“There is no other
reason, and none would be acceptable”), Ivanov portrayed that presence
as both ineffective and unnecessary: “There are no active combat
operations in Afghanistan, while the Taliban control a large part of
the country. Terrorist threats continue to emanate from Afghanistan,
but the Taliban don’t even bother to hide because no one pursues
them. The narcotics business keeps growing because no one lifts a
finger to deal with it.” Sergei Karaganov, chairman of the Foreign
Policy and Defense Council, echoed Ivanov’s sarcasm by predicting,
“It is probably a matter of several centuries yet before Afghanistan
fully recovers. But the situation is much better there now, so the
bases [in Central Asia] have served their purpose, the Americans can
do without the bases.” Federation Council chairman Sergei Mironov,
praising Tashkent’s anti-U.S. move, also distorted the U.S. position:
“The Uzbek authorities took an absolutely right and logical step. The
United States has said several times that the anti-terrorist operation
in Afghanistan has ended, thus it is time for U.S. forces to leave
Uzbekistan” (Interfax, July 28, 29; Russian Television Channel One,
July 30; RIA-Novosti, August 1).

The Uzbek “eviction notice,” as some commentators describe it perhaps
somewhat prematurely, was not, however, a foregone conclusion,
and might not necessarily be the final word. Even as the Uzbek-U.S.
political miscommunication had deepened through the Kyrgyz upheaval
and the Andijan violence, and Tashkent placed restrictions on the use
of the Karshi-Khanabad base, Uzbek authorities did not seem intent
on asking the U.S. military to leave the country. After the July
5 SCO summit, state-controlled Uzbek media carried over-dramatized
commentaries on alleged economic and ecological costs to Uzbekistan,
and inconvenience to local inhabitants, caused by the American air
base. But the commentaries stopped short of calling for closure of
the base. Rather, they seemed intended, however clumsily, to set the
stage for complete fulfillment, or perhaps re-negotiation, of some
of the terms of the 2001 and 2002 bilateral agreements.

The July 29 note came the day after the United States, working with
the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees office in Bishkek,
arranged the airlift from Kyrgyzstan to Romania of 439 Uzbeks who had
fled from Andijan. The group included some escaped criminals and some
suspected rebels who were wanted for questioning by Uzbek authorities
as part of the investigation into the Andijan violence. Nevertheless,
U.S. officials strongly pressured Kyrgyzstan to allow the evacuation
of the entire group. Thus, Tashkent’s “eviction notice” seems to be
an instant reaction to that move.

At this juncture, however, President Islam Karimov may still be keeping
the options open for both sides. As of August 1, Tashkent had not
announced the base-closure demand in the Uzbek media. The note was
delivered to the U.S. Embassy by an Uzbek courier, not by the usual
mode of delivery through government officials, and thus decreasing the
document’s weight. Moreover, the Uzbek Ministry of Foreign Affairs’
protest note against the U.S.-arranged evacuation of Uzbek suspects
from Kyrgyzstan, published on August 1, stopped carefully short of
naming the United States. Such hints seem calculated to suggest that
Karimov prefers to avoid a rupture in the security relationship at

CE Yerevan office to present its assessment of constitutionalamendme

CE YEREVAN OFFICE TO PRESENT ITS ASSESSMENT OF CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS

ARKA News Agency
Aug 3

YEREVAN, August 2. /ARKA/. The Yerevan office of the Council of
Europe (CE) will present its assessments of the draft amendments to
the RA Constitution. The US Embassy in Armenia reports that Resident
Representative of the CE Secretary General to Armenia Boyana Urumova,
British Ambassadress Armenia Torda Abbot Watt, Head of the OSCE
Yerevan office Vladimir Pryakhin, and UA Vice-Ambassador to Armenia
Entony Godfry will present their assessments as well. P.T. -0–

