Armenia To Set Up Nuclear Safety Control Agency

ARMENIA TO SET UP NUCLEAR SAFETY CONTROL AGENCY

Interfax News Agency July 17 2008
Russia

The Armenian government has approved a plan to form a state
nuclear safety committee to ensure the country’s compliance with
the Convention on Nuclear Safety, the government press service told
Interfax on Thursday.

The committee will be in charge of state regulation of the use of
nuclear energy, work out safety regulations, draft relevant bills,
and issue licenses to managers working in this sector, Deputy Nature
Conservation Minister Simon Papyan told the cabinet.

The state committee will have a nuclear safety and radiation safety
department, and six divisions to deal with technical, general,
finance, nuclear safety, international cooperation, legal and human
resources issues.

Bush’s Iran Decision Brings Mixed Reactions

BUSH’S IRAN DECISION BRINGS MIXED REACTIONS

New York Sun
July 17 2008

WASHINGTON — Just as Senator Obama was in the process of refining
his position on the Iraq war, the presumptive Democratic presidential
nominee is seizing on President Bush’s decision to embrace diplomacy
on Iran as a move that fits with his own plan to begin nuclear talks
with the mullahs without preconditions.

The undersecretary of state for political affairs, William Burns,
will attend European talks with Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, Saeed
Jalili, on Saturday as part of what has been dubbed "pre-negotiations"
on unresolved issues dealing with Iran’s nuclear program.

While the Bush administration has sent envoys to meet with Iranians
in multilateral settings on their support of terrorism in Iraq and
post-war planning in Afghanistan, the president in 2006 conditioned
any direct nuclear talks with Iran on the suspension of enrichment
activities.

That red line appears to have been crossed, and conservatives are
outraged. President Bush’s former ambassador to the United Nations,
John Bolton, said the decision legitimizes Mr. Obama’s position that
America should begin talks with Iran without requiring the mullahs
to stop uranium enrichment.

"Even if this is a one time only event in the Bush administration,
it legitimizes the Obama administration to do the same thing,"
he said. "It undercuts McCain, and Republicans on the Hill. This
is the State Department effort to insure a smooth transition to the
Obama administration."

The executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations, Malcolm Hoenlein, said he worried that
the presence of Mr. Burns in Switzerland "could be seen as a victory
for President Ahmadinejad and his hard-line supporters. Certainly
in Iran, one has to anticipate that this will be seen as helping
Ahmadinejad’s hard line stance."

Mr. Obama yesterday had a different view. He said in a statement:
"I welcome news that the Bush Administration has shifted course and
will send an envoy for direct talks as part of the P5+1 with the
Iranians in Geneva this weekend. I commend our European allies and
other friends on this effort."

The P5+1 refers to the five permanent members of the U.N. Security
Council — America, China, France, Russia, and Britain, plus
Germany. The Iranians last month rejected an incentives offer from
these nations of nuclear technology in exchange for a suspension of
uranium enrichment and transparency with U.N. inspectors, who have
yet to close the file on the history of Iran’s nuclear work since
they began their probe in 2003. Secretary of State Rice has said
the offer of incentives only applies when the Iranians end their
enrichment of uranium.

Senator McCain’s campaign said that sending Mr. Burns as an observer
in the nuclear talks "is a much more realistic approach than engaging
in the unilateral cowboy summitry advocated by Senator Obama."

Senator Kerry, the Democrat of Massachusetts who was his party’s
presidential nominee in 2004, said the decision to send Mr. Burns
to the meeting in Geneva "could be the most welcome flip flop in
diplomatic history."

The decision to engage Iran on its nuclear program comes as the
mullahs are cracking down again on their own citizens who choose to
affiliate with American nongovernment organizations. The Asia Society
yesterday confirmed that two HIV-AIDS activists affiliated with the
group have gone missing and are likely being detained. The brothers,
Drs. Arash and Kamiar Alae, were fellows for 2008 and 2009 at the Asia
Society. The executive vice president of the Asia Society, Jamie Metzl,
said he was trying to contact the proper authorities to determine their
whereabouts. Both Alae brothers have been missing since last month.

Also missing is a program officer in Armenia for the International
Research and Exchange Board, Harotonian Tazekand. The president
of that organization, Mark Pomar, wrote a July 14 letter to Iran’s
chief justice, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahrudi, asking about her
whereabouts after she had gone missing June 20.

