Recurrent Monitoring At The Karabakhi-Azerbaijani Contact Line

RECURRENT MONITORING AT THE KARABAKHI-AZERBAIJANI CONTACT LINE

armradio.am
13.05.2009 16:42

On May 13, in accordance with the earlier agreement with the NKR
authorities the OSCE mission conducted а regular monitoring of the
line of contact of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijani Armed Forces in
the northern direction from Talish settlement of Martakert region, NKR.

Press Service of the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs informs that From
the positions of the NKR Defense Army the monitoring was conducted
by Field Assistants of the Personal Representative of the OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Peter Kee (Great Britain), Irzhi Aberle(Czech
Republic) and Zhaslan Nurtazin(Kazakhstan).

The monitoring group from the Azerbaijani side was headed by Personal
Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-office Andrzey Kasprzyk.

The monitoring passed in accordance with the planned schedule. No
violation of cease-fire regime was registered.

The monitoring mission from the Karabakhi side was accompanied by
representatives of the NKR Ministries of Defense and Foreign Affairs.

Iran Begins Gas Exports To Armenia

IRAN BEGINS GAS EXPORTS TO ARMENIA

Press TV
May 13 2009
Iran

Kasaizadeh says Iran’s gas exports to Armenia will ultimately reach
6.3 million cubic meters a day.

Iran has officially begun gas exports to Armenia, initially pumping
two million cubic meters of gas per day to its northwestern neighbor.

The 113-km (71-mile) pipeline, which runs from the northwestern
Iranian city of Tabriz to the Iran-Armenia border, was inaugurated on
Wednesday, said National Iranian Gas Export Company Managing Director,
Seyyed Reza Kasaizadeh.

Lusine Harutiunian, an Armenian Energy Ministry spokesman, confirmed
that natural gas deliveries from Iran had begun.

Kasaizadeh said under the 20-year contract, originally signed in 2004,
the volume of Iran’s gas exports to Armenia could reach 4 million
cubic meters per day in 2011 and then gradually rise to 6.3 million
cubic meters per day.

Iran’s gas exports to Armenia were due to begin in 2007, but Armenia
requested a delay, saying Yerevan was not ready to distribute the
gas it was to receive under the contract.

Armenia will use Iranian gas for generating electricity which will be
partially returned to the Islamic Republic in payment for gas imports.

The two countries are due to build a third high-voltage power
transmission line linking their power grids for this purpose.

Armenian Box Team Participating At International Tournament In Chech

ARMENIAN BOX TEAM PARTICIPATING AT INTERNATIONAL TOURNAMENT IN CHECH REPUBLIC

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.05.2009 11:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today in the Chech city of Usti Nad Labem the
International Box tournament has launched.

8 representatives of Armenia team participate in the tournament:
Hovhannes Danielyan (up to 48 kg), Derenik Gizhlaryan (up to 51 kg),
Azat Hovhannesyan (up to 57 kg), Ara Puluzyan (up to 60 kg), hrachik
Javakhyan (up to 64 kg), Samvel Matevosyan (up to 69 kg), Andranik
Hakobyan (up to 75 kg), and Tsolak Ananikyan (up to 91 kg).

The Armenia’s team coach Rafael Meghrabyan will form a national team,
which will take part in the World Championship in August of 2009
in Milan.

Majority Of Turks Against Opening Armenian Border: Genar Survey

MAJORITY OF TURKS AGAINST OPENING ARMENIAN BORDER: GENAR SURVEY

ArmInfo
2009-05-11 17:21:00

ArmInfo. Majority of Turkish citizens are against the possible
opening of the Turkish-Armenian border. A survey, conducted by the
Genar research company among 2,044 individuals across 17 largest
Turkish cities from April 17 to April 26 showed that 67.6 percent
of the polled were against the possible opening of the border with
Armenia and the normalization of diplomatic ties with that country,
while 32.4 percent said they would support such a move.

Russia Relies On Subtle Diplomacy In Armenia-Turkey Issue

RUSSIA RELIES ON SUBTLE DIPLOMACY IN ARMENIA-TURKEY ISSUE

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.05.2009 16:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia relies on subtle diplomacy and is actually
interested in success of Armenian-Turkish talks, according to an
Armenian professor.

"Moscow is attempting to cause a split between Azerbaijan and Turkey
and is approaching its goal gradually," professor Ruben Safrastyan,
director of NAS RA Institute of Oriental Studies, told a news
conference today.

"Russia has two objectives: to alienate Ankara from Washington and
to divide Turkey and Azerbaijan on the Karabakh issue," he said.

