BAKU: "Zerkalo": European Parliament Not To Insist On Recognition By

"ZERKALO": EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT NOT TO INSIST ON RECOGNITION BY TURKEY

demaz.org, Azerbaijan
Oct 29 2007

Accordingly to Zahid Oruj, anyway demand relates to Yerevan not
Ankara ITAR-TASS informs that resolution adopted at the meeting of
European Parliament last week, contains call to Turks and Armenians
to start "reconciliation process". Thus, European parliament members
do not insist on obligatory recognition of "genocide of Armenians"
by Ankara any more. In 2005 when the matter concerned the start
of talks on Turkey’s gaining EU membership, European Parliament
expressed its wish that recognition of "genocide of Armenians"
to be preliminary condition for such entry. However this wish was
rather of recommendation nature, European Union never brought it
forward as condition. Last year European parliament members softened
their positions, and this year word "genocide" was removed from
resolution. Resolution reads that European Parliament again calls
on Turkey to make intensive and serious efforts to solve disputable
issues with all neighbors, to start open discussion on the passed
events. Resolution also reads that "European Parliament again urges
governments of Turkey and Armenia to start reconciliation process".

As one of functionaries of ruling Turkish party of justice and
development, Ersonmez Yarbay, said to our correspondent, Armenia
should stop occupation of Azerbaijani territories and recognize
Turkish frontiers. "Only after it any agreements between Turkey and
Armenia can be talked of", underlined Turkish politician. Following
E. Yarbay’s statement Turkey is not going to give up its previous
position concerning relations with Armenia and puts liberation of
occupied territories of Azerbaijan as condition for normalization of
relations between Turkey and Armenia. On commenting situation, deputy
of Milli Mejlis of Azerbaijan, deputy chairman of party "Ana Veten",
Zahid Oruj, declared for "Echo" that if EU really wants to partake
in improvement of relations between Turkey and Armenia it shouldn’t
put conditions before Turkey but it should do it before Armenia. As
Z. Oruj underscored that it is Armenia that deals with falsification
of history and talks with its neighbors in the language of terror,
ignoring international standards. "If Turkey opens its frontiers to
Armenia, establishing economical relations with this country it will
lead to enhancement of occupation ambitions of Armenia as Armenians’
mind is directed not to the future but to the past and this nation
is hostage of its history", deputy holds.

Accordingly to Z. Oruj, neither Turkey nor European Parliament are
capable to change this nation. Deputy specially underlined the fact
that one of basic directions of foreign policy of Turkey is relations
between Azerbaijan and Armenia. The reason is we and Turks are one
nation. "If Turkey had followed different policy Azerbaijani nation
wouldn’t have taken it", Z. Oruj said. Chairman of "Ana Veten"
reminded history of Soviet Union: "Last century specially during
Stalin’s ruling, Armenia laid serious claims to Turkey. Then there
was no Garabagh problem". Z. Oruj doesn’t understand how Turkey can
agree to reconciliation and cooperation with this state. He holds
that European Parliament made its address to Turkey to prevent its
entry to EU. "I think Armenia should assume obligations not Turkey
despite the fact that it is not EU member state", such is deputy’s
position. Asked by our correspondent whether Azerbaijan should
demand from Armenia to give up claims to territory of Turkey if peace
agreement with Armenia is signed, Z. Oruj answered that "if one can
admit that fair peace agreement will be concluded between Azerbaijan
and Armenia then Azerbaijan should do its best to reflect Turkish
interests in this agreement".

In Turkey, caution tempers calls for war

Los Angeles Times
October 27, 2007 Saturday
Home Edition

In Turkey, caution tempers calls for war;
The government fears a quagmire in Iraq, but nationalists want
action.

by Tracy Wilkinson, Times Staff Writer

The Turkish government is coming under enormous domestic pressure to
crush Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq, but even as rebel positions
are shelled and tens of thousands of troops moved to the border,
leaders are reluctant to invade, fearing international isolation and
a military quagmire.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan would prefer to avoid a
full-scale invasion, according to people familiar with his thinking,
and is pursuing diplomatic options. His government is also
considering using economic leverage by rerouting valuable trade away
from Iraq’s semiautonomous Kurdistan region, where the Turkish Kurd
rebels have found safe harbor.

