Arg will manage Iran-Armenia gas pipeline

ARG WILL MANAGE IRAN-ARMENIA GAS PIPELINE

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 22 2006

The construction of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline will finish by the
end of this year, 9 days before the year ends, stated the minister
of energy Armen Movsisyan December 22. He declines to comment on the
statements by the Iranian officials that the construction will finish
by the Iranian New Year, i.e. in the middle of spring 2007. However,
Armen Movsisyan could not mention the definite timing when the Iranian
gas will be supplied to Armenia.

Armen Movsisyan is not surprised that only the Russian companies
enter the energy market of Armenia, and explains it by the fact
of coexistence for several years. "we have the same mentality, we
know each other well, the risk is smaller than of any other European
company." And economically "operating 40 km will cost several times
more than ARG’s tender."

RA Prime Minister to attend Saparmurat Niyazov’s funeral ceremony

RA Prime Minister to attend Saparmurat Niyazov’s funeral ceremony

ArmRadio.am
22.12.2006 17:55

RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan will leave for Turkmenistan
to participate in the funeral of the President of Turkmenistan
Saparmurat Niyazov.

Andranik Margaryan said in a press conference today that for expressing
condolence and support for the Turkmen state he must attend the
ceremony, and he will leave for Turkmenistan on December 23 or 24.

Gas Supply From Georgia To Armenia Not Restored Fully

GAS SUPPLY FROM GEORGIA TO ARMENIA NOT RESTORED FULLY

Noyan Tapan
Dec 21 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, NOYAN TAPAN. As of December 21, the gas
supply from Georgia to Armenia has not been fully restored yet:
100-110 thousand cubic meters of gas is being supplied into the
country. Shushan Sardarian, spokeswoman for ArmRusgazprom, told NT
correspondent that reserves of the Abovian gas depot are also being
used now. To recap, on December 17 at 11:30 pm the gas supply to
Armenia was cut off as a result of an accident at the gas pipeline
in the territory of Georgia.

Azerbaijani President Criticizes Armenia For Signaling Suspension Of

AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT CRITICIZES ARMENIA FOR SIGNALING SUSPENSION OF TALKS ON DISPUTED TERRITORY

Associated Press Worldstream
December 21, 2006 Thursday 7:55 PM GMT

President Ilham Aliev criticized his Armenian counterpart Thursday
for saying that long-running talks aimed at resolving the status of
the Nagorno-Karabakh territory should be suspending during Armenia’s
parliamentary elections.

Robert Kocharian said last week that there would no "active
negotiations" with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh in the run-up to
next spring’s parliamentary elections, saying he didn’t want to give
potential candidates any fodder for their campaigns.

"The Armenian authorities are making funny announcements that have a
provocative character," Aliev said. "They are searching for a pretext
to drag out the negotiations. All their announcements are false.

Nagorno-Karabakh will never be independent."

"I call on Armenia to stand on the correct path, the path of
constructivism not to use parliamentary elections as a pretext and
not to put itself in a difficult position," Aliev said.

The two countries are at loggerheads over the mountainous region
in Azerbaijan that has been under the control of Armenian and
ethnic-Armenian forces since a 1994 cease-fire. The six-year separatist
conflict killed about 30,000 people and drove about 1 million from
their homes, including many of the region’s ethnic Azeris.

The region’s final status remains unresolved and years of talks
under the auspices of international mediators have brought few
visible results

The Azerbaijani leader also again reiterated his country’s rapid,
oil- and gas-fueled economic growth, which the government has used to
increase military spending stoking worries about a possible renewal
of fighting.

"Resolute policies gives Azerbaijan its own fruits. The military
potential and political position of the country is strengthening.

They have to deal with Azerbaijan and they have to consult with us.

We will get a just resolution to the problem," he said.

BAKU: Azeri Foreign Minister Praises Progress In Karabakh Talks In 2

AZERI FOREIGN MINISTER PRAISES PROGRESS IN KARABAKH TALKS IN 2006

Day.az, Azerbaijan
Dec 17 2006

Baku, 17 December: Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
believes that the year 2006 was successful in the resolution of the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

"On the whole, I can say that during two and a half years’ existence
of the Prague process, we have actually advanced greatly and agreed
many issues. On the whole, my assessment of 2006 is positive.

