Torosyan to Leave for Nagorno Karabakh for Festivities

TOROSYAN TO LEAVE FOR NAGORNO KARABAKH FOR FESTIVITIES

Panorama.am
20:01 07/05/2007

The Armenian delegation, headed by Armenian speaker of parliament,
Tigran Torosyan, will take part in festivities in Nagorno
Karabakh. Armenian National Assembly press services say a delegation,
headed by Torosyan, will leave for Karabakh on May 8. The festivities
are dedicated to the day of liberation of Shushi and Victory Day in
WWII. There will be three occasions for festivities in Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh on May 9 – Victory Day in WWII, 15th anniversary of
establishment of Defense Army of Karabakh and liberation of Shushi.

Turkey Uneasy Over Sarkozy Win, But Hopes For Pragmatism

TURKEY UNEASY OVER SARKOZY WIN, BUT HOPES FOR PRAGMATISM
by Florence Biedermann

Agence France Presse — English
May 7, 2007 Monday

Nicolas Sarkozy’s election victory gives Turkey another reason to
worry about its EU bid, but many here believe that once the new French
president takes office, his pragmatism will outweigh his hostility
to Ankara’s membership.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan voiced hopes Monday that the French
leader would soften his position on Turkey’s European aspirations.

"We hope we will not see in our bilateral relations from now on the
same attitudes that Sarkozy displayed during his election campaign
regarding our European Union (accession) process and Turkish-French
ties," Erdogan said.

Sarkozy is staunchly opposed to Turkey joining the 27-member bloc,
arguing that most of Turkey’s territory is in Asia and that the idea
of a united Europe would be diluted if its borders stretch that far.

He instead advocates a "privileged partnership" between the EU and
Turkey rather than full membership for the sizeable mainly Muslim
nation.

Political commentator Dogu Ergil suggested Sarkozy could follow the
example of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was also opposed to
Turkey’s accession, but said she would abide by existing agreements
between Ankara and Brussels once she took office in 2005.

Sarkozy had displayed a "certain opportunism in addressing the
worries and fears of French voters," Ergil said. "But once elected,
politicians become statesmen and can no longer be personal."

The mass-selling Milliyet newspaper echoed the same hope.

Sarkozy’s election "will increase the potential of already chilly
Turkish-French ties to worsen… But it is not impossible for Sarkozy,
who is more of a pragmatic politician than an ideologue, to change
his stance once he becomes president."

Questioned as to the possible impact of Sarkozy’s election, European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso indicated no change in the
EU’s negotiations with Ankara.

"We negotiate with Turkey on the basis of a mandate that was decided
unanimously… We recommend to member states only to take a decision
on whether or not Turkey should join based on the results of these
negotiations," Barroso said.

But some Turkish analysts remain pessimistic.

"The conditions that were applied to the central European countries
are no longer working with Turkey… Sarkozy’s election marks the
arrival of the moment of truth when this de facto situation will
transform into a legal one," EU expert Cengiz Aktar said.

"Turkey’s accession talks appear to be going on but the process
risks to halt officially in 2009 with the campaign for the European
Parliament elections," he said, adding that Sarkozy "will be probably
the one to hammer the last nail into the coffin of Turkish-EU
relations."

In December, the EU froze talks with Turkey in eight of the 35 policy
areas that candidates are required to complete, over Ankara’s rejection
to grant trade priviliges to arch-rival Cyprus.

Turkey has managed to open only two chapters since it won the green
light for talks in October 2005. It cannot formally close any chapter
until the Cyprus dispute is resolved.

Foreign affairs expert Semih Idiz described Sarkozy as a "coarse
representation of the basic fears and concerns of the French people"
on issues such as the integration of Muslims and immigrants as well
as Turkey’s eventual EU membership.

"The rise of a Muslim-populated country and the possibility of it
having an equal say with France in the EU cannot be easy to swallow
for ‘sugar-coated crypto-fascists’," he wrote in Milliyet.

Turkish-French ties have also been poisoned by France’s recognition
of the massacre of Armenians between 1915 and 1918 in the dying days
of the Ottoman Empire as an act of genocide.

According to the Turkish press, Sarkozy also said that if he was
elected president, he would sign into law a bill, passed in the
National Assembly in October, that makes it a jailable offense to
deny the killings were genocide — a label Ankara fiercely rejects.