Commenting on results of social surveys which revealed concerns over
possible opening of the Armenian-Turkish border, prof. Safrastyan said,
"Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan rules the situation. His statements
are meant to raise his party’s rating."

According to a poll conducted by Genar research organization, 67,6
% of respondents in 17 major Turkish cities opposed opening of the
Armenian-Turkish border and establishment of diplomatic relations
with Armenia. 32,4 % approved the idea.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Soldier Taken Prisoner

AZERBAIJANI SOLDIER TAKEN PRISONER

Trend
May 11 2009
Azerbaijan

In the morning of May 11, the Azerbaijani Army’s soldier was taken
prisoner by the Armenian Armed Forces on the front lines in the
Fizuli region.

According to sources, resident of the Goranboy Region Anar Hajiyev
crossed the contact line in the Alkhanbayli village of the Fuzuli
region under unknown conditions and came across the territory
controlled by the Armenian Armed Forces.

Anar Hajiyev was called to an active military service by the Goranboy
Region Military Commissariat in 2008.

Henrik Igityan Passed Away Aged 77

HENRIK IGITYAN PASSED AWAY AGED 77

armradio.am
11.05.2009 15:41

Art critic, Honored Art Worker, Honorary Citizen of Yerevan Henrik
Igityan passed away today at the age of 77.

Henrik Igityan was born in Tbilisi. He graduated from the Pedagogical
University of Russian and Foreign Languages of Yerevan and the
Leningrad Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.

Henrik Igityan worked at the National Art Gallery of Armenia. He
initiated the establishment of the Children’s Art Gallery in Yerevan,
the Republican Center for Artistic Education and the "Noyyan Tapan"
Union of Contemporary Armenian Artists.

He was awarded Movses Khorenatsi Medal of the Republic of Armenia,
Mhitar Gosh Medal of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic and the Gold Medal
of the Los Angeles University.

Much more to conducting than waving a baton

The Toronto Star
May 7, 2009 Thursday

Much more to conducting than waving a baton;
Veteran maestro Nurhan Arman believes novice conductors try to do too much

by John Terauds, Toronto Star

You can taste the difference a good chef makes, just as you can hear
the work of a great conductor. But conductors, like chefs, don’t often
share the secrets of their success.

As in fine dining, there’s a special alchemy that goes into a great
concert – and impossible to achieve if you don’t know your ingredients
or lack technique.

"An orchestra is like an X-ray machine. They can see what’s inside
your head," says Toronto maestro Nurhan Arman. "If you have no idea
what’s in the third trombone part, it will come out muddy, because
they can tell. It’s a strange energy, like a magnetic energy. No one
can explain it."

That’s only the beginning of the story.

Arman is the founding music director of Sinfonia Toronto, a chamber
orchestra made up of 13 string players, with other instruments added
as needed for a seven-concert season.

The group presents the final concert of its 10th-anniversary season
tomorrow night at Grace Church on-the-Hill, with hot young Montreal
violinist Alexandre Da Costa.

Tomorrow’s program includes a Serenade by Toronto-based composer and
pianist Heather Schmidt alongside favourites by Mozart and Dvorak. Da
Costa will show off with flashy encore pieces by violin legend Fritz
Kreisler.

Arman’s hard work in building relationships with young composers,
quality soloists and careful ensemble playing paid off handsomely this
season. The ensemble earned a Juno Award for Flanders Fields
Reflections, a CD of string pieces by Kingston-based composer John
Burge.

Pulling all this together demands a well-rounded artist.

"Conducting is not just one profession, but it is an amalgamation of
many professions, of many careers put together in one person," says
Arman. "That is why it is so difficult. That is why it is so
subjective, and that’s why the success rate moves around a lot. We
don’t have good criteria for judging conducting."

The Armenian-born maestro has a busy career guest conducting in Europe
– he spent the early part of spring in Italy. He has also taught
conducting, locally at the Royal Conservatory of Music.

For him, waving a baton is the least of everyone’s concerns. Arman
knows colleagues who spend hours working in front of a mirror. But,
ultimately, "the motions a conductor makes are only a reflection of
how much they know about the score," he says.

Arman believes inexperienced conductors often try to do too much:
"Before facing the orchestra, you’ve spent 200 to 300 hours on a
program, so when you get to the first rehearsal, the inexperienced
conductor will want to fix everything all at once.

"There are so many things you want to do your way, but each time a
conductor stops an orchestra it drains away the energy," Arman
explains. "You have to be able to read in the air the amount of
patience. If you make too many changes, it’s not good."

