Eurasia Daily Monitor – 01/05/2005

The Jamestown Foundation
Wednesday, January 5, 2005 — Volume 2, Issue 3
EURASIA DAILY MONITOR
IN THIS ISSUE:
*Yerevan agrees to add troops to Polish force in Iraq
*New Islamic terrorist group emerges in Tajikistan
*As tensions increase with West, Russia must look to China for allies
*New documentary implicates Russia in second attempt to murder Yushchenko
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ARMENIA TO DEPLOY TOKEN CONTINGENT TO IRAQ

On December 24, the Armenian parliament approved a symbolic deployment
of Armenian military personnel as part of the U.S.-led coalition in
Iraq. The vote was 91-23, with one abstention, after a seven-hour
closed session late into the night. A last-hour switch by the
opposition National Unity Party of Artashes Geghamian ensured the wide
margin for passing a deeply unpopular decision, made palatable to the
public by the token size of the troop commitment. The Armenian
Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutiun, a component of the governing
coalition, voted against the deployment, as did the opposition Justice
bloc.

Technically, the parliament was voting to ratify Armenia’s signature
on the Memorandum of Understanding with Poland — lead country of the
multinational force in south-central Iraq — on the deployment of
Armenian personnel with that force. Armenia is the nineteenth country
to become a party to that Memorandum.

The Defense Ministry has announced that the Armenian contingent is
ready for deployment as of January 5, but has not made public any
specific date for actual deployment. The ministry had adumbrated that
possibility with Washington as well as with the Armenian public since
late 2003, but it has taken more than a year to put it into
practice. The uncertainty and delays have inspired remarks that Poland
might withdraw from Iraq before the Armenians ever arrive, thus
rendering any Armenian deployment moot.

The parliament also approved the Defense Ministry’s concept of sending
46 personnel to Iraq for one year. The group consists of: two
officers, one signals specialist, 30 drivers, ten sappers, and three
medical doctors with civilian specialties. Armenian personnel are not
to participate in combat, but only in humanitarian activities. They
are also barred from any joint actions with Azerbaijani troops in
Iraq. The Armenian group will deploy without equipment, and Yerevan
will only pay the soldiers’ base salaries. Coalition forces in the
theater will provide the equipment, and the United States almost all
the funding for the Armenian group.

Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian is the prime mover behind this
mission, not only in the military but also in the internal political
arena. Sarkisian argues that Armenia cannot afford to stand aside and
risk forfeiting U.S. goodwill at a time when Azerbaijan and Georgia
are present with troops in Iraq (and elsewhere) to support the United
States. Sarkisian’s political statements obliquely suggest that the
Iraq deployment would raise Armenia’s standing in Washington, mitigate
what he terms “discriminatory” treatment there, and earn a title to
more favorable consideration of Armenian interests in the
region. Without publicly alluding to the Karabakh issue in this
context, Sarkisian has hinted that he expects Washington to lean on
Turkey to open the border with Armenia, as one of the possible
quid-pro-quos for the deployment to Iraq (Armenian Public Television,
December 25; Noian Tapan, December 27).

Somewhat more defensively, Prime Minister Andranik Margarian argues,
“Armenia’s presence [in Iraq] is primarily symbolic and for political
purposes” (Haiastani Hanrapetutiun, December 25). The government in
Yerevan rejects any characterization of the mission as a “military
presence,” terming it instead a “humanitarian presence.” This line
reflects concern for the group’s safety in the dangerous environment
of Iraq, as well as seeking to mitigate the domestic political fallout
from the deployment decision. Armenian public opinion surveys are
showing less than 10% approval of the mission and more than 50%
disapproval. Cutting across the political spectrum is the view that
Armenia’s presence alongside the United States would expose Iraq’s
Armenian diaspora community to reprisals from insurgents. That
community, currently estimated at nearly 30,000, is concentrated
almost entirely in the insurgency-plagued Sunni area.

(Mediamax, Armenpress, Noian Tapan, PanArmenian News, December 23-30).

–Vladimir Socor

TAJIKISTAN OFFICIALS FAIL TO APPREHEND KEY MEMBER OF BAYAT

On the night of December 25-26, 2004, law-enforcement officials in
Tajikistan attempted to apprehend a member of the Islamic terrorist
organization Bayat, Ali Aminov, in the village of Chorku, Isfara
district, Sogdy oblast (northern Tajikistan). Law-enforcement agents
had received a tip that Aminov was hiding in his sister’s house. At
approximately 1 am a police task force surrounded the house and
attempted to storm the compound to apprehend the terrorist. However,
the occupants responded with armed resistance and the standoff soon
deteriorated into full-blown armed confrontation. The police task
force retreated under heavy fire and called for backup. A special
forces regiment arrived by 4 am. Upon entering the house, the members
of the special forces team encountered resistance from Aminov’s
relatives. Aminov himself managed to escape through a secret passage
(Vecherny Bishkek, December 29).

The first indications of Bayat’s existence (“bayat” means “a vow” in
Arabic) appeared in the press in April 2004, when Tajikistan’s special
services apprehended 20 members of this organization in the Isfara
oblast of northern Tajikistan. The suspects were accused of carrying
out several aggravated criminal acts that were motivated by racial and
religious hatred. The group was charged with the January 2004
assassination of the head of the Baptist community in Isfara, Sergei
Bessarab, as well as torching several mosques that were headed by
imams, whom the terrorists believed had exhibited excessive loyalty to
the ruling regime. According to the Office of the Prosecutor-General
of Tajikistan, the suspects resisted arrest and searches of their
houses, carried out by law-enforcement officials, turned up hidden
arms caches.