New page in world chess history

New page in world chess history

ArmRadio.am
07.05.2007 13:39

For three days chess players all over he world were following the
Kramink-Aronyan match in Yerevan. Summing up the results of the match,
chief referee Ashot Vardapetyan noted that although the match was
friendly, it was rather strained. As a result, Levon Aronyan
celebrated victory with the score 4:2. RA President Robert Kocharyan,
Prime Minister and the President of the Chess Federation of Armenia
Serge Sargsyan came to see the last-day matches between the World
Chess Champion and the World Cup holder.

At the closing ceremony of the match Serge Sargsyan mentioned that
chess players all over the world were following the tense competition
between the two chess giants. This was a match that opened a new page
in the history of Armenian, and probably, world chess.

Thanking Vladimir Kramnik for the interesting game, Serge Sargsyan
presented the model of Noravank to Kramnik and that of St. Nshan
Church to Levon Aronyan.

Kocharyan promises to punish the ballot-riggers of the Elections

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan promises to punish the
ballot-riggers of the May 12 parliamentary election

Arminfo Agency
2007-05-06 00:13:00

At today’s meeting with the governors of Armenia, President Robert
Kocharyan stated that he’ll punish the ballot-riggers of the May 12
parliamentary election.

The Armenian presidential press-service told ArmInfo that the meeting
covered the issues of the pre-electoral campaign. The President
emphasized the significance of holding elections in accordance with
the requirements of the Electoral Code. R.Kocharyan also stressed the
importance of ensuring a normal activity of all the state bodies on
the election day. Hovik Abrahamyan, Territorial Administration
Minister, Garegin Azaryan, Vice Mayor of Yerevan and Chairman of the
Central Electoral Commission, were present at the meeting.

Ilham Aliyev has not made any discoveries

Ilham Aliyev has not made any discoveries

ArmRadio.am
05.05.2007 11:42

Attending the opening of the settlement for refuges in Ramani village,
Azerbaijani President made a number of `discoveries’ about the
negotiations on the Karabakh conflict resolution. He informed about
the purchase of a great number of military equipments and the change
of the military balance.

Connected with these statements, Acting Spokesman of RA MFA Vladimir
Karapetyan noted that this is not the first time that Ilham Aliyev is
trying to disclose the content of the negotiations,’ he said.

‘I can reconfirm our position in the talks, which is based on the
recognition of the self-determination principle of Nagorno
Karabakh. The rest of the questions on the bargaining table are
secondary.

As for the military rhetoric of the Azerbaijani President and the
threats to apply force in the settlement of the conflict, the frequent
repetition of these speaks about the ignorance of international
commitments, as well as weakness and uncertainty,’ Vladimir Karapetyan
stated.

Energy Price Rise Rattles Georgia

A1+

Energy Price Rise Rattles Georgia
[03:00 pm] 05 May, 2007

Government blamed for not limiting steep increase in gas price. `The
weather seems to be on their side too – it’s May already but it’s cold
as November,’ said Tbilisi resident Lali Skhiereli, 52. She complained
that she was still using her gas heater to warm her two-room
apartment, where she lives with her 79-year-old mother.

`But for her, I wouldn’t use the heater,’ she said. `But how can I
leave her without heating? Old people are like children, aren’t they?’

Lali used to spend 30 to 40 laris (18 to 25 US dollars) a month from
her salary of 180 laris to warm her flat, but now she will have to pay
around a third more.

As of May 1, the Tbilisi population has to pay 50.6 tetris (around 30
cents) for each cubic metre of natural gas, instead of the former
price of 34.3 tetris. Elsewhere in Georgia, the new rate is higher,
reaching 55 tetris per cubic metre.

Across the country, consumer gas prices have gone up by an average of
30 per cent. Combined with a rise in the price of bread, they are
causing political damage to the government.

The new gas prices were fixed by the national energy regulatory
commission on April 16. But Tbilisi residents already knew they would
have to pay a higher rate at the beginning of the year, when four
Georgian companies signed a contract with the Russian gas monopoly
Gazprom for supplies of gas for 2007.

Amid an upsurge of tension between Tbilisi and Moscow last autumn,
Gazprom, the main supplier of gas to Georgia, announced it would
double the cost of its gas for Georgia from 110 to 235 dollars per
1,000 cubic metres, making it the highest gas price in the
Commonwealth of Independent States.