The status of the three Iranian nationals harkens back to the crisis
last summer when Iran detained scholars affiliated with the Wilson
Center and the Open Society Institute on charges of trying to spark
a velvet revolution.

Russia, US Hold Rival War Games In Restive Caucasus: Officials

RUSSIA, US HOLD RIVAL WAR GAMES IN RESTIVE CAUCASUS: OFFICIALS

Agence France Presse
July 15, 2008 Tuesday 1:29 PM GMT

The United States and Russia held rival war games Tuesday on either
side of the Caucasus mountains amid simmering tensions over the fate
of two rebel regions in ex-Soviet Georgia.

Almost 8,000 Russian servicemen on Tuesday began anti-terror exercises
across Russia’s North Caucasus region, which borders Georgia, a
spokesman for the Russian army told AFP.

In Georgia 1,650 US and Georgian servicemen began rival exercises on
the formerly Russian-controlled Vaziani base, the Georgian defence
ministry said.

The Russian exercises were planned a year ago and "are in no way
related to the US-Georgian activities," Russian army spokesman Igor
Konashenkov said.

Tensions between Georgia and Russia have soared in recent months
as Moscow has increased its support for Georgia’s rebel regions of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Georgia has angered Moscow by moving to
join the NATO alliance.

The Russian exercises are in part designed to prepare forces for
peacekeeping work in the Russia-backed regions of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia, Konashenkov said.

"In connection with the aggravated situation of the Georgian-Abkhazian
and Georgian-Ossetian conflicts… we will also work on participation
in special operations to bring peace to zones of armed conflicts,"
he said.

Around 700 pieces of military hardware will be used during the
exercises, he said.

US-Georgia exercises within the framework of the NATO Partnership
for Peace began Tuesday, Georgian Defence Ministry spokeswoman Nana
Intskirveli told AFP.

Armenian, Azerbaijani and Ukrainian staff officers are also taking
part in the exercises which will last for three weeks, she said.

Abkhazia Shrugs Off Georgia’s Move To Punish Telecom Companies

ABKHAZIA SHRUGS OFF GEORGIA’S MOVE TO PUNISH TELECOM COMPANIES

Apsnypress
July 16, 2008 Wednesday
Abkhazia

"Everything seems to indicate that the Georgian parliament has nothing
better to do than discuss mythical draft laws." This is how Kristian
Bzhania, the president’s [Sergey Bagapsh] media aide, has commented
on a report by Interfax that the Georgian parliament has voted to
restrict the work of communications companies in Abkhazia.

Bzhania says such a decision is comparable to Tbilisi forbidding
certain media outlets from working in Armenia, Azerbaijan or Turkey.

"It is absolutely clear that no Georgian laws or codes can apply
to the territory of the sovereign republic of Abkhazia," he said,
noting that "it is not up to Tbilisi to decide what foreign media
outlets can work in Abkhaz territory or what programmes of foreign
television or radio companies are broadcast in the republic".

As he put it, "with each passing day we bear witness to more and
more absurd behaviour on the part of the Georgian authorities, who
are ready to ban everything in Abkhazia".

The Georgian parliament approved set of draft amendments into the
administrative code which stipulate large fines for companies illegally
doing business in the broadcast and electronic communications industry
in the territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Interfax reported
that under the amendments, a company illegally doing business in these
territories would at the first stage be assessed a fine in the amount
of 50,000 lari (about 36,000 dollars) while second-time offenders
will have to pay 500,000 lari (about 360,000 dollars). Those who
violate the administrative code a third time will be fined 1m lari
(720,000 dollars).

Pyunik Lost To Anortosis

PYUNIK LOST TO ANORTOSIS

A1+
16 July, 2008

Armenia’s Champion "Pyunik" lost to "Anortosis" of Cyprus 0:1 at the
first round of the Champion’s League Qualifiers.

Before the meeting Pyunik had worked out a strategy of 4+5+1. Anortosis
stood out just from the beginning of the match.

