Armenia’s Ombudsman At Hearings On EC Of Human Rights’ Reforms

ARMENIA’S OMBUDSMAN AT HEARINGS ON EC OF HUMAN RIGHTS’ REFORMS

Aysor
Feb 17 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Ombudsman Armen Harutyunian at the invitation of the
European Group of National Human Rights Institutions will participate
in the ministerial summit, a spokesperson for the Ombudsman Office
said. According to report, the summit will take place on February
18-19 in Interlake city of Switzerland, and its agenda is to focus
on the European Court of Human Rights’ reforms.

The European Group of National Human Rights Institutions consists of
four regional bodies: African, Asian Pacific, European and American,
which are administrative bodies set up in to protect or monitor
human rights.

PSRC Grants License To ZH And K GES Ltd For Construction Of Small Hy

PSRC GRANTS LICENSE TO ZH AND K GES LTD FOR CONSTRUCTION OF SMALL HYDROPOWER PLANT SYUNIK

ARKA
February 17, 2010
Yerevan

YEREVAN, February 17, /ARKA/. Armenia’s Public Services Regulatory
Commission (PSRC) has granted a license to Zh and K GES Ltd for
construction of a small hydropower plant Angeghakot in the southern
Syunik province.

Hmayak Amiraghyan, head of a PSRC department in charge of legal and
licensing issues, said the declared capacity of the power plant is
150 KWh. He said the license is granted until 2011 December 30.

According to official figures, on October 1 2009 there were 76 small
operating hydropower plants in Armenia with the aggregate capacity of
97 megawatt; they generated 337 million KWH a year. Other sixty-eight
small power plants with the total capacity of 157 megawatt and 552
million KWh were under construction. The bulk of small hydropower
plants are in Syunik and Lori provinces. ($1 – 375.83 Drams).

Armenian Population Of Samtskhe Javakheti Is Spiritually Thirsty

ARMENIAN POPULATION OF SAMTSKHE JAVAKHETI IS SPIRITUALLY THIRSTY

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.02.2010 14:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian population of Samtskhe Javakheti
has a key strategic role for Armenia’s communication security, an
expert said.

"The Georgian authorities are forcing Armenians to leave their
historical homeland or to assimilate. The situation even worsens due
to the problems related to the activities of the Armenian Apostolic
Church," Eduard Abramyan, head of National Neo-conservative Movement
told reporters on Monday.

"There are 130 thousand Armenians living in Samtskhe Javakheti
and there are only 5 or 6 clergymen for the entire territory. The
Armenian population of the region is spiritually thirsty," he said. "To
address these problems a separate AAC diocese should be established in
Javakhk. Besides, Armenia should alter its policy towards the region."

U.S. should back a new Constitution, not the military, in Turkey

Kurdish Globe
Feb 13 2010

U.S. should back a new Constitution, not the military, in Turkey

By Azad Aslan
Globe Editorial

Last week, two high-profile visits to Turkey by U.S. officials to
discuss a number of issues with Turkish authorities, including the PKK
(Kurdistan Workers Party) issue, may indicate a new turn with regard
to the Kurdish national question in Turkey.

The AKP-led Turkish government’s highly debated, so-called Democratic
Opening, which dealt with Turkey’s long-standing question of the
Kurdish issue, was derailed mainly thanks to the fierce opposition
from the two main parties in the Turkish National Assembly, the CHP
(Republican People’s Party) and the MHP (National People Party). The
Democratic Opening also received a huge blow when the country’s
constitutional court decided to close the only pro-Kurdish party, the
DTP (Democratic Society Party), while at the same time the PKK
attacked and killed several Turkish soldiers in Turkey.

