BAKU: Serbian Foreign Minister: Belgrade Should Not Sell Arms To Arm

SERBIAN FOREIGN MINISTER: BELGRADE SHOULD NOT SELL ARMS TO ARMENIA

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Jan 10 2006

Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Draskovic criticized arm selling to
Armenia, APA reports. The minister noted that the steps taken by
President Tadic are contrary to Prime Minister Voislav Kostunica’s
opinion.

"To sell arms to Armenia is Serbia government’s business. We only
provide a political opinion, and that opinion has not changed from the
outset. We have long declared that the OSCE has imposed an arms embargo
on Armenia and Azerbaijan because of the conflict in Nagorni-Karabakh
and that there is an instructive Resolution 8153 by the UN Security
Council that requires all countries to refrain from supplying "any
arms or ammunition to Armenia or Azerbaijan."

underlined Draskovic. The minister also noted that, US has a decision
on banning cooperation with the country that violates embargo law.

"Kraguevache plant gets $20m profit from arm selling to the U.S. That
is why by selling arm cost $2m we put our profit under risk. On the
other hand the government should compensate the losses" he said.

The minister said that if the president agrees to sell armaments to
Armenia, he would have give explanation to UN and OSCE because of
violation of resolutions and embargo law.

BAKU: Leo Platvoet: Facts On Captivity Of Azerbaijani Soldiers Will

LEO PLATVOET: FACTS ON CAPTIVITY OF AZERBAIJANI SOLDIERS WILL NOT BE INCLUDED IN MY REPORT

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Jan 10 2006

"I have no information about the captivity of three soldiers of the
Azerbaijani Army. Anyway, the fact on the captivity of Azerbaijani
soldiers will not be included in my report," Leo Platvoet, PACE
Rapporteur on the Missing Persons in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
told the APA exclusively.

He said that the mission led by him prepares report only on missing
people. Leo Platvoet noted that repatriation of Meskheti Turks to
Georgia will not be included in the report either.

OSCE Report About Fires In Karabakh Conflict Zone Is Unbiased: Armen

OSCE REPORT ABOUT FIRES IN KARABAKH CONFLICT ZONE IS UNBIASED: ARMENIAN FM

Yerevan, January 9. ArmInfo. The report of the OSCE mission about the
fires on the contact line in the Karabakh conflict zone is unbiased,
Armenian FM Vardan Oskanyan said during a press-conference today.

The report focuses on the necessity to prevent the fires and makes
specific proposals on how to do it. Oskanyan said that the report
may shortly be published.

Armenian genocide question hits home

na-armenia7jan07,0,3732522,full.story?coll=3Dla-ho me-headlines

Armenian genocide question hits home
The former U.S. ambassador’s use of the term leaves Congress poised for a
battle between pragmatism and principle.
By Maura Reynolds
Times Staff Writer

January 7, 2007

WASHINGTON – Nearly two years ago, John Evans did something no U.S.
ambassador to Armenia before him had done: He used the word "genocide"
– in public – to describe the deaths of about 1.2 million Armenians at
the hands of Ottoman Turks.

It has long been a sore point with Armenian Americans that the U.S.
government does not refer to the killings that began in 1915 as
genocide, and Evans’ use of the word did not signal a change in that
policy. It did set off a slow-boiling controversy that eventually cost
him his job.

Now, the issue is preparing to boil over again, setting up a clash
between the Democratic-controlled Congress and the Republican White
House. The dispute has stalled the confirmation of Evans’ successor
and strained U.S. relations with Turkey, a key U.S. ally in the Middle
East.

"Based on what I’ve seen, this is headed to a confrontation," said a
senior Democratic congressional aide. "It’s an issue that’s a
flashpoint of controversy for both parties."

It started at UC Berkeley, in February 2005, soon after Evans took up
his ambassadorship.

"I will today call it the Armenian genocide," Evans said, according to
a transcript by one of the groups attending the gathering hosted by
the university’s Armenian studies program.

Evans’ comments floored – and pleased – his audience, eventhough he
made it clear that he was articulating a personal view, not
U.S. policy.

"I recall being surprised at that moment," said Stephan Astourian,
executive director of Berkeley’s Armenian Studies program, who
organized the session.

Though Armenian Americans and others consider Evans’ statement an act
of courage for which he has been unfairly punished, policymakers call
it a misjudgment that could fuel anti-Western sentiment in Turkey.

Historians have long used the term "genocide" to describe the
murderous campaign against the Armenians in Turkey. Nearly the entire
population of A rmenians was executed, starved or forced into exile on
the orders of the ruling Young Turk Party. Outside Turkey, there is
little debate over the facts orthe use of the word "genocide."