Pyunik played with the following staff,

Grigor Meliksetian-goal-keeper

Sargis Hovsepian- back

Karen Khachatrian- back

Karen Dokhoyan- back

Artak Adrikian – back

Henrikh Mkhitarian-halfback

Arthur Edigarian-halfback

Karlen Mkhrtchian-halfback

Norair Sahakian-halfback

Gevorg Ghazarian-halfback

Tigran Gharabahgtsian-forward

Cyprians played a noteworthy game heightening tension at the rival’s
gate. Several times the ball jumped back from the gate post. Besides,
Pyunik’s goal-keeper Grigor Meliksetian covered the situation thus
saving his team from a crushing defeat.

Former Soviet State May Find New Energy Reserves A Bit Of A Curse

FORMER SOVIET STATE MAY FIND NEW ENERGY RESERVES A BIT OF A CURSE

The Irish Times
Thursday, July 17, 2008

Wealth in the form of oil and gas is seeping up from the sea belonging
to a once blighted region in the Caucasus, writes Kieran Cooke

AS MANY countries in the West teeter on the brink of recession,
this country of 8.5 million people in the south Caucasus finds itself
suddenly awash with money. Oil companies have recently started mining
vast reserves of oil and gas from deep under Azerbaijan’s section of
the Caspian Sea.

The result is billions of dollars in royalties, and export earnings
are flowing into the local exchequer. Last year, Azerbaijan’s economy
grew by 27 per cent – the highest GDP growth rate in the world.

Oil seeps out of the ground in Azerbaijan, its smell fills the air. In
ancient times, fires on the earth lit by oil and gas deposits made the
territory a main centre of Zoroastrianism, one of the world’s oldest
religions in which fire is a sacred symbol. Near Baku, the capital,
a forest of oil derricks stretches for miles along the Caspian shore.

Further inland, you can actually take a bath in pure crude oil. At a
crumbling sanatorium, visitors submerge themselves in the local crude:
doctors say the treatment – once you’ve spent an hour wiping off the
black, tarry substance – beautifies the skin, calms nerves and cures
conditions such as psoriasis.

Azerbaijan – part of the old Soviet Union until independence in 1991 –
is a country of contradictions. The centre of Baku is one big building
site, with new skyscraper hotels and apartment blocks going up on
every corner.

Top-of-the-range cars clog the streets: luxury goods shops are crowded
with the newly wealthy.

Yet, on the city outskirts, families live in what are effectively
caves dug into the hillsides.

The World Bank says Azerbaijan’s oil earnings are likely to be at
least $30 billion (â~B¬18.88 billion) this year alone, but average
annual per capita incomes are still only just over $1,000. Nearly two
million people have left the country in recent years in search of jobs.

"Azerbaijan is a country in transition," says Ilham Aliyev, the
country’s 45-year-old president. "We have considerable resources,
but money earned from them must be spent wisely."

Just how wisely Azerbaijan is spending its new wealth is open to
question, with observers watching to see whether the country will
follow the example of Norway – carefully investing its oil wealth
for the benefit of future generations – or go the way of Nigeria,
where billions have been lost due to corruption.

The early signs are not good. Transparency International, the
body which monitors levels of corruption round the globe, lists
Azerbaijan as one of the world’s most corrupt countries. A small
number of companies run by the supe r-rich and with powerful links
to the ruling elite controls most non-oil sectors of the economy.

Economists say oil money is in danger of being squandered on luxuries
for the select few, and there are fears of inflation running out
of control.

Azerbaijan is one of the most strictly run of the post-Soviet states,
with any sign of political opposition firmly stamped upon. Successive
elections have been deemed "deeply flawed" by the international
community.

The media is strictly controlled and journalists regularly imprisoned:
Emin Huseynov, a prominent journalist, is believed to be in a critical
condition in hospital after being detained and beaten by police last
month for attending what authorities called an illegal gathering –
a screening of a documentary film in a Baku cafe on the life of
Che Guevara.

Meanwhile, international observers are concerned at a considerable
build-up in Azerbaijan’s armed forces: in the early 1990s, war broke
out with neighbouring Armenia over a disputed highland region called
Nagorny Karabakh.

As a result of the conflict, Azerbaijan lost about 15 per cent of
its territory and more than 700,000 people in the country were made
homeless.

At a recent armed forces day parade – the most elaborate held for
many years – there was talk of regaining lost lands and striking a
blow at the old enemy, Armenia.