Bayat is not affiliated with such outlawed organizations as
Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HUT) or the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU),
which are better known in the region. Nor does Bayat maintain any
links with the only legally functioning Islamic organization: the
Party of Islamic Revival of Tajikistan. According to some sources, the
Bayat activists are Tajik citizens who previously had fought on the
side of the Taliban movement in Afghanistan, and some of them are now
imprisoned at the American military base in Guantanamo, Cuba. A
connection between Bayat and the IMU should not be ruled out, however,
because IMU militants have been known to operate in the Fergana
Valley, and they also fought along side the Afghan Taliban members
(see EDM, May 3, 2004). Currently Bayat is trying to spread its
influence to neighboring countries. Thus, a branch of the Bayat
movement was recently opened in Osh, Kyrgyzstan (Vecherny Bishkek,
December 29).

Isfara is a very special region in Tajikistan. The population there is
more religious than in other regions of the country. In July 2002 the
President of Tajikistan, Imomali Rakhmonov, visited the city of Isfara
and stated that three citizens, who were originally from the Isfara
region and who had fought on the side of Taliban, were being held at
Guantanamo. Furthermore, the Party of Islamic Revival of Tajikistan is
particularly strong in the Isfara region. In the 2000 parliamentary
elections, the majority of this region’s population voted for the
Party of Islamic Revival. Moreover, in the main Islamist enclave —
the village of Chorku — 93% of the votes cast were for the Party of
Islamic Revival (Forum18.org, May 27, 2004). In a sense, Chorku,
albeit to a lesser degree, resembles the Islamist enclave in the
village of Karamakhi in Dagestan, which was destroyed by Russian
troops in 1999. For example, both villages strictly prohibited alcohol
consumption and required women to wear veils while in public. The
centers of public life are mosques, and the imams adjudicate and
resolve all disputes in accordance with the Sharia law.

The Islamist enclave in Isfara region is dangerous also because of its
geographic location. Isfara is located in the Fergana Valley section
of Tajikistan, only a few kilometers from the Uzbek and Kyrgyz parts
of the Fergana Valley. The Valley is widely considered to be one of
the most potentially volatile areas in Central Asia. In 1989
anti-Jewish pogroms took place in Andizhan (Uzbekistan), which led to
the exodus of the Jewish population from that city. That same year,
inter-ethnic clashes between Uzbeks and Meskhetian Turks broke out in
the Uzbek city of Fergana, which resulted in 150 casualties and the
mass exodus of Meskhetian Turks from Uzbekistan. In 1990 inter-ethnic
clashes between local Uzbeks and Kyrgyz claimed 320 lives in Osh
oblast (Kyrgyzstan). Furthermore, all the leaders and the majority of
the militants of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan are originally
from the Fergana Valley. The addition of another militant group will
hardly calm the region.

–Igor Rotar

RUSSIA AND CHINA: DO OIL AND WEAPONS MAKE A MARRIAGE?

Russo-Chinese relations in 2004 were not all sweetness and light.
Moscow’s destruction of Yukos and preference for a Japanese rather
than a Chinese pipeline in Siberia put severe pressure on Chinese oil
supplies, because Yukos was China’s main Russian oil supplier and
Chinese demand for energy is exploding. Thus shortages or supply
failures seriously injured China’s economy and led to public muttering
about Russia’s unreliability. However, as Russia’s ties to the West
worsened in late 2004, it had no choice but to turn back to China and
find a solution that entailed guaranteeing Beijing more access to
Russian energy supplies.

To overcome their bilateral tensions in energy, the two governments
have arrived at a four-part solution.

First, Russian firms will participate in joint construction of nuclear
power plants with China, and they will build a thermal power plant at
Yimin and Weijiamao (RIA-Novosti December 21).

Second, efforts are underway, apparently with Kazakhstan’s support, to
involve Russian companies in the current project of laying a pipeline
from Kazakhstan to China. There are also discussions about sharing
energy from the Kurmangazy oil field (RIA-Novosti, December 22). This
would create another avenue by which Russian energy supplies could go
to China.

Third, because no pipeline is currently available, Russian railroads
will transport up to 30 million tons of energy to China by 2007,
beginning with 10 million tons in 2005. While the railroads could
handle freight up to 50 million tons, that is their maximum, and a
pipeline would have to be built to carry annual amounts of 50 million
tons or more. This railway shipment program thus represents a
tripling of current oil shipments to China by 2007, from the existing
level of 10 million tons annually (Itar-Tass, December 24).

Finally, Russian President Vladimir Putin has indicated that the China
National Petroleum Company (CNPC) might be invited to take part in the
production of Yuganskneftgaz, which was the main production unit of
Yukos. Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khristenko has indicated that
CNPC might gain as much as a 20% ownership of the new company that is
to be owned and managed by Gazprom. Beijing would thus be able to
recoup the energy that was going to China before Yukos was destroyed
(Kremlin.ru, December 21; Reuters, December 30).

While the Yukos affair has incurred much criticism abroad and will
reduce the efficiency of Russia’s energy companies, soliciting Chinese
participation represents an effort to mollify Beijing and give the
deal a patina of legitimacy. Ironically, it represents a major policy
reversal from 2002, when xenophobic protests derailed earlier Chinese
efforts to buy into Slavneft. Thus, this deal also signifies Russian
efforts to come to terms with the rise in Chinese economic power that
clearly fueled huge anxieties in the Kremlin.

But the rapprochement with Beijing goes beyond energy supplies to
encompass defense issues as well. Russia and China will hold
bilateral army exercises in China during 2005 that will apparently
test the new Russian weapons that are also going to China
(Nezavisimoye voyennoye obozreniye, December 17). These exercises
will be “quite large” and involve not only large numbers of ground
forces but also state-of-the-art weapons, navy, air, long-range
aviation, and submarine forces to provide interaction with Chinese
forces (Itar-Tass, December 27). These exercises, particularly on the
planned scale, are unprecedented and mark an expansion of both Russian
and Chinese military diplomacy to encompass greater interaction among
their militaries.