The Georgian government described the price as `political’ and
declared it would not buy gas from Russia. However, after a long
search for alternative sources, it accepted the Russian terms.

Georgia is also receiving gas from the South Caucasus Gas Pipeline
that carries gas from the Shah Deniz field in Azerbaijan via Georgia
to Turkey. Georgia’s share of gas from the pipeline is 250 million
cubic metres, which it is entitled to buy at a price of 62 dollars per
1,000 cubic metres. In addition, Turkey has allowed Georgia to use 800
million cubic metres of its own gas allocation from the pipeline.

However, this still leaves Georgia heavily dependent on Gazprom’s
supplies. Production from Shah Deniz will increase this year and
Georgia is continuing to negotiate with Iran over possible supplies,
but it is anticipated that Georgia will still need to rely on the more
expensive Russian gas in 2008.

Most critics of the government accept that a price rise was
inevitable, but question whether it had to be so high.

The consumer gas price has been raised to offset not just the hike in
the cost of the Russian gas, but also a state loan of 125 million
laris (around 73 million dollars) that was given to large
gas-distributing companies early in the year to prevent them from
raising prices during the winter. The government has decided that the
cost of repaying the loan should be met by consumers.

The cost of other goods is now rising as well, with bread prices being
the first to go up.

`We are sorry to notify you that, due to the increase of the gas rate,
the price of our bread has risen by five tetris,’ said a notice in a
small Tbilisi bakery, similar to hundreds of others in the city.

Large bread-making businesses have increased their prices too by two
tetris (one cent).

Bread-baking plant No. 3 produces around five tonnes of bread a day,
the bulk of which it distributes to penitentiary institutions. The
factory used to pay around 5,000 laris a month for gas, but its
monthly bill will now rise to 7,000 laris.

`It’s quite possible that the price of bread will increase by five to
seven tetris,’ said the manager of the bakery Lasha
Naroushvili. `There’s one other point to be taken into consideration:
if there is a rise in the cost of electricity, the price of flour will
grow too, making our position even more difficult.’

Economics expert Gia Khukhashvili predicted Georgia’s electricity
price will indeed rise, but only in the autumn, when most energy
production switched from hydro-electric plants to thermoelectric power
stations running on gas.

Georgia’s national energy regulatory commission has said it did all it
could to keep the price rise to a minimum.

`Russia has doubled its gas prices for us, whereas we’ve managed to
keep the rate within the range of 50 tetris,’ said the chairman of the
commission Giorgy Tavadze. `Those people, who dare to say that the
commission has pro-Russian interests, simply have no shame.’

However, experts and opposition parties are accusing the government of
failing to take all necessary measures to stop the rise being so
steep.

Khukhashvili believes that `the government had all the necessary
leverage to sort out the issue with less pain for the population.

`They could have set a differentiated rate, finding an arrangement, in
which the price would not have changed for the public, while
increasing to 55 tetris for the commercial sector. It’s absolutely
unfair that a pensioner and a restaurant receive gas at exactly the
same price.’

Khukhashvili said the government should have deducted VAT from the gas
price. `As a result of all this, the rate would have risen by five or
six tetris at most, not by 15 tetris,’ he said.

Ever since the commission raised the prices, opposition demonstrators
and several dozen ordinary citizens have rallied in front of Tbilisi’s
city hall or the parliament building, demanding that the government
take steps to protect the poorest members of society.

`The most horrible thing is that prices have been rising at an
astronomical rate, while pension and salaries remain infinitesimal –
and I’m not even mentioning high unemployment,’ said Giorgy Gugava, a
spokesman for the Labour Party.

Government officials have confined themselves to saying that those who
live below the poverty line will receive certain benefits, the size of
which is yet to be determined.

`I’m afraid waiting for the end of the month, when the next gas bill
is due,’ said Lali Skhiereli. `God knows how much I will have to pay.’

Diana Chachua is a correspondent with 24 Hours newspaper in
Tbilisi. Sopho Bukia, IWPR Georgia Editor, contributed to this
article.

