Serzh Sarkisian Confident That The Opposition Went On Collisions In

SERZH SARKISIAN CONFIDENT THAT THE OPPOSITION WENT ON COLLISIONS IN AN ORGANIZED MANNER

Mediamax
March 14, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Armenian Prime Minister, President-Elect Serzh
Sarkisian expressed confidence that the opposition went on collisions
in an organized manner.

Mediamax reports that, answering the questions, sent to him through
internet, Serzh Sarkisian stated that the weapons, prepared beforehand,
evidence that, and otherwise the participants of the rallies would
not hinder the actions of law-enforcement bodies, who wanted to check
the information on presence of weapon among the oppositionists.

Armenian Prime Minister expressed hope that the organizers of
the unrest "panicked", when they saw that the representatives
of the opposition accepted the proposal on cooperation with the
President-Elect.

"I promise that all the materials, related to this case, will later
on become publicized, and even if those are not punishable acts,
they are absolutely immoral", Serzh Sarkisian stated.

Human Rights and Artsakh: Heritage’s Day in Parliament

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

14 March 2008

Human Rights and Artsakh: Heritage’s Day in Parliament

Yerevan–Today, March 14, the Heritage Party’s MPs Stepan Safarian,
Anahit Bakhshian, Zaruhi Postanjian, and Vardan Khachatrian received
at the National Assembly Mr. Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of
Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights. They exchanged concerns and
perspectives on improving the human rights situation in Armenia and
the region; overcoming the current state of emergency, the expanding
list of political prisoners, and the deepening crisis of public
confidence; and meeting the nation’s contemporary challenge of
securing democracy and due process, civil liberties and fundamental
freedoms for all. These, the parties concurred, are both a domestic
Armenian and a broader European imperative.

Later in the day and after great delay, the Parliament’s Standing
Committee on Foreign Relations considered for inclusion in the
National Assembly’s official agenda the draft law, authored by
Heritage leader Raffi K. Hovannisian, formally to recognize the
Mountainous Karabagh Republic. MPs Larisa Alaverdian, Anahit
Bakhshian, and Stepan Safarian represented the Heritage parliamentary
group at the session.

Presided over by Committee Chairman Armen Rustamian, the meeting once
again decided to postpone the examination of the matter, this time for
thirty days.

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land.
Its central office is located at 31 Moscovian Street, Yerevan 0002,
Armenia, with telephone contact at (374-10) 536.913, fax at (374-10)
532.697, email at [email protected] or [email protected], and website
at

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am

Asian Development Bank To Lend $45 Million To Armenia For Water-Supp

ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK TO LEND $45 MILLION TO ARMENIA FOR WATER-SUPPLY SYSTEM MODERNIZATION IN RURAL AREAS

ARKA
March 11, 2008

YEREVAN, March 11. /ARKA/. Asian Development Bank is to lend $45
million to Armenia for water-supply and sewerage system modernization
in rural areas.

Constitutional Court of Armenia said at its Tuesday’s session that
the norms of the agreement between Armenia and the bank are in full
conformity with Armenian Constitution.

The program beneficiaries are residents of 16 towns and 125 villages
of the country.

Armenian Finance and Economy Ministry finds it reasonable to ratify
the agreement.

Justice Ministry thinks the same.

The credit agreement will take force after all necessary procedural
matters are settled and the document is ratified.

Neutrality, Russian-Style

NEUTRALITY, RUSSIAN-STYLE
by Vadim Dubnov

Gazeta
March 7 2008
Russia

The wall of silence that Russian television has erected around events
in Yerevan may once again have evoked memories of Soviet agitprop,
thanks to which our people remained the only ones on the planet
to learn about events of headlinesignificance from hostile radio
broadcasts.

Yerevan has been the scene of constant demonstrations, of
demonstrations dispersed, and of street disorder on aParisian scale –
in effect, of the kind of attempted revolution that was always the
top news story when it related toGeorgia or even Kyrgyzstan – and
yet suddenly this boycott.

The explanation is known, of course, and is at first sight
unexpected. A few days before the Armenian election Levon Ter-Petrosyan
paid a secret visit to Moscow. Malicious tongues in Yerevan insist
that the only people who would granthim an audience were the staff in
the airport restaurant where he whiled away the time as he waited for
the flight back.At the same time there are major signs to suggest much
greater interest on Moscow’s part in meeting withTer-Petrosyan. In any
event, a bearded television commentator renowned for his impassioned
manner [possibly MikhailLeontyev] was surprisingly indulgent towards
him and even recorded an interview with him for showing in prime time
onChannel One, and he, as we know, does not waste his breath.