Initially the opening provided some hope for the century-long Kurdish
question for a democratic solution, and the Kurdistan Regional
Government officials in Iraqi Kurdistan expressed their optimism and
support for the initiative of the Turkish government. Following the
Turkish government’s initiative, there was a lively academic and
public discussion centered on the Kurdish issue and the possibility of
its resolution. However, this short-lived optimism turned into
pessimism when the abovementioned developments followed the opening.
Despite all these negative occurrences, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan insisted that the Democratic Opening continue. This,
however, seems very unlikely, and requires profound fundamental
structural reforms within the Turkish establishment that are necessary
not only for the solution of Kurdish national question, but also other
deep-seated questions ranging from the Armenian genocide to
headscarves and the role of the military in political life of Turkey.

Since the establishment of the Turkish Republic, one of the main
characters of Turkish politics can be categorized as a military
tutelage whereas the main founder of the republic, the military under
the banner of Kemalism, determines the social, political, and economic
life of the country. Despite Turkey’s transformation from single-party
rule to a multi-party system in the second half of the 20th century,
the governments have had limited roles and space in the political
administration. The framework determined by the Kemalist military
ideology symbolized by secularism and inclusive nationalism. At
certain junctions where the civil polity tried to break the chain of
this framework, the military inserted its rule through military coup
d’états. The last military coup happened on September 12, 1980, and
the new Turkish Constitution was prepared and endorsed under this
military regime. The main problems of Turkey finding difficulty
dealing with fundamental problems are related to this militarist
Constitution and judicial system.

This explains the fact that any government in Turkey, if it is serious
in dealing with and bringing solutions to the grave questions, must
rewrite a democratic and civil Constitution and reform the judicial
system. As long as the current Turkish Constitution prevails, any
initiative toward a democratic and peaceful solution of Turkey is
bound to fail.

That is not to say that a new democratic constitution will be able to
resolve the most intricate question of Turkey–that is, the Kurdish
national question–but it will provide a better and peaceful road
toward the solution. The Kurdish question primarily is a national
question, a question of territory and property right to control
resources on territory in parallel with self-administration. In short,
it is a question of building a state and self-determination. To expect
a democratic constitution to grant such rights to the Kurds in Turkey
would be over-optimistic and far from reality. This, however, should
not discourage the Kurdish political actors from pushing to support
any initiative toward writing a new constitution providing basic
cultural rights to the Kurds. The Kurdish political actors in Turkey
should follow a delicate policy while on the one hand assisting any
Turkish government that attempts to reform the political system of
Turkey on the Kurdish question, and on the other hand they should not
lose perspective of the real character of the Kurdish question. This
means the Kurdish actors should be both assistive and critical of the
government on its initiative toward the Kurdish issue.

The fact is, the Kurdish question is not entirely an internal affair
of Turkey but has an international character; the actors involved in
this question are from diverse political power circles within the
Turkish establishment, Kurdish political groups, the KRG, and
international power centers–mainly the U.S. and EU. Each of these
actors one way or other influence and affect the question and its
possible solutions on its own merits. Because of this character, it is
not entirely on the Kurdish actors to determine the possible roads
toward the solution. The other actors, particularly the international
ones, should play a positive and contributory role.

The U.S. is explicitly involved in this question and cooperates with
Turkey on this issue. For so long, the U.S. pursued the Kurdish
question as a terror issue and provided military assistance to Turkey
to combat PKK guerrilla warfare. However, it seems that the U.S. only
recently began to see that the question cannot be dealt with purely
through a military effort, but other measures must be taken into
consideration. This perception has not gone far in terms of
implications, but remains solely in verbal well-wishes. The U.S.
military support for Turkey, however, continues. This cooperation
intensified in 2007, when Washington decided to provide significant
intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance capacities, and other
equipment to Ankara to back up its efforts to eliminate the PKK.

In the last two official U.S. visits by U.S. Defense Minister Robert
Gates and Gen. Ray Odierno to Ankara, they offered Turkey more help
with equipment and intelligence to combat the PKK both in Turkey and
in their base in Kurdistan Region of Iraq. "I offered during my visit
here to see if there are more capabilities that we can share with
Turkey in terms of taking on this threat," Gates stated. He further
stated that Gen. Odierno, the top U.S. officer in Iraq, discussed an
"action plan" on possible further assistance with Turkish officials
when he visited Ankara earlier this week.