Institute for War and Peace Reporting Caucasus Reporting Service

BAKU: Armenians Provoked Fight With Azerbaijani Youth In Russian Cap

ARMENIANS PROVOKED FIGHT WITH AZERBAIJANI YOUTH IN RUSSIAN CAPITAL

TREND News Agency, Azerbaijan
May 2 2007

(Version 3)

Azerbaijan, Baku / corr Trend S.Agayeva / A serious fight occurred
between Azerbaijani and Armenian youths at the end of a festival
which was held in the Moscow-based Russian University of Friendship
of People on 1 May.

During the festival which was organized in the Russian University,
the Armenians provoked young Azerbaijani youths several times to
fight. Witnessing the Armenians dancing and raising the flag of the
un-recognized self-proclaimed separatist regime of Nagorno-Karabakh,
the Azerbaijani students warned them to stop. The Azerbaijani students
then reported the incident to both officers of the corresponding
security agencies of the Russian capital and the director of the
University about the illegitimacy of the actions by the Armenians, as
well as of the provocative nature of their statements and actions. The
Armenians ignored the requests and began to distribute Anti-Azerbaijan
literature amongst students of the University regardless of the
protests from the Azerbaijanis.

One of the Azerbaijanis who took part in the fighting tore up the
flag of the so-called ‘ Independent Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’. Even
after the Russian police and the OMON (emergency plat) arrived at the
scene and fired shots into the air, the Azerbaijanis and Armenians
continued fighting with each other.

As Trend has been informed, Aghali Alyshev, 22, who received a
gunshot wound, has been operated on at Hospital 64, within the Russian
Capitol. Information regarding his condition has yet to be confirmed.

On 2 May the Law-enforcement of the Obruchevskiy Region of Moscow
launched an investigation into the incident, which resulted in the
injury of 4 Azerbaijani citizens.

Meanwhile, Nigar Akhundova, the adviser for humanitarian issues at
the Azerbaijani Embassy in Russia, said by telephone that one of
the injured, Agali Alyshov, is currently in Moscow and his health is
satisfactory after the recent surgery. Three more Azerbaijanis, who
received superficial knife injuries were not admitted to the hospital,
she added.

Attempts to obtain information on the incident from the university,
as well as from the Interior Affairs Department of Obruchevskiy Region
were not successful.

World Champion Arrives In Yerevan

WORLD CHAMPION ARRIVES IN YEREVAN

A1+
[01:54 pm] 02 May, 2007

On May 2, the World Chess Champion Vladimir Kramnik is arriving in
Yerevan. He will stay at the hotel "Golden Palace."

The outstanding Grand Master (GM) will hold a Rapid Chess Tournament
with the World Cup-holder Levon Aronyan at the State Academic Opera
and Ballet Theatre on May 4-6.

It is noteworthy that Kirsan Ilumjinov, the FIDE President, will be
present at the tournament.

Prior to the Champion’s visit to Yerevan, Kramnik beat Peter Leko,
the Hungarian chess player, by the score of 4.5:3.5 in a Rapid Chess
Tournament.

Why Genocide Is Difficult To Prosecute

WHY GENOCIDE IS DIFFICULT TO PROSECUTE
By Robert Marquand | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Christian Science Monitor
April 30 2007

Protesters in 35 nations and more than 280 US cities rallied Sunday
for protecting those being killed in the Darfur war.

The Hague – As public consciousness of the grim situation in Darfur
grows, the difficulty of prosecuting what is often popularly called
genocide is becoming clearer.

For years, the term genocide was used to describe the ultimate crime.

But that crime was rarely – if ever – charged, since international
courts were too weak.

Now, the mechanics of international justice are modestly rising to
confront man’s inhumanity to man: take, for example, the International
Criminal Court and the Yugoslavia and Rwanda Tribunals here at
The Hague.

Yet at the same time, the political sensitivity surrounding a genocide
charge, which requires nations to intervene under international law,
is creating friction. The cases of Rwanda, Bosnia, and now Darfur
demonstrate this.

Sunday, protesters in 35 nations and more than 280 US cities marched
against what a UN mission calls "apocalyptic" scenes still emerging
from the Darfur war, now spreading from Sudan to Chad. Protest groups,
including Amnesty International, called on Britain and the US to help
create a peacekeeping force.