Actually, negotiations were productive, moreover, the OSCE Minsk
Group co-chairs also assess the process as productive," Mammadyarov
told journalists.

Commenting on the opinion that Azerbaijan and Armenia failed to use the
window of opportunities available in 2006 in the Karabakh settlement,
the Azerbaijani foreign minister said that it would be wrong to link
a solution to the conflict to a specific time frame.

The minister said that the negotiations would continue in 2007. At the
same time, Mammadyarov expressed his hope that Armenia was sincerely
disposed to resolve the conflict and that its request for a short break
to think of further steps in the Karabakh settlement was in no way
connected with the upcoming parliamentary election in Armenia in 2007.

"At present there remains only one serious issue and if we agree it,
it will actually mean a breakthrough. On the other hand, we would
like to believe that Armenia takes the talks seriously, that it is
actually disposed to accept the stage-by-stage settlement plan and
is not wasting its time from the political point of view. This is a
very important issue since elections are to take place in Armenia and
it appears there are other issues as well," the Azerbaijani foreign
minister said.

Azeri party ignores Armenian refugees’ just dreams

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Dec 15 2006

AZERI PARTY IGNORES ARMENIAN REFUGEES’ JUST DEMANDS

A network of the civil society `’Refugees and International Law” has
circulated a statement in connection with the NKR Constitution’s
adoption.
The statement runs, in part:
`’A network of the civil society `’Refugees and International Law”
on behalf of hundreds of thousands refugees from the Azerbaijani SSR
and Nakhijevan states that the adoption of the Main Law – the NKR
Constitution – corresponds to the fundamental interests of Artsakh
people, refugees and will become an important incentive for the
negotiation process to proceed in the rational channel. The next step
of the NKR people and leadership should be adoption of a law on the
NKR citizenship, which would enable the refugees to again find a
country of their citizenship in the NKR. The network of the civil
society `’Refugees and International Law” believes the OSCE Minsk
group Co-Chairs Matthew Bryza, Yuri Merzlyakov and Bernard Fassier,
as well as all officials, who ignore and hush up the issue of half a
million refugees from the Azerbaijani SSR and Nakhijevan one way or
another, bear personal responsibility for the non-productiveness of
the bilateral talks being held. Since the Azeri party ignores a just
demand of the refugees from the Azerbaijani SSR and Nakhijevan to
compensate material and moral damage incurred by the Azerbaijani
authorities, the network of the civil society `’Refugees and
International Law” again reaffirms its determination to achieve the
aim: the territories of the former Aghdam, Fizuli, Jebrail and other
regions of the former Azerbaijani SSR should be turned over to the
refugees from the Azerbaijani SSR as a partial compensation of the
damage they have suffered”, KarabakhOpen reports.

Armenian State Budget of 2007 Paradoxical and Absurd: ROA Economist

ARMENIAN STATE BUDGET OF 2007 IS A PARADOXICAL AND ABSURD DOCUMENT:
ARMENIAN ECONOMIST

Yerevan, December 15. ArmInfo. The Armenian state budget of 2007 is a
paradoxical and absurd document, Eduard Agajanov, an Armenian
economist who held the post of the Armenian Statistics Minister (now
the National Statistical Service) in 1995-1998, said at a
press-conference at the National press-club, Friday, According to
Eduard Agajanov, the parameters of the state budget should comply with
the country’s economic policy. The Program of the Armenian
government’s activity says that the country is guided by the creation
of innovative structure. However, for its creation not a single dram
is allotted by the state budget of 2007. 5-7 bln AMD or 0.19% of the
GDP is to be spent on science, and nothing is said about target
programs, meanwhile in such a developed country as the USA, the target
programs make up 90% of the country’s GDP, E.Agajanov.

He also noted that in such transition countries as Armenia export is
the key term of the economic progress. The Armenian state budget of
2007 stipulates reduction of export from 27% of the GDP to 20.1%, and
it’s hard to understand how the country will develop by reducing
export.