Ter-Petrosyan himself, meanwhile, cited an agreement not to reveal
details and made only one thing clear: that,whatever happens in
Yerevan, Moscow will remain neutral.

Some tightening up is evidently being done in the old Kremlin "us and
them" system, if only to insure it tosome degree against reactions
in the "Yanukovych congratulations" genre. The actual criteria for
separating usfrom them are changing, especially in the light of recent
measures in Ukraine and Georgia.

Both as premier and in opposition Yanukovych has left the Kremlin
with no illusions as to whether a particularpolitical figure can
be employed as its agent. So now the Kremlin is checking off its
sympathies in agonized fashionalong the Yushchenko-Tymoshenko axis.

The elections in Georgia showed that the alternative was scarcely any
better than Saakashvili and so, from being an enemy, Georgian President
Saakashvili is gradually shifting into the much moretolerated category
of the ordinary.

Armenia, on the other hand, has a special look about it. On the one
hand it is a strategic partner, our last ally in the Caucasus, and the
subject of other bravura mythology about eternal brotherhood. On the
other, it is quite obviouswhat skill Yerevan applies in using these
slogans to keep a proper distance from Moscow, and that logic will
not change,whoever is president.

Strictly speaking, Armenia can already be seen as more independent
of Russia than even its Caucasus neighbours -Azerbaijan and Georgia.

What is more, fears over the possibility that the Karabakh conflict
will be resolved, theborders will open up, and Armenia will
finally disappear over the western horizon are also to some degree
mythologized. The conflict is not going to be resolved, and Armenia’s
ties with Turkey are already just as close as economically essential.

The Armenian foreign policy dynamic is stable and predictable, and
its domestic political situation is of no interestto anyone – and
Moscow is uniquely at one with the West in understanding that. Just
as the West is in no way inclined tosupport Ter-Petrosyan with the
recklessness applied to Georgia, so Moscow is restricting itself to
congratulatingSargsyan in the most formal manner.

But that is the theory. The practical implementation has been
customarily fanciful. Neutrality has boiled down in theend to the
pretence that there was no opposition, no demonstration, and no
dispersal of a demonstration. The Kremlin hasdevised only one method
of not showing the Armenian opposition as the enemy – by not showing
it at all.

The congratulations to Serzh Sargsyan looked to be charged with the
happy realization that the Yanukovych syndromehas been overcome,
but that did not shelter the Russian embassy from opposition catcalls
(that also had to be ignored,of course).

Being neutral, it turns out, is a real art. Rather like the art of
wearing a tuxedo. People who are accustomed tomilitary uniform find
it very hard.

Armenian poll challenge rejected

Armenian poll challenge rejected

Story from BBC NEWS:
europe/7285815.stm

Published: 2008/03/09 06:40:12 GMT

The constitutional court in Armenia has rejected opposition claims that
the presidential election was rigged.
The court accepted opposition claims there were some violations but
said this could not call into question the entire poll.

The original announcement that Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian
had won sparked days of protests.

The government declared a 20-day state of emergency on 1 March as eight
protestors died in clashes with police.

Public gatherings have been banned and restrictions placed on the
media.

Official election results in Armenia gave Serzh Sarkisian 53% of the
vote, and the main opposition candidate Levon Ter-Petrosian 21.5%.

Mr Ter-Petrosian had alleged there was widespread fraud at the poll,
but his legal appeal was rejected.

The outgoing President, Robert Kocharian, has warned that the
authorities will not tolerate any more mass demonstrations even after
the state of emergency is over.

The BBC’s Matthew Collin says a small group of female opposition
supporters defied the measures on Saturday when they dressed in black
and laid flowers where the clashes had taken place, in memory of those
who died.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/

As of March 6, There Are 46 Defendants, 20 Suspects on Occasion 3/1

AS OF MARCH 6, THERE ARE 46 DEFENDANTS, 20 SUSPECTS ON OCCASION OF
RECENT EVENTS IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MARCH 6, NOYAN TAPAN. As of March 6, accusation was brought
against 46 people on the fact of the incidents that happened early in
the morning of March 2. Arrest was chosen as a preventive punishment to
them. Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed about it by Sona Truzian,
the Spokesperson of the RA Prosecutor General.

The defendants on the case are accused on different articles of the RA
Criminal Code: mass disorders, organization, holding a public event
with the violation of the order established by the law, making appeals
aimed at not obeying the requirements on stopping it, using violence to
a power representative, appropriation of the state power.

Azerbaijan Denies Using Heavy Armor In Clash With Armenia

AZERBAIJAN DENIES USING HEAVY ARMOR IN CLASH WITH ARMENIA

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS
March 5, 2008
Russia

Azerbaijan denied using heavy armor in a battle with neighboring
Armenia that was in progress on Tuesday, and blamed the clash on
Armenia.

