Sargsyan: Even in Soviet times officials didn’t dare to solve Kond

Serzh Sargsyan: Even in Soviet times high-ranking officials didn’t dare
to solve the problem of Kond district in Yerevan

2008-01-26 20:19:00

ArmInfo. "Even in Soviet times high-ranking officials didn’t dare to
solve the problem of Kond district in Yerevan", Armenian Prime
Minister, Leader of the Republican Party of Armenia, and currently a
presidential candidate, Serzh Sargsyan said at a meeting with the
residents of Kentron community of Yerevan, Saturday.

According to him, at the moment all the residents of Kond district are
pleased with the fact that Kond is acquiring a new appearance and
becoming one of the best districts of Yerevan. "Certainly, there are
also displeased people, who built their houses after 2001 and are still
building, which is illogical and inadmissible", Sargsyan said. He also
stressed that the tasks of Yerevan should always be in the focus of the
Armenian president’s attention. Touching upon the draft law "On
Yerevan" under which the mayor of Yerevan is to be elected, Sargsyan
noted: "This draft law was approved by the National Assembly in the
first reading and will be adopted in the final reading during the
spring session". Sargsyan thinks that a rough mistake was made at the
beginning of the state’s establishment – Yerevan was divided into
communities. "The elected mayor should unambiguously belong to or
supported by some party", the prime minister said.

Greece, Turkey: will former foes make friends?

Greece, Turkey: will former foes make friends?

18:55 | 25/ 01/ 2008

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Yelena Shesternina) – Greek
Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis arrived in the Turkish capital
Wednesday for what experts had dubbed a landmark visit even before it
started, the first visit to Turkey by a Greek premier in five decades.

The last Greek prime minister to pay an official visit to Turkey was
also Costas Karamanlis, a namesake and an uncle of the current leader.

The relations between the two nations have gone through a number of
crises since then, serious enough to be dubbed a "cold war" and invoke
a threat of a real "hot" conflict.

But will Karamanlis’ visit remain a landmark only because of the time
lapse since the last such contact, or will the two countries’ leaders
reach some tangible agreements which will literally change the world’s
map this time?

The tensions between Greece and Turkey have been caused by their
territorial disputes for many decades, primarily over Cyprus, which is
still divided into two areas, the Greek part populated by Greek
Cypriots, and the Turkish part, which is home to Turkish Cypriots and
Turkish immigrants.

The Turkish forces invaded the northern part of the island in 1974, and
repeated futile attempts to unify it have been made since then. The
last one failed because of the Greek Cypriots, who voted down UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan’s unification plan in a 2004 referendum:
they reckoned that too many concessions were required from them for the
return of their own lands. Cyprus ended up joining the European Union
as a divided nation, although legally the whole island is now a EU
member.

The talk of the need to resolve the Cyprus problem as soon as possible
reemerged late last year, brought up by all of the conflicting parties
simultaneously: Greece and Cyprus on the one hand, and Turkey and the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, on the other.

Any specific steps, including direct talks on the issue, are likely to
be scheduled after the February presidential elections in Cyprus. Prime
Minister Karamanlis pledged at his meeting with Turkish officials that
the last wall in Europe would come down soon.

Besides Cyprus, Greece and Turkey have a dispute over the continental
shelf of the Aegean Sea, as Angara refuses to recognize Greece’s right
to extend its off-shore territory to 12 miles, and several small
islands. These disputes have brought Athens and Ankara to the brink of
an open armed conflict on several occasions, last time in January 1996.
It was the interference of the United States and other NATO countries
that helped prevent a military conflict then. Greece decided it was
high time to put an end to this long confrontation and proposed
settling the issue in the International Court of Justice in the Hague.

Turkey sounds ready to compromise on many issues, because its EU
accession will be impossible without Greece and Cyprus’s agreement.
Athens’ position has become milder lately as well. Greece has agreed to
Turkey’s EU accession, but put forth certain very specific requirements
– that Turkey recognize Cyprus and normalize its relations with Greece
first of all.

