BAKU: Russia Denies Accusations of Inaction Over Post-Soviet Conflic

Russia Denies Accusations of Inaction Over Post-Soviet Conflicts

Baku Today

Politics

02/02/2005 21:18

BAKU, Feb 2, (AFP) – Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov of Russia denied
Wednesday that Moscow was turning a blind eye to ethnic conflicts in
the former Soviet Union.

“It is strange for me to hear that Russia is passive in making
efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and the same goes
for other conflicts in the post-Soviet area,” Lavrov told reporters in
the Azeri capital, Baku. Azerbaijan and Armenia have been stalemated
over Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, since Armenia
took control of the region in 1994.

Lavrov said Russia has supported the implementation of all agreements
reached between Georgia and its two separatist republics, Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, and is more active than others in pushing for
the settlement of the conflict between Moldova and the breakaway
Transdniestr region. “There is no lack of initiative steps from our
side,” Lavrov said. “What there is, is a deficit of good will between
the conflicting parties.”

Russia has come under fire from western governments and from nations
that lost territory during secessionist conflicts after the break
up of the Soviet Union, for tacitly supporting separatist regimes in
former Soviet republics.

Russia is plagued by its own separatist conflict with rebels in
Chechnya, which has raged intermittently since 1993.

Copyright AFP

BAKU: PACE to mull Armenians’ illegal settlement in occupied Azerila

PACE to mull Armenians’ illegal settlement in occupied Azeri lands

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 1 2005

Baku, February 28, AssA-Irada

Azerbaijani parliamentarians Samad Seyidov and Asim Mollazada will
attend a meeting of the Political Committee of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) in Warsaw, Poland on Tuesday,
a source from the Milli Majlis (parliament) told AssA-Irada.

Issues related to preparations for the PACE spring session, regional
co-operation and illegal settlement of Armenians in the occupied
regions of Azerbaijan will be discussed.

The Azerbaijani MPs, who are currently in the Polish capital,
participated in a symposium entitled “Stepping up democracy in Europe”,
which was organized by the Committee on Monday.*

Azerbaijani Says He Will Promote Peace in Caucasus

Zenit News Agency, Italy
Feb 27 2005

Azerbaijani Says He Will Promote Peace in Caucasus

Received in Audience by Cardinal Sodano

VATICAN CITY, FEB. 27, 2005 (Zenit.org).- President Ulham Aliev of
Azerbaijan committed himself to promote peace and religious freedom
in the Caucasus, when he visited the Holy See over the weekend.

Aliev, who was received Saturday by Vatican Secretary of State
Cardinal Angelo Sodano, began the meeting by asking the prelate to
transmit to the hospitalized John Paul II “his homage and that of the
Azerbaijani people.” He also said he remembered well the Holy
Father’s visit to Baku on May 22-23, 2002.

A statement issued by Vatican spokesman Joaquín Navarro Valls
reported that “in the course of the talks, relations between the Holy
See and Azerbaijan were reviewed, as well as the existing problems in
the Caucasus, with the common commitment to favor the material and
spiritual progress of that region, and, in particular, the necessary
religious freedom and dialogue between the different components of
society.”

Also present at the meeting were Elmar Mammadyarov, Azerbaijan’s
foreign minister, and Archbishop Giovanni Lajolo, Vatican secretary
for relations with states.

The Republic of Azerbaijan became independent in 1991, after the fall
of the Soviet Union. It has 7.8 million inhabitants, most of whom are
Muslims, although there are important minorities of Russian and
Armenian Orthodox.

Despite the 1994 cease-fire, Azerbaijan has yet to resolve its
conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, a largely Armenian
enclave. Azerbaijan has lost 16% of its territory and, as a result of
the conflict, must support 800,000 refugees and internally displaced
people.

The Catholic community in Azerbaijan virtually disappeared during
Stalin’s persecutions. There are fewer than 1,000 Catholics in the
country.

Last Nov. 18, John Paul II received a delegation of Muslim, Orthodox
and Jewish representatives of Azerbaijan, who went to Rome to thank
him for his 2002 visit.

During the meeting, the Pope and all the representatives agreed that
no one has the right to use religion as an instrument of intolerance
or violence.