In Turkey, however, official history has long disputed the use of that
term. As a result, American officials have used all sorts of others –
"mass killing," "massacres," "atrocities," "annihilation" – but have
stopped short of "genocide."

"We have never said it wasn’t genocide," explained a senior State
Department official, who agreed to discuss formation of U.S. policy in
detail on condition he not be further identified. "We just haven’t
used that word."

State Department officials believe that Turks will come to their own
acceptance of the term from internal debate.

"That debate needs to happen, but it needs to be a Turkish debate,"
the official said. "It has been our view that our position of
encouraging thatdebate – and not allowing Turks an easy out to say,
‘This is foreign pressure’ – is more effective."

Most Armenian Americans and many members of Congress disagree, arguing
that the U.S. government should call the killings "genocide."

In a short interview, his first since leaving the State Department,
Evans declined to discuss his motives in making the genocide
statement, but saidthat "it wasn’t a slip of the tongue."

"I knew it was not the policy of the United States" to use the word
"genocide," Evans said.

"Ninety years is a long time," Evans added, referring to the decades
since the genocide began. "At some point you have to call a spade a
spade."

In the months after Evans’ remark, the State Department made clear its
displeasure. By July 2005, "it was absolutely crystal clear" that he
wouldbe forced out, he said. Still, it took more than a year more for
him to leave.

"Evans was a career foreign service officer, and you do not go after a
career foreign service officer lightly," said a second State
Department official.

Evans left Armenia in September and formally retired from the State
Department last month.

Meanwhile, the American Foreign Service Assn., the organization that
represents U.S. foreign service officers, granted Evans its 2005 award
for "constructive dissent" by a senior diplomat. But weeks later, the
group rescinded the prize, arousing suspicion that the State
Department had intervened.

Foreign Service Assn. officials who agreed to discuss the matter said
they took back the award after learning that Evans apparently did not
first go through internal channels of dissent before publicly stating
his views.

"Ambassador Evans’ action – admirable as it was – did not fit the
category of ‘constructive dissent,’ " the group said in a statement.

State Department officials said they felt blindsided by Evans’
genocide remarks.

The unanswered questions about Evans’ departure have stalled the
nomination of a successor.

In May, President Bush nominated Ambassador Richard Hoagland, who most
recently served as ambassador to Tajikistan. But in September,
Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) put a parliamentary hold on Hoagland’s
nomination, blocking it until the end of the congressional session,
when the nomination expired.

Some Armenian Americans took issue with Hoagland, complaining that in
written responses to questions from the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, he was dismissive of the Armenian genocide. Last month,
Menendez and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) demanded the
administration send over a new nominee.

Bush will have to decide whether to renominate Hoagland. The
administration appears to be standing behind him, and complains that
he has been turned into a scapegoat over Evans’ dismissal.

"Senators can say that our policy on the Armenian massacres is wrong,
but it’s wrong to punish the president’s nominee for adhering to the
president’s policy," said the senior State Department official, adding
that some of Hoagland’s opponents had "twisted" his responses on the
genocide.

"He’s being tarred as a [genocide] denier," said the senior State
Department official. "And the only reason it’s being done is that
they are angry about Evans for the wrong reasons."

Not all Armenian Americans oppose Hoagland’s nomination. The Armenian
Assembly of America has said that although it opposes administration
policy, it would support Hoagland. And the Armenian government has
said that policy on the genocide issue should take second place to
more immediate problems, including diplomatic relations with Turkey.

The Republic of Armenia became an independent state after the breakup
of the Soviet Union in 1991, and today has a population of about 3
million.

To both Democrats and Republicans, support from Armenian Americans is
important. There are an estimated 1.4 million Armenian Americans, with
the largest population center in Glendale.

In the end, Democrats now in control of Congress may need to decide
between pragmatism and principle.

"To the extent that Armenia goes without a U.S. ambassador, that’s a
bad thing by anyone’s standard," said a Democratic staffer involved in
the confirmation process. "We’re 1,000% supportive of the Armenian
community onthe genocide issue. But in this case, the [State
Department] policy is going tobe very tough to change, and I don’t
think holding up an ambassador is going to get them to change their
policy."

[email protected]

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-

Starting January 1 the population is paying 59 AMD for gas

Starting January 1 the population is paying 59 AMD for gas

ArmRadio.am
05.01.2007 15:15

Starting January 1, 2007 those who consume less than 10 thousand cubic
meters of gas monthly will pay 84 thousand drams instead of the
current 90 thousand. Those who consume 10 thousand cubic meters or
more will pay 153.26 USD per 1,000 cubic meters (including the
value-added tax) instead of the current 146.51 USD. Despite the rise
of gas fees for the latter, considering the dram-dollar exchange rate
fluctuations, they will also pay 3,000 less for every 1,000 cubic
meters than before.