On Friday, Turkey warned that its "patience has run out" and demanded
that Iraq extradite rebel leaders.

Erdogan and his government want to show they are exhausting
diplomatic options while waving the military threat, the sources say,
because they expect international scorn if Turkey is seen as having
opened a battlefront in the only relatively peaceful part of Iraq.

"You can lessen the public pressure with an all-out invasion, but it
would be a short-term gain," Turkish military expert Lale
Sariibrahimoglu said. "The government and the armed forces are well
aware of the repercussions. This is a serious test of democracy and
diplomacy."

Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, Turkey’s top military commander, was quoted
Friday by private broadcaster NTV as saying that the government would
wait until Erdogan returns from a Nov. 5 visit with President Bush
before deciding whether to launch a military offensive into Iraq.

An invasion also risks dragging Turkey into a quagmire that would
play into the hands of Turkish nationalists keen to undermine the
pro-Islamic government. Some of the loudest war drums are being
beaten by extreme nationalists with a certain sway in parliament and
who would no doubt raise their voices further if a military effort
proved ineffective.

And experience makes it clear that swift success is by no means
guaranteed.

The separatist Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, survived repeated
attacks by Turkey in the 1990s, its members hiding safely in the
rugged mountain terrain on the Iraqi side of the border. And with
winter coming, the chances of a decisive Turkish victory are even
bleaker.

For days, tens of thousands of Turkish troops have been massing along
the 200-mile southern border with Iraq, and commandos have entered
several miles into Iraq in hot pursuit of rebels. Combat helicopters
and F-16 fighter planes daily attack suspected guerrilla hide-outs
and escape routes.

At the same time, Turkey is feverishly pursuing diplomatic solutions,
looking especially to Baghdad and Washington to uproot the PKK and
stop its violence. The Turkish foreign minister rushed to Baghdad; an
Iraqi delegation arrived in Ankara, the Turkish capital, on Thursday
for crisis talks that were to continue today; and U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice is to visit Turkey next week.

In a TV interview Friday, Massoud Barzani, president of Iraq’s
Kurdistan regional government, accused Turkey of seeking a pretext to
mount a major assault in the area. "The PKK is a justification,"
Barzani told Al Arabiya satellite channel. "The goal is to stop or
hamper the growth of Kurdistan region."

The latest Turkish military action is in response to an ambush Sunday
in which the PKK killed 12 soldiers and captured eight in southern
Turkey, about three miles from the border with Iraq. But hostilities
along the remote border have been building for months.

Each day since the ambush, thousands of Turks have taken to the
streets across the nation to demand tough military action. The clamor
became so intense that the government attempted to restrict
television coverage of the soldiers’ funerals and crying mothers.

And Friday, mosques were instructed to read a sermon calling for
brotherhood and discouraging citizens from disunity.

The public outcry almost always goes hand in hand with a pitched fury
of anti-U.S. sentiments; many Turks are convinced that America is
aiding the PKK, or at the least turning a blind eye to rebel
activities — charges Washington denies.

The U.S. maintains that its troops in Iraq are already stretched thin
and cannot sustain a significant presence in largely peaceful Iraqi
Kurdistan. U.S. officials are demanding that Iraqi authorities crack
down on the PKK, but the Iraqis have not done so.

On Friday, Army Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, the commander of U.S.
forces in northern Iraq, said he planned to do "absolutely nothing"
to counter PKK activity, and that he was neither tracking the rebels’
movements nor reinforcing the military presence in the region. Mixon,
speaking to Pentagon reporters by videoconference, also said he had
not seen Iraqi Kurdish authorities acting against the guerrillas.

In Istanbul’s Taksim Square, the heart of the city, police braced for
more demonstrations as passersby vented their anger and vendors sold
huge Turkish flags.