In this connection, he said that the state budget should undergo a
highly skilled expert examination. Armenia has excellent specialists
in the economic sphere, e.g. former Prime Ministers of Armenia Hrant
Bagratyan and Armen Darbinyan, who would certainly conduct an
expertise. But their services are refused, as a result the is
acknowledged an unprepared transaction both by the Armenian and
Russian sides. Eduard Agajanov said he respects Armenian Defence
Minister Serzh Sargsyan and his contribution to the army, but he has
nothing to do with economy. However, he leads the Armenian side of the
Armenian-Russian Inter-parliamentary Commission for economic
cooperation.

Armenia Sends Judge On Mission On International Scene After 20-Year

ARMENIA SENDS JUDGE ON MISSION ON INTERNATIONAL SCENE AFTER 20-YEAR INTERRUPTION

Noyan Tapan
Dec 13 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 13, NOYAN TAPAN. Delegates of Armenia left Yerevan
for Moscow on December 13 to take part in the international tournament
of sporting gymnastics. As Albert Azarian, a thrice champion of the
Olympic Games, the Chairman of the Republic Federation of Gymnastics
informed the Noyan Tapan correspondent, after the 20-year interruption
Armenia will have its judge in the international review, in the
person of Hakob Serobian. Armenian team’s leading gymnast Vahagn
Stepanian, Vahagn Davtian, Narek Rafayelian, participants of the women
tournament Astghik Gyulnazarian and Liana Kobalian will perform their
skills. Names of prize winners of the Moscow tournament to memory of
Olympic champion Mikhayil Boronin will become known on December 16.

ANKARA: Yes, I’m A Denier! But What About The Others?

YES, I’M A DENIER! BUT WHAT ABOUT THE OTHERS?
Cem Oguz

The New Anatolian, Turkey
Dec 12 2006

In response to my open letter to Nancy Pelosi published on Nov. 21,
I didn’t get a reply from the soon-to-be U.S. House of Representatives
speaker, which in fact I didn’t expect Her Majesty to do. Instead,
however, I did receive some inspiring remarks from Armenian readers.

Some of them were indeed hopeless cases, like one gentleman from
Australia, Mr. A. M., who audaciously demanded the Turks "accept
[the Armenian genocide], apologize," and "get out of [their] homeland!"

Some others like Mrs. N. I., on the other hand, reproachfully invited
me to "reread history with open mind" by checking a variety of
"documents," ranging from statements of our Nobel winner author Orhan
Pamuk to a still-disputed remark attributed to Adolf Hitler.

Everything she pointed out were actually issues I had touched on in
my previous analyses. She was, nevertheless, kind as well as moderate
enough to admit that I have "the right to defend whatever I believe
in" and "no one should be persecuted for defending his/her opinion."

I have taken these two messages deliberately, since they represent
two categorically opposite poles, or lines of thinking, actually not
much different from would-be reactions by Turks to a similar case.

The latter letter writer, on the other hand, led me to introspection.

She deliberately ended her message by describing herself as "a firm
believer in the Armenian genocide committed by the Turks." She was
alluding to the way I signed off my letter to Nancy Pelosi. For those
of you who have forgotten how this letter ended, let me remind you
that I chose to describe myself as "a humble denier from Turkey."

At the time I wrote it, I pondered for a considerable while as to
whether it was the right thing to do. Be sure, it was not because
I feared punishment one day in France with time in prison, or that
I might be accused of being an incorrigible fascist, particularly
by my so-called liberal compatriots! I neither wanted to insult our
sincere Armenian friends nor simplify the extent of the tragedy they
suffered. But still, I did it because I wanted to underline, boldly,
the denial of our tragedy by those who accuse the Turks of being
nothing more than deniers. Yes, in that respect I am a pure denier
indeed! This must be the precise reason why I received, particularly
from U.S. citizens of Turkish descent, many messages of appreciation.

They, too, are tired of being increasingly and overwhelmingly denied.

