Serzh Sarkisian Rules Out Dialogue

SERZH SARKISSIAN RULES OUT DIALOGUE

A1+
21 July, 2008

"I think Armenian courts treat all citizens committing offences
very mildly," Serzh Sarkissian said in reply to A1+. We wondered
what measures the Armenian authorities take with regard to the PACE
recommendation to free all those detained under Articles 300 and 225
of the RoA Criminal Code.

"I am seriously concerned over their arrest. As you know many people
are already released. I have already said many times that I am of a
high opinion of Armenian courts as they treat people committing minor
offences very softly. On the other hand, I think we shouldn’t close
an eye to grave crimes and all those who have smashed, wrecked and
raised a hand against other’s property should be brought to justice
otherwise we will serve a bad model for the society. Many will be
seduced by that permissiveness and think that after each election they
can bring down the moon with the help of power. We must exclude it."

Serzh Sarkissian states that "the authorities are powerful, confident,
quiet and calm." They don’t fear from problems. Serzh Sarkissian said
he relies on the support of mighty parties. He particularly named
the "Orinats Yerkir" Party (OYK) "which won the confidence of large
masses during the election," "Bargavach Hayastan" Party (BHK) with its
distinct stance and Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun
(ARFD) with its close ranks. "Finally, I rely on the party taking
the most seats in the National Assembly – on the Republican Party of
Armenia (HHK). I need nothing else," said Serzh Sarkissian.

As to the dialogue with Levon Ter-Petrossian, Serzh Sarkissian said
the term is perceived wrongly. By saying a dialogue he means a dialogue
with people, the society, rather than a dialogue of the head of state
with an individual.

Today Serzh Sarkissian ruled out a dialogue with the opposition. "What
is the aim of a dialogue if the opposition demands an earlier
election? Are we supposed to negotiate the terms of the election? I
am sick and tired of elections."

Russia begins to tackle violence against migrants

News & Observer, NC
July 20 2008

Russia begins to tackle violence against migrants

Tom Lasseter, Mcclatchy Newspapers
Comment on this story

MOSCOW – Artur Ryno had a knife and was looking to kill foreigners. He
slipped between two buildings near downtown Moscow and walked toward a
janitor standing alone in the night air in April 2007. By the time the
frenzy of hacks and thrusts was over, Khairullo Sadykov, a Tajik, lay
crumpled on the ground with dozens of stab wounds.
Three hours later, Ryno encountered Karin Abramyan, an Armenian
businessman, and pulled out his knife. Abramyan’s body was found with
stabs to the head, stomach and chest.

Human rights groups say Ryno, who was 17 when he was arrested, is one
of an untold number of thugs who have hunted migrant laborers and
immigrants in Russia. Darker-skinned migrants from former Soviet
republics in Central Asia and the Caucasus region are usually the
targets.

The murders have centered on the nation’s capital, where
ultranationalist groups are growing more vicious, many people say. The
groups post videos on the Internet showing random attacks: Packs of
young Russians ambush non-Slavic-looking men, kicking and punching
them until they fall to the ground cowering.

Subway stops and the areas near them often are chosen because they
offer a quick escape, said Vladilen Bokov, the head of the Moscow city
department on interethnic relations.

In some cases, the teenagers and men carrying out the beatings have
been affiliated with ultranationalist groups that sponsor "fitness
clubs" or youth meetings that often include members with swastika
tattoos.

It’s a culture that scorns chyorni, the Russian word for black, which
many Russians use in various forms to refer to all people with darker
skin. While there is no proof of a connection with the violence, the
groups virulently oppose the influx of migrants.

After his arrest, Ryno confessed to participating in 26 or 27 attacks
on non-Russians during an eight-month rampage in 2006 and 2007 that
left 20 people dead, according to his attorney, Yuri Yefimenkov.

For years, little action

After years of relatively little action, the Russian government is
taking the problem more seriously. Authorities are cooperating with
migrant-advocacy groups and prosecuting street gangs that hunt
foreigners, said Gavkhar Dzhurayeva, the head of the Migration and Law
Center, a Moscow-based migrant worker rights and legal aid
organization.

Leaders of two of the nation’s more notorious ultranationalist groups
predicted in interviews that the violence will worsen significantly in
coming years. They say it is driven by paranoia about a drop in
Russia’s Slavic population amid a rising tide of migrant labor and
immigrants. Millions of people have migrated to Russia; estimates
range from 5 million to 20 million.