Ahmed Keskin, 60, said war was necessary to put an end to the
"humiliation" that Turks were suffering at the hands of the Kurdish
rebels.

"And I’d go straight to northern Iraq, kill the Americans there and
then kill Kurds wherever I find them," said Keskin, who makes a
living taking photographs of tourists.

In less dramatic terms, Murat Ayan, a recent college graduate looking
for a job in the business world, also advocated robust military
action regardless of the consequences.

"As long as we solve the problem, it does not matter what we
sacrifice," Ayan, 22, said when asked about the possible blood bath
that would accompany an invasion. "We always talk about entering
northern Iraq. If you talk about it, you have to show it, you have to
show your power."

That is the kind of public pressure Erdogan faces. Weighing against
it, in addition to the expected political and diplomatic fallout, are
the lessons of the past.

In two dozen previous incursions in the last decade or so, including
a massive operation in 1995, the Turkish army, the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization’s second largest, was not able to destroy the
PKK. The guerrillas are intimately familiar with the forbidding
mountains where they are based, a roadless swath of hidden caves and
hard-to-detect, rudimentary camps.

The PKK is believed to have about 3,500 to 5,000 fighters grouped
roughly 15 to 20 miles inside northern Iraq, according to
intelligence sources. It is a largely lawless region that even
Kurdistan regional officials say they have no control over.

After years of guerrilla strikes into Turkey, the PKK has developed
as a highly mobile mini-army with expertise in explosives, especially
roadside bombs.

Because the pinpoint strikes have not eliminated the rebels, Turkey
is considering, among various military options, setting up a buffer
zone up to 30 miles deep.

That suggests a different dilemma, according to Cengiz Candar, a
leading commentator on Middle East affairs. Turkish forces, he said,
would have to in effect occupy the zone much as Israel occupied
southern Lebanon for nearly 20 years in an ultimately unsuccessful
attempt to destroy the Hezbollah militant group.

And then there’s the approaching winter. Some of the mountains where
the PKK is based are already dusted with snow, and much of the area
will be impassable within a month’s time.

The recent violence quickly inflamed tensions between ethnic Turks
and Kurds, a long-repressed minority in Turkey. There have been
several attempts to attack offices of Kurdish political parties.

The government in recent years took a number of limited steps aimed
at giving Kurds some political and cultural freedom, such as allowing
the use of the Kurdish language in television broadcasts. Giving
Kurds more rights could deprive the PKK of one of its key reasons for
fighting. But the "Kurdish question," as it is often called here,
remains remarkably emotional and gut-wrenching.

Many Turks regard Kurds with suspicion and even racism, unwilling to
show tolerance for expressions of cultural difference. The reasons
for this are rooted in history and the creation of the Turkish state
early in the 20th century.

The modern Turkish state was created from the ruins of the
once-mighty Ottoman Empire after its defeat in World War I. Its
founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, fended off attempts by Western powers
to further chop it into pieces, and pulled together its diverse
peoples into what he envisioned as a single Turkish identity.

For the new Turkey to survive, modernize and prosper, Ataturk
ordered, ethnic differences had to be suppressed in the interest of
national unity. To this day, Turkish children aren’t taught about the
messy backdrop to their country’s creation.

"There is a deep, deep fear among many Turks that more rights for the
Kurds means the disintegration of the nation," Sariibrahimoglu, the
military analyst, said.

It is this same visceral context that makes discussion of the World
War I-era Armenian genocide, and even Turkey’s more recent invasion
of Cyprus, such an emotionally fraught matter.

At a certain point, of course, if it quacks and waddles, it’s a duck.
So, even if Turkey refrains from a massive invasion and merely
continues with the current cross-border raids and shelling, a war of
sorts is already being fought, the repercussions already unleashed.
Those include the fraying of Turkish-U.S. relations and delaying of
democratic reform inside Turkey.