Recurrent destruction of Armenian graves in Krasnodar territory

PanArmenian News Network
July 30 3005

RECURRENT DESTRUCTION OF ARMENIAN GRAVES IN KRASNODAR TERRITORY

30.07.2005 04:38

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ July 29, 2005 4eports were received by the Khostin
region section of domestic affairs from residents of Verkhny Yurt
village populated by Armenians that a large number of graves is
demolished in the cemetery 5 km away from the settlement, reported
the Yerkramas newspaper of Armenians of south of Russia. In the
course of examination of the cemetery 29 demolished graves were
discovered most of them being Armenians’. The word `Schizophrenia’ is
written on the headstones of each of the destroyed graves. The graves
were supposedly demolished with a sledgehammer or some other heavy
object. The investigators at present consider a few versions: a
person with mental disorder committing the crime or destruction of
the graves in revenge, as well as other versions. The persons, who
had committed the crime, are searched for. The Khostin region section
of domestic affairs has instituted proceedings on criminal case on
article 244 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation: outrage
upon corpses and their burial places. Residents of Verkhny Yurt
village are seriously concerned over the incident. July 30 evening
the residents will gather to discuss the vandalism act, which in
their opinion has an explicit national underlying cause.

Armenia’s population growth down in six months

Armenia’s population growth down in six months

Arminfo
30 Jul 05

YEREVAN

In January-June 2005, 17,457 babies were born in Armenia and 13,772
people died, 199 of them under the age of one, Armenia’s National
Statistics Service has said.

So the Armenian population grew by 3,685 people over this period. A
total of 7,889 marriages and 1,050 divorces were registered in the
country.

As of the beginning of 2005, 63.3 per cent of the country’s permanent
population were at the employment age (16-62 years for men and 16-58
years for women), 23.6 per cent were under and 13.1 per cent over the
employment age. The proportion of those at the employment age to
children and elderly people was 1,000 to 579.

The indicators of both the absolute and comparative birth rates in
January-June 2005 fell compared with the same period of 2004. The
birth rate fell by 2.2 per cent and the coefficient of the birth rate
was 10.9 per 1,000 people against 11.2 per 1,000 people last year.

Due to the decline in the birth rate, the natural population growth
fell by 9.7 per cent over the past six months compared with the same
period of the last year. And the coefficient of the natural growth was
2.3 per 1,000 people compared with 2.6 per 1,000 people last year.

Despite the natural population growth in the first six months of 2005,
Lori Region, some districts and towns (particularly Tumanyan, Shamlug,
Akhtala, Stepanavan, Tashir, Gyumri and Tsakhkadzor) saw a natural
population decline, i.e. deaths outnumbered births.

Genocide. Ambassadeur suisse entendu en Turquie

Le Temps
28 juillet 2005

Berne et Ankara campent sur leurs positions;
GENOCIDE. Ambassadeur suisse entendu en Turquie.

Walter Gyger, ambassadeur de Suisse en Turquie, a été invité à
s’expliquer mercredi au MinistĂšre turc des affaires Ă©trangĂšres sur
les enquĂȘtes ouvertes par la justice suisse contre un politicien et
un historien turcs pour négation du génocide arménien. Ankara avait
vivement protestĂ© contre l’enquĂȘte ouverte durant ce week-end contre
Dogu Perincek.

Celle pour négation de génocide contre Yusuf Halacoglu avait déjà
valu Ă  Walter Gyger d’ĂȘtre convoquĂ©.

«Les deux parties ont expliqué leurs positions», commente Ivo Sieber,
porte-parole du Département fédéral des affaires étrangÚres. «Nous
avons rappelĂ© que la libertĂ© d’expression est garantie en Suisse mais
que minimiser, nier ou justifier un génocide tombe sous le coup de
l’article 261 bis du Code pĂ©nal.» Il ajoute: «Nous avons aussi
rappelé la stricte séparation des pouvoirs et souligné que le cas de
Dogu Perincek est entre les mains de la justice.» Ankara a de son
cĂŽtĂ© dĂ©clarĂ© que les enquĂȘtes du MinistĂšre public de Winterthour
contre l’historien et le chef du Parti des travailleurs turcs
allaient «à l’encontre du droit international». Elle exige l’abandon
de ces enquĂȘtes.