Russian arms sales to China faltered in 2004 because China demanded
only the most advanced weapons while Russia insisted on the extension
of existing contracts for the supply of weapons (RIA-Novosti, December
20). This dispute prompted China to press harder for the termination
of the EU embargo , but with only limited success. While the
possibility of renewed EU arms sales to China must alarm Russian arms
dealers who cannot survive without selling China weapons systems,
China still must rely on the Russian market for now because of the
strong American opposition and threats to the EU if it lifted
sanctions (Russian Business Monitor, December 22; Vedomosti, December
20; RIA-Novosti, December 20; NTV, November 8, 2004). Thus during
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov’s visit to China in December,
agreements were hammered out upgrading the scope of Russian arms sales
to China. These agreements include delivery of Su-30MK2 fighters and
licensing the assembly in China of Sukhoi-27SK aircraft for the
Chinese Navy (Itar-Tass, December 13). Thus in 2005 Russia will sell
24 more Su-30 planes to China (Itar-Tass, December 13; Russian
Business Monitor, December 22). Other big deals involving Ilyushin-76
Candid transport planes, Ilyushin-78 Midas aerial tankers, and engines
for China’s Super 7 and Super 8 planes are also being discussed
(Interfax-AVN Military News Agency, December 24).

Paradoxically, these deals reveal the existing tensions in
Sino-Russian relations as well as the efforts to overcome them. China
wants state-of-the-art weapons that Russia, for obvious reasons, is
not prepared to sell, but Beijing still cannot generate sufficient
leverage to push Moscow to sell those weapons. However, in the energy
sector Beijing can induce Russia to live up to existing contracts,
sell energy to China, and even invite it into some form of equity
ownership in Russian energy firms. This may not be the ideal solution
for China, but it shows that while Chinese economic power is clearly
growing, it still cannot compel Russia to comply with Chinese demands
in defense economics. Nor is it entirely clear that this energy deal
will eventually work out to China’s benefit, given the atavistic fears
of Chinese economic power in Moscow. While Russo-Chinese relations
may have reached “unprecedented heights,” according to Presidents
Putin and Hu Jintao, closer examination suggests that the mountain
that both sides are still climbing remains a rocky one.

–Lionel Martin

DETAILS EMERGE OF SECOND RUSSIAN PLOT TO ASSASSINATE YUSHCHENKO

As Viktor Yushchenko prepares for his inauguration as Ukraine’s third
president, he knows that Ukraine-Russia relations will be one of the
most difficult issues he faces. The Economist (December 29) advised
Yushchenko, “to kiss and make up with Russia and Vladimir Putin, who
backed Mr. Yanukovych and has thus been humiliated by his defeat.”
Such reconciliation will be far easier said than done. Russia is
reportedly behind two attempts on Yushchenko’s life, one through
poisoning and a second with a bomb. Yushchenko alluded to the latter
plot when he said, “Those who wanted to blow myself up did not
undertake it, because they came too close and could have blown
themselves up” (Ukrayinska pravda, December 16).

While details of the poisoning are better known, evidence of the bomb
threat has only just come to light in a documentary on Channel Five, a
Ukrainian television station sympathetic to Yushchenko. Details aired
in the weekly “Zakryta Zona” (Closed Zone) documentary, under the
suitable title “Terrorists” (5tv.com.ua/pr_archiv/136/0/265/).

During last year’s election campaign a still-unexplained bomb
detonated in Kyiv, killing one person and injuring dozens more. The
Kuchma government blamed the Ukrainian People’s Party (UNP), a member
of Yushchenko’s Our Ukraine bloc, for the attack. Explosives were also
planted during searches of the offices of opposition youth groups. The
Security Service (SBU) and Interior Ministry (MVS) have now admitted
that charges of “terrorism” against the UNP and youth groups were
false (Ukrayinska pravda, December 16; razom.org.ua, December 23).

According to Channel Five, the real terrorists were the authorities,
conspiring with the Russian security services (FSB). It would be naive
to believe that Russian President Vladimir Putin was unaware of the
plot. An illicitly transcribed telephone conversation, cited at length
in the “Zakryta Zona” documentary, between a Ukrainian informant and
an FSB officer showed how the Russian authorities were fully aware of
the dirty tricks being used by Russian political advisors working for
Ukrainian Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych. The “advisors,” such as
Gleb Pavlovsky and Marat Gelman, worked with Yanukovych’s shadow
campaign headquarters, headed by Deputy Prime Minister Andriy
Kluyev. Presidential administration head and Social Democratic United
Party (SDPUo) leader Viktor Medvedchuk served as Gelman and
Pavlovsky’s principal contact. The taped conversation reveals that
Gelman and Pavlovsky considered assassination to be a legitimate
campaign strategy. The FSB officer on the tape specifically discusses
the poisoning of Yushchenko.

The bomb attempt may have been conceived after the poison failed to
kill Yushchenko before election day. Plans for the bomb attack were
discovered when a spetsnaz unit of the State Defense Service (DSO) was
sent to investigate a burglar alarm. The alarm went off near one of
the three offices used by the Yushchenko campaign. The DSO noticed a
car with Russian license plates and asked the two occupants for their
documents. After a check of their Russian and Ukrainian passports
revealed them to be false, a search of the car’s trunk found three
kilos of plastic explosives, enough to destroy everything within a
500-meter radius.

Both passengers were arrested and a subsequent investigation unmasked
them as Mikhail M. Shugay and Marat B. Moskvitin, Russian citizens
from the Moscow region. Their only contact in Moscow had been a
certain “Surguchov” who had hired them in September for the bombing
operation against Yushchenko and his ally, Yulia Tymoshenko. The
terrorists were to receive $50,000 after the bomb plot was
completed. After smuggling the explosives through the
Russian-Ukrainian border, both FSB operatives set up a safe house in
the village of Dudarkiv, 15 kilometers from Kyiv. A search of these
premises found pistols, radio equipment, and bomb-making instructions.

