Armenian Police: We Have Enough Water Jet Cannons To Suppress Any Ma

ARMENIAN POLICE: WE HAVE ENOUGH WATER JET CANNONS TO SUPPRESS ANY MASS DISORDERS

arminfo
2008-01-25 15:19:00

ArmInfo. Armenian Police refutes media reports on recently purchased
water jet cannons. Head of the Armenian Police Department for Public
Affairs and Information Sayad Shirinyan made the above refutation at
a press conference, Friday.

He said the Police have enough water jet cannons to suppress any mass
disorders. S. Shirinyan urged Media to verify the information before
disseminating it especially during presidential campaign,

Armenia Intends To Strengthen And Deepen Relations With Iran For Eve

ARMENIA INTENDS TO STRENGTHEN AND DEEPEN RELATIONS WITH IRAN FOR EVEN MORE

Noyan Tapan
Jan 24, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenia highly estimates the
process of development of Armenian-Iranian relations and intends
to strengthen and to deepen bilateral relations with Iran for even
more. RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian said on January 23, when
receiving the copy of the credentials of Seid Ali Saghaian, the newly
appointed Ambassador of Iran to Armenia. Greeting the Ambassador,
the Foreign Minister wished him success in the fulfilment of his
high mission and mentioned that Armenia attaches importance to close
cooperation between the two countries both within the framework of
bilateral relations and international organizations.

According to the report provided to Noyan Tapan by the RA Foreign
Ministry Press and Information Department, during the conversation
the Ambassador assured that he will do his best to strengthen the
bilateral relations.

Seid Ali Saghaian was born in 1957 in Tehran, received pedagogical
education. In 1985 he worked as an expert at IRI Foreign Ministry
Consular Department, in 1986 he was the Deputy Head of the Passport
and Visa Department of the IRI Foreign Ministry. In 1987-1989 he
took the post of the Head of the Passport and Visa Department of
the IRI Foreign Ministry, in 1989-1993 he was IRI Consul General in
Karachi. In 1993 he was the Head of the Public Relations Department
of the IRI Foreign Ministry, in 1993-1998 the Deputy Head of the IRI
Foreign Ministry Protocol General Department. In 1996-1997 he assumed
the commissions of the IRI Charge d’Affaires in Argentina. In 1998-2002
he was IRI Ambasssador in Tanzania and pluralistically in Malavia. In
2002-2005 he worked as the Head of the IRI Foreign Ministry Foreign
Representations Department. In 2005-2007 he assumed the post of the
Head of the Protocol General Department of IRI Foreign Ministry. He
masters the English and Arab languages.

Georgia To Have New Foreign Minister

GEORGIA TO HAVE NEW FOREIGN MINISTER

ARMENPRESS
Jan 24, 2008

TBILISI, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS: News reports from Georgia say Davit
Bakradze, the current minister for conflict resolution is slated to
become the new foreign minister, replacing Gela Bezhuashvili.

The foreign ministry confirmed on January 24 that Bezhuashvili would
no longer lead the ministry.

Bezhuashvili is expected to become secretary of the National Security
Council, replacing Alexander Lomaia, who will be given a diplomatic
posting in the UK.

Bezhuashvili served as NSC secretary for about four months in 2005.

Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili – a key Saakashvili ally –
and Koba Subeliani, the minister for refugees and accommodation,
are expected to retain their positions.

Reports say some other government replacements are expected as well.

TBILISI: Georgian MPs Slam PACE Invitation For Secessionist Leaders

GEORGIAN MPS SLAM PACE INVITATION FOR SECESSIONIST LEADERS

Daily Georgian Times
Jan 24 2008
Georgia

The Georgian delegation at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe said it was against inviting Abkhaz and South Ossetian
secessionist leaders to a PACE session.

The invitation, according to Georgian TV reports on January 23, came
from the Armenian delegation and was supported by Russia. Russia has
been trying, unsuccessfully, to give the secessionist regimes voice
at international fora, in particular the UN Security Council.