Incidentally, the two countries are pragmatic enough not to let their
territorial disputes and political disagreements get in the way of
economic cooperation. Their commodity circulation came close to $3
billion last year, up from a mere $200 million in 1995.

The pipeline which connected Greece and Turkey to ship Azerbaijan’s
natural gas to Europe, the latest major joint project, was commissioned
in November 2007. This project could lay a foundation for normal
relations, if not a real friendship, between the former enemies.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

January Frosts Can Damage Agricultural Crops: Armenian Meteorologica

JANUARY FROSTS CAN DAMAGE AGRICULTURAL CROPS: ARMENIAN METEOROLOGICAL SERVICE

Arka News Agency
Jan 25 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, January 25. /ARKA/. January frosts can damage agricultural
crops in Armenia, said Zaruhi Petrosian, press secretary of the
Meteorological Service of Armenia. "If the temperature is 24 degrees
below zero for more than five hours, this may damage agricultural
crops and trees," she said.

The Meteorological Service and the RA Ministry of Agriculture are
trying to calculate the damage rate.

Frosts crept Armenia in early January. The temperature has dropped to
32 degrees Celsius below zero in mountain regions and to 22 degrees
Celsius below zero in the Ararat Valley (27 degrees below zero in
Yerevan).

BAKU: Lord Russell Johnston To Visit Azerbaijan And Armenia

LORD RUSSELL JOHNSTON TO VISIT AZERBAIJAN AND ARMENIA

Trend News Agency
Jan 24 2008
Azerbaijan

France, Strasbourg, 24 January / corr. Trend A. Maharramli/ Lord
Russell Johnston, the head of the sub-committee on the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE)
will pay a visit Armenia and Azerbaijan in the first half of February.

"I am planning to visit Baku on 8 February, and later Armenia to
observe the presidential election," Lord Johnston said Trend on
24 January.

The Sub-committee on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe was established in spring of 2005 as
a body exercising control over the implementation of the Resolution
(Resolution 1416) of the organization on the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict.

The agenda of the meetings have already been coordinated with the
presidents and parliament chairmen of both countries. He is expected
to hold meetings with the leaders of the political parties. Though
the election period is not suitable to discuss the regulation of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict I am planning to discuss these issues with
the leaders of the both countries, he said.

Lord rejects the statements that the sub-committee was established
to regulate Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. "We do not deal with
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, it is the OSCE Minsk group who tries
to solve the conflict," Johnston said. Our task is to improve the
relations between parliamentarians, especially to let them to hold
negotiations instead of accusing each-other. I want to make sure that
the leaders of both countries consider our work useful," Lord said.

Johnston’s visit to Armenia and Azerbaijan was scheduled for November,
but was postponed due to the non-agreement of the agenda between
the parties.

Trade In Armrusgazprom’s Bonds On Armenian Stock Exchange Makes 221

TRADE IN ARMRUSGAZPROM’S BONDS ON ARMENIAN STOCK EXCHANGE MAKES 221 MILLION DRAMS

Noyan Tapan
Jan 24, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, NOYAN TAPAN. Since the time of ArmRusgazprom’s
bonds being listed on the Armenian Stock Exchange in September 2007,
trade in these bonds has made over 221 mln drams (about 724 thousand
USD). NT correspondent was informed by spokeswoman for ArmRusgazprom
Shushan Sardarian that no other Armenian company has registered
such a large circulation of bonds in the past 4 months. Last year
ArmRusgazprom entered the securities market. In June and July it
issued and placed nominal coupon bonds of the total amount of 1
billion drams, which were acquired by commercial banks, organizations
and natural persons.

ArmRusgazprom plans new issues of bonds not only in Armenia but also
in Russia this year.