The U.S. must understand that whatever military cooperation it can
make with Turkey, it is not possible to deal with or get rid of the
Kurdish question. Instead of encouraging the Turkish military to
perceive the question entirely from a security threat and terror
perspective, the U.S. must encourage civil and democratic institutions
in Turkey to push it toward a better functioning democracy where all
the problems of Turkey can be dealt with.

Neither the Turkish state nor the U.S. has any right to ask the KRG to
take a part in this issue from a purely military solution. Kurdistan
President Massoud Barzani was absolutely right when he explained
during his interview with the Brookings Institute in the U.S. that he
will not take part if Turkey deals with the issue from a military
angle. He underlined that the issue can be resolved through dialogue
and democratic initiative. He expressed the KRG’s good intention to
support the Turkish government in its effort in the Democratic
Opening. This clear perspective put forward by the Kurdistan President
should be taken seriously by Turkey and the U.S., and this should be
the blueprint of KRG policy to deal with the PKK and Kurdish questions
in Turkey.

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Artur Baghdasaryan, Nikolai Bordyuzha Discuss Armenia-CSTO Collabora

ARTUR BAGHDASARYAN, NIKOLAI BORDYUZHA DISCUSS ARMENIA-CSTO COLLABORATION ISSUES

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.02.2010 17:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ RA National Security Council Secretary Artur
Baghdasaryan met with CSTO Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha .

The meeting centered around Armenia-CSTO collaboration issues, RA
NSC press service reported.

The parties also emphasized the importance of cooperation in
military-technical, IT, and anti-trafficking spheres.

The Collective Security Treaty Organization, formed under the framework
of the Commonwealth of Independent States, serves as a mutual defense
alliance among Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and
Tajikistan. The Collective Security Treaty (CST) was signed on May
15, 1992 for five-year term, with the possibility of prolongation. On
December 2, 2004 the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted
the Resolution to grant the observer status to the Collective Security
Treaty Organization in the General Assembly of the United Nations. The
goal of the Collective Security Treaty Organization is to strengthen
peace and international and regional security and stability and to
ensure collective protection of independence, territorial integrity
and sovereignty of Member States, in the attainment of which Member
States shall give priority to political methods.

On February 4, 2009, the CSTO leaders approved formation of Collective
Rapid Reaction Force (RRF).

Turkey Says Determined To Normalize Ties With Armenia

TURKEY SAYS DETERMINED TO NORMALIZE TIES WITH ARMENIA

People’s Daily
Feb 11 2010
China

Turkish President Abdullah Gul said Thursday Turkey remains determined
to normalize relations with Armenia after a recent dispute threatened
to derail the two neighbors’ efforts to mend long-time rifts.

"We have to be aware that concluding this historic process will require
honoring our commitments in their entirety as well as displaying
adequate political courage and vision," Gul was quoted by local
newspaper Hurriyet Daily News as saying.

"You should have no doubt that our determination to move these
objectives forward is intact, provided that this resolve and commitment
remains reciprocal," Gul said in a response to a message given by
Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan.

In October last year, Turkey and Armenia signed historic deals on
normalizing ties and reopening their borders after nearly a century
of hostilities. The agreements need to be ratified by both countries’
parliaments before taking effect.

Last month, the Armenian Constitutional Court upheld the protocols,
but ruled that the protocols should not breach the country’s
Independence Declaration, which says Armenia will always work for
worldwide recognition of the massive death of Armenians under the
Ottoman rule in 1915 as genocide.

Turkey denies that charge and insists the Armenians were victims
of widespread chaos and governmental breakdown as the 600- year-old
Ottoman Empire collapsed before modern Turkey was born in 1923.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has criticized the Armenian
court’s ruling as "unacceptable" and said it could challenge the
reconciliation efforts between the two countries.