Tbilisi-based Mze TV reported on January 23 that Terry Davis, Secretary
General of the Council of Europe, "wants to see invitations extended
to the de facto leaders, because hearing from them in person would
allow for better understanding."

Davis, speaking with Georgian journalists in Strasbourg on the
sidelines of the PACE winter session, was also quoted, at least
according to the translation, as saying that "all forms of dialogue
should be used to resolve these conflicts". He said "details [of
the possible invitation for the secessionists leaders to speak]
still need to be agreed."

"Inviting them [secessionist leaders] here is ludicrous," Levan
Berdzenishvili, a lawmaker from the opposition Republican Party
and a member of Georgia’s delegation to PACE, said. "The Armenian
delegation’s initative is not correct. It should not happen without
the consent of the Georgian authorities. There is no disagreement
between the [Georgian] opposition and the authorities on this issue."

"This is not the first time something like this has happened," MP
Nino Nakashidze, a lawmaker from the ruling party and a member of
the Georgian delegation to PACE, said. "Such initiatives are merely
stunts."

ANKARA: Turkish Supreme Court Overrules Rejection Of Lawsuit Against

TURKISH SUPREME COURT OVERRULES REJECTION OF LAWSUIT AGAINST NOBEL LAUREATE

Anatolia News Agency
Jan 23 2008
Turkey

ANKARA (A.A) -22.01.2008 -4th Chamber of the Supreme Court of Appeals,
overruled a local court’s verdict rejecting an amends lawsuit filed
against Nobel laureate novelist Orhan Pamuk – for his statements
published in a Swiss magazine – .

4th Chamber of the Supreme Court of appeals overruled the first
instance court’s decision upon the appeal filed by the plaintiffs,
on Tuesday.

The Supreme Court said in its verdict that "personal rights"
also covered feelings of ethnicity, citizenship and identity and
reasoned that as well as honour and dignity of individuals, feelings
of belonging to a nation as defined by the constitution were under
legal protection.

The verdict stressed that if the remarks attributed to Pamuk targeted
the Turkish nation – which the plaintiffs are citizens of – the
plaintiffs had the right to actively file a lawsuit against the
novelist and concluded that the first instance court should have
examined the lawsuit based on its merits.

In June 2006 a local court had rejected an amends case filed against
Pamuk by Turgut Koboza and five other individuals – who are relatives
of martrys – .

The petition for the lawsuit had recalled that "in an exclusive
interview with the magazine Pamuk had said, ‘we have killed 30,000
Kurds and 1 million Armenians, and nobody but me dares to talk about
it in Turkey’."

The petition had also said Pamuk incriminated Turkish nation as a
whole with his words.

Six plaintiffs were seeking 36,000 YTL from Pamuk (one dollar equals
1.22 YTL).

The local court had rejected the case reasoning that Pamuk’s
remarks could not be considered a violation of personal rights of
the plaintiffs, only based on their ties of citizenship with the
Turkish nation.

Copper Controversy Haunts Armenian Town

COPPER CONTROVERSY HAUNTS ARMENIAN TOWN
Marianna Grigoryan

EurasiaNet
Jan 23 2008
NY

An increase in birth defects in the northern Armenian town of
Alaverdi has prompted a debate about the operations of one of the
town’s largest employers, the Armenian Copper Program.

Located about 170 kilometers north of Yerevan inside a steep mountain
gorge, Alaverdi, with a population of about 22,000 people, could pass
as a poster town for post-Soviet industrial decline. Emissions from
a 100-meter-tall smokestack connected to the town’s copper-smelting
plant often shrouds the town’s rusting and ruined buildings, creating
a ghostly effect.

Established more than 200 years ago, the Alaverdi plant was once one
of the largest copper production facilities in the former Soviet Union,
with an annual output of 55,000 tons of copper.

