"As Experience Shows, Ballot-Boxes Start To Gradually Disappear," CE

"AS EXPERIENCE SHOWS, BALLOT-BOXES START TO GRADUALLY DISAPPEAR," CEC VICE-CHAIRMAN ASSURES

Noyan Tapan
Apr 20 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, NOYAN TAPAN. Ordering more ballot-boxes than
necessary for holding of voting at the May 12 parliamentary elections
is conditioned by the circumstance that they will be used at the next
elections, too, as well as by the circumstance that "as experience
shows, ballot-boxes gradually start to disappear." Abram Bakhchagulian,
CEC Vice-Chairman, RPA representative, said at the April 20 press
conference in response to Noyan Tapan correspondent’s question.

To recap, the day before CEC stored 5 thousand transparent ballot-boxes
brought from Syria, on which RA coat of arms is stamped. 3846
out of these 5 thousand ballot-boxes will be used on May 12: two
ballot-boxes will be given to each of 1923 polling stations of Armenia
for proportional and majoritarian voting. They will have apricot and
white covers, respectively. And smaller, transparent ballot-boxes used
during the previous elections will be used as movable ballot-boxes
in the forthcoming elections.

Justice Minister Says HHK Most Interested In Fair Elections

JUSTICE MINISTER SAYS HHK MOST INTERESTED IN FAIR ELECTIONS

Panorama.am
20:57 20/04/2007

"If elections happen to run not free and fair, the authorities will
be weak. You may have 90% of votes but you will be weak and you will
not feel public support," Davit Harutunyan, minister of justice and
member of the Armenian Republican Party (HHK), told reporters before
his interview with Shant TV.

Harutunyan believes the elections must be free and fair to have strong
authorities, which may act as a partner for both the people and the
international community. "HHK is a force that is most interested in
that," the minister said.

Speaking about international election mission, Harutunyan said,
"They came to assist us to have proper electoral process. Observers
are not political figures. They belong to different teams – right and
left, democrats and conservatives. So, we cannot say that observers
have one face. One is clear – all observers want to see free and fair
elections here."

"We must not perceive the observers as instructors, as was in the
past, when Moscow Central Committee instructors used to come and
give instruction and we had to perform their orders. Now we enter
into debate with observers, make our suggestions. After all, we are
a sovereign state," Harutunyan said.

Oskanian And Mamedyarov Discussed Those Principles Of Karabakh Proce

OSKANIAN AND MAMEDYAROV DISCUSSED THOSE PRINCIPLES OF KARABAKH PROCESS THAT ARE NOT AGREED YET

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.04.2007 13:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the framework of BSECO (Black Sea Economic
Cooperation) Foreign Ministers’ session a meeting took place between
Armenian and Azeri FMs Vartan Oskanian and Elmar Mamedyarov. The OSCE
Minsk Group Co-Chairs were also present at the meeting, as well as
personal representatives of OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk.

The main accent was made on those principals of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, which are not agreed up to the present. In this connection
the OSCE MG Co-Chairs expressed opinions and offered the sides to
discuss them. In the result of the meeting an agreement was reached
to organize a visit for the Co-Chairs to the region. During the visit
mediators will familiarize themselves with the positions of conflicting
parties and discuss possibility of holding a meeting between Armenian
and Azeri presidents, the RA MFA Press Office reports.

RA Public Television and Radio Company and Islamic Republic of Iran

RA PUBLIC TELEVISION AND RADIO COMPANY AND ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN BROADCASTING SIGN AN EXECUTIVE PLAN

ArmRadio.am
19.04.2007 17:07

The President of the Council of Public Television and Radio Company of
Armenia Alexan Harutyunyan and the President of the Islamic Republic
of Iran Broadcasting Seyyed Ezattollah Zarghami signed an executive
plan ensuring the implementation of the memorandum of understanding
for media cooperation signed February 1st, 2006 in Tehran. In the
framework of the executive plan the Television and Radio Companies
of the two countries will exchange films and programs.

