BAKU: Defence Ministry denies Azerbaijan mediating between Iran, USA

Defence Ministry denies Azerbaijan mediating between Iran, USA

Fars News Agency website
20 Apr 06

Tehran, 20 April: Minster of Defence [Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar] has
denied the report filed by Associated Press concerning Azerbaijan’s
mediation between Iran and America as a sheer lie.

Gen Kalantari, the deputy minister of defence for defensive and
international cooperation, in a telephone conversation with Fars News
Agency emphatically denied the news published by Associated Press
concerning Azerbaijan’s mediation between Iran and America.

He stressed: There have been no discussions concerning the mediation
of Azerbaijan over Iran’s relations with America and the report filed
by this agency is a sheer lie.

A few hours ago, Associated Press had announced that Iran’s defence
minister in his meeting with the president of Azerbaijan had said
that this country may mediate between Iran and America.

U.S. Embassy holds fifth annual Jazz Appreciation Month

U.S. Embassy holds fifth annual Jazz Appreciation Month

20.04.2006 12:14

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – The U.S. Embassy in Armenia is proud to announce
that it will hold its fifth annual Jazz Appreciation Month in Armenia
April 26-30. This year’s program will include multiple events including
film showings, a jazz dance performance, and Armenian and American
jazz music concerts, which are open to the public.

The Judy Bady Quartet from New York City, along with many well-known
Armenian jazz musicians, will take part in this week-long celebration
of jazz. A new addition to this year’s events is a jazz dance
performance at the Paronyan Theater.

Tickets for all performances are on sale at the Opera and Paronyan
Theater box offices. Additional information can be found on the
U.S. Embassy website at

www.usa.am.

Turks And Azeris Of America Envisage To Hold Demonstration OfComplai

TURKS AND AZERIS OF AMERICA ENVISAGE TO HOLD DEMONSTRATION OF COMPLAINT IN NEW YORK ON APRIL 22

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 19 2006

NEW YORK, APRIL 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Assembly of
Turkish American Associations and the Azeris’ Union of America envisage
to hold a demonstration of complaint in the “Times” square of New York
on April 22, two days before the memory day to the Armenian Genocide
victims. According to the Istanbul “Marmara” daily, Tomris Azeri,
the Chairman of the Azeris’ Union of America stated that their goal
is to make “massacres conducted by Armenians against Azeris” audible
to the world. According to him, “the world is not enough aware of
those massacres that were conducted by Armenians against Turks and
Azeris.” It is envisaged to place during the demonstration a huge
screen in the “Times” square on which a “documentary film” about
“the genocide implemented by Armenians” will be shown.

TBILISI: Saakashvili: New Roads To Put An End To Javakheti’s Isolati

SAAKASHVILI: NEW ROADS TO PUT AN END TO JAVAKHETI’S ISOLATION

Civil Georgia, Georgia
April 19 2006

President Saakashvili said on April 19 that a total of “GEL 400
million [USD 219 million] is planned to be spent over the course
of the next few years” on rehabilitating and constructing roads in
Samtskhe-Javakheti, which will “put an end to the isolation of this
region,” which is in southern Georgia.

Saakashvili was speaking in Akhalkalaki, a predominantly
ethnic Armenian populated town in the Samtskhe-Javakheti
region, at a groundbreaking ceremony of the construction of the
Akhalkalaki-Akhaltsikhe road, which is planned for completion by
next year.

“Later this autumn we will launch the construction of another new
highway linking Akhalkalaki with Tbilisi; GEL 300 million will be
spent on the construction of this road,” Saakashvili said.

“[New roads] mean that Javakheti’s geographical isolation from the
rest of Georgia will end once and for all; this means that local
peasants [sic]will be able to freely export their products from here;
this means that more businesses will come here; this means that more
transit will take place here… Roads and development – these are
what Javakheti needs now,”

The rehabilitation of roads in this region is also envisaged by the
U.S. funded USD 295.3 million aid program in frames of the Millennium
Challenge Account. A major part of the funding – USD 102 million –
will be spent towards rehabilitating some 245 kilometers of the main
road traversing the Samtskhe-Javakheti region.

A Number Of Official Representatives Of Pace To Visit Armenia InCurr

A NUMBER OF OFFICIAL REPRESENTATIVES OF PACE TO VISIT ARMENIA IN CURRENT YEAR

Noyan Tapan
Apr 18 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, NOYAN TAPAN. PACE ad hoc commission on the isssue of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict will visit Armenia, Azerbaijan and Nagorno
Karabakh in October of the current year. Head of the PACE Armenian
delegation, RA NA Vice-Speaker Tigran Torosian informed about it at
the April 17 press conference.