So is Darfur a genocide? A US Holocaust Memorial Museum committee
and Colin Powell have said it is. So do at least two human rights
reports. One French expert, Marc Lavergne, calls it "worse than a
genocide" since mass killings are not done out of racial hatred,
but because Darfurians are simply "in the way" of Sudan’s plans to
control land.

Yet many Sudanese experts and an International Criminal Court (ICC)
don’t term it genocide. They say it doesn’t fit the 1948 Geneva
Convention definition to win a case. This requires absolute proof
of "mental intent" to kill or displace based on national, ethnic,
or religious identity. Hence, an ICC prosecutor this winter did not
charge a Sudanese interior minister and a rebel Janjaweed militia
leader with "genocide," but crimes against humanity.

‘An explicit call to action’

The word genocide raises deep legal and moral conundrums in a
globalizing world, experts say: The term has gained popular usage
in a media age to describe mass atrocities, as in Darfur, Rwanda,
Bosnia. Yet prosecutors and world courts are ever more cautious
about leveling the charge, even when it may apply – since it raises
a requirement to intervene.

"Genocide is an explicit call to action under the 1948 treaty, a call
to prevent and punish," says Diane Orentlicher at American University
in Washington. Recent court rulings show that "if you wait until there
is a legal certainty to prove genocide, you have waited too long,"
she adds.

That’s where politics enter. A party or state charged with genocide
will likely be isolated and stigmatized in the global community,
perhaps even making the situation worse. This is disputed on Darfur.

Some Darfur activists feel Sudan hasn’t been charged with genocide
because that would make it impossible for governments to deal with
Khartoum.

The politics of genocide rose in a ruling on Bosnia this February.

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) at The Hague did not find
Serbia guilty of genocide in the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims
in the early 1990s. Rather, it found Serbia culpable in not preventing
genocide in the Srebrenica massacre, and awarded no damages.

The ruling outraged scholars like Ruth Wedgwood of Johns Hopkins
University who told the Monitor it "appeared to be a posthumous
acquittal of [then President] Slobodan Milosevic for genocide. The
court didn’t look at a pattern of crimes in Bosnia, but selectively
picked its evidence."

Early this month it came to light that ICJ judges did not read and
did not seek to investigate a huge range of materials from Belgrade
that were used as evidence by the UN-sanctioned Yugoslavia Tribunal,
just down the street in this city.

New York Times reporter Marlise Simons wrote that the ICJ ruling
"raised some eyebrows because aspects of Serbian military involvement
are already known from records of earlier [Tribunal] trials…. In
late 1993, for instance, more than 1,800 officers and noncommissioned
men from the Yugoslav Army were serving in the Bosnian Serb Army,
and were deployed, paid, promoted, or retired by Belgrade [and] given
dual identities" through a secret office known as the 30th Personnel
Center of the General Staff."

ICJ defenders say it is a civil not a criminal court, and that its
purpose is to settle disputes between nations to keep amity and
peace intact. Critics say the ruling seemed more about conciliation
than justice.

"A lot has changed in the past 12 years; the EU is anxious to normalize
relations with Serbia," says an American jurist with ties to The Hague,
who requested anonymity. "I’m sure there are political pressures. The
court probably didn’t want to send Serbia back to the 1990s, isolate
it, make it a pariah state in perpetuity…. When it came to the
legal standard required to prove genocide, the court shrank."

(Serb fugitives Radovan Karadzic and Gen. Ratko Mladic, architects
of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, still face genocide charges at the
tribunal.)

Tension between peace, justice

UNHCR head Louise Arbour, who as chief prosecutor at the Yugoslav
tribunal charged Mr. Milosevic with genocide, told the Monitor that
courts should resist politics: "At the end of the day, there’s going
to be tension between peace and justice. By saying that genocide is
a destabilizing charge [to the country accused], you politicize the
justice issue," she said. Regarding Darfur, she said, "The UN embraced
a responsibility to protect citizens from genocide…. But in Darfur,
[head of the ICC investigation Antonio] Cassese looked for three
months with a large staff and could find no genocidal intent.

He couldn’t find a case."

That document, "The 2005 Report of the International Commission
of Inquiry on Darfur to the UN Secretary-General," finds that the
brutality in Darfur is for "purposes of counter-insurgency warfare."

Yet legal scholar Nsongurua Udombana at Central European University
in Budapest, Hungary, states bluntly that the Cassesse report finds
no genocide in Darfur – to avoid an obligation to act.