That situation changed in 1988-1989, when the disintegration of the
Soviet Union and a growing Armenian environmental activism campaign
prompted the plant’s closure. The Alaverdi plant was totally plundered
and expensive filters that synthesized emissions were sold on the
cheap. The town was left "an environmental disaster area," in the words
of Larisa Paremuzian, who served as Alaverdi’s mayor from 1989 to 1991.

In 1996, the plant finally reopened, under the management of the
Armenian Copper Program, a company whose majority shareholder is the
Lichtenstein-registered Valex F.M. Establishment Company.

But it operated without filters and emissions of hazardous
materials began to soar. At the time of Alaverdi’s closure, its
emissions of sulfuric anhydride — a hazardous compound formed when
sulfur-containing copper concentrate is put into production — exceeded
allowed norms by 7.2 times. By comparison, during the first ten months
of 2007 and in 2006, the plant released into the atmosphere 20 times
more sulfuric anhydride than is permitted under state regulations,
according to data compiled by the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

In 2006, the government states, the plant also released into the
atmosphere 12 tons of arsenic, nearly 105 tons of dust, 41 tons of
zinc, and nearly 3 tons of lead, and 3 tons of copper, among other
hazardous elements.

It is a track record that raises official eyebrows, but has not
yet prompted a crackdown. "We have all the reasons for stopping the
plant’s operations," Marzpet Kamalian, deputy head of the Environment
Ministry’s State Inspections Department, told EurasiaNet. "However,
authorities do not let us do that, as there is a state policy that
the economy should develop. We could either shut down the plant’s
operations, or allow the emissions to happen, and we chose the
second option."

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Health and local hospitals state that the
Alaverdi area is experiencing an alarming frequency of birth defects
in newborns.

In 1992, when Alaverdi was not operating, the town did not record any
case of "natural birth deviations, development defects, deformations
and chromosomal disorders." By 2004, four years after resumption of
copper smelting, the incident rate had increased to 107, from 28 in
2001. Health ministry officials say that they are still completing
the statistics for more recent years.

Doctors at the maternity hospital in Alaverdi say that they have
dealt with anencephalia — "a missing brain" — many times in the
last decade. Hydrocephalia (an excessive amount of water in the
brain), spinal hernias, two-headed fetuses and other defects have
also occurred, said maternity hospital director Amalia Azatian.

Such defects can be caused by genetics, as well as hazardous
pollutants, noted Azatian, who declined to draw conclusions from
the cases.

Respiratory problems — often associated with high concentrations of
sulfur — have become more frequent, too, more than doubling in recent
years. In 2005, the health ministry recorded 121 cases of respiratory
diseases among Alaverdi adults; by 2007, that number had reached 295.

Environmental activists are up in arms over Alaverdi, but say that
their hands are tied. Union of Greens Chairman Hakob Sanasarian calls
the town "a gas chamber."

"It is already about 10 years that the plant has operated without
filters and the emitted poisons immediately affect humans," Sanasarian
said. "It looks like a conspiracy against man and nature by the
government and the plant."

Armenian Copper Program company director Gagik Arzumanian, however,
categorically rejects that view.

"We are always looking for and trying to conduct research to find
a rational option [to continue operations and to minimize the
environmental impact], "Arzumanian said during an October 2007
interview with EurasiaNet.

In the late 1990s, when Alaverdi resumed operations, "our production
volumes were not so large as to enable us to install filters," he
added. Filter costs — broadly estimated in the millions of dollars
— are still exorbitant given Alaverdi’s output, he claimed. As of
2007, the plant’s annual copper production stood at 7,000-8,000 tons,
according to company figures — a sliver of its Soviet-era output.

Government officials do not blame the Alaverdi plant for the birth
defect rate, but stress the need for "extensive" investigation into
the causes. For now, though, the Health Ministry does not have the
"large funding" required for such research, according to Mother and
Child Department Head Karine Saribekian.