The plot thickens with additional taped telephone conversations played
in the “Zakryta Zona” documentary. These conversations were made by
the SBU during the elections and handed over to Yushchenko after round
two. Kluyev is heard discussing with unknown individuals the
whereabouts of Yushchenko’s office and where the leadership of the
Yushchenko camp meets. The documentary’s producers believe that
Kluyev sought this intelligence to pass on to the Russian
assassination team, so that bombs could be placed to murder not only
Yushchenko, but also other members of his team, such as Tymoshenko.

Increasing evidence points to Russian involvement in Yushchenko’s
poisoning. In December Yushchenko’s doctors in Vienna concluded that
he had, in fact, been poisoned by TCDD, the most toxic form of
dioxin. His dioxin level was 6,000 times higher than normal and the
second highest recorded in history. Alexander V. Litvinenko, who
served in the KGB and the FSB before defecting to the United Kingdom,
has revealed that the FSB has a secret laboratory in Moscow that
specializes in poisons. A former dissident scientist now living in the
United States, Vil S. Mirzayanov, reported that this institute studied
dioxins while developing defoliants for the military. (TCDD was a
component of Agent Orange.) SBU defector Valeriy Krawchenko also
pointed to this FSB laboratory as the likely source of the dioxin that
poisoned Yushchenko (New York Times, December 15).

Yushchenko has alleged that the poisoning took place during a
September 5, 2004, dinner at the home of then-deputy SBU chairman
Volodymyr Satsyuk, a member of the SDPUo. This again reveals the
involvement of Medvedchuk and Russian political advisors working for
Yanukovych. Not surprisingly, Satsyuk and Kluyev have hurriedly
abandoned their government positions to return to parliament, where
they enjoy immunity.

Russia’s involvement in two terrorist attacks in Ukraine, a poisoning
and bombing, make a mockery of Putin’s alleged commitment to work
alongside the United States in the international war on terrorism.

–Taras Kuzio
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The Eurasia Daily Monitor is a publication of the Jamestown
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From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Pipeline perks for Russia in Armenia-Iran energy deal

EurasiaNet Organization
Dec 22 2004
PIPELINE PERKS FOR RUSSIA IN ARMENIA-IRAN ENERGY DEAL
Samvel Martirosyan 12/21/04
Iran has moved closer to gaining a strategic foothold in Caucasian
energy markets with the start of work on a gas pipeline to Armenia
that has been heralded by Yerevan as bringing “definite changes in
the region.” The project has the potential to undercut Russia’s
control of Armenia’s energy supply, yet two new gas projects could
act as potential deal sweeteners for this longtime Armenian ally.
Plans were recently announced for an increase in Armenian orders for
Russian gas and a possible role in the Iranian pipeline project for
Russian energy giant Gazprom.
Construction on Armenia’s section of the 142-kilometer gas pipeline
began on November 30, with $30 million in costs for the 42-kilometer
strip from the Armenian border town of Agarak to Kajaran, south of
Yerevan, picked up by the Iranian Export and Development Bank. Upon
completion in late 2006, the pipeline will supply the tiny South
Caucasus state with 36 billion cubic meters of Iranian gas over the
next 20 years. Gas from Turkmenistan is also scheduled to be
delivered to Armenia via the pipeline.
At an official ceremony to mark the project’s debut, Armenian Deputy
Prime Minister Andranik Margarian stated that the pipeline, in the
works since 1992, would bring economic benefits to Armenia as well as
foster regional stability. “This project has been implemented
throughout Armenia’s political and economic sufferings,” Armenian
media reported Margarian as saying. “In Armenia’s years of hardship,
Iran has stretched out its hand to help us.”
Expanding Armenia’s energy sources is a critical goal for the
administration of President Robert Kocharian – for both economic and
political reasons. Chronic energy shortages contributed to much of
the country’s economic decline after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, and Armenia’s economic woes continue to attract the criticism
of the country’s opposition. Speaking to reporters about Armenia’s
energy deal with Iran, Kocharian commented during a December 2 visit
by Iranian Energy Minister Habibollah Bitaraf that “[w]e are ready to
do everything possible to support the current level of cooperation,”
according to the Russian news agency Interfax.
In exchange for the gas, Armenia will eventually deliver up to 1,000
megawatts of electricity to Iran with the construction of two
high-voltage power lines between the countries. Additional
electricity projects are also in the works. In 2005 or 2006 Armenia
hopes to start construction on two hydropower plants on the banks of
the Arax River between Armenia and Iran, according to Margarian.
Oil could reinforce Tehran’s ties with Yerevan still further. At a
December 4 meeting between Armenian Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian
and Iran’s Armenian Ambassador Alirza Hagigian, plans were discussed
for construction of a 60-kilometer oil pipeline from the Iranian town
of Julfa to the Armenian border town of Meghri.
Geopolitics, though, rather than the attractions of the Armenian
energy market, appears to drive much of Iran’s push for partnership.
With American troops stationed in neighboring Afghanistan and Iraq
and Iran’s nuclear energy program under intense international
scrutiny, the country’s ruling clerics have taken steps to assure the
outside world that the Islamic Republic is a force for stability in
the region. Iranian President Mohammad Khatami’s September 2004 visit
to Armenia, a close US ally, reinforced that campaign with a “good
neighbor” message that “Iran is interested in peace and stability in
the South Caucasus.”
But in drawing closer to Iran, Yerevan has risked alienating another
longtime ally – Russia. Though Russian Deputy Prime Minister Boris
Alyoshin assured reporters in Yerevan earlier this year that the
pipeline deal with Iran would only provide additional business for
Russian-operated electricity stations in Armenia, the deal has been
scrutinized with some trepidation. The Russian company United Energy
Systems controls 40 percent of Armenia’s electricity generation
facilities, while heavy hitters Gazprom and Itera control 55 percent
of ArmRogazprom, currently Armenia’s sole natural gas supplier.
When the Iranian pipeline is complete, however, Armenia will no
longer need to depend solely on Russia for its natural gas needs. In
Yerevan, Kremlin concerns about the prospect of Armenia providing a
conduit for Iranian gas to Europe, a key Russian market, are widely
believed to have resulted in a reduction of the pipeline’s size to a
width too narrow for exports.
Yet Russian energy companies have not been idle in defending their
interests. The Russian news agency Interfax reported an unidentified
Armenian government source as saying on December 8 that Gazprom may
be invited to build and repair one part of the Armenian-Iranian gas
pipeline, between Kadjaran and Ararat, at a cost of $90 million. As
payment for its work, Gazprom would receive the No. 5 generating unit
at the Razdan power plant, Armenia’s largest heating and power plant,
which supplies 20 percent of the country’s electricity needs.
Armenian President Robert Kocharian had earlier dismissed reports of
such a deal.
Still other sweeteners are in the works. On December 11, ArmRogazprom
CEO and General Director Karen Karapetyan announced plans to increase
gas supplies to Armenia by roughly 31 percent during 2005 to some
1.6-1.7 billion cubic meters. A $27 million expansion of Armenia’s
gas pipeline from Russia is planned to handle the increased flow. “I
am convinced that the problem of Armenia’s energy security will be
solved soon,” the Russian news agency Novosti reported Karapetyan as
saying, “given the forthcoming opening of the alternative
Iran-Armenia gas pipeline.”
For now, the government line out of Yerevan is that what benefits
Iran benefits Russia. At a May 13-15 summit in Moscow with Russian
President Vladimir Putin, Kocharian took pains to stress that the
pipeline deal with Iran would not damage Russia’s own energy
interests in Armenia or result in a fall-off in Armenian orders for
Russian gas. Gazprom, Itera and United Energy Systems will all
collect “major dividends from the deal,” Kocharian said, Novosti
reported. “They will benefit, too.”
Editor’s Note: Samvel Martirosyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.
–Boundary_(ID_cQP908hUWPxwrGDaNtBp2g)–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ilkham Aliyev teaches politics