In a closely argued essay, "An Escape from Reason" in the Spring 2006
issue of The International Lawyer, he says Darfur is prima facie far
closer to genocide than the report finds.

One conundrum: "It is impossible to determine genocide while it is
actually happening," Mr. Udombana says. He adds, "By not calling
it a genocide, it appears to make the issue less urgent than it
actually is."

Indeed, mass killings can create new on-the-ground dynamics, he
suggests: Whether or not precise causes of intent can be determined by
outside investigators, still, as rapes and murders continue on their
bloody way, war can breed an intent to exterminate on the grounds of
group identity.

He agrees with Samantha Powers, author of "The Age of Genocide," that
Darfur has spawned a dynamic in which Arabs are killing Africans, and
lighter skinned and darker skinned groups are set against each other.

He says a confession by a high ranking Sudanese official isn’t needed
to prove genocidal intent. It can be shown via a common standard of
"practice and pattern" of crime.

Two motives in prosecuting

Mr. Lavergne of the National Center for Scientific Research in Paris
says prosecuting mass crimes boils down to two often different motives:
an effort to change behavior, or an effort to punish. In the midst
of a nightmare like Darfur, he says, a genocide charge may not be the
best way to change behavior, though he admits the problem is ambiguous.

He also questions if Darfur is a genocide. The extermination is not
aimed at Darfurian identity: "Darfurians who live in Khartoum are
not targeted," he notes.

For years "genocide" was a sanctified word, emerging from the
Holocaust, and it defined mass atrocities like the Armenian genocide,
or the killing fields of Pol Pot in Cambodia. But its popular use
rose in the midst of the Rwanda and Bosnia wars.

French scholar Jacques Semelin, author of the book "Purify and
Destroy: The Political Uses of Massacres and Genocide," notes that
"In Nuremburg, the charges were crimes against humanity. Genocide
didn’t come into the legal framework until 1948 in Geneva."

Bosnia was an early instance of systematic mass killings in close
proximity to a region, Europe, with an incorporated value system
based on history that contained an assumption that such crimes would
"never again" take place.

Reports of mass killings along the Drina River in 1992, with Bosnian
Muslim villages purged and teachers and elders shot, created a dilemma
for Europe and the US. The US State Department’s initial downplaying
of killings and prison camps led one mid-level US diplomat, Richard
Johnson, to write "The Pin-Stripe Approach to Genocide" – an early
effort to pair the term with an event that seemed to warrant it.

At the time, little notion existed of international courts as a tool
to deal with mass crimes. That has changed. The Rwanda and Yugoslavia
tribunals, the 1998 Treaty of Rome, the decision of the UN Security
Council to empower indictments on Darfur by the ICC, the pressure on
Serbia and Croatia to hand over war criminals – have created pressure
on regimes to change behavior, though not a preventive one.

For John Packer of Human Rights Internet in Ottawa, the world is in an
"awkward moment" between the old Westphalian system of adjudication,
"based on sovereign states and designed to create peace and stability
between them, and a new developing model of international law."

The ICJ ruling on Bosnia "brings this awkward moment into relief,"
he says. "The court was caught willfully disregarding evidence showing
Serbia’s culpability, to avoid being put in a difficult spot."

Fat And Aggresssive Countries Are Weak

FAT AND AGGRESSIVE COUNTRIES ARE WEAK

A1+
[08:50 pm] 30 April, 2007

The Germans live in excellent conditions thanks to the country’s
professional high-level officials. No matter which force comes to
power, German officials are sure to preserve their posts.

"Officials cannot be dismissed," Michael Link, a member of the
German Bundestag, said today. He tried to define the phrase "good
governance." A strong country shouldn’t necessarily be "fat and
aggressive" i.e. the authorities shouldn’t meddle with people’s lives.

Moreover, "government" must be distinguished from
"administration". "Constitutional right is changeable, whereas
administrative right is eternal."

The deputy maintains that Armenia’s well-being depends on the country’s
high-level officials and not on political figures or ministers.

Ararat Zurabyan, the leader of the All-Armenian Movement thinks that
Armenian officials aren’t protected by law. According to him, people
ignore the fact that "a civil worker is not a political figure,"
therefore professionals become unemployed.