One toxicologist, however, maintains that there is a direct link
between the Alaverdi emissions and recorded birth defects. Emil Babaian
is head of the industrial toxicology lab at the General Hygiene and
Occupational Diseases Scientific Research Institute in Yerevan and
has conducted studies in Alaverdi and other "problematic" Armenian
industrial towns.

Annual studies conducted by the institute put Alaverdi kindergartners’
cognitive development at "7 to 10 points behind the norm," Babaian
said. "And the emitted poisonous elements are greatly at fault for
all this."

Armenian Copper Program Director Arzumanian states that he recognizes
the extent of the problem. "I agree that the situation in Alaverdi
is not auspicious for health. However, I cannot say that the problems
exist only because of the plant’s emissions. An increase in diseases
can be registered in all areas [of Armenia]," he said.

By 2009, Arzumanian said, the plant will try to find a solution that
will strive to meet both environmental and economic concerns. A
government-ordered 10-percent reduction in emissions by January
2008 has not yet taken place, he conceded. An additional 80 percent
reduction is slotted for 2009.

Environmental activist Paremuzian says it is unlikely the plant will
meet that target. "The situation goes from bad to worse from year to
year," she said in an October 2007 interview. "According to previous
promises, the filters should have already been installed. However,
nothing has been done so far."

State Environmental Inspections Department Deputy Head Marzpet Kamalian
stresses that Alaverdi still has until 2009 to bring its operations
into compliance with emission regulations.

Despite the current emphasis on economic development, "[i]f it fails
to meet the requirements within the period, we will impose strict
sanctions on it, such as big fines and even going so far as shutting
down the plant," Kamalian said.

Arzumanian states that if hefty fines are imposed and filters cannot
be purchased, the Alaverdi plant may "temporarily suspend" its work.

"Our activities will not be financially justified," he said. Instead,
he said, the company would concentrate on operations at Teghut,
thousands of hectares of woodland in the northern Lori region that
the Armenian Copper Program intends to clear for mining of large
copper reserves.

That threat resonates with Alaverdi residents. The plant employs some
700 people, and is one of the town’s largest sources for jobs.

"If the plant is closed, Alaverdi will be turned into a large village,"
predicted Alaverdi Mayor Artur Nalbandian, adding that consideration
is also given to the environmental issues. "[W]e would have to choose
the old option [having a job despite environmental pollution] again."

For now, Alaverdi residents say that they are still waiting for a
sign of any other option.

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the Armenianow.com
weekly in Yerevan. Karen Minasyan is a photographer based also
in Yerevan.

President Kocharian Says Government Interested In Holding Democratic

PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN SAYS GOVERNMENT INTERESTED IN HOLDING DEMOCRATIC POLLS

ARMENPRESS
Jan 22, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22, ARMENPRESS: President Robert Kocharian said today
the government is interested in holding the February 19 presidential
election in conformity with international standards.

He made the remark during a meeting with ambassador Gert-Hinrich
Arhens, head of the OSCE/ODIHR election observation team. Kocharian
said the government has done everything possible to organize the
ballot in a proper manner.

Apart form a long-term mission the OSCE/ODIHR is expected also to
deploy about 250 short-term observers on February 19.

Kocharian was quoted by his press office as telling the ODIHR
Mission head that the Armenian government is eager to cooperate with
international observers for a good conduct of the polls.

Kocharian also expressed wish that every signal of vote fraud be
carefully examined before being recorded by observers.

Ambassador Arhens said his Mission is ready for useful cooperation
with the authorities.

Kocharian was also said to give explanations and answers to a set of
questioned raised by Arhens.

Artashes Geghamian Presented His Pre-Election Program And Criticized

ARTASHES GEGHAMIAN PRESENTED HIS PRE-ELECTION PROGRAM AND CRITICIZED THE EX-PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA

Mediamax
January 21, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Candidate for the position of the Armenian
President, Leader of "National Unification" Party (NUP) Artashes
Geghamian presented his "Creation Program" in Yerevan today.