In Thursday’s message, Gul said "overcoming the long- established
prejudices and nurturing mutual understanding and trust among our two
neighboring peoples were indeed our main objectives when endorsing
the process of normalization between our countries."

Turkey allowed Sarksyan’s plane to fly through Turkey’s airspace en
route to London last week and the Armenian president sent a courtesy
message to Gul, according to the newspaper.

Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic or economic ties since Armenia
declared its independence in 1991. Turkey closed its border with
Armenia in 1993 to support Azerbaijan, which had a territorial conflict
with Armenia over the Upper Karabakh region.

Azerbaijan Will Hardly Take A Chance On War, Says Military Expert

AZERBAIJAN WILL HARDLY TAKE A CHANCE ON WAR, SAYS MILITARY EXPERT

Aysor
Feb 11 2010
Armenia

"There were recently made official and non-official statements and
declarations on resumption of hostilities. All these appear to have
concerned society; in respond to all these declarations there were
some statements made and views shared, and then the process recovers
its temper until the next statement," said at today’s press conference
military expert, David Jamalian.

He pointed that Aliev’s war treats can concern the civil population,
never interested in politics, while others perfectly realize that
all these are just parts of propaganda. Meanwhile, the resumption
of hostilities is possible in any time, but the matter is when to
prepare the society for a war?

"It’s interesting, if there are preconditions of resumption of
hostilities, and how it is appropriated to declare war, when there
is too little sense in voicing all these. Sure, our society should
always be open-eyed as the best instrument against war is being ready
both militarily and psychologically to face such kind of development."

The region won’t go into the war if the superpowers are not interested
in it, according to expert. He said believes that the war is possible
to begin only if Armenia and the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’s positions
become weaker than they are now.

"I believe that our enemy would immediately take advantage of our
weakness – if we were weak – to return lost in the war territories.

"I wonder if any superpower is interested in war today. I say, no,
the war is not possible."

Besides, says David Jamalian, Armenian side is on the better hand as
it is the part which stands in defense of its own land. Peoples of
Armenia and NKR are ready to stand up for their lands, so, Azerbaijan
will hardly take a chance on the war.

A Reference Interconnection Offer Of ArmenTel CJSC Approved In Armen

A REFERENCE INTERCONNECTION OFFER OF ARMENTEL CJSC APPROVED IN ARMENIA FOR OPERATORS OF PUBLIC TELECOMMUNICATION NETWORKS

ArmInfo.
2010-02-10 20:34:00

ArmInfo. The Public Services Regulatory Commission of Armenia (PSRC)
has approved a reference interconnection offer of ArmenTel CJSC
(branch of VimpelCom OJSC) for the operators of public networks of
mobile and fixed communication, as well as for operators of fixed
networks using telephone number with geographical codes.

According to the document, ArmenTel is to provide services related to
deployment of a connection point of the networks which are necessary
for connection of communication lines, as well as termination of
calls from other networks. The operator concluding an agreement with
ArmenTel is to deploy the connection point and termination of calls.

As regards deployment of new lines for interconnection, the sides
conclude additional agreements. Moreover, if ArmenTel needs additional
construction work to deploy the new lines of communication for
interconnection, the work is to be carried out at the expense of the
agreement partner in compliance with an additional agreement between
the sides, agreed technical conditions and cost sheet.

If deployment of the lines is carried out at the expense of the partner
operator and by the latter’s forces, ArmenTel is to provide the proper
technical conditions if needed and if possible. The agreement on
interconnection may be cancelled in case of violation of considerable
provisions, including regular violations of the traffic management
conditions.