Perhaps of greatest concern is Azerbaijan’s central position in a mo
re comprehensive struggle for power taking place in the Caspian region.

For years, Moscow regarded Azerbaijan and the territories of the
Caucasus as part of its fiefdom, an area referred to as the "near
abroad". Now Russia, armed with its new-found oil and gas wealth,
is seeking to regain its influence in the region.

A western oil consortium led by BP has invested billions in a 1,762km
(1,095 miles) pipeline which pumps oil from Baku to the port of Ceyhan
on Turkey’s Mediterranean coast. Conspiracy theorists in Baku say
powerful Russian interests – already plotting to take over western
oil concerns in Russia itself – are now eyeing western resources in
the Caspian region.

Azerbaijan has tried to keep a neutral position: it maintains good
relations with both the US and Russia and also has close ties with
Iran, its neighbour to the south. However, some are wondering whether
plentiful oil and gas resources are a blessing or a curse: the country
could quickly become the new flashpoint in an increasingly bitter
international battle for control of vital energy sources.

–Boundary_(ID_N4KQ/GTv6hlCNWRkWOSGHw)–

RA Prosecutor General To Take Part In Sitting Of Coordination Counci

RA PROSECUTOR GENERAL TO TAKE PART IN SITTING OF COORDINATION COUNCIL OF CIS MEMBER-COUNTRIES’ PROSECUTOR GENERALS IN TBILISI

NOYAN TAPAN

JU LY 15

A delegation led by RA Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepian, on July
17, will take part in the sitting of the Coordination Council of CIS
member-states’ Prosecutor Generals to be held in Tbilisi. Noyan Tapan
was informed about it by Sona Truzian, the Spokesperson of the RA
Prosecutor General. She also said that over one dozen issues are on
the sitting agenda. The draft interdepartmental agreement of joint
actions on combatting trafficking and sale of human organs intended
for 2008-2010 will be also discussed. The issue was raised by the
RA Prosecutor General at the Coordination Council sitting held in
October 2007 in Yerevan.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=115647

Jack Kevorkian To Take Part In Congress Elections

JACK KEVORKIAN TO TAKE PART IN CONGRESS ELECTIONS

AZG Armenian Daily
16/07/2008

Social

Dr. Jack Kevorkian collected enough signatures to take part in the
Congress elections in Michigan, which are to be held in November
2008. Head of Oakland Electoral Committee Joe Rosel said that
Dr. Kevorkian collected 3200 signatures while 3000 are required.

The 80 years old doctor had stated that he intends to run as an
independent candidate for the vacant place of Republican Joe Nolenberg.

Jack Kevorkian, also known as Doctor Death, in 1998 helped an incurable
patient to pass away in peace, for which he was sentenced to 8 years
of imprisonment. Last year he was set free.

Gas Price Increasing

GAS PRICE INCREASING

A1+
[09:05 pm] 15 July, 2008

Chairman of the "Hayrusgazard" Board, Director General Karen Karapetian
today affirmed that an agreement was signed between him and Chairman
of the "Gasprom" JSC Board Alexei Miller on the price for gas supplied
into Armenia.

However, Karapetian did not announce the new tariff, which will be
put into effect since January 1, 2009. The new tariff was neither
announced by Sergey Kupriyanov, Press Secretary of Alexei Miller at
the interview with the "Liberty" Radio Station. The latter only noted
that Russian-Armenian relations had their say on fixing the price.

"The price will be reasonable, logical and comprehensible," Karen
Karapetian said.

Still back in April the Russian press published that "Gasprom" JSC
was going to increase the price for gas imported into Armenia by 50
per cent ($165 for 1000m3).

To Stop Annihilation Of Armenian Monuments

TO STOP ANNIHILATION OF ARMENIAN MONUMENTS

Panorama.am
20:34 14/07/2008

Sasun Baryan, the secretary of the Unity of Armenian Writers and
Painters in the Crimea called on the international society in the
name of the Crimea Armenians to stop the annihilation of Armenian
monuments in the territory of Turkey.

The message particularly states that Turkish authorities keep the
implementation of annihilation of Armenian monuments. The members
of the unity announced that Turkish Government drafted a project to
annihilate one of the Armenian monuments in Hasankeif City. They ask
the international society to stand the project and further similar
activities.