Mediamax reports that in his speech, Artashes Geghamian harshly
criticized the actions of the company of the Ex-President Levon
Ter-Petrosian, noting that "this person does not act in accordance
with the interests of the Armenian people".

Candidate for the position of the President expressed confidence
that the Ex-President counts on the support of external forces, in
particular, Russia. According to him, "the participation of external
forces in the electoral processes directly hits the Armenian statehood,
and only the population of Armenia is empowered to decide on the
future of its country".

Talking about his pre-election platform, Leader of NUP stated that
in he presents in it the ways for solving social-economic, cultural,
educational problems, at that bringing about detailed description of
his actions.

Artashes Geghamian stated that if he is elected for the position of
the Armenian President, he will strive to reach the formation of such
state bodies, which would have the will to establish law and order
in the country.

Russian Railways to handle Armenian Railway

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Jan 16 2008

Russian Railways to handle Armenian Railway

YEREVAN, January 16. /ARKA/. The Russian Railways will handle the
Armenian Railway CJSC, RA Minister of Transport and Communication
Andranik Manukyan said today during a press conference.

The Russian company has won the Armenian Railway management bid. The
companies signed today a transaction in Yerevan. The concession
agreement will be signed in a month, according to the Minister.

On December 21, 2007 the Russian Railway expressed a willingness to
invest $570mln in the Armenian Railway CJSC ($230mln of the total sum
will be invested in five years). If Armenia establishes railway
communication with Turkey and Azerbaijan, the investments will
increase to $610mln and $1.8mln respectively. The company is ready to
incest another $2.2mln if the Abkhaz section of the railroad opens.

According to Manukyan, the RA Government planned to invest $170mln in
the Armenian Railway in 30 years. He pointed out that the Russian
Railways plans to allocate AMD 1.7bln for the RA state budget as a
lump sum investment. Besides, the company will transfer 2% of the
Armenian Railway’s profit to the RA state budget.

The Canadian CPS Transcom Consulting Company gave 94.4 points (on a
100-points scale) to the offer of the Russian Railways. The
consulting company will prepare the concession agreement, Manukyan
said. `The concession agreement with the Russian Railways is a
success, taking into account that the company remains the country’s
property and is just committed to trust,’ the Minister said.

The Armenian Railway CJSC owns 805 km long railway lines of total
1,125 km railroads in Armenia. The company has been gaining profit
since 2001. The Armenian Railway freighted 3mln tons of goods in 2007
against 2.7mln tons in 2006. The company’s profit totaled AMD 12bln
against AMD 11bln in 2006. -0–

Telebridge Shushi-Yerevan-Moscow-Bethlehem

TELEBRIDGE SHUSHI-YEREVAN-MOSCOW-BETHLEHEM

KarabakhOpen
18-0 1-2008 16:55:01

On January 18, the Christmas Day by the old calendar, the telebridge
Shushi-Bethlehem will start at 9.30 pm local time, organized by
Shushi Rebirth Foundation. During the telebridge there will be live
telecasts from St. Savior Church of Shushi, the City Hall of Yerevan,
Moscow and Bethlehem.

Mayor Yervand Zakharyan, director of the foundation, will hold a
reception at the City Hall of Yerevan. The representatives of the
Armenian community will gather at the Armenian embassy to Russia. In
Bethlehem the viewers will watch the mess at St. Christmas Church.

Renowned activists of Armenia, Karabakh and the Diaspora will
participate in the telebridge, footages from the United States and
France will be broadcast.

The purpose of the telebridge is to mark Christmas, underline the
importance of the reconstruction of Shushi and call our compatriots
worldwide to contribute to the charity and investment programs of
Shushi Rebirth Foundation.

Shushi Rebirth Foundation Department of Public Relations