In predominantly Kurdish southeastern Turkey, most residents regard
with dread the prospect of a war. It is there that civilians suffered
the most during previous offensives, with tens of thousands killed or
displaced.

"If there is war, what am I going to do with my children? How can I
leave them, how can I take them?" said Akide Soz, 35, a Turkish Kurd
in the southern village of Kurubas, a collection of dirt roads where
chickens peck.

Soz has five children, the eldest 7. Wearing billowing paisley pants,
a head scarf and golden hoop earrings, she bemoaned especially that
Muslims would be forced to kill one another.

"What," she asked, "is the future?"

Ter Petrosian has not chance of becoming single opposition candidate

AZG Armenian Daily #197, 27/10/2007

Local Politics

LEVON TER-PETROSIAN HAS NO CHANCE OF BECOMING SINGLE OPPOSITION
CANDIDATE

During the press conference after the opening ceremony of the highway
in south of Armenia President Robert Kocharian also made several
remarks on the current political situation in the country. In
particular, he said that the Pan-Armenian Movement Party left a poor
heritage and is responsible for running the economy of Armenia. The
people, which remember the tough days of early 90’s, will not be so
foolish to trust the Pan-Armenian Movement again, he said hinting at
Ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s intention to take part in the
presidential elections of 2008.

Mr. Kocharian stated that the economy of Armenia has been restored in
general and supposed that the Armenian National Movement leadership
imagine they’ve got opportunity for another plunder. "This is why they
are eager to get the Ex-President involved in their game, so as to
enhance their resources," said Robert Kocharian.

The President also said that Levon Ter-Petrosian has no chance of
becoming the single candidate of the opposition, as there are at least
2 or three figures in the opposition, who are resolved to run for the
President’s office on the forthcoming elections.

Hamazkayin calls Armenian Cypriot parents to join their effort

AZG Armenian Daily #197, 27/10/2007

Diaspora

HAMAZKAYIN CALLS ARMENIAN CYPRIOT PARENTS TO JOIN THEIR EFFORT

Gibrahayer 22 October, 2007

Janna Tahmizian is arriving in Cyprus this Wednesday 24 October, 2007
to stage yet another cultural show this spring. All those interested
to join should contact Sipan Dance Ensemble of the Hamazkayin Cultural
and Educational Association by calling Garine Gostanian on 99353450.
Participation is open to all Armenian youth of all ages. Hamazkayin is
specially urging parents to give their children the opportunity to
experience Armenian dance and culture.

SAN DIEGO, CA – November 4
TENAFLY, NJ – December 1
WASHINGTON, DC December 2
MONTREAL, CANADA – December 8
TORONTO, CANADA – December 9
SF BAY AREA – December 15
LOS ANGELES – School Performances – Dec 18/19
GLENDALE, CA – January 6, 2008

C O N F E R E N C E THE MINORITIES OF CYPRUS: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE

24 & 25 November, European University – Cyprus, Nicosia

CALL FOR PAPERS:

The European University – Cyprus invites submissions for the
conference entitled "The Minorities of Cyprus: Past, Present and
Future". The conference will focus on the Maronite, Armenian and Latin
minorities, however the organizers welcome presentations on other
minorities in Cyprus. The objective is to facilitate an exchange of
research relating to the place of minorities in Cyprus’ past since
1571 (Ottoman, British and Independence periods). We welcome proposals
dealing with any aspect of the experience of minorities in Cyprus,
including the literary and artistic, for the relevant historical
period. We will consider most favorable those proposals that seek to
consider broader and comparative frameworks.

The conference organizers have secured the participation of Professor
Panicos Panayi, De Montfort University and Dr Colin Heywood,
University of Hull as keynote speakers. Assistant Professor Zelia
Gregoriou, University of Cyprus, will give a special presentation and
Professor Costas M. Constantinou, Keele University and PRIO Cyprus
Centre, will chair a panel of the three parliamentary representatives
of the minorities.