Let us remind that according to the decision of RA Government, the
state has assumed the responsibility t o pay 25,000 AMD out of 84,000
set per 1,000 cubic meters. That means that starting January 1, 2006
the population is to pay 59 drams instead of the previous 65 per every
cubic meter of natural gas.

Russia allows Serbian company to export weapons to Armenia

FoNet news agency, Serbia
29 Dec 2006

Russia allows Serbian company to export weapons to Armenia

Belgrade, 29 December: Russian Ambassador Aleksandar Alekseyev today
conveyed the Russian side’s positive response to Serbian President
Boris Tadic regarding the president’s initiative that the problem of
Zastava Weapons factory products’ export to Armenia be solved.

President Tadic and Ambassador Alekseyev agreed that the quantity and
the kind of exported weapons should not influence the balance of
power in the Caspian region.

Tadic and Alekseyev stated that relations between Serbia and Russia
were progressing and said they were hopeful that economic issues,
initiated by [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin and Tadic at a
meeting in Moscow, were starting to realize, said a statement
released by the president’s press office.

Turkish Organizations To Send Protests To Sylvester Stallone

TURKISH ORGANIZATIONS TO SEND PROTESTS TO SYLVESTER STALLONE

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.12.2006 13:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish organizations are going to send protest
letters to American movie actor Sylvester Stallone who intends to
screen Franz Werfel’s ‘The 40 Days of Musa Dagh’. As Turkish Milliyet
reports, Savaş Egilmez, the chairman of the so-called ‘Association
on struggle against Armenian Genocide ackowledgement’ stated that
"movies are often used for propagandistic goals and this time the
Armenians also are going to use such an opportunity. Austrian writer,
a Jew by descent Franz Werfel has written this novel in 1933. It is
full of lie since the author wrote it after talking to the Armenians
with nationalistic and radical views," Egilmez claims. In his words,
"it is necessary to take appropriate measures till the start of shoots,
since after everything has already began it will be more difficult. "We
have already sent appropriate documents about the events of those
days to the producers of the film. Our compatriots will assist us to
urge the producers not to shoot the film," he underlined.

It’s worth reminding that Sylvester Stallone declared about his
intentions to shoot a film about heroic defense of Musa Dagh in
1915 in Ottoman Empire on the bases of ‘The 40 Days of Musa Dagh’
book. Alongside, he stated that Ankara near 85 years carries out a
denial policy of the Armenian Genocide, reports the Armenian Public
Television.

How Did The Government Understand?

HOW DID THE GOVERNMENT UNDERSTAND?
James Hakobyan

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 25 2006

The intention of the government to revise the procedure of subsidizing
gas for the industries could be considered as reasonable if the
subsidy were not such an unreasonable step. Like the prime minister
said several days ago, they thought the subsidy would help to keep
the prices of products low, but the prices soared, nevertheless,
and it aroused questions with the government. Now the government is
likely to discuss whether the subsidy is expedient.

This could be considered progress of the government towards economic
thinking. In reality, however, this phenomenon reveals once again how
void this thinking is. After seeing the consequence of this thinking
only a hopeless fool would not realize that it is a mistake and would
not try to correct his mistake. Meanwhile, the problem is to think
enough before making a mistake to avoid it. And not everyone is able.

The government gives a subsidy of several million dollars to such
industrial giants of Armenia like the cement factories of Ararat and
Hrazdan and then suddenly finds out that it was a mistake, and the
price of the cement nevertheless soars. The impression is that the
government listens to its inner voice and then finds out its mistake.

Meanwhile, the government should first study every branch of the
economy before granting subsidies. The tendencies of development,
the correlation of the supply and demand, the regional developments
should be evaluated first because the factories of cement, for
instance, sell the bulk of their production abroad. In that case
the government would see that in the economy nothing is absolute,
and subsidy should not be based on the same measurement.

There is another explanation of subsidizing which is as absurd. The
government said that it would help the Armenian producers become
competitive compared with the producers of Georgia and Azerbaijan
who have to pay more for gas, and for the Armenian producers the
price remained the same or increased. For a term of three years it
is possible, but the price of the Russian gas will cost 110 dollars
for this period, and the government decided to subsidize gas for this
period. But this resembles a situation when a doctor gives a painkiller
to the patient instead of a treatment. Meanwhile, the other patients
are taking a treatment, and the government is not interested in what
will happen later when the others recover, for it is only solving a
current problem. But if they have decided to reconsider the subsidy,
something must be happening. Maybe the reason was the appeal of the
IMF resident representative for Armenia Nienke Oomes who advised to
reconsider the subsidy because it is not effective. Considering the
"deep respect" of the Armenian government for female representatives
of the international organization, the government may have listened
to the appeal of the IMF representative.