SOPHIA: Deputy FM Carries Out Political Consultations With Armenian

DEPUTY FM CARRIES OUT POLITICAL CONSULTATIONS WITH ARMENIAN COUNTERPART

Focus News
Jan 23 2008
Bulgaria

Sofia. Deputy Minister Evgeniya Koldanova was leading a Bulgarian
delegation which carried out political consultations between the
Ministries of Foreign Affairs of Bulgaria and Armenia today in Sofia,
MFA informed. The Armenian delegation was led by Armenian Deputy FM
Armen Barburdyan.

Both parties discussed the bilateral relations in the development of
the political dialogue, trade economic partnership and cooperation
in the field of culture.

Conflict Resolution, Border Security Are Top OSCE Priorities For 200

CONFLICT RESOLUTION, BORDER SECURITY ARE TOP OSCE PRIORITIES FOR 2008

Gazeta.KZ
Jan 22 2008
Kazakhstan

Trying to solve the protracted Soviet-era conflicts of
Nagorno-Karabakh, South Ossetia and the Transdniester was among
Belgium’s top priorities when it assumed the rotating leadership of
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in 2006.

Despite Belgium Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht’s anticipation that
his chairmanship would bring "new opportunities," the year brought
no substantial progress on any of the three conflicts.

Spain, which led the OSCE throughout 2007, did not make conflict
resolution a top priority. Its efforts focused primarily on the
fight against terrorism and environmental issues, among others. But
Finland, which assumed the organization’s leadership at the beginning
of this year, intends to turn the spotlight back on the so-called
"frozen conflicts."

Addressing the OSCE’s Permanent Council in Vienna on January 10,
Finnish Foreign Minister Ilkka Kanerva said conflict prevention
and conflict management would "lie at the core of [the Finnish]
chairmanship."

"I will use every opportunity to make progress on regional issues in
close consultation with all parties," he told the panel.

In a program that was circulated among OSCE ambassadors, Kanerva
said he would seek "to create enabling conditions for the peaceful
resolution of regional conflicts" and "encourage all the parties to
resume negotiations in order to find feasible political resolutions
of the conflicts."

Georgia’s Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili last October said
Finland’s firm stance against Russia when it held the rotating
presidency of the European Union the previous year gave him reasons
to hope that substantial progress would be made on the South Ossetian
conflict in 2008.

But with presidential elections scheduled in Armenia and Azerbaijan
later this year, Finland’s task will certainly not be easy — even
though its diplomats are generally believed to be more familiar
with the Soviet-era "frozen conflicts" than their Belgian or Spanish
counterparts.

In comments made to Baku’s Day.az, an electronic daily, Azerbaijan’s
Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on December 7 said that because of
Helsinki’s longtime involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks
he was looking forward to the upcoming Finnish chairmanship. But he
implicitly warned against setting expectations too high, saying that
"elections always make the atmosphere of negotiations more sensitive."

In the years 1995-1996 Finland co-chaired the Minsk Group of nations
that has been mediating in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks on behalf
of the OSCE.

Kanerva told the Permanent Council he had appointed Heikki Talvitie
to assist and advise him during his chairmanship. Talvitie has served
as Finland’s Minsk Group co-chair and the EU’s special representative
to the South Caucasus. Another former member of Finland’s Minsk Group
co-chairmanship team, Ambassador Terhi Hakala, has been in charge of
the OSCE Mission to Georgia since October.

Talking to reporters in Vienna last week, Talvitie said he believed
there was a "momentum" in Nagorno-Karabakh and that "there might be
one" in South Ossetia. However, he said Finland should be "realistic"
as to what it could expect to achieve in the region.

A member of the Finnish delegation told EurasiaNet on condition
of anonymity that the new chairman-in-office will concentrate his
efforts on trying to improve the work of the existing negotiation
mechanisms in which the OSCE is involved, in particular that of the
Joint Control Commission (JCC), a quadrilateral body co-chaired by
Georgian, South Ossetian, North Ossetian and Russian representatives.