Meanwhile, the Russian population has declined dramatically, by 2.8
million people from 2002 to 2006 alone, according to state statistics.

"I don’t fight any specific person, but I fight the possibility that
Russia could be a Muslim country in 20 years," said Dmitry Dyomushkin,
the head of the Slavic Union, one of the ultranationalist groups. "You
know, there are a lot of clashes now, and one big conflict might be
enough to spread the fighting across Russia."

Dyomushkin denies any connection with violence, but he said that Ryno,
an art student studying to paint religious icons, and others from his
group attended Slavic Union meetings.

Dyomushkin’s group and the Movement Against Illegal Immigration, known
by its Russian initials DPNI, sponsor or provide trainers to "fitness
clubs" that teach young Russians close-quarters combat skills and, in
some cases, basic lessons in handling explosives, ostensibly to ready
them for service in the military.

Neither group would allow McClatchy to visit the clubs.

Just teaching ‘skills’

"We try to teach them the basics of staying secure, but we cannot
guarantee that a small number of them won’t use the skills we teach
them to commit crimes," said Alexander Belov, the leader of the
DPNI. "It’s the same as accusing a knife manufacturer of something
when someone uses their knife to kill someone instead of cutting
meat."

The organizations are structured in a loose network in which the
Slavic Union and DPNI act as political and organizing arms. But they
don’t seem to issue direct orders to the smaller units of skinheads or
other radicals, said Dmitry Dubrovsky, a senior research fellow with
the Russian Museum of Ethnography in St. Petersburg, who works as an
expert witness for the city’s police and prosecutor’s departments.

"Nobody says to them, ‘Go to the streets and kill the blacks,’ "
Dubrovsky said. "It’s the ideology of ‘We should remove the blacks
from the streets,’ but the tool for removing them is up to the smaller
groups."

President Sargsya Meets With Paleontologists

PRESIDENT SARGSYA MEETS WITH PALEONTOLOGISTS

armradio.am
18.07.2008 17:40

President Serzh Sargsyan today met with a number of paleontologists.

The interlocutors discussed issues related to the development
of paleontology, implementation of educational programs in the
sphere. They emphasized the need for special attention of the state
towards paleontology.

The parties stressed the necessity of preventive research and
paleontological works when implementing construction programs. The
issue of modernization of the governance of the sphere was prioritized.

Armenia Announced Plans To Offer Third Mobile License For The Countr

ARMENIA ANNOUNCED PLANS TO OFFER THIRD MOBILE LICENSE FOR THE COUNTRY

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.07.2008 16:26 GMT+04:00

Armenia’s telecoms regulator, The Public Services Regulatory Commission
(PSRC) has announced plans to offer a third mobile license for the
country, said Susanna Tonoyan

The interested parties should file in applications within 10 days
starting with July 19, 2008.

Joining the tender will cost â~B¬10 thousand. There will be a reserve
price of â~B¬10 million for the license and the winner will be required
to invest a minimum of â~B¬200 million in the network rollout.

The codes for the third network will be +374 (0) 55 and +374 (0)
95. If by the end of the first operation year the operator fails to
distribute more than 60 per cent of the numbers, the PSRC is entitled
to appropriate the unused ones, RBC reports.

Armenia currently has two mobile networks, Armentel (majority owned
by Russia’s VimpelCom with Beeline trade mark) and VivaCell (majority
owned by Russia’s MTS). ArmenTel said last year that it had been
granted a 3G license as well.

–Boundary_(ID_Gb/FnTtwmtpRm+o009QE8g)–

ANKARA: Iran Mediation Prospects Gain Momentum With Key Visits

IRAN MEDIATION PROSPECTS GAIN MOMENTUM WITH KEY VISITS

Zaman Online
July 17 2008
Turkey

Babacan met Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the sidelines
of a summit of eight Muslim nations in Malaysia earlier this month.

Ankara is preparing to host senior Iranian and US officials this week
as prospects increase that Turkey may take up a mediation role to
help resolve an international conflict over Tehran’s nuclear program,
which the West suspects is intended to develop nuclear weapons.