Alexan Harutyunyan mentioned during today’s press conference that
cooperation will help the two peoples to better know each other,
get acquainted with each other’s culture, life and country. "An
agreement was reached to exchange documentary and feature films and
programs. This is the best way to get to know each other, to get
familiar with the business atmosphere and investment opportunities,"
said Alexan Harutyunyan. An agreement was reached on mutual
support and defense of interests in the framework of international
cooperation. The Public Television of Armenia, which is a member of
the European Broadcasting Union, will do its best to ensure broader
representation of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting in
this organization. Armenian has been invited to participate in the
recurrent meeting of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union in Tehran,
to which the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting is a member.

According to Mr. Zarghami, large-scale economic programs have been
implemented between the two countries during the past two years. There
exist large opportunities for cooperation and this is what the efforts
of the leadership of the two countries are targeted at. "I can mention
also that the leaders of both countries view these relations from
the perspectives of strategic importance," he said.

According to Mr. Zarghami, joint films and programs will be shot about
Iran and Armenia as a result of cooperation between the two television
companies. " This is the best way to bring the two peoples closer,"
he said.

Breaking The Blockade: Stronger Strategic Partnership Between Russia

BREAKING THE BLOCKADE: STRONGER STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN RUSSIA AND ARMENIA
by Alexei Matveyev
Translated by Elena Leonova

Source: Voenno-Promyshlennyi Kurier, No. 15, April 2007, p. 2
Agency WPS
What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
April 19, 2007 Thursday

Senior Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov visits Armenia; Armenia has
moved into one of the most crucial phases of its political development:
a parliamentary election is scheduled for May 12, with a presidential
election to follow in March 2008. This country is Russia’s most
important military-strategic ally in the South Caucasus.

Moscow and Yerevan are continuing to develop their strategic
partnership – as evidenced by the results of Senior Deputy Prime
Minister Sergei Ivanov’s visit to Armenia last week. Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov also visited Armenia recently. The Russian leadership’s
increased interest in Armenia is entirely understandable.

Armenia has moved into one of the most crucial phases of its
political development: a parliamentary election is scheduled for
May 12, with a presidential election to follow in March 2008. Of
course, the Kremlin is by no means indifferent to the question of who
will hold power in Armenia. This country is Russia’s most important
military-strategic ally in the South Caucasus. When Sergei Ivanov met
with Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian in Yerevan, he noted: "Armenia is
our strategic partner, and this is not measured by military-political
interest alone." Ivanov emphasized that Russia and Armenia are linked
by centuries of shared culture and historical roots that have much
in common.

Moving on to military issues, Ivanov noted that the Russian military
base in Armenia "feels comfortable here and is defending the interests
of both Armenia and the Russian Federation." Ivanov said: "Its action
plan and scale are obviously and objectively non-aggressive and not
aimed against any other states, but they are effective in safeguarding
our common security."

The withdrawal of a Russian military base from Akhalkalaki (Georgia)
should be completed this year. Some of the arms and military hardware
from that base will be relocated to Armenia: to the 102nd Russian
military base at Gyumri. This will soon be Russia’s one and only
military facility in the South Caucasus. The Gyumri base, equipped
with S-300 air defense missile systems and MiG-29 fighter jets, is
also part of the CIS Unified Air Defense System. In December 2005,
after Russia and Armenia signed a number of bilateral agreements,
they announced that this base would be expanded. Armenia gave the
102nd base with additional land and property.

It’s also worth noting that Sarkisian said at his meeting with Ivanov
that any deployment of NATO bases in the South Caucasus would lead
to new dividing lines in the region, and this would not facilitate
improvements in regional security. Sarkisian emphasized that Russia
is reducing its military presence in the region, and it would be
inappropriate for any other force to increase its presence at the
same time.

Judging by the results of Ivanov’s visit to Yerevan, military-strategic
partnership between our countries is being actively supplemented by
economic relations. Ivanov described the trends in Armenian-Russian
economic relations as positive, "as objective figures indicate." Trade
turnover has increased by 70-80% in recent years. Russia is the
leading source of investment in the Armenian economy. Ivanov went on
to say that this growth is not "ethnic investment," but investment
by substantial Russian businesses: "This applies to many sectors and
branches of the economy, especially the energy sector, including
nuclear power, as well as transport and communciations, including
mobile communications. These areas of the economy are showing the
strongest growth in terms of Russian investment in Armenia."