Ce jeudi, l’ambassadeur turc en poste Ă  Berne aura l’occasion
d’exprimer son irritation Ă  Jean-Jacques de Dardel, en charge de la
division politique I du DFAE. Le besoin de clarifier ces tensions se
fait grandissant pour ne pas compromettre le voyage de Joseph Deiss:
le ministre de l’Economie est censĂ© se rendre en Turquie dans un
mois.

Ombudsperson: Constitution should contain provisions re Broadcasting

ARKA News Agency
July 28 2005

RA OMBUDSPERSON: RA CONSTITUTION SHOULD CONTAIN PROVISIONS RELATING
TO AT LEAST TWO BODIES THAT REGULATE THE AREA OF TELE-AND RADIO
BROADCAST

YEREVAN, July 28. /ARKA/. RA constitution should contain provisions
relating to at least two bodies that regulate the area of tele-and
radio broadcast: National Commission on Television and Radio and the
Council of RA Public Television Company of Armenia, as RA
Ombudsperson Larisa Alaverdyan said. According to her, RA NA “as
elected body, capable of ensuring pluralism of opinions and
representation of various strata of society” should actively
participate in their formation. Most optimal of the existing variants
is the mechanism, according to which the list of both candidates for
the members of the National Commission on Television and Radio, and
members of the Council of Public Television are presented by RA NA
and approved by the president of the country. According to her, the
new staff of regulatory body should be formed at once after adoption
of the project of constitutional changes.
According to the ombudsperson, for the country that chose democracy
and European values as the way for development of the country, it’s
especially important to be adhered to the ideals of freedom of word
and press, in regard with which it’s necessary to make amendments to
the RA constitution. “I welcome the long-term cooperation with the
Commission of the Council of Europe “Democracy through Law ”
(Venetian Commission), the goal of which is to perfect the project of
constitutional changes”, she said. However, according to her, the
provisions of the last version of project of constitutional reforms
telling about the order of formation of the bodies regulating
television and radio, submitted to the Commission, cause anxiety. “In
terms of a developing country like Armenia, the sphere of television
and radio broadcast has special importance. From this standpoint the
principle and mechanisms of formation of bodies regulating the
sphere, which mostly ensure independent and free mass media in the
country, are important”, according to the press release. In words of
the Ombudsperson, the provisions will hardly contribute to solution
of the problem. “I am sure that the mentioned principles stipulated
in the constitution will become the basis, which will enable
formation of free and independent media in Armenia, guaranteeing
adherence to human rights and access to objective and comprehensive
information”, the ombudsperson said. A.H.–0-

BAKU: Armenian vice-speaker claims Turkey will open border prior to

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
July 28 2005

Armenian vice-speaker claims Turkey will open border prior to EU
membership

Baku, July 27, AssA-Irada

Turkey will have to open its border with Armenia sooner or later.
This country will benefit from the measure more than Armenia,
Armenian parliament vice-speaker Vaan Ovanesian has said. He said in
a recent meeting with representatives of youth organizations that
Turkey will definitely open the border as it `has great aspirations
to European Union membership’. Armenia, in turn, should achieve
raising the border issue prior to Turkey’s accession, he said.
`Armenia has nothing to concede in exchange for unblocking the
frontier. We cannot accept Turkey’s demands, in particular, those on
withdrawing our armed forces from Upper Garabagh and relinquishing
efforts at international recognition of the genocide of Armenians.’*