"This information is not true," Azeri Defense Ministry spokesman
Ilgar Verdiyev told Interfax, in reference to an Armenian statement
that blamed Azerbaijan for breaking the ceasefire. "Apparently, by
disseminating this information, the Armenian side is again trying to
delude the world community," he said.

Verdiyev also denied a report that Azerbaijan used heavy armor in
the battle and a claim by Armenia that Azerbaijan had gone on to
the offensive.

Canada Urges Armenia To Lift State Of Emergency

CANADA URGES ARMENIA TO LIFT STATE OF EMERGENCY

Agence France Presse
March 5 2008

OTTAWA (AFP) – Canada’s foreign affairs minister on Wednesday urged
Armenia to lift a state of emergency declared on the weekend, and
respect "fundamental freedoms" of protestors.

Foreign Affairs Minister Maxime Bernier said in a statement: "It is
the democratic right of people everywhere to gather and express their
views so long as this is done in a peaceful manner."

"We urge the government of Armenia to respect these fundamental
freedoms by lifting the state of emergency as soon as possible,"
he said.

As well, Bernier added: "Canada urges Armenians of all political
affiliations to seek solutions to their current differences within
the framework of their democratic institutions."

Armenia’s President Robert Kocharian declared the 20-day state of
emergency in Yerevan on Saturday after eight people died in street
battles between riot police and opposition supporters protesting the
result of a presidential election.

The opposition claims the election was rigged to ensure victory for
Serzh Sarkisian, Kocharian’s hand-picked successor.

A mediator from the Western-led Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said Tuesday that talks to resolve the
crisis would be impossible until the end of emergency rule, which
bans protests and censors the media.

U.S. Receives Assurances From Armenia, Azerbaijan On Cease-Fire

U.S. RECEIVES ASSURANCES FROM ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN ON CEASE-FIRE
By Desmond Butler

Associated Press
2:43 p.m. March 5, 2008

WASHINGTON – A U.S. official said Wednesday he has received assurances
from Armenia and Azerbaijan that they have returned to a cease-fire
along the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh after shooting broke
out in recent days.

After meetings in Baku with officials including Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza is now
heading to Armenia to try to encourage talks between the government
and opposition figures who claim fraud in last month’s election.

Reached by telephone en route to Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, Bryza
said that he intends to deliver a stern message in Armenia about
recent violence between police and demonstrators that has left eight
people dead and more than 100 injured.

"We simply deplore the violence," he said. "That simply can’t be
repeated."

Bryza said he intends to press the government to lift a state of
emergency it declared Saturday and to ask both sides to move their
dispute from the streets to the negotiating table.

Demonstrators have been rallying for presidential candidate Levon
Ter-Petrosian, who has appealed to the country’s constitutional
court to overturn the results of the Feb. 19 election. Ter-Petrosian
finished a distant second to Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian in the
official results.

Western observers issued an overall positive assessment of the
election, but noted serious flaws, especially during the vote count.

The opposition says Sarkisian stole the election by resorting to
vote-buying, ballot stuffing and pressuring media to skew coverage
in his favor. Several opposition members said they were beaten on
election day to prevent them from monitoring the vote. The government
denies any wrongdoing.

After his meetings in Azerbaijan and a telephone call with Armenian
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian on Tuesday, Bryza says he is satisfied
that tensions in Nagorno-Karabakh have subsided.

"Based on everyone I have talked to it is clear that the shooting
has stopped and the level of tension is decreasing," said Bryza,
who has been the chief U.S. mediator to end the conflict in the region.

Armenian and ethnic Armenian local forces drove the Azerbaijani army
out of Nagorno-Karabakh in one of the bloodiest conflicts of the
post-Soviet era.

Some 30,000 people were killed and about 1 million were forced from
their homes during six years of fighting that ended with the 1994
cease-fire.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s separatist ethnic Armenian government is not
recognized internationally, despite more than a decade of efforts by
foreign mediators led by the United States, Russia and France to help
reach a resolution.

Aronyan The 3rd With 6.5 Points

ARONYAN THE 3RD WITH 6.5 POINTS

armradio.am
05.03.2008 15:50

Armenian Grand Master Levon Aronyan played a draw with Grand Master
Aleksey Shirov of Spain in the 12th round of the Morelia-Linares
Chess Tournament underway in Linares (Spain). Aronyan is currently
the 3rd with 6.5 points.

Wishvanathan Anand – Peter Leco and Vasili Ivanchuk – Teymur Rajabov
games also ended in a draw. Magnus Carlsen defeated Vesselin Topalov.