Russica Izvestia Information Inc.
RusData Dialine – Russian Press Digest
December 21, 2004 Tuesday
Ilkham Aliyev teaches politics
by Rauf Mirkadyrov
SOURCE: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No 277, p.5
Azerbaijan’s President believes Russia is excessively interfering
insettling the conflict in Nagorny Karabakh
Commenting on the progress of the talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia
on the problem of the disputed province Nagorny Karabakh, the Azeri
President Ilkham Aliyev praised as successful the recent round of
negotiations the two countries’ foreign ministers Elmar Mamedyarov and
Vardan Oskanyan conducted in Prague. As a result of the four meetings,
the sides came to an agreement on the general principles of settling
the conflict. “I believe that if the negotiations continue in a
constructive manner and the Armenian side doesn’t withdraw from the
existing agreements, as it happened earlier, we can reach a certain
settlement,” Aliyev said.
However, he remarked that the Russia’s excessive interference in the
conflict settlement and backing of Armenia may negatively affect the
peace process. Commenting on the last week’s visit of the Russian
State Duma’s Chairman Boris Gryzlov to Yerevan, Ilkham Aliyev said
the following: “The chairman of the State Duma said the other day
that Armenia is the Russia’s outpost in the Southern Caucasus. We
used to believe Armenia was an [independent] state. Now it turns out
to be just an outpost.” After this sarcastic remark, Aliyev continued:
“With whom shall we conduct negotiations – with the ‘outpost’, or with
its owner?” According to Aliyev, Yerevan should “clear up this issue,”
in order to create favorable conditions for continuing the talks. “If
Armenia behaves like an independent state, we can approach signing
a concrete agreement in the near future,” the Azeri President said.
Experts said that Aliyev’s statement was predictable – after the defeat
of the Russia’s “imperial” policies in Ukraine the Azeri leader is
likely to distance himself from Russia and demonstrate loyalty to
the West.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkey’s press freedom far from EU standards -media watchdog RSF