Turkey will open border over aspiration to join EU

PanArmenian News Network, Armenia
July 27 2005

TURKEY WILL OPEN ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER OVER ASPIRATION TO JOIN EU

27.07.2005 02:25

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Sooner or later, Turkey will have to open the
Armenian-Turkish border’, National Assembly Vice Speaker Vahan
Hovhannisian said Tuesday during his meeting with the participants of
the Third Pan-Armenian Youth Jamboree. `Turkey aspires to join the
European Union’, Hovhannisian said. `Armenia should work to make the
border issue raised before Turkey on that country’s way to join the
EU.’ He added that the border is open from the Armenian side, and
that there is nothing Armenia has to offer to Turkey for the opening
of the border. `We cannot give up what Turkey demands. It demands
that Armenian forces leave Karabakh. Also, Armenia cannot drop its
demand of the recognition of the Armenian Genocide. That process is
in place even without Armenia’s participation. For example, Armenia’s
role in the recognition of the Genocide by Venezuela was minimum’, he
said, IA Regnum reports.

Venezuelan Parl. Unanimously Ratify Resolution on Armenian Genocide

VENEZUELAN PARLIAMENTARIANS UNANIMOUSLY RATIFY A RESOLUTION ON ARMENIAN
GENOCIDE

Azg/arm
28 July 05

A press release by journalist Karo Hekimian from Montevideo, Uruguay,
informs that the head of Venezuela’s Armenian diocese, Archbishop
Komitas Ohanian, notified in a radio broadcast that the
parliamentarians of Venezuela have unanimously ratified a resolution
recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

His Eminence closed his speech with the following words, “Armenians
will lose their identity if they ever forget the Genocide. As a nation
we exist in common history, one church and one future. We have to
struggle for the Armenian Cause, keep the Armenian children in our
legacy as all of us — organizations, the church and unions — should
go forward together”.

By Gohar Gevorgian

Draft law on lobbying, a measure to enhance public participation…

ArmenPress
July 26 2005

THE DRAFT LAW ON LOBBYING, A MEASURE TO ENHANCE PUBLIC PARTICIPATION,
DISCUSSED WITH UNDP SUPPORT

YEREVAN, JULY 26, ARMENPRESS: Today, at the Tekeyan Center in
Yerevan, United Nations Development Program (UNDP) held a discussion
of the draft Law on Lobbying, a new tool in the fight against
corruption in Armenia. The discussion was organized in cooperation
with the Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Trade and Economic
Development of Armenia. Participants included representatives of
local and international organizations, central authorities and local
governance bodies, businesspeople, and experts.
The aim of the discussion was to consider the disputed clauses of
the draft law with the participation of governmental and
non-governmental sectors and other major stakeholders. Participants
discussed the international experience in regulation of lobbying
activities, methods and limitations of lobbying, financing and
reporting of lobbying, rights and responsibilities of lobbyists,
licensing and accreditation issues. Suggestions on NGO lobbying
received a special attention of the participants. Elaboration of a
regulatory framework for lobbying is in line with the Poverty
Reduction Strategy of Armenia adopted in late 2003, as well as the
national Anti-Corruption Strategy. At the same time, the law will
become an important step towards providing equal and transparent
opportunities for civic participation in policy making and is
anticipated to foster participatory processes in Armenia. In March
2005, the Government of the Republic of Armenia adopted the Concept
of the Law on Lobbying. Recently the Government has officially
circulated the draft Law on Lobbying among state agencies and the
public.
UNDP programs in Armenia aim to contribute to equal political,
economic and social opportunities for all the citizens of the
country. In this context, UNDP supports the Government of Armenia in
developing legislation and implementing policies promoting efficient
participation of citizens in decision-making processes through its
“Support to Information Society and Democratic Governance (SISDG)”
program.
Vahan Asatryan, SISDG Governance Specialist, noted in his speech:
“One of the most important objectives of regulating lobbying
activities is to ensure equal opportunities for protection of public
and business interests by the introduction of competitive and
attractive mechanisms. We believe that these new formal mechanisms
should become more viable than the existing informal and
non-transparent, but in fact more effective mechanisms. The next
discussion of the draft law will take place in August and will
feature organizations representing the interests of small and medium
sized enterprises.