He informed that during the PACE spring session held on April 10-13
in Strasbourg the head of the Armenian and Azeri delegations met with
the Chairman of the above-mentioned commission Lord Russel Jonston
for the purpose of discussing the further work. In particular, they
reached an agreement on reconsideration of the commission’s staff: it
is envisaged that two delegates from Armenia and two from Azerbaijan,
two co-reporters on issues of Armenia and Azerbaijan in PACE from
Armenia and two from Azerbaijan, a representative from each group of
the Assembly will take part in the further work. According to Torosian,
at the meeting it was also established that henceforth the commission
should take control of the fulfilment of the recommendatioms of the
Assembly Resolution N 1416. T.Torosian informed about the Assembly
representatives’ visits to Armenia. In particular, at present Russian
deputy in the Assembly Vera Oskina is in Armenia. She is preparing a
report on the position of women in the South Caucasian countries. In
late May – early June, British deputy in PACE Edvard O’Hara will
pay a visit to Armenia for the purpose of preparing a report on the
condition of the monuments in the South Caucasus. On June 5-9 ,
PACE deputy from Netherlands Leo Platvoet will visit Armenia for
the purpose of preparing a regional report on missing people. On
September 25-27, two co-reporters on the issue of Armenia from the
Monitoring Commission will pay a visit to Armenia for studying the
further application of the constitutional amendments in the Armenian
legislation. According to T.Torosian, after the 2007 parliamentary
elections the co-reporters will make up a final report on fulfilment
of the commitments of the country towards CE. According to the
preliminary agreement, in mid-October a sitting of the Assembly’s
Monitoring Commission will be held in Armenia and the sitting of the
Commission on Political Issues in 2007 spring.

Armenian Government Makes Decision To Liquidate Yerevan K. Demirchya

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT MAKES DECISION TO LIQUIDATE YEREVAN K. DEMIRCHYAN SPORT AND CULTURE CENTER

Yerevan, April 17. ArmInfo. On April 13 the Armenian Government made a
decision to liquidate Yerevan K. Demirchyan Sport and Culture Center,
which bears no relation to the deal on the sale of K. Demirchyan
Sport and Concert Complex (SCC) to the company “Bamo,” reliable
sources told ArmInfo.

The procedure connected with registration of the SCC property
privatization and liquidation of the earlier operating state
non-commercial organization is in question. The given governmental
decision proceeds from the Law “On state non- commercial
organizations.” The news agency ArmInfo misunderstood the above
decision. Hence, the information that the deal with “Bamo” was
broken allegedly for non-fulfillment of the contractual commitments
by the company does not correspond to reality. ArmInfo presents its
apologies for the inaccuracy in the information to “Bamo” company
and to its readers.

More Iranians to flee to Azerbaijan due to rising tension with USA

More Iranians to flee to Azerbaijan due to rising tension with USA – website

Institute for War and Peace Reporting website, London
15 Apr 06

Ethnic Azeris from Iran are fleeing to Azerbaijan for fear of a
possible US attack, the website of the London-based Institute for War
and Peace Reporting has said. They have chosen Azerbaijan because they
speak the same language spoken north of the border and often have
relatives in Azerbaijan, it said. At the same time, the website quoted
several experts as saying that in 2005 the number of Iranians applying
for refugee status in Azerbaijan was 10 times the 2004 figure, rising
from 14 to 147. If the tension between Iran and the United States
continues to rise, it seems inevitable that many more Iranian
nationals will want to make Baku their new home, the IWPR said. The
following is the text of Kamal Ali’s report by London-based Institute
for War and Peace Reporting website on 15 April headlined “Iranian
Azerbaijanis move north.

Growing numbers are moving from Iran to Azerbaijan, especially since
the upsurge in tension between Washington and Tehran”. Subheadings
have been inserted editorially:

Safe haven

I would never have thought they were from Iran. Said Soleymani, 42,
and his family members looked like regular residents of Baku. Women in
the Azerbaijani capital do occasionally wear black headscarves, and
there was nothing unusual about the denim gear worn by Said and his
two sons. Only their accent betrayed that they were southerners,
possibly from Iran.

I met them in Baku’s Zavokzalnyy district beyond the railway station,
which used to be an Armenian neighbourhood before the war over
Nagornyy Karabakh, and which then became a haven for Azerbaijani
refugees.

Now there are reports that the area has become a haven for a new kind
of migrants. Semen Kastrulin, a journalist who lives in this
neighbourhood, says Zavokzalnyy is now home to large numbers of ethnic
Azerbaijanis from Iran.