He also expressed confidence that Armenia’s economic problems are being
solved, despite all the difficulties in Armenia’s position due to
the transport blockade. The new Caucasus-Poti rail ferry is already
in operation; it can hold up to 50 train carriages. Ivanov said:
"This is a full-fledged rail transport element, already offering a
solution to one of the key problems: the transport blockade against
Armenia, in effect for many years. This Gordian knot has been partially
cut." Ivanov added that a second ferry of this kind is likely to be
ready by the end of summer, thus increasing potential cargo turnover
between Armenia and Russia. In discussing cooperation plans, Ivanov
emphasized that Russia and Armenia also have long-term plans concerning
rail transport development and free movement of goods. Indeed,
transport is a key aspect of bilateral relations; as Ivanov noted,
"without transport, everything else becomes pointless."

As we see, Moscow and Yerevan are actively expanding contacts in the
military technology area and the economy. Ivanov’s visit to Armenia
showed that the potential is there, and a new phase of mutually
beneficial cooperation is expected in Russian-Armenian relations.

Heritage Follows Through in Siunik, Receives Delegation From OSCE

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

April 19, 2007

Heritage Follows Through in Siunik, Receives Delegation From
OSCE Election Observation Mission

Yerevan–On Thursday, April 19, the Heritage Party’s campaign bus "Toward
Victory"–with candidates, party faithful, and volunteers on
board–continued its journey to the Siunik marz and surrounding cities and
villages. This time, the Heritage representatives were joined by former
Goris mayor, freedom fighter, and parliamentary candidate Samvel
Harutiunian. As of 5pm Armenian local time, the Heritage campaign had held
successful public meetings in Goris, Kapan, and several villages. The
campaign mission also plans to meet with residents of Kajaran, Meghri, and
Agarak.

Meanwhile, as volunteers continued to take the party’s message through
Yerevan’s streets, Heritage board member Anahit Bakhshian and Martiros
Boghikian, manager of Heritage’s Shengavit office, received Jeremy Franklin
and Alexander Lukashyk of the OSCE Election Observation Mission. They
discussed the pre-electoral campaign process and reaffirmed their commitment
to free and fair elections–not just on May 12, but throughout the entire
lection season.

At 12pm tomorrow, April 20, a press briefing will be held at Heritage
campaign headquarters in Yerevan.

Also tomorrow, at the Court of Appeals on Criminal Matters, a hearing is
scheduled regarding the "Armenian Watergate"–the theft of sensitive
information from the database of Heritage headquarters.

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

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am

Turkish Right-Sided Opposition Parties To "Help" Erdogan In Ensuring

TURKISH RIGHT-SIDED OPPOSITION PARTIES TO "HELP" ERDOGAN IN ENSURING NECESSARY NUMBER OF DEPUTIES IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 18 2007

ANKARA, APRIL 18, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan reached an agreement with leaders of Motherland
and Right Way Grand National Assembly’s opposition right-sided parties
to provide the necessary number of deputies, 367, in the parliament
in the forthcoming presidential elections.

The biggest parliamentary opposition faction, Republican-People’s
Party, organized a rally on April 14 in Ankara with participation of
nearly 1 mln people, during which the leaders of the parties expressed
their indignation and protest to Erdogan’s nomination for the post of
country’s President and demanded to see "a secular, not pro-Islamic
citizen" on President’s post.

According to the Sabah Turkish newspaper, Erdogan declared that in the
formed conditions there is a danger in connection with nomination of
his candidature on the post of the President. "We will not run risks,"
he said.

To recap, nomination of candidates for presidency in Turkey started
on April 16. Starting April 26, the Turkish parliament should elect
head of the state within 20 days. The elections will be held on May
22. The deadline of registration is April 25 and the Prime Minsiter
declared that he will give a final answer before that day.