He compares rehearsal time to the life of airplanes: "The number of
kilometres doesn’t matter. It’s the takeoffs and landings that
constitute the wear and tear."

Arman describes how years of experience allow him to plot out
rehearsal progress from day one to the first performance. "Some of the
ideas a conductor has have to bake a bit in the mind of the
musician. They don’t get accepted automatically," he says.

"You can’t turn up the oven to 500 to speed up the cooking. You’re
just going to burn the food."

Watch a video of Alexandre Da Costa playing some Jimi Hendrix:

http: //bit.ly/Tl50r

WHAT: Sinfonia Toronto, with violinist Alexandre Da Costa
WHERE: Grace Church on-the-Hill, 300 Lonsdale Rd.
WHEN: Tomorrow @ 8 p.m.
TICKETS: $7-$35 at 416-499-0403

ULP Returns The Same to Yerevan

ULP RETURNS THE SAME TO YEREVAN
17:39:07 – 08/05/2009

Interview by ARMAN GALOYAN
LRAGIR.AM

Interview with the head of the United Labour Party Gurgen Arsenyan

– Your party is not running for Mayor. How would you comment on this
fact?

– Our party decided not to run for two reasons. The first is that
Yerevan gave few votes to our party during the 2007 parliamentary
elections. In other words, Yerevan decided that the OYP, the
Heritage, the BHK are more familiar to it than we-the UPL. We treat
Yerevan in the same way. We answer in the same way. If Yerevan does
not want our service, we are not going to force it. Let them live as
they want.

– How do you evaluate the chance of the opposition in the Yerevan
Mayor election?

-The opposition will have many votes it will be the first or the
second. Let us live and we will see. All this depends on the choice of
the Yerevan residents, on how they imagine their city, how they
evaluate the past and how they see the future.

– The ARF Dashnaktsutyun became opposition, what do you think about
this decision will they be able to be an alternative for the HAK?

– In order to become real opposition, the ARF Dashnaktsutyun has to
work hard for one year to prove that it is really a strong
oppositional force.

The current opposition, the Armenian National Congress brings up
important questions for the public. For example, the opposition is
able to prove that this state is a not a state but a clan-oligarchic
system. Now the ARF has to express its opinion in this connection, as
when this opinion was voiced, the Dashnaktsutyun was a part of the
government. And, as soon as the Dashnaktsutyun expresses its opinion,
its supporters will make conclusions if the party is opposition or
not. We witnessed the same scenario at least three times when a quasi
opposition formed and then it was found out not to be what it said to
be in reality.

– How do you think, will there be breaches during this election and
will it be followed by post-election developments?

– The post election developments need to have conditions, that is one
of the candidates should be sure that the results of the election are
not true. After the results, the political forces will be able to
decide if the latter coincides with the reality or not. Therefore,
post election developments are also possible.

– What do you think; does the government have political will to hold
free and fair elections?

– You are asking a very strange question, of course it does not have.

Interview by ARMAN GALOYAN

Central Asia And Caucasus: Terrorist Threat On Rise In Ferghana Vall

CENTRAL ASIA AND CAUCASUS: TERRORIST THREAT ON RISE IN FERGHANA VALLEY – US STATE DEPARTMENT
Joshua Kucera

Eurasianet

May 8, 2009

The threat posed by Islamic militant groups in Central Asia, especially
in the Kyrgyz and Tajik portions of the Ferghana Valley, appears to
be growing, according to the US State Department’s recently released
annual report on terrorism.

The State Department’s 2008 Country Reports on Terrorism, released
April 30, suggest that the membership in Kyrgyzstan of Hizb-ut-Tahrir,
a group that the State Department says advocates "the establishment
of a borderless, theocratic Islamic state throughout the entire Muslim
world," grew from 5,000 in 2006 to 15,000 in 2008.

The members live mainly in the ethnic-Uzbek southern region of
Kyrgyzstan, but "are reportedly achieving an increased following
in the north as well," the report said. "Kyrgyz officials reported
growing support for and bolder public outreach by HT."

While Hizb-ut-Tahrir is growing in Kyrgyzstan, that does not mean
that people there subscribe to all of its radical beliefs, asserted
Eric McGlinchey, a Central Asia expert at George Mason University.

"The report highlighted the fact that Hizb ut-Tahrir was radical and
anti-Semitic and all that, which it is. But when you take a look at
the rank-and-file members in Kyrgyzstan, they may be knowledgeable
about that rhetoric, but that’s not the reality of Hizb ut-Tahrir
for the vast majority who are part of it," he said.

Most members are more attracted to the group’s social welfare
activities and small-scale development projects, which fill a space
that the ineffective government is unable to, McGlinchey said.