Said and his bashful and silent wife agreed to talk to me. They come
from around Tabriz, the capital of Iran’s East Azarbayjan
Province. They said they had come to Baku for about three weeks, to do
some sightseeing and shop for cheap goods.

According to Said, their visit had nothing to do with fears of an
American attack on Iran, in the dispute over its development of
nuclear technology. He said they had long been planning to come. But
he conceded that they might stay a bit longer, waiting for things to
quieten down back home.

I met another Iranian, Nazim Mohammadi, 60, in Cafe Tabriz close to
the Iranian embassy. Apparently, this is now the local Iranian
community’s favourite place to hang out and discuss the latest
political and sports news.

Mohammadi and his two sons came to Baku at the end of March. They are
staying with his wife’s relatives, who emigrated from Iran during the
Soviet era, fleeing political persecution in the wake of the Red
Army’s withdrawal from northern Iran at the end of the Second World
War.

“We are from Tehran, where we own a beautiful two-storey house with a
courtyard,” said Mohammadi. “We have a family car repair business. My
brother and his family are staying there now, looking after the house
and the business.”

Nazim is playing with the idea of starting a car repair centre in
Baku, but he is not sure he can compete with the locals. “We are not
going to stay here forever; we’ll see how it goes. If we’re lucky,
we’ll probably go to Europe.

If not, we’ll go back home,” he said.

The Iranian Azerbaijani migrants are hard to spot in Baku – still less
count – partly because they blend in with the locals, but also because
they keep a low profile and come and go from Iran.

Sharp rise in migration from Iran

IWPR contacted Majid Feyzullahi, press spokesman for the Iranian
embassy in Baku, for a comment on newspaper reports that Azerbaijan
was being “overrun” by refugees from Iran. The Ekspress newspaper, for
example, had reported that the flow of migrants to Baku had
intensified to such an extent that housing and land prices had gone
up.

Feyzullahi appeared annoyed and said he could only repeat what his
ambassador, Afshar Soleymani, had already said – that the embassy had
no information about this matter.

Word-of-mouth reports however suggest a sharp rise in migration from
Iran.

Political analyst Rovsan Novruzoglu told IWPR he knows of more than
150 Iranian families who have fled to Azerbaijan in fear of an
American attack on Iran.

But Iranian immigrants are nothing new for Baku. Ethnic Azerbaijanis
came across from Iran in the Soviet period, fleeing persecution by the
shah’s regime before it was overthrown in 1979.

Novruzoglu also claimed that Iranian security agents were in the
country disguised as migrants, creating a threat to Azerbaijan’s
national security.

Why have Iranian nationals chosen Azerbaijan as a safe haven? Iran’s
ethnic Azerbaijanis speak the same language spoken north of the border
and often have relatives in Azerbaijan. However, Persian-speaking
Iranians also come to Azerbaijan.

It is easy and inexpensive for Iranian nationals to obtain an
Azerbaijani visa. A three-month renewable visa costs them 40 US
dollars. Under a 2005 bilateral agreement – yet to be ratified by the
Azerbaijani parliament – both Iranian and Azerbaijani nationals living
within 40 kilometres of the frontier will be entitled to cross without
a visa.

Another Iranian, Ahmad, who had arrived in Baku a few weeks before,
said he believed the Azerbaijani authorities were stalling on the
visa-free border agreement for fear of being overrun by Islamic
fundamentalists from Iran.

Azerbaijan’s National Committee on Refugees and Forced Migrants
reported that in 2005 the number of Iranians applying for refugee
status was 10 times the 2004 figure, rising from 14 to 147. In 2005,
the applications of 40 Iranian families were approved, according to
the committee’s press spokesman Sanan Huseynov.

Vuqar Abdusalimov, press spokesman for the Azerbaijani office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, told IWPR the numbers
had not really changed despite the talk of an increased refugee flow
prompted by the threat of conflict.

Baku residents are wary of their more affluent cousins from Iran,
believing that they bump up property prices in a city already bursting
with other migrants and refugees from the Karabakh conflict.

According to Baku’s Birzha newspaper, the average price of a
three-room apartment in a good Baku neighbourhood has gone up from
22,000 or 23,000 US dollars to 35,000-40,000 dollars in just 12
months. Property prices are also reported to be on the rise in
Naxcivan, the Azerbaijani exclave that borders Iran.

Westernized Baku is a strong contrast to the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Kastrulin said he noticed that Iranian men enjoy the freedom to drink
alcohol in restaurants – something they are denied at home, while the
women are frequently seen on the street without the obligatory
headscarf.

If the tension between Iran and the United States continues to rise,
it seems inevitable that many more Iranian nationals will want to make
Baku their new home.