"We’re not trying to make a big fuss about our role, but if we can
help in a technical way that will mean a lot in many other ways,"
the Finnish diplomat said.

Negotiations between Tbilisi and Tskhinvali are stalled. Georgia
accuses Russia and South Ossetia of blocking the implementation of
all decisions made within the JCC framework and demands that the
negotiation format be changed.

The JCC met in a plenary session only once last year. The October
meeting produced no results, notably because of Tbilisi’s insistence
that Dmitri Sanakoyev, the head of the recently created pro-Georgian
provisional administration of South Ossetia, be recognized as a
fully-fledged party to the peace process.

Asked by EurasiaNet whether Finland would consider engaging with
Sanakoyev, Talvitie remained non-committal. "Sanakoyev is a new
element. Let’s see in the future if he fits into the picture," he said.

Beyond the frozen conflicts, Kanerva said in his program that Finland’s
chairmanship would also encourage the OSCE to build stronger relations
with its Central Asian member states with a view to helping them
combat human trafficking and the smuggling of arms and drugs. With
this respect, he says, the organization should put a "specific focus"
on border security and management.

In his address to the Permanent Council, Finland’s chief diplomat
pointed out that his country already had contributed more than 500,000
euros ($745,000) to projects aimed at enhancing the security of the
Tajik-Afghan border.

One of the few achievements of the OSCE Ministerial Council that
took place in Madrid in November was a consensual decision to step
up the organization’s engagement with partner state Afghanistan,
with a special focus on securing its borders with the Central Asian
countries of Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. The Madrid
decision followed the launching of an OSCE project to train Afghan
anti-drug police.

Kanerva last week invited Kazakhstan and Lithuania — which are
due to take the helm of the OSCE in 2010 and 2011, respectively —
to join the organization’s current troika "in developing ideas for
long-term activities."

The troika is the OSCE’s main political decision-making institution.

It consists of the chairman-in-office, its predecessor, and its
successor. Kanerva suggested that representatives of the future
"quintet" meet in Finland this year "to identify possible common
priorities for the purpose of better planning."

Dashnak Candidate Deplores Election Fraud

DASHNAK CANDIDATE DEPLORES ELECTION FRAUD
By Ruben Meloyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Jan 22 2008

The presidential candidate of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(Dashnaktsutyun) questioned the legitimacy of Armenia’s leadership
and pledged to end the country’s culture of electoral fraud as he
campaigned in the southern Armavir region on Tuesday.

Addressing a small crowd that gathered in the eponymous regional
capital, deputy parliament speaker Vahan Hovannisian explained why he
thinks the country’s rulers have failed to deliver on their promises
to the electorate.

"Presidential or parliamentary elections always create a situation
in Armenia in which those who have come to power owe their success,
their victory not to you, but to criminal or semi-criminal clans,
wealthy individuals, oligarchs, senior government officials,
who bring them votes on a plate by trampling on your rights, by
crushing, deceiving and bribing people," said Hovannisian. "That
is lip service. The authority doesn’t benefit from that or become
healthier as a result. But it is used to eating from that plate."

"Only a Dashnaktsutyun member can break that plate," he added.

The remarks were quite extraordinary for a leader of a party that has
long stood by outgoing President Robert Kocharian and recognized the
legitimacy of his victory in the disputed presidential elections of
1998 and 2003. They underscored Dashnaktsutyun’s efforts to distance
itself from the Armenian government, in which it is represented
by three ministers. The influential party has been trying to cast
itself as a viable alternative to Kocharian’s preferred successor,
Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian.

Mindful of an unusually cold weather, Hovannisian hoped to hold his
Armavir rally in the town’s main conference hall belonging to the
municipality. But he had to rally supporters outdoors after being
controversially denied permission to use the premises by Armavir Mayor
Ruben Khlghatian. The latter is a member of Sarkisian’s Republican
Party of Armenia (HHK).