Ukraine Prez, Iran Prez Rep discuss Iran-Armenia-Europe Gas pipeline

PRESIDENT OF UKRAINE AND SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE OF IRAN’S PRESIDENT
DISCUSS PROJECT OF CONSTRUCTION OF GAS PIPE-LINE FROM IRAN TO EUROPE
THROUGH ARMENIA AND GEORGIA

KIEV, FEBRUARY 25. ARMINFO-RBC. President of the Ukraine Victor
Yushchenko and Special Representative of Iran’s President for issues
of Caspian Sea and CIS countries Mehdi Safari discussed in Kiev the
issues of construction of gas pipe-line from Iran to Europe through
the territory of the Ukraine. Safari informed journalists in Iran’s
Embassy in the Ukraine. According to Safari, already next week the
Ukrainian-Iranian subcommission for energy issues, headed by Deputy
Minister of Fuel and Energy, during its this sitting in Kiev will
discuss the feasibility study of the project of construction of this
gas pipe-line. As Safari mentioned, earlier th Ukraine “did not have
serious attitude to the project of construction of this gas
pipe-line”, and after the coming of Victor Yushchenko to power “the
negotiations on the construction of the gas pipe-line were
continued”. It is envisioned that the gas pipe-line will pass from
Iran through the territory of Armenia, Georgia, Russia and the
Ukraine.

At the same time Safari added that the first section of the gas
pipe-line to Armenia will be built by the end of 2006. At the
beginning of February Deputy Chairman of the Board of the ukrainian
company “Oil and gas of the Ukraine” Alexander Kisilyev informed that
the company is examining the issue of construction of the gas
pipe-line through which gas will be supplied from Iran to Armenia.To
remind, earlier Iran envisaged to provide only Armenia with gas.

Info center opens at Gegharkunik Governor’s office

ArmenPress
Feb 24 2005

INFORMATION CENTER OPENS AT GEGHARKUNIK GOVERNOR’S OFFICE

GAVAR, FEBRUARY 24, ARMENPRESS: The International Development
Agency of Great Britain was instrumental in helping the authorities
in Gegharkunik province to open Information Center. The Center,
according to Vahagn Bazikian, chief of governor’s staff, is intended
for providing population with clear information, consulting and to
improve the procedure of receiving and processing their applications.
The Center is located on the ground floor of the governor’s
office, equipped with modern technique and a special drive is made to
facilitate the entrance of disabled people on wheelchairs.

ANCA Discusses Armenian American Concerns with Amb. John Evans

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
February 24, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA DISCUSSES ARMENIAN AMERICAN CONCERNS
WITH U.S. AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA JOHN EVANS

— Talks Include Special Focus on U.S.
Policy on the Armenian Genocide

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
met this week with Ambassador John Marshall Evans, the U.S.
Ambassador to Armenia.

The meeting, held in the ANCA offices in Washington, DC, was
characterized by a substantive and meaningful exchange on a broad
range of issues of concern to Armenian Americans, particularly U.S.
recognition and commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. Joining
Ambassador Evans were Aaron Sherinian, the U.S. Embassy’s Political
Officer and Assistance Coordinator in Yerevan, and Robin Phillips,
the USAID-Armenia Mission Director.

The Ambassador’s meeting with the ANCA followed a two week tour of
Armenian American communities in Boston, New York, New Jersey, San
Francisco, Los Angeles, Fresno and Washington, DC. During his
presentations in these cities, the Ambassador spoke with a level of
candor on the historical reality of the Genocide that was
specifically welcomed by Armenian Americans.

“We welcomed the opportunity to exchange views with the Ambassador,
and value his insights and clarity regarding our nation’s diplomacy
toward Armenia and the region,” said Aram Hamparian, Executive
Director of the ANCA. “Along with those who heard him speak during
his public lectures around the nation, we appreciate the
forthrightness of his remarks about the Armenian Genocide. We take
note of the fact they coincide with a new level of awareness within
the Administration, and the American public, regarding the current
attitudes in Turkey toward the United States.”