Turkey’s press freedom far from EU standards -media watchdog RSF
Reporters Sans Frontieres press release, Paris
16 Dec 04
Text of report in English by press release by Paris-based organization
Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) on 16 December
Reporters Without Borders has said that Turkey is still far from
meeting European press freedom standards as the European Council
prepares to decide on 17 December whether or not to open negotiations
on Turkish EU membership.
European deputies voted on 15 December for the discussions to start
without “needless delay” but on the basis of Ankara complying with
certain conditions.
In particular they are seeking the repeal of Article 305 of Turkey’s
new criminal code, that comes into effect on 1st April 2005 and which
they consider runs contrary to freedom of expression.
“The legislative progress that has undeniably been made should not
conceal the fact that the climate remains as harsh as ever for the most
outspoken journalists,” the worldwide press freedom organization said.
“The press is exposed to misuse of authority by the courts, which in
practice continue to impose prison sentences and exorbitant fines
that push journalists to censor themselves extensively on the most
sensitive subjects such as the army and the Kurdish question,”
Reporters Without Borders said.
The TV and radio stations are still subject to “brazen censorship”
by the High Council for Broadcasting (RTUK), while pro-Kurdish
journalists continue to be the target of many kinds of pressure,
the organization continued.
“Despite progress towards European standards, the gap between the
declarations of good intentions and the reality is still considerable,
with the result that Turkey still does not fulfil all the necessary
conditions for real press freedom,” it added.
Genuine progress made
The legislative amendments undertaken by Turkey with a view to joining
the European Union have been positive for journalists. Heavy fines have
replaced prison sentences in the new press law, adopted in June. The
most repressive sanctions, such as the closure of news organizations
or bans on printing and distribution, have been eliminated, while
the protection of sources has even been reinforced.
Article 159, which has led to many journalists being prosecuted
for “affront to the state and state institutions and threats to
the indivisible unity of the Turkish Republic”, was amended in
2002 and 2003, with the prison sentence being cut from one year to
six months. At the same time, criticism not intentionally aimed at
“ridiculing” or “insulting” state institutions is no longer punishable
by imprisonment.
Journalists still under pressure
Even though the new criminal code that becomes law on 1st April 2005
removes the offence of “mocking and insulting government ministers”,
there remains a problem with Article 305.
This punishes alleged “threats against fundamental national
interests”. It specifically targets freedom of expression, particularly
on issues involving Cyprus or Armenia. The European parliament voted
on 15 December for a resolution calling, among other things, for the
immediate repeal of this article, viewed as incompatible with the 1950
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.
Contrary to European standards, the new criminal code stipulates
that insult is punishable by three months to three years in prison,
with the sentence increasing if the offence is committed by means of
the press (Article 127).
In practice, judges still interpret the concept of “criticism” very
subjectively and abusive prosecutions continue.
Four journalists with the pro-Kurdish daily Yeniden Ozgur Gundem who
criticized government policy on the Iraq war were brought before the
courts in 2003 while on-line journalist Erol Oskoray was detained for
“mocking” and “insulting” the army. Sabri Ejder Ozic, the manager
of Radyo Dunya, a local radio station in the southern city of Adana,
was sentenced to a year in prison for offending parliament.
Hakan Albayrak, a former editorialist for the daily Milli Gazete,
was imprisoned on 20 May and is serving a 15-month prison sentence
for “attacking the memory of Ataturk” in violation of the 1951 law
governing crimes against Kemal Ataturk. Article 1 of this law punishes
any offence against the Republic of Turkey’s founder by one to three
years in prison. Article 2 doubles the sentence if it is committed
by means of the press.
On 15 October, Sebati Karakurt of the daily Hurriyet was held for 12
hours at the headquarters of the anti-terrorist police in Istanbul and
some 10 policemen searched his home. It stemmed from a report published
a few days earlier that included an interview with Murat Karayilan,
the military chief of the former Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK), now
renamed Kongra-Gel. The report included photos showing female rebels
in combat fatigues in a favourable light, relaxed and smiling. Karakurt
was released after being interrogated by the police and a prosecutor.
Memik Horuz, the managing editor of the far-left newspaper Isci Koylu,
has spent years in prison for the views he expressed in the course
of their journalistic work.
Pro-Kurdish media targeted
While the national radio and TV stations are now allowed to use
the Kurdish language, the RTUK continues to impose disproportionate
sanctions – ranging from warnings to withdrawal of licence – against
pro-Kurdish media or media that are very critical of the government.
Ozgur Radyo, a local radio station in Istanbul, was sentenced
by the RTUK to a month’s closure for “inciting violence, terror,
discrimination on the basis of race, region, language, religion or sect
or the broadcasting of programmes that arouse feelings of hatred in
society.” The station stopped broadcasting on 18 August. In the event
of a further offence, the RTUK could withdraw its licence altogether.
Gunes TV, a local television station in the eastern city of Malatya,
was also forced to stop broadcasting for a month from 30 March. This
was because the RTUK accused it of “attacking the state’s existence
and independence, and the country’s indivisible unity with the people
and Ataturk’s principles and reforms” under article 4 of RTUK law
3984. Using the same article, the RTUK closed down local TV station
ART in the south-eastern city of Diyarbakir on 15 August 2003 for
broadcasting two love songs in Kurdish.
Mass detentions of pro-Kurdish journalists by the anti-terrorist police
on the eve of the NATO summit in Istanbul on 28-29 June 2004 were
also indicative of the treatment reserved for the pro-Kurdish press.
Finally, nine journalists covering the dispersal of protesters against
electoral fraud were badly beaten by police in Diyarbakir during the 28
March local elections and three of them had to be hospitalized. Those
responsible have still not been punished.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Paris souhaite qu’Ankara reconnaisse le Genocide Armenien

Les Echos
14 décembre 2004
Paris souhaite qu’Ankara reconnaisse le génocide arménien
CATHERINE CHATIGNOUX
L’hostilité confirmée des Français contre l’adhésion de la Turquie à
l’Union européenne oblige le gouvernement à multiplier les
sauvegardes avant de donner, lors du Conseil européen, vendredi, à
Bruxelles, son feu vert à l’ouverture de négociations avec Ankara.
Hier, à l’issue du Conseil des ministres européens des Affaires
étrangères, Michel Barnier a souhaité que ces négociations s’engagent
« au plus tôt au deuxième semestre 2005 », alors que la Turquie
réclame mars 2005. Une tentative, peut-être un peu vaine, de
dissocier le débat sur la Constitution européenne, qui doit être
couronné par un référendum avant l’été 2005, et le dossier turc, que
Paris ne souhaite pas voir « polluer » le scrutin en faveur du traité
constitutionnel. Michel Barnier a également réclamé que la Turquie
reconnaisse le génocide arménien de 1916 dans le courant des futures
négociations. Quant aux relations entre la Turquie et la République
de Chypre, qu’Ankara n’a toujours pas reconnue, Nicosie a demandé,
hier, que la Turquie manifeste sa volonté de normaliser ses relations
avec elle avant le sommet européen de mars prochain.
« Processus ouvert »
Les chefs d’Etat et de gouvernement, qui consacreront leur dîner de
jeudi, à Bruxelles, à la Turquie, n’auront cependant plus beaucoup de
divergences à aplanir. Car, au-delà des ultimes réglages, les dés
sont jetés. La Turquie sera appelée à ouvrir de longues négociations
avec l’Union, assorties d’un grand nombre de conditions techniques,
destinées à s’assurer qu’au-delà de l’adoption des lois les réformes
soient appliquées sur le terrain. La formulation sur la finalité des
négociations avec la Turquie semble désormais faire l’objet d’un
consensus des Vingt-Cinq. La dernière proposition rédigée par la
présidence suggère que les négociations constituent un « processus
ouvert », dont l’issue n’est pas garantie à l’avance. La France et
l’Autriche n’ont pas obtenu que soit inscrite plus précisément
l’hypothèse d’une « alternative à l’adhésion » en cas d’échec des
pourparlers. La Grande-Bretagne et l’Allemagne n’y sont pas
favorables.
La Croatie pourrait profiter de ce que tous les projecteurs sont
braqués sur la Turquie pour obtenir en douceur l’ouverture de
négociations d’adhésion à l’Union dès mars prochain. A la condition
que soit confirmée la coopération de Zagreb avec le Tribunal pénal
international pour l’ex-Yougoslavie, ce dont certains Etats, comme le
Royaume-Uni, doutent. Les Vingt-Cinq envisageaient jusque-là que la
totale coopération avec le TPI soit confirmée par les Etats membres
eux-mêmes.
Les ministres ont également proposé que la signature du traité
d’adhésion de la Roumanie et de la Bulgarie à l’Union ait lieu fin
avril ou début mai.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Snapshots of living together