Former POW Shares Story

FORMER POW SHARES STORY

The UCLA Daily Bruin, CA
ormer-pow-shares-story/
Oct 26 2007

American author was drafted into Iraqi navy against his wishes,
then captured by U.S. forces Helen Yim, Bruin contributor (Contact)
Published: Friday, October 26, 2007 Shant Kenderian, an American who
was drafted into Saddam Hussein’s navy and captured by American forces,
came to UCLA Thursday to promote his book and discuss his harrowing
experiences on the front lines of Operation Desert Storm.

His book, titled "1001 Nights in Iraq: The Shocking Story of an
American Forced to Fight for Saddam Against the Country He Loves,"
tells the story of his unlikely survival through two wars and
interrogation in an American POW camp.

The lecture, sponsored by the Armenian Graduate Student Association,
was part of a series of events that invites Armenian-American authors
to discuss their books on campus.

Andrew Behesnilian, a medical student and the project manager of the
event, said the goal of the event was to allow students to interact
with published authors in the Armenian community.

Although he was then a permanent resident of the U.S., during a visit
to Iraq in 1980, Kenderian was barred from returning to his mother
and brother in Chicago for 10 years when Saddam Hussein sealed Iraq’s
borders and invaded Iran.

Within weeks of receiving his green card and permission to return to
the U.S. at the war’s end, Iraq launched an invasion of Kuwait and
Kenderian was drafted back into the navy.

Though he was born in Iraq, Kenderian said did not consider himself
an Iraqi, in part because he has no living relatives in the country.

"I felt like I didn’t belong (in Iraq) and that hurt me," he said.

Desperate to return to his family and adopted country, Kenderian
volunteered for an assignment he described as a "triple suicide
mission" on the front lines because he hoped he would be captured as
a prisoner of war by American troops.

He said he did not mind heavy interrogation and solitary confinement
"as long as I was in American custody."

Kenderian said his book presents readers with a unique firsthand
account of war.

"It gives you a feeling about war, a different perspective than the
news or movies," Kenderian said of his book.

He described the hardships of survival such as being forced to fight
without adequate food, shelter or ammunition.

"We had no food, we lived on one bagel-sized piece of bread per day
and drank a lot of water," Kenderian said.

But draftee said he was relieved that he did not have to use a gun
during the war because of his conflicting loyalties.

Key to his survival, Kenderian said, were the lasting friendships he
made with his interrogators and a prison guard.

"It’s a very special bond, and it’s a very painful bond. I am still
in touch with these people," he said.

Areen Babajanian, a fourth-year economics and international development
studies student said he thinks the story of Kenderian’s experiences
is compelling.

"I’m just really interested in the premise of the lecture and the
events he went through," Babajanian said.

Raffi Kassabian, a law student and the executive officer of AGSA, said
he thinks that Kenderian’s experiences are particularly compelling
because the author has no political message and shares stories of
human relationships.

"The story sends a universal message that everyone can relate to,
whether it’s religious or cultural," Kassabian said.

http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/2007/oct/26/f

Iranian FM Mottaki Resignation Rumor Denied

IRANIAN FM MOTTAKI RESIGNATION RUMOR DENIED

IranMania News
Oct 25 2007
Iran

LONDON, October 25 (IranMania) – Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
said Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki will not only retain
his position, but has also appointed a new acting foreign minister,
Iran Daily reported.

He referred to similar rumors about the resignation of officials as
psychological war against the government.

?Mottaki is firmly doing his job. If lawmakers have said something
about the resignation of Mottaki, they themselves should be held
accountable for what they say,? he said.

Commenting on the resignation of former secretary of Supreme
National Security Council (SNSC), he pointed out that Larijani had
earlier submitted his letter of resignation to President Ahmadinejad
thrice? The government? Policies have not changed,? he said.

Asked whether his visit to Armenia was incomplete, he rejected the
same and said everything went as scheduled and that Armenia?s visit
was even prolonged by an hour and a half than was previously planned
because of the kindness of Iranian expatriates in Armenia.