Commenting in the wake of the Ambassador’s visit, ANCA Chairman Ken
Hachikian said, “On this 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
we urge the Bush Administration to take the decisive step of
breaking with Turkey’s shameful campaign of genocide denial. The
time has come for the U.S. government to adopt a fresh and positive
approach to the Armenian Genocide issue – in terms of both White
House and Congressional initiatives – in a manner consistent with
our nation’s moral obligations to truth and justice, and in light
of new realities in the region.”

www.anca.org

Watertown a leader in early childhood programs

Watertown a leader in early childhood programs
By Dan Atkinson/ Staff Writer

Watertown TAB & Press, Massachussettes
Feb 18 2005

About 18 months ago, Maral Karamousayan had a problem. Her oldest
children were preparing to enter kindergarten, but Karamousayan, an
Armenian originally from Syria, was concerned about their ability
to read and speak English. She heard from a friend about a free
twice-weekly program that helped children with their reading and
signed up.

Now, she said, her children have gone from not speaking any English
to using it all the time, and reading “is the best thing in the house.”

Karamousayan is participating in the Parent Child Home Program,
one of several early childhood education programs in Watertown.
Although Watertown is much smaller than neighboring communities such
as Newton and Waltham, it receives nearly $750,000 in grants from the
commonwealth for early childhood programs, despite cuts in funding
over the past few years. Newton receives about $835,000 in state
grants for early childhood education, and Waltham gets about $118,000.

Watertown’s five state-funded early childhood programs are a model
for other communities because of their interrelation, according to
Anne Hardiman, Watertown’s early childhood coordinator.

“We try to work as a whole council, not separate entities,” Hardiman
said. “One grant feeds out of another grant.”

The programs cover a range of ages and subjects. The Watertown Family
Network helps parents of newborn children with child development;
Community Partnerships for Children oversees preschool education; the
Quality Full-Day Kindergarten Grant helps maintain small classroom
sizes and all-day classes for kindergarteners; and Even Start and
the Parent Child Home Program focus on reading.

The grant programs and other private programs are holding an Early
Childhood Information Fair on Saturday, March 9, from 9:30 to 11:30
a.m. at Watertown Middle School, 68 Waverley Ave.

The Parent Child Home Program sends volunteers and staff members to
about 20 families in Watertown over two-year periods, said program
director Beth Fagan. The “modelers” bring books and educational toys
to the family twice a week and talk about them with a parent and
the child participating in the program, although the family’s other
children are encouraged to participate as well.

The program is less focused on pure literacy than teaching children to
relate books to the real world, Fagan said. The modeler, and eventually
the parent, will use the books’ illustrations and toys to let the child
make connections between text and objects in the child’s home. Not
only does the process improve reading skills, it teaches them learning
skills they need help the school system as a whole succeed, Fagan said.

“A child who goes to school ready to learn is an asset to the
community,” she said. “But if the same kid goes to school ready to
learn but the kid next to him can’t read and is acting up in class,
both are harmed.”

Fagan said the program’s goal is to “encourage a love of books,”
and Karamousayan said her children have taken their reading to
heart. Her 6-year-old daughter, Anais, reads bedtime stories,
with Karamousayan’s help, to her younger siblings. Her son, Mike,
was a year old when the family began the program in September 2003,
and now brings books into the room when Kathy Kopp, the family’s
modeler, comes by on her twice-weekly visits.

However, the program was cut from the state budget in 2002 after
receiving a grant for $80,000 the previous year, and was restored
in 2003 at $40,000 of funding, Fagan said. To match funding, Fagan
has gotten donations from the Watertown Savings Bank and the O’Neill
Properties Fund, which was created by the sale of the Arsenal on the
Charles to Harvard University.

All of the programs have been cut in recent years, Hardiman
said. Although the cuts often run statewide, they have a harsher
impact in Watertown, according to Watertown Family Network Director
Arlene Smith.

“It’s eye-opening how much this is really needed,” she said.
“Watertown has a lot of people from outside the United States who
are here because their partner is getting a degree or working on an
internship, and they face uncharted territory when they’re raising a
child and oftentimes don’t speak [English]. We still hear from people
about how we’ve made a big difference in their lives.”

Karamousayan is fluent in English, but said she was still shy about
reading aloud before she started the Parent Child Home Program.
Now she is reading “Charlotte’s Web” to Anais, and is more involved
in the community through the Watertown Family Network. She takes Mike
to play group every Tuesday and music class on Friday at the family
center. Fagan said people like Karamousayan show the usefulness of
Watertown’s early childhood programs, and are good arguments for
increased funding

“Success breeds success,” she said. “If a grant program is doing well
in the community, it shows the community knows how to use the money.”