NKR: Bako Sahakian: The Post Of President Is Not A Political Privile

BAKO SAHAKIAN: THE POST OF PRESIDENT IS NOT A POLITICAL PRIVILEGE

Azat Artsakh Daily, Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]
16 April 07

Interview of the Azat Artsakh with the head of the NKR State Security
Service Bako Sahakian AA: Mr. Sahakian, the recent polls give you the
highest rating among the likely presidential candidates in NKR. What is
your attitude? I am happy that the institution of the public opinion is
developing in the country. As to the likely presidential candidates, I
think this question needs a more serious consideration. AA: What do you
mean? It is a highly responsible decision for any person who realizes
that the post of president is first of all great responsibility for
the fate of people and the state rather than a political privilege. I
realize this as a citizen, and as a public official, therefore I
cannot express my attitude earlier. AA: How about today? Recently we’
ve had meetings with the leaders of the influential parties and NGOs.

Representatives of the intelligentsia and the youth, the
veterans of World War II and the war in Artsakh came up to me with
proposals. During these meetings I felt real support and now I can
say that I may be running in the presidential election. And if I am
nominated, it will be a conscious decision acknowledging the great
responsibility which I will assume if I am elected president. AA:
Does it mean that you already have agreement with the political forces
over your nomination? I have already said that there is timing set
down in the law.

The present stage is a stage of consultations. Besides, if I make up
my mind, I will prefer nomination on a civil initiative not to offend
any of the parties whom I respect and whose support I will need.

Turks Face A Future Filled With Fear

TURKS FACE A FUTURE FILLED WITH FEAR
by Catherine Field

New Zealand Herald, New Zealand
April 17 2007

A gentle breeze wrinkles the Bosphorus, the muezzin at the Blue Mosque
calls the faithful to pray and old men sip tiny cups of grainy coffee
in the spring sunshine.

This image of Istanbul is tempting for its timelessness. Yet beneath
its reassuring surface is a country in the grip of powerful change.

Ask Turks where they think their country is or should be heading, and
you will get many answers and all are likely to be tinged with anxiety.

Some fear Turkey is edging towards a religious state; others dread a
backlash by the pro-secular, ultra-nationalist military, who staged
three coups between 1960 and 1980; others fret about a civil war with
the Kurdish minority.

"A few years from now, we don’t know what’s going to happen," says
Mustafa Kemal, a British-educated businessman in his late forties.

"It’s anyone’s guess."

A decade or so ago, what happened in Turkey could be regarded by much
of the world as a sideshow. Not any more.

For one thing, this nation of 71 million people is increasingly
prosperous, rivalling the newer members of the European Union in
per-capita income. It also straddles the main export route for the
oil-rich countries of the Caucasus. But most of all, Turkey plays
the linchpin role in Washington and Brussels’ vision of a Middle East
that is tolerant, stable and democratic.

AdvertisementMany secular Turks worry about creeping Islamism under
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, head of the Islamic-rooted Justice
and Development Party (AKP), who has been in power for the last five
years. Erdogan is expected toannounce this week if he will stand in
next month’s presidential elections.

Last Saturday, around 300,000 people took to the streets of Ankara,
the capital, to set down a marker of support for secularism ahead of
the vote. They rallied in front of the mausoleum of Kemal Ataturk,
the revered founder of the Turkish republic, who set up a secular
state, dividing religion from politics, after the collapse of the
Ottoman empire in 1917.

On the eve of the rally, the current President, Ahmet Necdet Sezer,
issued a sharp warning about the threat to secularism. A former
Constitutional Court judge, Sezer has vetoed a record number of laws he
deemed in violation of the secular constitution. He has also blocked
Government efforts to appoint hundreds of reportedly Islamic-oriented
candidates to key civil service jobs.

"Since the foundation of the republic, Turkey’s political regime
has never been under such threat," Sezer said. "For the first
time in history, the fundamental values of the republic have been
questioned and both domestic and foreign forces want Turkey to become
a conservative Islamic model."

Prodded by the EU as a precondition for membership negotiations,
Erdogan has pushed forward some important pro-democracy reforms,
including curbs on powers of the military. As a result, the death
penalty has been scrapped, tougher safeguards introduced against
torture and headway made in women’s rights and Kurdish culture.

But Erdogan has also tried to criminalise adultery – he backed down
under EU pressure – appoint an Islamic central banker, taken steps
to strengthen religious schools and spoken out against restrictions
on wearing Islamic-style headscarves in government offices and the
schoolroom. These, say critics, are signs that he will push an Islamic
agenda if he becomes head of state, a charge that Erdogan denies.