But the problem is what the government understood from this appeal.

It is possible that the current size of the subsidy is not effective
because it is small and needs to be boosted.

ARF’s History On Photographs

ARF’S HISTORY ON PHOTOGRAPHS
By Sevak Hakobian

Yerkir.am
December 22, 2006

ARF’s Youth Union of Armenia organized a photo exhibition dedicated
to the 116th anniversary of ARF. The exhibition titled "My Past Is
the Cornerstone of My Future" was held at Moscow Cinema on December 20.

ARF’s history starting with 1890 up to our days was presented at the
exhibition. The exhibition aimed at showing to the youth the history
of ARF’s activities in Armenia, Artsakh and Diaspora through photos.

The items presented at the exhibition were collected by the young
people from personal archives and other sources. Some photos were
exhibited for the first time. In his opening remarks, Officer in
Charge of ARF’s Hay Dat and Political Issues Kiro Manoyan noted that
ARF’s cote d’arms tells everything about the party’s activities.

ARF’s history of 116 years has been so reach in activities that it
is impossible to present it fully at the photo exhibition. Despite
this fact, the exhibition depicted ARF’s activities in such a clear
way that anyone would get an idea of ARF’s activities. The exhibition
was divided into four parts.

The first part presented ARF’s history starting with its foundation
up to its activities in the Diaspora. It included photos of the Urfa
battle, the command unit of the Khansor battle (1897), soldiers of
Vaspurakan unit (1921), and many other military units that played an
important role in ARF’s history.

Photos of the party’s founders and activists were also presented here –
Rostom, Aram Manukian, Simon Vratsian, Stepan Tsaghikian, Nikol Duman,
Dro, Nikol Aghbalian, Garegin Nzhdeh and many others that devoted
their life to the difficult task of liberating the nation and were
the spirit of the liberation troops.

When ARF was exiled by the Soviets, it was widely active in the
Diaspora.

This phase of ARF’s activities was presented in the second part of
the exhibition. During this period, ARF carried out intellectual work,
and was at the same time engaged in self defense.

The activities of Hay Dat and youth organizations were partially
presented at the exhibition – a number of demonstrations, meetings,
marches, ARF’s self-defense troops in Lebanon, the April 24 march in
Beirut and many other historical events. Most importantly, Hay Dat
activities in different countries were presented. The independent
state is the key to solving the Hay Dat, Officer in Charge of ARF’s
Hay Dat activities Kiro Manoyan believes.

The third part of the exhibition presented the period of the liberation
war in Artsakh where ARF sacrificed many of its best soldiers.

The forth part tells about ARF’s activities after the independence
of the Third Armenian Republic was accomplished including the period
when the party’s activities were banned in the country.

Books and periodicals published by the ARF and its youth organizations
in Armenian communities in different countries were also presented
at the exhibition.

Member of ARF’s Supreme Board, head of ARF’s parliamentary faction
Hrayr Karapetian noted in addition to celebrating the ARF’s anniversary
in different countries of the world, our youth should be exposed to
these photos because ARF’s history is also the history of the entire
Armenian nation.

The exhibition dedicated to ARF’s 116th anniversary will be open
until December 25.

Issue Of Legality Of Vote Results Of Constitutional Right Union Part

ISSUE OF LEGALITY OF VOTE RESULTS OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT UNION PARTY’S CONGRESS IS NOT ISSUE OF CONSTITUTIONAL COURT, FORMER MEMBER OF UNION’S CHAIRMANSHIP IS SURE

Noyan Tapan
Dec 25 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 25, NOYAN TAPAN. "We dispute not the issue of
legality of the activity of the "Constitutional Right Union" party,
what is really an issue of the Constitutional Court (CC), but the
legality of the vote results of the party’s last conference." Karen
Vardanian, one of the claimants on the issue of recognizing invalid
results of the Constitutional Right Union congress made such a
statement at the December 25 press conference. In his words, the
issue of violations of the vote for the party heading bodies has no
relation with the Constitutional Court. Commenting upon the innerparty
developments of the Constitutional Right Union during the recent
months, K.Vardanian qualified them as "a revolution," expressing a
confidence that its authors are other forces. At the same time he
found it difficult to state names of those forces, emphasizing that
they have no possibility of holding their investigation.

And, in K.Vardanian’s words, Constitutional Right Union former Chairman
Hrant Khachatrian’s words about leaving the policy must not be accepted
seriously: "those are a consequence of the shock arisen because of the
friend’s betrayal." Touching upon the sale of places at the commissions
by some heads of Constitutional Right Union at the last parliamentary
elections, K.Vardanian mentioned that "Nor Zhamanakner (New Times)
party Chairman Aram Karapetian must be interested" in interpretation
of that issue as the happened directly damaged his political interests.