The rebuff prompted an angry comment from Artur Aghabekian, chairman
of the Armenian parliament’s defense committee and another prominent
Dashnaktsutyun figure. "The conference hall must be returned to the
people because the mayor has [effectively] privatized it. Do you
agree with me?" Aghabekian aksed the crowd.

The Hovannisian campaign faced a similar problem in the nearby village
of Mrgashat whose Republican mayor, Manvel Danielian, also refused
to let the Dashnaktsutyun candidate use the village club.

Danielian denied any political motives for his decision, saying
that he was notified about Hovannisian’s visit to Mrgashat at a very
short notice.

"Unfortunately, they fear any new thing in our country," Hovannisian
told villagers. "There is one new thing which we shouldn’t fear,
which we should aspire to and succeed in bringing about. That new
thing would be to elect a Dashnak president."

"A president representing Dashnaktsutyun would really be your
president," he said.

Hrant Dink Commemorated in the Netherlands

Federation of Armenian Organisations in The Netherlands
24 April Committee
For Recognition and Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide of 1915
Address: Weesperstraat 91
2574 VS The Hague, The Netherlands
Telephone: +31704490209
Website:
Email: [email protected]
Contact: M. Hakhverdian

PRESS RELEASE

Hrant Dink Commemorated in the Netherlands

19 January 2008 Assen, The Netherlands – Armenians gathered at the Armenian
Genocide Memorial commemorated the first anniversary of the assassination of
Hrant Dink. The commemoration was organised by the 24 April Committee of the
Federation of Armenian Organisations in the Netherlands (FAON).

Representatives of the FAON and other organisations throughout the country
laid flowers and wreaths at the Armenian Genocide Memorial, the Khachkar, in
the cemetery ?De Boskamp¹ in Assen in the Netherlands.

Member of Dutch Parliament Mrs. E. Wiegman, (ChristionUnion Faction, a party
in the present coalition government) delivered a speech about Dink¹s efforts
for democracy in Turkey. She compared Dink with theologist and Nazi fighter
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, in whose opinion the solidarity is a person¹s
responsibility and includes more than just himself, whereby freedom is not
to be found in elevated thoughts, but in actions. Talking about Turkish
taboos, she said the Netherlands and Europe must hold on to the principle
that a country that refuses to face its past, cannot become a member of the
European Union.

A resolution was adopted at this commemorative meeting, which is addressed
to Dutch government, parliament and which will be sent also to the Turkish
embassy. In this resolution it is noted that Dink¹s ideas still are very
much alive and have many sympathisers. These sympathisers need support. In
order to provide that support, articles in Turkish law like Article 301 of
the Turkish Penal Code cannot be maintained. These articles of the law being
in contradiction with the conditions for EU membership negotiations, as well
as Turkey¹s obligations as a Council of Europe member, should no longer be
without consequences. The resolution also calls upon the Turkish government
to follow Dink¹s ideas on the reconciliation among different ethnic groups
of the population of Turkey and to face its own history, as the only way out
to solve the differences in a peaceful way.

With reference to Dink¹s words in one of his last columns, saying that he
feels like a pigeon, a bit afraid but free, the ceremony included launching
of white pigeons.

www.24april.nl

NKR Army Planning To Modernize Anti-Aircraft Defense

NKR ARMY PLANNING TO MODERNIZE ANTI-AIRCRAFT DEFENSE

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.01.2008 14:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The NKR Defense Army is planning to obtain a
new system of anti-aircraft defense, NKR Defense Minister, general
lieutenant Movses Hakobyan said.

Each square meter of the sky above Nagorno Karabakh is defended
and three weapon emplacements will be enabled in case of danger,
according to him.

"However, equipment needs modernization and we are planning to increase
military expenses this year," he said.

The Minister did not name the country the armament will be bought from,
Novosti Armenia reports.