?Such rumors are childish. During Russian President Vladimir Putin?s
visit to Iran, a rumor circulated about a likely assassination attempt
on Putin,? he said.

On recent threats of American officials against Iran, the chief
executive said some of these people are sitting at home and plotting
against Iran.

Ahmadinejad stressed that Iran is ready to negotiate on anything,
except the rights of the Iranian nation.

?What is important is the fact that Iranians are pursuing their
rights. They want Iran to negotiate the issue of 20 centrifuges for the
next 10 years. This is while we currently have 3,000 centrifuges,? he
said.

"Greta" To Monitor Convention Implementation

"GRETA" TO MONITOR CONVENTION IMPLEMENTATION

A1+
[05:26 pm] 24 October, 2007

The Council of Europe Convention against Trafficking in Human Beings
(CETS n° 197) will enter into force on 1 February 2008, following
the ratification by Cyprus as the tenth country to ratify it. On this
occasion Terry Davis, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe,
made the following statement:

"The Convention is deliberately hard on traffickers and makes a
clear difference for the victims of this crime. These victims will be
offered comprehensive assistance and protection of their human rights.

Europe is finally going to use this new and far-reaching instrument
to fight this modern form of slavery. Ten ratifications take us over
the threshold required for the Convention to enter into force, but
the Convention will use its full potential when it is ratified by
other countries in Europe and beyond.

The fact that this treaty has been agreed within the Council of
Europe extends its application to all European countries, which
include countries of origin, transit and destination of the victims
of trafficking.

It is also open to non-European countries and therefore provides a
global response to a global problem. "

The main features of the new Convention include: compulsory assistance
measures and a recovery and reflection period of at least 30 days
for the victims of trafficking, the possibility to deliver residence
permits to victims not only on the basis of cooperation with the
law enforcement authorities, but also on humanitarian grounds; the
possibility to criminalise "the clients"; a non-punishment clause for
the victims of trafficking; a strengthened international cooperation
system and an independent monitoring mechanism, GRETA, which will
monitor the proper implementation of the Convention by the Parties.

–Boundary_(ID_5fzKbyZFD5BRYqq9GMPNJA)–

"Power Structures Should Be Under Civil Control," Secretary Of Herit

"POWER STRUCTURES SHOULD BE UNDER CIVIL CONTROL," SECRETARY OF HERITAGE FACTION DECLARES

Noyan Tapan
Oct 24, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 24, NOYAN TAPAN. "Like before, the party is still
continuing to condemn any attempt of restriction on information
dissemination and free speech, which is expressed by intolerance with
regard to alternative viewpoints." This was said in the October 24
statement of the Orinats Yerkir "Country of Law) party, which was
accepted by law enforcement bodies in connection with the prevention
of the procession organized on the eve by the representatives of the
Alternative non-governmental public initiative.

It should be mentioned that a clash took place between the
representatives of the Alternative non-governmental political
initiative and the collaborators of the police on October 23, which
was based on the attempt of the police to restrict the dissemination
of information concerning the envisaged mass meeting on October 26. As
a result, the representatives of the initiative were brought to the
Kentron police office and kept there for 8 hours.

"We abstain from giving legal marks for the reason of not being
acquainted with the details of the clash and once again consider
inadmissible similar manifestations incongruous with democracy,"
is said in the statement of the Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) party.

As Stiopa Safarian, the Secretary of the Zharangutiun (Heritage)
faction, declared in the October 24 sitting of the RA National
Assembly, immediately after the procession participants were brought
to the police office, the representatives of the faction met with
the leadership of the police office and demanded clarifications in
connection with what had happened. He mentioned that irrespective
of the fact that the leadership of the police office promised to
give clarifications to the MPs a few hours later, the latters were
prohibited to enter the police office and "make use of the rights
they are entitled with by the legislation."

Attaching the attention of the parliament to that fact, S. Safarian
expressed an opinion that the National Assembly should provide
legislative bases so that power structures appear under civil control
and account to society. "This is a challenge addressed to everybody
and, in my opinion, to the power representative political forces,
first of all," the MP declared.