As you might have already realized, dear readers, the "genocide"
debate revolves around three main words, or concepts: revisionism (in
response to mainstream historiography), denial, and reconciliation
with the past. In the atmosphere of intellectual terror that our
dear Armenian friends have successfully built up, they stubbornly
oppose any challenge to their version of mainstream historiography,
although, in contrast to the Holocaust, it is highly disputable.

Turkey’s relatively puny efforts at self-defense are frequently
portrayed as attempts at denial, and by accusations of revisionism
history is sadly being politicized. The substance of the messages I
received from Armenian readers precisely exemplify this phenomenon.

In all of them I was accused of being a revisionist and thus, in a
state of denial.

Since the Turks have failed to become reconciled with their past,
this line of thinking then assumes, they must be forced, either with
the help of parliamentary resolutions or political "sticks," to admit
and accept the "genocide." Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian,
for instance, in his op-ed in the International Herald Tribune in
October, maintained, "The message from France is clear: So long as
Turkey refuses to confront its own history, others will feel impelled
to do so."

Oskanian’s (or of others alike) Machiavellian line of thinking, in
turn, immediately brings to mind Turkish Armenians’ Patriarch Mesrob
Mutafyan II’s remarks at a symposium held in Kayseri a couple of months
ago. Readers may well remember him wisely arguing that it’s unethical
for both Armenians and Turks "to ignore each other’s responsibility or
completely put it on the other side although responsibilities weren’t
equal in the brutal consequence." This being said, I will pose a very
simple question the answer to which is of grave importance for any
sort of healthy dialogue between the Turkish and Armenian peoples:
Have our Armenian friends managed to reconcile with their past, or
are they, too, in a state of denial and blindly trying to convince
themselves to be the only victims without any guilt?

Those who fail to reconcile with their past or, as Oskanian accused
Turkey in the said op-ed, who "continue to surround [themselves] with
myths," one day, as the gentlemen far away from Australia unperturbedly
did in his letter, will have even the temerity to ask the Turks
to "get out of their homeland." Or, as the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (or the notorious Dashnaktsutiun) spokesman Giro Manoyan
told The New Anatolian’s Nursun Erel during her visit to Armenia,
those who still fail to engage in self-criticism may even think
that "the perfect solution for them would be the Treaty of Serves"
(of 1920, superseded in 1923 by the Treaty of Lausanne).

After reading what the gentleman from Australia or Mr. Manoyan has
sarcastically as well as irresponsibly argued, my Turkishness wanted
to show itself. I just wanted to respond to both, by saying "Come and
take or change it!" But I didn’t. Because I still believe in dialogue
and reason …

Russia Should Acknowledge Nagornyy Karabakh, Other Unrecognized Stat

RUSSIA SHOULD ACKNOWLEDGE NAGORNYY KARABAKH, OTHER UNRECOGNIZED STATES – MP

Ekho Moskvy radio, Moscow
Dec 11 2006

[Presenter] Azerbaijan, the USA, the European Union and the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe [OSCE] do not
acknowledge the results of the referendum in Nagornyy Karabakh. And
where does Moscow stand on this? Despite the existing difficulties,
Moscow could acknowledge the results of the referendum in Karabakh,
MP Konstantin Zatulin, a member of State Duma committee on CIS affairs,
believes.

[Zatulin] Nagornyy Karabakh does not border on the Russian
Federation. It does not want to become part of Russia, nor has
it a right to do so. The majority of the Karabakh population are
Armenians. The case in point here is whether Nagornyy Karabakh and
Armenia are two separate states or they are parts of a single entity.

It is more difficult for Russia to acknowledge the independence of
Nagornyy Karabakh at the state level, if only because Russia has
normal relations with Azerbaijan at present. No doubt, relations with
Armenia are preferential, they are a priority.

It is clear that Azerbaijan would like to see a proper development
of relations with Russia. If Russia acknowledges Nagornyy Karabakh,
Azerbaijan will react badly to this. Nevertheless, I believe that – if
we speak in principle here – that it is high time Russia acknowledged
both Nagornyy Karabakh and other unrecognized states.