On Uzbekistan, whose government has had a combative relationship with
Washington since the 2005 Andijan events, the report said relatively
little. Over the past year US officials have sought to reestablish
cordial ties with Uzbekistan, which is serving as a key conduit for
the transport of non-lethal equipment to support the war effort in
Afghanistan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

"The Government of Uzbekistan pursued modest steps in resuming
counterterrorism cooperation with the United States," the report said,
without providing details. The Uzbekistan section of the report was
notable for the omission of any discussion of terrorist groups in
Uzbekistan. The previous year’s report listed several groups that
the United States believed were operating in Uzbekistan in 2007:
"Supporters of terrorist groups such as the Islamic Jihad Group
(IJG), the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the IMU-affiliated
East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), and other al Qaeda-affiliated
groups were active in the region, and terrorist groups in the region
continued to target both the Government of Uzbekistan and western
interests." The report for 2008 contains no such discussion.

Tajikistan also is home to an unknown number of Hizb-ut-Tahrir
members, primarily in the northern part of the country, as well as
other Islamist groups including al Qaeda, the report stated.

The report highlighted various US-led counterterrorism initiatives
that the government of Tajikistan participated in, but noted
that impoverished circumstances in Tajikistan made it difficult
to effectively combat terrorist groups. "Individual border guards
and other law enforcement personnel were not motivated to interdict
smugglers or traffickers due to systematic corruption, low income,
conscripted service, and lack of support from senior Tajik government
officials," the report said. "As a result, extremists and terrorists
may exploit Tajikistan’s border to travel to and from Afghanistan."

The Kazakhstan section of the report highlighted various international
counter-terrorism efforts that Astana undertook in 2008, and
specifically mentioned cooperation with Slovakia and the United
Arab Emirates. "When you look at the Kazakhstan section, of all the
cooperation they’re doing, there is one major player that is missing:
the United States," McGlinchey said.

Nevertheless, Kazakhstan did cooperate with the United States,
the report said: "Kazakhstan detained and prosecuted suspected
terrorists and took tangible steps to cooperate and share information
with the United States and international organizations." The report
said Kazakhstan now has 16 groups that are banned as "terrorist and
extremist" organizations, but the report did not estimate the extent
of their membership.

Turkmenistan cooperated with international counterterrorism efforts,
but the country’s borders remained vulnerable because of difficult
terrain and the "small size and uneven quality of Turkmenistan’s
border guard and customs services," the report said.

The report mentioned the September 2008 violence in the Khitrova
district of Ashgabat, where a protracted gun battle took place under
circumstances that remain murky. The incident "forced the [g]overnment
of Turkmenistan to reevaluate its counterterrorism program, training
partners, and readiness," the report said, without providing details.

Terrorism is an unlikely prospect in a place as tightly controlled
as Turkmenistan, the State Department stressed: "Turkmenistan’s law
enforcement and security agencies exert stringent security control
over all aspects of society, making it unlikely that Turkmenistan
could easily be used as a terrorist safe haven."

Indeed, Turkmenistan remains one the most repressive on earth. The
State Department’s latest evaluation of human rights conditions in
the country stated that Ashgabat "continued to restrict severely
political and civil liberties."

On Armenia, the report said that the country’s ties with Iran
hampered its anti-terrorism efforts. "As a result of the increased
diplomatic activity, Armenia continued to be reluctant to participate
in international efforts that criticized or placed pressure on Iran
for its non-compliance on issues related to nuclear proliferation
and terrorist financing," the report said.

Iran also featured in the Azerbaijan section of the report: "Azerbaijan
is a logical route for extremists with ties to terrorist organizations,
including several organizations which have been ‘inspired’ or directed
by Iran. These groups have sought to move people, money, and material
through the Caucasus, but the government has actively opposed them
and has had some success in reducing their presence and hampering
their activities."

The State Department also noted that while efforts to combat
money-laundering in Azerbaijan have been lacking, the country is
trying to implement reforms.

Georgia has improved its ability to stop smuggling of contraband like
drugs, money and weapons, the report said. It also suggested, without
providing detail, that the de facto Russian occupation of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia could promote terrorism. "Border crossings into Russia
from the separatist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia continued,
but were not under the control of the [g]overnment of Georgia. This
situation allowed for the unrestricted and unidentified flow of
people, goods, and other items from Russia into these regions,"
the report said.

Editor’s Note: Joshua Kucera is a Washington, DC-based freelance writer
who specializes in security issues in Central Asia, the Caucasus and
the Middle East.

http://www.eurasianet.org