The Messenger, Georgia
Nov. 5, 2004
Snapshots of living together
By Nino Gvalia
At the exhibition
Photographers from Georgia Ira Kurmaeva and Liza Osephaishvili-Nemtsova
Until November 7, the TMS Art Gallery (16 Rustaveli Avenue) is holding
a photography exhibition titled ‘Living Together,’ presented by the
British Council and BP.
The collection features works by six young photographers from Georgia,
Azerbaijan and Armenia – Liza Osepaishvili-Nemtsova, Irina Kurmaeva,
Sitara Ibrahimova, David Hakobyan, Vahe Gevorgyan and Rafail Shakirov.
The Living Together exhibition is the result of a week’s work in
February this year, when the six photographers from the three Caucasian
countries met up to take snapshots around the theme of living together.
They worked in Tbilisi, Mtskheta, Marneuli and Tskhinvali, where
different ethnic and social groups live side by side.
According to Liza Osepaishvili-Nemtsova, working together on the
project was a very interesting experience, as it gave her the
opportunity to meet up with colleagues and share ideas. “I liked the
project very much. I met with interesting photographers and
collaborated with them,” she said.
The project was coordinated by the British photographer Ann Doherty,
whose works were exhibited in a British Council exhibition in the three
South Caucasian countries in 2003.
The aim of the project was to bring together a photo collection for a
touring exhibition describing how people of different origins can live
in peace and harmony, despite the recent ethnic conflicts in the South
Caucasus.
“When I see this exhibition, I think that it belongs to one author. I
don’t know if this is good or bad, but I find the exhibition very
interesting and also think that it is a very good idea when
photographers from different countries work on the same theme and then
exhibit their work together,” said the famous photographer Irina
Abzhandadze.
The black and white photographs printed to a very high quality well
illustrate the often harsh life of Caucasian people, who live in
poverty, face many difficulties, and whose eyes are thoughtful and sad.
“This theme has made a strong influence on me. The exhibition again and
again proves that photography is one of the main art-forms, which can
send a powerful message to a viewer,” commented the well known
photographer Yuri Mechitov while visiting the exhibition.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian Railways and Armenian Railway Sign Memorandum of Cooperation

RIA OREANDA
Economic News
November 3, 2004 Wednesday
Russian Railways and Armenian Railway Sign Memorandum of Cooperation in
Organization of Railway Communication between Russia and Armenia
Yerevan. The President of JSCO “Russian Railways” Gennady Fadeev and
the General Director of JSC “Armenian Railway” Ararat Khrimyan will
sign the Memorandum of Cooperation in the field of organization of
railway communication between Russia and Armenia, public relations
department of JSCO “Russian Railways” informed.
The Memorandum proclaims intentions of Russian and Armenian parties to
develop cooperation between railways of Russia and Republic of Armenia
in the field of rail transportation, rolling stock, infrastructure,
techniques and corresponding railway equipping.
In particular, the Memorandum speaks about intention to organize rail
transportation between the Russian Federation and Republic of Armenia
with further output on routes of the international transport corridor
“North-South”, increase in volumes of transportations of mutual trade
cargoes between the Russian Federation and Republic of Armenia and
international transit, increase in efficiency and competitiveness of
railway cargo and passenger transportations.
“Railways always were and remain out of politics and borders between
the states, Gennady Fadeev has emphasized after arrival to Yerevan.
Purpose of our visit is arrangement of economic cooperation with
Armenian colleagues in the field of development of the largest Eurasian
transport corridors, in particular, corridor “North-South”.
It is supposed that the parties will charge specially created working
commission of experts of JSCO “Russian Railways” and JSC “Armenian
Railway” with preparation of offers on formation of joint company with
attraction of private capital for organization of transportations
between Russia and Armenia at creation of necessary infrastructure on
railway route Veseloe – Sukhumi – Yerevan.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Armenians by Oktay Eksi

Turkish Press review
Oct 20 2004
ARMENIANS BY OKTAY EKSI (HURRIYET)
Columnist Oktay Eksi comments on Turkish-Armenian relations. A
summary of his column is as follows:
`Our efforts to become a member of the European Union have caused
some confusion. For example, everybody knows that the concept of
`minority’ comes from the Treaty of Lausanne. This is true not only
for us, but also for Greece, which signed the treaty as well.
Meanwhile, those who think it’s time to benefit from Turkey while
hindering our EU bid are hard at work. The most important such
initiative is the push to make Turkey recognize the so-called
Armenian genocide. Former Foreign Minister Ilter Turkmen wrote
yesterday in Hurriyet, `Of course it’s out of the question for Turkey
to accept the claims of Armenian genocide.’ However, he also
suggested that we should normalize our relations with Armenia so we
can solve the problem. Actually Armenia’s deputy foreign minister
said a few days ago that it was ready to meet unconditionally with
Ankara in order to normalize relations. We’re against neither
Turkmen’s view nor efforts to improve relations with Armenia. We also
support the ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) push to
normalize our relations with neighboring countries. However, this
can’t happen with the efforts and good will coming from one side
only. For example, Armenia wants to normalize relations but it also
supports cruel and unfair campaigns by the Armenian diaspora. In
addition, hostility against Turkey is still enshrined in Armenia’s
founding state papers, and Armenian President Robert Kocaryan doesn’t
seem to have given up his promise to US Armenian lobbying groups that
it would work hard for recognition of the genocide.’
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ENI: Spitting triggers Jewish-Christian tension in Jerusalem