Stephen Hadley, national security advisor for US President George
W. Bush, will meet with President Abdullah Gul, Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan on a number of what
US Embassy officials described as "routine" issues, including Iran’s
nuclear program, today in Ankara. Tomorrow Ankara will host Iranian
Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki to discuss regional issues. The
visits by two senior officials come as prospects emerge for Turkish
mediation between Iran and the international community, which is
urging the Islamic republic to halt its contentious nuclear program.

"We are in touch with all parties involved. They tell us that we
should also be in the picture," Foreign Minister Babacan said in
televised remarks on the Iran row yesterday. He told NTV that Turkey is
playing a defined role in efforts for peace between Syria and Israel,
referring to Ankara’s mediation in indirect talks between the two
mutually hostile states, while on Iran, it is playing an "unnamed"
role, without elaborating.

Iran’s nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, will meet with European Union
foreign policy chief Javier Solana and envoys from China, Russia,
France, Britain and Germany in Geneva on Saturday. In a major policy
shift, the United States said it was also sending a representative,
Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns, to
the talks.

They will discuss Iran’s response to an offer made by world powers
last month to encourage it to give up sensitive nuclear work that the
West believes is aimed at building a nuclear bomb and Tehran says is
for peaceful power-generation purposes.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said last week that Ankara might
be asked to play a role in the Iran nuclear row similar to the role
it is playing in Syria-Israel peace efforts. Turkey has hosted three
rounds of indirect talks between Syrian and Israeli representatives
in recent months, and a fourth round is expected to take place in
the next few weeks, according to Babacan.

Babacan, who had closed-door talks with Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad on the sidelines of a summit of eight Muslim nations in
Malaysia earlier this month, described the lack of trust between Iran
and the international community as a main reason why the conflict
cannot be resolved. "We, as Turkey, believe that dialogue is the
main means for reaching a settlement in this dispute," he said,
emphasizing that he has explained this to US officials in his past
contacts as well.

Babacan is expected to visit Tehran between July 28 and 31 to attend
a ministerial conference of the Non-Aligned Movement. Officials said
the visit was not directly related to efforts to find a solution to
the nuclear row.

Ankara opposes nuclear weapons in its region but says any country
must have the right to make use of nuclear energy for peaceful
purposes. Ties with Iran, once strained over Turkish suspicions
that Iran wanted to export its Islamic regime to Turkey, improved
dramatically after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and
Development Party (AK Party) first came to power in 2002. The two
countries are now cooperating, despite US opposition, in the fields
of energy and security.

Turkish diplomatic sources told Today’s Zaman that Ankara will
reiterate in talks with Hadley and Mottaki that the problems must
be resolved in peaceful ways and urge Iran to pursue transparency in
its nuclear program.

Mottaki will visit Turkey on a regional tour that also includes Oman
and Syria. Iranian sources said the talks will focus on regional
issues and the upcoming meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement.

In June, EU foreign policy chief Solana presented Tehran with a
package of incentives proposed by world powers to coax Iran to halt
its nuclear work. Tension increased last week after Iran test-fired
missiles in the Gulf and the United States reminded Tehran that it
was ready to defend its allies. Fears of conflict helped push oil
prices to new record highs.

Armenian resolution to harm US ties

When Hadley visits Ankara, Turkish concerns over the possible passage
of a resolution by the US Congress recognizing Armenian claims of
genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire will also be on the
agenda. US presidential presumptive nominee Barack Obama caused
concern in Ankara when he said during his election campaign that he
would endorse the genocide claims if elected president.

"There will be serious damage to ties if such a resolution is
passed," Babacan told NTV. "Relations cannot continue as if nothing
happened." The outgoing Bush administration has worked successfully
to block a vote in the House of Representatives on the "genocide"
resolution. Babacan suggested that President Gul may attend a soccer
match in Armenia, a move that would mark a shift in relations between
the two states, which have no diplomatic ties.

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan has invited Gul to visit Yerevan
for a soccer match in September. "Such participation would depend on
developments ahead of the match," Babacan said. Armenia and Turkey
will play against each other in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on
Sept. 6 in a qualifying match for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, scheduled
to be held in South Africa. The foreign minister also insisted on his
argument that the Muslim majority in Turkey also faces problems in
terms of religious freedoms and accused his critics in the opposition
and the media of denying the existence of serious problems.

Armenian Events Abroad

ARMENIAN EVENTS ABROAD

AZG Armenian Daily
16/07/2008

Culture, Diaspora

A festival dedicated to Armenian traditional music and food took
place in Canada on July 4-6. The organizers of the events emphasized
the importance of the event for the Canadian Armenian community and
expressed hope that the festival will become a tradition and will be
held once a year.