Sezer steps down as President on May 16. His successor will be chosen
by Parliament, which is dominated by AKP politicians.

Nationalism and ethnic frictions are other toxic additions to Turkey’s
problems.

In January, ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who challenged
the state position that the mass killings of Armenians by Turks in
World War I was not genocide, was shot dead outside his office. An
ultra-nationalist teenager has confessed to the killing – and the
debate rages over whether the youth had links with networks within
the state and security forces.

Even more troubling, though, is the prospect of fresh bloodshed over
the Kurdish question. The Kurds live in an area straddling east and
southeast Turkey, as well as smaller areas of Iraq, Iran and Syria.

More than 30,000 people were killed in Turkey in the 1980s and 1990s in
fighting between the Turkish Army and secessionist Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK).

Strengthened by the establishment of a quasi-independent Kurdish entity
in northern Iraq as a result of the war, the PKK has stepped up its
operations across the border in Turkey, and Turkish troop deaths are
now running at several a day.

Washington relied on stability in the Kurdish south, said Andrew
McGregor of the Aberfoyle International Security Analysis in Canada.

"Southern Turkey’s Incirlik Air Base is a crucial staging ground for
US operations in Iraq and Afghanistan," he said.

"The US is unwilling to open a new front in northern Iraq, nor can
it afford to lose its support from Iraq’s Kurdish population. Kurds
provide the most reliable units in the reformed Iraqi national Army."

In 2003, many in Turkey predicted the Iraq War would be disastrous
for their country, sensing it would strengthen the PKK and bolster
Kurdish demands on Turkish soil. Now the predictions appear to be
coming true, with all the potential for driving a massive wedge
between Ankara and Washington.

"It is the great under-reported story of the Iraq War," said Steven
Cook, of the Council on Foreign Relations.

The war within

* Turkey’s staunchly pro-secular President Ahmet Necdet Sezer warned
at the weekend that the threat Islamic fundamentalism poses to the
country’s secular establishment has reached its highest level.

* His comments were directed at the Islamic-rooted Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is expected this week to say if he is
prepared to serve as president.

* Erdogan has tried to push through pro-Islamic laws and appointments,
but has also given in to European Union demands and has denied having
an anti-secular agenda.

* Parliament will elect a new president after Sezer stands down on
May 16.

* Turkey’s secularists fear that if Erdogan – or someone close to
him – wins the presidency, the government will be able to implement
an Islamic agenda without opposition.

* Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the Turkish republic, set up a secular
state, dividing religion from politics, after the collapse of the
Ottoman empire in 1917.

FM toSpeak in Brussels at Event on Issue of Int’l Recog of Genocide

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER TO MAKE SPEECH IN BRUSSELS AT EVENT ON ISSUE
OF INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, NOYAN TAPAN. A working visit of the RA Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian to Austria is scheduled for April 16, during
which he will meet with Chiarwoman of Austria’s National Council
(speaker of the Austrian parliament’s upper chamber) Barbara Prammer
and the Foreign Minister Ursula Plasnik. During the visit, Vartan
Oskanian will give a lecture at Vienna Diplomatic Academy and make a
speech at the special session of the OSCE Permanent Council.

On April 19 V. Oskanian will particupate in the meeting of foreign
ministers of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization and
deliver a speech.

A visit of V. Oskanian to Brussels is scheduled for April 25. The
speech of the Armenian foreign minister at an event dedicated to the
issue of international recognition of the Armenian Genocide (the event
is organized by the Royal Conservatory of Brussels) is scheduled for
the same day. Heads of diplomatic missions accredited in Brussels,
representatives of various Armenian communities and organizations in
Europe will participate in the event.

On April 26 V. Oskanian will have meetings with high-ranking officials
of European structures in Brussels.

On April 27-29 the Armenian foreign minister will take part in the
Brussels Forum 2007, at which he will make the report "Black Sea
Region. Development Prospects". Prime ministers of Belgium and
Georgia, foreign ministers of Germany and Canada, other high-ranking
officials will participate in this forum.