The deployment of a point of connection will cost 375,000 AMD
(VAT exclusive) per each E-1 port. The call termination cost within
ArmenTel’s fixed telephony network will make up 2.1 AMD in Yerevan and
8.33 AMD in the regions. The call termination cost within ArmenTel’s
mobile network at peak hours (07:00 AMD-11:00 PM) will be 19.83 AMD
till July 1 2010, 17.02 AMD and 14.21 AMD in the following six-month
periods and 11.40 AMD July 1 2011. From 11:00 PM to 07:00 AM the cost
will be 14.74 AMD July 1 2010 and 13.63 AMD, 12.51 AMD and 11.40 AMD,
respectively.

Head of Legal Service of ArmenTel David Sandukhchyan regrets that
the company’s proposals have not been considered in the offer. As
a national operator, ArmenTel has undertaken the initiative to
draft and approve the inter-connection agreement and is ready to
cooperate with all alternative operators. ArmenTel has drafted the
agreement without waiting for similar initiatives by the other mobile
operators and has submitted relevant proposals to the Public Service
Regulation Committee. However, the company is not satisfied with the
inter-connection prices fixed by the Committee as they are too low.

"We regret that the Committee has ignored our proposals," says
Sandukhchyan.

Football Diplomacy Proves Inefficient

FOOTBALL DIPLOMACY PROVES INEFFICIENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.02.2010 15:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish
relations has hit a deadlock, according to Ruben Mehrabyan, expert
at the Armenian Center of Political and International Studies.

"Football diplomacy proved inefficient," he told reporters on
Wednesday. "Politicians can to their heart’s content reiterate that
Nagorno Karbakh conflict settlement process in not interconnected
with the Armenian-Turkish reconciliation but the linkage is obvious."

The Protocols aimed at normalization of bilateral ties and opening of
the border between Armenia and Turkey were signed in Zurich by Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet
Davutoglu on October 10, 2009, after a series of diplomatic talks
held through Swiss mediation.

On January 12, 2010, the Constitutional Court of the Republic of
Armenia found the protocols conformable to the country’s Organic Law.

The conflict between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan broke out in
1988 as result of the ethnic cleansing the latter launched in the
final years of the Soviet Union. The Karabakh War was fought from
1991 to 1994. Since the ceasefire in 1994, sealed by Armenia, NKR and
Azerbaijan, most of Nagorno Karabakh and several regions of Azerbaijan
around it (the security zone) remain under the control of NKR defense
army. Armenia and Azerbaijan are holding peace talks mediated by the
OSCE Minsk Group up till now.

Armenian President Sends Message To Turkish President

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SENDS MESSAGE TO TURKISH PRESIDENT

ArmInfo
2010-02-09 10:53:00

ArmInfo. President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has sent a message to
President of Turkey Abdullah Gul. To note, the Armenian president
left for London this morning on a three-day working visit.

As the presidential press service told ArmInfo, S. Sargsyan’s message
says, in particular: "Flying over the territory of Turkey, I welcome
you and the people of the neighbouring Turkey. Our initiative
on settlement of relations between Armenia and Turkey is in the
center of attention of the world community. The moment is really
historical, and this is realized not only by us but by the whole
world as well. The efforts of the powers, involved in the region,
are invaluable in settlement of bilateral relations. I am sure that
it would be difficult to advance without their mediation. Along with
it, I think however much interested the friendly countries are in a
positive outcome of the process, they cannot do what our two peoples
are able to do.

I think you will agree that the leading part in breaking the
stereotypes in relations between the Armenian and Turkish peoples,
as well as in formation of an atmosphere of mutual trust has been
assigned to the authorities. We can achieve results only due to the
belief in our work, decisiveness and fidelity to the principals.

Otherwise, when the world and work disagree, it causes distrust,
enabling the process opponents to act. We must realize that the
time, in this case, does not contribute to the process but makes
it senseless.

If, at this moment, we succeeded to bring out the bilateral contacts
to such a level that a prospect of building of normal relations
between our countries has become visible and tangible, now it has
become necessary to show decisiveness and make a large step forward,
as well as transfer a secure and stable region to our descendants.

Assuring you of my highest esteem".