Another exhibition dedicated to Christianity in Armenia and the
Armenian Apostolic Church was opened in the town of Mindelheim,
Germany. Both ancient pieces and works by modern Armenian children are
to be exhibited. The profits from selling the items will be allocated
to physically disabled Armenian children.

An exhibition of Armenian fonts and books took place in London, July
5-12. Over 30 exemplars of books and albums dedicated to Armenian
fonts, letters design and printing were exhibited. Copies of the most
beautiful pages from the ancient Armenian manuscripts of Matenadaran
were also represented to the public. The exhibition was organized at
the Lincoln University. Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
of the Republic of Armenia to Great Britain was present to the
opening ceremony.

ANKARA: US warily eyes Turkish political turmoil

US WARILY EYES TURKISH POLITICAL TURMOIL

Today’s Zaman
July 12 2008
Turkey

The United States is anxiously watching political turmoil in Turkey
amid concern that instability could affect Ankara’s role on issues
of mutual concern from Iraq to Israeli-Syrian talks, analysts say.

Turkey’s Constitutional Court is expected to rule in the next month
whether to ban the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
and bar close US ally Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan from office
for allegedly seeking to turn the country into an Islamist state,
which the party denies.

Unlike many European nations that have had tough words for what some
say is a "judicial coup," the Bush administration has been more muted,
preferring to stress support for "democratic processes" while making
clear that whatever happens, Washington wants good ties with its NATO
ally. "I do believe that Turkish-American relations are in a good
place," said US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice after a meeting
last month with Turkey’s foreign minister.

A senior US official conceded if Erdogan’s government and party were
ousted it would "not be the optimal outcome," but he said "Washington
was determined to keep strong ties." "Our relationship is much stronger
than it has been in a decade and we have been building on it in a
meticulous way. Even if the current government were out, we would
continue on the same track," said the official, who declined to be
named because the issue is sensitive. "I am not arguing that this is
a positive development but it is hard to say what the impact is going
to be. I think the Turks will find a way to wiggle out of this crisis."

Relations were rocky between the two nations at the time of the US
invasion of Iraq in 2003, and even though ties are better now, the
United States is unpopular in Turkey. The latest Pew Global Attitudes
poll found only 12 percent of Turks had a favorable view of the
United States. The two countries share a list of strategic interests,
from Turkey’s neighbors Iraq and Iran to Ankara’s recent mediation
efforts between Israel and Syria. Ankara is a key US military ally
in the Middle East region and Washington needs Turkey’s cooperation
in trying to stabilize Iraq, particularly in the Kurdish north.

"If a weak government replaces the current one it will be harder
to tackle many of these issues and Turkey will undergo a period of
navel-gazing," said Turkey analyst and author Gareth Jenkins.

Turkey’s role in mediating between Israel and Syria could also be
affected as Turkey, a predominantly Muslim but officially secular
country, is consumed by domestic strife. "The inevitable outcome
is that it (instability) will take a toll on the [Israeli-Syria]
talks. I don’t think you could have seen Turkey playing this role
under any other government," said Sam Brannen, a fellow at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank.

"Turkey is generally going to draw in and not look to be engaged. It
may even look towards countries such as Russia rather than turning
West," he added. Tensions were exacerbated last week by the arrests
of two senior retired generals and others — all critical of the
Islamist-rooted ruling party — on suspicion of seeking to overthrow
the government. Several analysts cautioned Washington against using
harsh rhetoric when the court makes its decision as this could be
interpreted as interfering in Turkish affairs and siding with Erdogan.

"The EU will pretty much do the bad cop stuff for the US as it has more
legitimacy to interfere," said Zeyno Baran from the Hudson Institute,
referring to Turkey’s accession bid to the European Union.

Former State Department official Henri Barkey said Washington should
take a tougher stand as the potential damage to US interests was
too great. "But the State Department is so afraid of its own shadow
when it comes to Turkey," said Barkey, now at Lehigh University
in Pennsylvania.

One wildcard is how the US Congress might respond, particularly
after the uproar last year when a congressional committee branded
as genocide the killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks. The Armenia
resolution, which was ultimately dropped, caused a diplomatic storm and
harmed relations. "From a Turkish perspective they don’t distinguish
much between the administration and Congress," Baran, of the Hudson
Institute, said of Turkish views towards Congress. "The administration
will want to keep them (lawmakers) quiet but it is election time,"
Baran added, referring to the US presidential election in November.

Sabine Frezier: Karabakh status determination is matter of future

PanARMENIAN.Net

Sabine Frezier: Karabakh status determination is matter of future
10.07.2008 14:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs do not mind if EU played
greater role in the resolution of the conflict, said Sabine Frezier,
International Crisis Group’s Europe program director.

`Ambassador Bernard Fassier regularly informs EU member states about
the achievements in the negotiation process. The role of the EU
special representation is gradually growing. Though, frankly speaking,
I doubt that many EU member states want to engage deeply in the
process and replace OSCE Minsk Group. They are satisfied with the
current format of talks. Expansion of the UN role in the resolution of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict is possible but existence of two parallel
mediators or two parallel negotiation processes will not help the
solution,’ she said.

Ms. Freizer is convinced that basic principles, developed by the OSCE
MG in cooperation with the conflict parties are the best way to move
forward.

`Azerbaijan has done everything possible for inclusion of paragraphs
about release of seven occupied regions and return of all internally
displaced persons to their houses, including in Nagorno Karabakh, to
the basic principles of the framework agreement. The main differences
are related to the possible status of Nagorno Karabakh. Armenia
insists on inclusion of the possible independence of Nagorno Karabakh
into the basic principles, which Azerbaijan is against is. I think
that definition of the status of Nagorno Karabakh should be put off
until the time, when mutual trust between Azerbaijanis and Armenians
is restored,’ she said, Day.az reports.

NMDC May Buy Two Ore Mines In Armenia

NMDC MAY BUY TWO ORE MINES IN ARMENIA

Livemint
July 9 2008
India

India’s biggest iron ore producer is looking at forming several joint
ventures to acquire and develop mines overseas

Debarati Roy / Bloomberg

Mumbai: India’s biggest iron ore producer National Mineral Development
Corp., or NMDC, is looking at acquiring iron ore mines overseas,
including two in Armenia, chairman Rana Som said on Wednesday.

"We are looking at forming several joint ventures to acquire and
develop iron ore mines overseas," Som said in a phone interview from
Hyderabad, where NMDC is based.

"Spice Energy approached us with existing mining assets in Armenia
with one deposit of 300 million tonnes (mt) and another of 75mt. These
deposits are magnetite deposits. We have signed an agreement with
Spice saying that we are interested in having a joint venture to
explore iron ore on the basis of 50:50 partnership," he said. "The
total amount that will be spent will be about $500 million (Rs2,155
crore)." Speaking on ore prices, Som said an NMDC team will visit
Japan from 26 July to negotiate prices with customers.

Alvard Petrossian Is Subjected To Terror

ALVARD PETROSSIAN IS SUBJECTED TO TERROR

A1+
10 July, 2008

Member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun (ARFD)
lives on 4/3 Kiyevian. She says the residents of their building
are terrorised by the owners and visitors of objects in Hrazdan
Canyon. At weekends feasts are accompanied by shots. "The number of
shots depends on visitors’ pockets. You cannot imagine what a hell it
is! They don’t even realise that the Memorial to the Genocide victims,
Tsitsernakaberd, is a little above," she said.

Mrs. Petrossian reminded that the world-known artist Hakob Hakobian
lives on the tenth floor and urged the owners of the objects to stop
the terror out of respect to the greatest painter.

"Things worsen during the summer months when people are forced to
keep windows open. I have already become an expert of backstreet
music. The air has become stagnant from the music. It seems as if
the same people organise feasts there all day long," she added.

Alvard Petrossian thinks that the National Assembly is to consider
the issue but the latter sits idle. It is due to mention that the
disputed objects belong to high-rank officials and their relatives.

Residents of 4/3 Kiyevian are terrorised by NA MP Samvel Alexanian
who owes an object in the canyon. Alvard Petrossian was unaware of
it. "The Armenian parliamentarian appreciates the role and functions
of the National Assembly with his behaviour."

Alvard Petrossian frequently raises the question from the NA rostrum
but it never finds a favourable solution. She thinks it will never
do as if the Armenian MPs don’t respect the outstanding painter why
they should respect a woman-parliamentarian