Dan Atkinson can be reached at [email protected].

In 2004 Population In Armenia Grew By 3.5 Thous. People Totaling3,21

IN 2004 POPULATION IN ARMENIA GREW BY 3.5 THOUS. PEOPLE TOTALING 3,215.7 THOUSAND PEOPLE

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 16. ARMINFO. In 2004 the population in Armenia
grew by 3.5 thous. people totaling 3,215.7 thousand people by the
end of 2004. Head of the Armenian National Statistical Service Stepan
Mnatsakanyan says at a press conference, Wednesday while presenting
the socio-economic state of the country for 2004.

In his worlds, in 2004 the births registered in the country totaled
37,526 as against 35,793 in 2003, with the birth-rate coefficient
totaling 11.7 per thousand in 2004 as against 11.1 per thousand in
2003. Last year, 25,823 deaths were registered as against 26.014 in
2003. The death-rate did not changed totaling 8.0 per thousand. In
2004 10 cases of maternity deaths were registered as against 8 cases
in 2003. The number of children’s deaths in the first year of their
life increased by 21 cases totaling 443. At the same time, marriages
grew 10% totaling 17,002 with divorces growing 9.2% and totaling 1,987.

Russia welcomes Armenian-Azeri dialogue at different levels

RUSSIA WELCOMES ARMENIAN-AZERI DIALOGUE AT DIFFERENT LEVELS

PanArmenian News
Feb 16 2005

16.02.2005 12:58

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Nagorno Karabakh settlement will undoubtedly
be discussed during the visit of Russian FM Sergey Lavorv to
Yerevan, official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry
Alexander Yakovenko stated. “It is known that Russia welcomes the
continuation of the Armenian-Azeri dialogue at different levels,
first of all between the Presidents of the two states. We suppose
that the conflicting parties themselves should find an admissible
resolution of the conflict. Russia is ready to render assistance
both at bilateral level and as the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair and
become a guarantor of the agreement”, he noted. In his words, one of
the items of the agenda of the forthcoming talks will touch upon the
process of fulfillment of the Moscow agreements (achieved in May 2004)
regarding the further development of the Russian-Armenian interaction
for resolving transport problem in Armenia, cooperation in fuel
and energy field, strengthening of direct economic links between the
Russian Federation and Armenia. The parties will pay special attention
to the rapid development of the Russian-Armenian economic, cultural and
humanitarian cooperation and conduction of national years of Armenia
and Russia in 2005 and 2006. They are also expected to consider the
issue of interaction within the CIS and the CSTO, A. Yakovenko noted.

Russian FM arrives in Armenia on visit

Russian FM arrives in Armenia on visit

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Feb 16 2005

YEREVAN, February 16 (Itar-Tass) — Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov arrived in Yerevan on Wednesday for talks with the Armenian
leadership to discuss the situation in the Caucasus and the development
of bilateral relations.

He is scheduled to meet with President Robert Kocharyan, Prime Minister
Andranik Margaryan, and Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan on Thursday.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko said a good deal of
attention at the talks would be paid to “the coordination of efforts to
improve the situation in the Caucasus and resolve the conflicts there”.

“This is necessary in order to create an atmosphere of trust for
cooperation in the whole of the Caucasus,” the spokesman said.

Speaking about the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement, Yakovenko said Moscow
“welcomes further Armenia-Azerbaijani dialogue at various levels,
foremost between the presidents.”

“The parties to the conflict should find a mutually acceptable solution
themselves,” the spokesman said.

Russia is ready to provide the most active assistance, including as
a co-chairman of the OSCE’s Minsk Group. It is also ready to become
a guarantor of the accord, Yakovenko said.

Moscow and Yerevan will also consider the stepping up of
Russian-Armenian interaction, in particular in resolving Armenia’s
transport problems and in the fuel and energy sector, as well as the
expansion of direct business ties.

“Relations with Armenia have acquired the character of a strategic
and allied partnership in recent years,” Yakovenko noted.

The sides will consider bilateral interaction within the framework
of the Commonwealth of Independent States and the Collective Security
Treaty Organisation, the diplomat said.