Kamal Ali is the editor-in-chief of Birzha Plus newspaper in Baku.

Power plant deal aimed at supporting Armenian authorities – pol

Power plant deal aimed at supporting Armenian authorities – politician

Arminfo
14 Apr 06

Yerevan, 14 April: “The so-called strategic partnership between
Armenia and Russia resembles the Soviet Union’s support for African
regimes,” the leader of the opposition National Democratic Union
[NDU], Vazgen Manukyan, said at the Zerkalo discussion club today.

He said that the money Armenia will receive from the sale of the fifth
unit of the Razdan thermal power plant will not reach ordinary
citizens and as a whole, the deal is totally aimed at supporting the
current authorities. The NDU leader gave a similar assessment to the
US Millennium Challenge Corporation as well. The corporation has
decided to allocate 235m dollars in the next few years on condition
that democratic reforms are carried out.

Manukyan said that this loan will only strengthen “the positions of
anti-democratic forces in the country”. “If the corporation suspends
the financing when elections are rigged, responsibility for that will
be placed on the opposition which will try to expose ballot-rigging,”
he said.

Asked by journalists whether the loan of the American corporation and
the commitments of Russia’s Gazprom to Armenia can be assessed as the
superpowers’ support for candidates to supreme power – Armenian
President Robert Kocharyan and Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan,
Manukyan said that such a version has the right to exist.

His opponent, the former prime minister and leader of the Christian
Democratic Union, Khosrov Arutyunyan, said that “he is not going to
comment on old wives’ tales”.

Armenia, Revisited; Amid Protests, PBS Slates Film and Panel Show

Armenia, Revisited

Amid Protests, PBS Slates Film and Panel Show

The Wall Street Journal
April 14, 2006
Page W2

The mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during World War I
still elicits both rage and denials — as the controversy over two new
PBS programs shows.

On Monday, the public broadcasting network will air “The Armenian
Genocide,” a one-hour documentary that details both the horrors of that
ethnic-cleansing campaign and the Turkish government’s efforts to deny
that what occurred qualifies as genocide. Narrated in somber tones by
celebrities such as Juliana Margulies, Ed Harris and Natalie Portman,
the film presents evidence that the slaughters were planned centrally,
including letters from U.S. government officials and others who
witnessed parts of the campaign. They describe forced deportations,
during which many Armenians were killed or died, and government death
squads that mopped up stragglers.

The film includes some of the first statements from Turkey-based
academics agreeing that the genocide occurred, as well as oral histories
from Turkish people who recall their own families’ involvement. “There
is something my grandfather did personally,” one man, filmed on a
Turkish street, says. “They caught Armenians and put them in a barn and
burned them. My grandfather says their voices didn’t leave his ears for
years.” (According to many scholars, more than one million Armenians
died in that period, though Ankara says the toll was much lower.)

In Turkey, one of the professors involved in the film says he faced
death threats when he spoke out in a Turkish newspaper about the
genocide. In the U.S., the topic rouses passions as well. Filmmaker
Andrew Goldberg, fearing a partisan protest, says he has hired off-duty
police officers for added security for Monday’s premiere of the
documentary in a Los Angeles movie theater. Meanwhile, a separate
discussion panel that PBS commissioned to run after the documentary is
causing an outcry among pro-Armenian groups because it includes two
academics who reject the label “genocide.” PBS says it has received more
than 8,600 letters and phone calls opposing the broadcast.

While the documentary itself will be accessible to about 93% of U.S.
television households, most major PBS affiliates in the top 20 TV
markets aren’t airing the panel show. That program will nevertheless
reach about 58% of U.S. households through smaller PBS affiliates. A
spokeswoman for WGBH in Boston, which is among the channels not airing
the panel, says the station felt the documentary “stood on its own.”

(“The Armenian Genocide” airs in most markets on Monday, 10 p.m. EDT;
check local listings)

[PHOTO CAPTION] Century-old wound: Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in a
scene from the PBS documentary “The Armenian Genocide.”

BAKU: Stephen Mann To Visit Yerevan In May

STEPHEN MANN TO VISIT YEREVAN IN MAY
Author: Z.Ibrahimli

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
April 13 2006

The date of visit of Stephen Mann, American co-chairman of OSCE Minsk
group for resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, is not determined
yet. Apparently, he will arrive in Yerevan in May of the current year,
said Anthony Godfrey, deputy US Ambassador to Armenia, adding there
was no official note on this matter.

We should note that Stephen Mann is visiting Baku April 18. The purpose
of Mann’s visit is learning positions of official Baku and Yerevan on
so-called recommendations the USA made on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
resolution, Regnum reports.