During the conversation with a Noyan Tapan correspondent Karen
Karapetian, the Chairman of the Armenian National Movement faction,
mentioned that if the procession participants have acted in accordance
with the Constitution and Law, he considers inadmissible such an
approach of law enforcement bodies. At the same time he added that only
law enforcement bodies can comment on what happened. In connection
with the fact of using force agaisnt the procession participants by
policemen, Karen Karapetian mentioned that he, in general, is against
such approaches.

Armenia Should Create Reserve Fund Of First-Priority Foodstuff

ARMENIA SHOULD CREATE RESERVE FUND OF FIRST-PRIORITY FOODSTUFF

ARKA News Agency
Oct 24 2007
Armenia

YEREVAN, October 23. /ARKA/. Armenia should create a reserve fund
of first-priority food, independent MP Viktor Dallakyan said at
Tuesday’s parliamentary session commenting increase in prices for
first-necessity products in the country.

"Armenia, like any normal country, must have reserve fund of flour,
sugar and other commodities. Many developed countries undertake
intervention in markets in the event of increase in prices and
stabilize prices", he said.

The lawmaker thinks prices in Armenia surged not only because of
developments in world markets.

He thinks that prices for first-priority products went up amid poverty
and social problems.

In his opinion, Armenian authorities must react properly to these
processes.

Dallakyan proposed to convene extraordinary session to discuss mounting
food prices.

In September 2007, 0.2% deflation was recorded in Armenia. Consumer
prices grew 0.7% in September, compared with the previous month.

Consumer prices index was recorded at 102.7% in September 2007,
compared with the same months of the previous year.

Food prices index, including alcohol and tobacco, made 103.8% in
September 2007, compared with the same month of 2006.

3.8% inflation was recorded in Jan-Sept 2007, compared with the same
period a year earlier, of which foodstuff prices index made 104.8%.

Ahmadinejad: Iran Ready To Launch Consortium For New Installations

AHMADINEJAD: IRAN READY TO LAUNCH CONSORTIUM FOR NEW INSTALLATIONS

Islamic Republic News Agency
Oct 24 2007
Iran

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Wednesday that Tehran is ready to
form new consortium with various world countries for new installations.

Speaking to reporters, he said since Iran should generate 20,000
megawatts of nuclear electricity these consortium could be established
in various parts of the world.

"Since Iran has gained access to technological know-how to generate
nuclear electricity, We never let others interfere and we ourselves
have the final say in these technological matters," he said.

"We are to safeguards the legitimate rights of our nation and let other
countries come to terms for establishing such jointly run consortium,"
Ahmadinejad pointed out.

On Iran’s nuclear dossier, he said the case has been referred to the
International Atomic Energy Agencies.

"Since we abide by the rules and regulations of the IAEA, there is
no concern on declaring our nuclear activities to IAEA," he said.

He underlined that Iran has always been a member of IAEA and the body
has always monitored the country’s nuclear activities.

"We believe in dialogue in resolving our issues," underlined the
president.

"As a member of IAEA, we call for inspecting the nuclear facilities
of other members while letting them inspect ours as well," Ahmadinejad
underlined.

Based on IAEA letter of association and NPT, Iran as a member of IAEA
is authorized to possess nuclear fuel but ‘if others put pressure
on us to negotiate to this end, we completely reject this and are
determined not to come to terms on our legal rights’.

"A number of European countries seek to play a much active role in
our region and we can help them based on meeting nations rights as
well as governing rules and administration of justice," underlined
the president.

On Iran’s nuclear dossier which is still in the UNSC, he said these
are only worthless paper works and their efforts have no impacts on
Iran’s political developments.

"The enthusiastic welcome accorded to Iranian delegation in Armenia
proves that our opponents have been isolated," pointed out the
president.

"We suggest to those who claim that Iranian officials have been
isolated to specify a place for the two sides to be present to see
who has been isolated," concluded the president.