Ecumenical News International
Daily News Service
14 October 2004
Spitting triggers Jewish-Christian tension in Jerusalem’s Old City
ENI-04-0681
By Michele Green
Jerusalem, 14 October (ENI)–Tensions in Jerusalem’s Old City
have flared following an incident in which a Jewish seminary
student spat at an archbishop during a procession from the city’s
Armenian Quarter to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a site
commemorating Jesus’ crucifixion and burial.
Israeli police arrested the seminary student, but Christian
clerics living in the walled Old City say such assaults by
ultra-Orthodox Jews is a frequent occurrence.
“It happens maybe once a week,” Armenian Bishop Aris Shirvanian
told Ecumenical News International. “As soon as they notice a
Christian clergyman they spit. Those who are ‘respectful’ turn
their backs to us or the large cross that we may carry but the
ones that are daring either spit on the ground or on the person
without any provocation on our part.”
In the incident on Sunday, a cross was ripped from the
archbishop’s neck when a scuffle broke out after the Jewish
seminary student spat at the cleric. The seminary student later
told police he had done it because he saw the religious
procession as idolatry. Police said the man had been temporarily
banned from visiting the Old City and that he had been placed on
bail pending an indictment.
Bishop Shirvanian said spitting against Christian clergyman had
been going on for years and that the assailants were religious
Jews, sometimes men but also women, teenagers and even children.
“This shows that it is a phenomenon that is prevailing in their
religious education and it should be corrected,” he said.
Daniel Rossing, director of the Jerusalem Center for
Jewish-Christian relations, said his organization was collating
accounts of spitting incidents so they could approach rabbis and
demand they teach their congregants to stop such attacks.
“All people are created in the image of God and to spit on
another person is to spit on the image of God,” Rossing said. He
said that usually the assailants were ultra-Orthodox Jews and the
victims were “people wearing liturgical vestments or are wearing
a manifest Christian symbol such as a cross”. Rossing said he
believed the attacks were carried out due to intolerance towards
Christians by ultra-Orthodox Jews as well as to anger from
religious persecution in past centuries.
Israeli police spokesman Gil Kleiman said few Christians file
complaints with police about such assaults and unless they did it
was impossible to arrest and prosecute the assailants.
“We can only act when we have been informed by a complainant.
When we do know about it we act immediately to arrest the person
who did it and bring them to justice,” Kleiman said.
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz said in a 12 October editorial: “It
is intolerable that Christian citizens of Jerusalem suffer from
the shameful spitting at or near a crucifix. Similar behaviour
toward Jews anywhere in the world would immediately prompt
vehement responses.” [482 words]
All articles (c) Ecumenical News International
Reproduction permitted only by media subscribers and
provided ENI is acknowledged as the source.
Ecumenical News International
PO Box 2100
CH – 1211 Geneva 2
Switzerland
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russia Blocked Georgia and Armenia From Land and Sea

RUSSIA BLOCKED GEORGIA AND ARMENIA FROM LAND AND SEA
Will Kocharian and Saakashvili Discussed the Matter in Tbilisi Meeting
Azg/am
9 Oct 04
The Russian-Georgian border was closed de facto on September 1 and
only on September 15 an official order was issued. The Armenian side
was officially informed only on September 20 when the number of
vehicles waiting to cross the border reached 1000. No warning as to
border crossing closure was sent beforehand.
Georgia states that the border is open at the Upper Lars checkpoint
from the Georgian side. “Border is open from the Georgian side and
closed from the Russian. We are ready to provide the Armenian vehicles
with services neededfor crossing. Last time Russia opened the border
crossing for 2 hours was the period from September 9-12”, Kakha
Mikeladze, customs official at the Northern checkpoint, informed Azg
Daily.
On September 12 Russia closed also seaways for Georgia and
Armenia. According to the information we have, Russia stopped cargo
transportation from Poti to Novorosiysk for cargo boat repairing
lasting two weeks.
The two weeks have long ago expired. Now Russia explains that cargo
transportation between Poti and Novorosiysk will resume no sooner than
October 18. Arsen Ghazarian, head of Apaven Company, informed us that
the closed seawaywas the only one providing transportation to the
Company.
20 percent of Armenian goods were conveyed through the closed Upper
Lars checkpoint. This route becomes impassable in winter. Today the
important thing is to take the vehicles out from Darial gorge before
the first snow.
The Russian side does not define any terms for the border
opening. “The embassy has nothing to do with border closing. I have no
information on this”, was the only answer we received from the Russian
embassy to Georgia.
Russian press is full of information blaming Georgia for preventing
vehicles from Armenia to cross the border. Armenian mass media and
some officials seem to trust Russian press and declare that Russia
opened the border after president Kocharian’s phone conversation with
Vladimir Putin, whereas Georgia did not send green light.
In fact, Russia kept open only the Roki tunnel’s section of the
border. Armenians were allowed to enter South Ossetia where new
problems appeared connected with Georgian-Ossetian
confrontation. Georgia declared many times that there is only one
legal checkpoint between Russia and Georgia, i.e. Upper Lars.
The Russian side, in fact, invites Armenians to South Ossetia having
in mind that they will never cross the border. Allowing Armenians to
pass through Roki tunnel, Russia puts Georgia in a strange
position. The latter does not recognize this border crossing and does
not let Armenians pass it.
Those issues may top the meeting agenda of Robert Kocharian and
Mikheil Saakashvili. According to the press office of the president of
Georgia, president Kocharian will arrive in Tbilisi on October
22-24. The aim of the visit andthe framework of issues to be discussed
were not revealed.
By Tatoul Hakobian and Aghavni Harutyunian from Tbilisi
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress