Former Armenian Justice Ministry Official Arrested On Kidnapping Cha

FORMER ARMENIAN JUSTICE MINISTRY OFFICIAL ARRESTED ON KIDNAPPING CHARGES

Arminfo
30 Jul 07

Yerevan, 30 July: The former chief of the department for correctional
facilities of the Armenian Ministry of Justice, Samvel Hovhannisyan,
has been arrested.

Hovhannisyan is charged under Part 3 of Article 131 of the Armenian
Criminal Code (kidnapping), Sona Truzyan, press secretary of the
Armenian prosecutor-general, has told an Arminfo correspondent. Charges
have already been brought against Hovhannisyan. However, no restraining
measure has been chosen yet. Truzyan refused to report details of
the case in the interests of the investigation.

Insurgent Syria, 1925

INSURGENT SYRIA, 1925 OCCUPIED IRAQ’S NOT-SO-DISTANT MIRROR
by Bill Weinberg and Michael Provence

World War 4 Report, NY

University of Texas, Austin, 2005
July 31 2007

The comparison is nowhere made explicitly, but the subtext for
most readers of Michael Provence’s The Great Syrian Revolt will
inevitably be the current situation in Iraq-even if it was not the
author’s intention. The irony is that Provence poses the 1925 revolt
against French Mandate rule in Syria as the watershed event in the
emergence of Arab nationalism. In Iraq, where Ba’athism is rapidly
being superceded by Islamism in the vanguard of resistance to the
occupation, we may be witnessing its death throes.

The revolt also represented a watershed in counter-insurgency and
clinical mass killing. It culminated in French aerial bombardment of
Damascus-predating by 12 years the Luftwaffe’s destruction of Guernica,
which claimed an equal number of lives but is far better remembered.

The revolt began in July 1925, when Druze farmers in the Jabal Hawran,
a rugged frontier zone some 50 miles southeast of Damascus, shot
down a French surveillance plane. Provence chronicles how the revolt
quickly evolved from a local Druze rebellion to a Syrian revolution
with a nascent Arab nationalist consciousness.

The Druze had been deported to the harsh Hawran from Lebanon by
a joint French-Ottoman force following a civil war with their
Maronite Christian neighbors in the 1860s. There they established
their dominance over Bedouin raiders and developed a "frontier
warrior ethos." Provence writes: "They sought to preserve their
independence both from the state and from provincial elites and
would-be landlords." The initial leader of the revolt, and its
eventual military commander, Sultan al-Atrash, was an heir to this long
struggle. In 1910, his father, Dhuqan al-Atrash, had been hanged by
the Ottoman authorities on charges of insurrection. Sultan al-Atrash
was then serving with the Ottoman military in the Balkans-experience
which would serve him well back home.

Al-Atrash was involved in the early resistance to the French when
they took over Syria in 1920 under the terms of the secret Sykes-Picot
agreement, ousting the recently-installed Hashemite King Faisal with
reluctant British connivance. Faisal’s loyalists put up a struggle
before the king was enticed by Britain to accept the throne of Iraq
as a consolation prize. Druze villagers took up arms for Faisal on
a pledge of regional autonomy for the Jabal, and many fought at the
battle of Maysalun, the brief war’s most significant engagement.

The 1925 revolt would prove a greater challenge. The French cast their
colonial project in anti-feudal terms, and the armed resistance that
exploded that year as sectarian, not nationalist: the work of local
chiefs whose power was threatened by the Mandate’s reforms.

Provence writes: "Sectarian conflict was a theoretical necessity
for French colonialism in Syria, since the entire colonial mission
was based on the idea of protecting one sectarian community, the
Maronite Christians, from the predations of others. Without sectarian
conflict, colonial justification evaporates." The French encouraged
such conflicts by imposing territorial divisions based on religious
and ethnic lines. The rebels were immediately labeled "bandits,"
"extremists" and "feudalists."

>From the start, Provence dismisses France’s self-serving "narrative"
of a civilizing anti-feudal mission. He informs us that Druze village
sheikhs were not absentee landlords, and in fact served to protect
village interests in dealings with Damascus merchants who purchased
their grain. But the village political orders they oversaw seem to
have been fairly authoritarian, and the Bedouin were made to pay
tribute to the sheikhs for access to pasture and water.

Paradoxically, trouble started brewing with the Druze when the
old-guard military administrators-who were of a "right-wing,
pro-Catholic political bent"-were cycled out under a new high
commissioner for Syria, Gen. Maurice Sarrail, "a republican
anticlericalist freethinker and a darling of the French Left."

Sarrail appointed as governor of the Jabal Hawran one Capt. Gabriel
Carbillet, who zealously sought to break the grip of Druze "feudalism"
in the region. Carbillet conscripted the sheikhs for forced labor
(officially in lieu of taxes) on modernizing projects such as
road-building. Protests were met with repression, villages raised
militia, and the regional capital Suwayda was besieged.

As always, the forces of "civilization" quickly resorted to
barbarism. France responded to the rebellion with aerial bombardment of
villages and "collective punishment" measures: wholesale executions,
public hangings, house demolitions, forced removal of the populace
from disloyal regions. There were rebel claims of poison gas used
against Jabal villages. Meanwhile, leaflets air-dropped on the Jabal
read: "Only France can give you wheat, running water, roads, and the
national liberty you desire."

At its inception, the revolt used the "language of Druze honor and
Druze particularism," and French counter-insurgency measures sought
to encourage this. The French used Christians-especially Armenian
and Circassian refugees from Ottoman rule-as shock troops against the
rebel Druze villages. "Irregular troops" were also conscripted from
the lumpen, who committed some of the worst atrocities-an echo of
the "Salvador Option" apparently now being employed by the Pentagon
in Iraq.

Yet the rebellion also exhibited the beginnings of a national
consciousness from the start. In defiance of the divide-and-conquer
strategy, al-Atrash wrote the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Damascus
apologizing for rebel reprisals against Christians, pledging
reparations, and calling for mutual solidarity against the French.

The real turning point came when the rebel leadership, following ties
already established through trade, made contact with the prominent
Arabs of Damascus who supported independence. The Hizb al-Shab
(People’s Party), whose leader Shahbandar had already been imprisoned
and seems to have been operating in semi-clandestinity, embraced the
Jabal revolt and called for a general revolution. At this point, the
rhetoric of Druze particularism was decisively abandoned in favor of
an Arab nationalism that was at least tentatively secular.

In an August call "To Arms!" addressed to all Syrians and distributed
in Damascus by the People’s Party, al-Atrash (now "Commander of the
Syrian Revolutionary Armies") delineated French crimes, including:
"The imperialists have stolen what is yours. They have laid hands on
the very sources of your wealth and raised barriers and divided your
indivisible homeland. They have separated the nation into religious
sects and states. They have strangled freedom of religion, thought,
conscience, speech and action. We are no longer even allowed to move
about freely in our own country."

Rebel propaganda emphasized that Druze, Sunnis, Shi’ites, Allawis
and Christians alike were "sons of the Syrian Arab nation." As the
Druze rebel army (now swelled with volunteers from Bedouin tribes)
advanced on Damascus in October, and urban militants erected street
barricades in preparation for the coordinated uprising, brigades
were organized to protect the Christian and Jewish quarters of the
city from potential mob violence. "These Moslem interventions assured
the Christian quarters against pillage. In other words it was Islam
and not the ‘Protectrice des Chretiens en Orient’ which protected
the Christians in those critical days," wrote the British consul in
Damascus (arguably not the most objective source).

On the other hand, al-Atrash apparently called for the amputation of
the hands of informers (albeit with anesthesia and under a doctor’s
supervision, a touching nod to modernity). Captured Circassian fighters
were summarily killed and mutilated. Rebel demands that prominent
Christians and Jews provide taxes and conscripts for the independence
struggle were often made under explicit threat of retaliation-which can
be read as either embrace or persecution. And in a grim harbinger of
a generations-long ethnic struggle to follow in both Syria and Iraq,
there were episodes of internecine violence between Arab and Kurdish
rebel bands.

As guerillas besieged the city and the uprising broke out, Sarrail
approved the bombardment of Damascus. Nearly 1,500 were killed as the
bombs fell for two days. Then, in a gesture of stupendous arrogance,
the French demanded a large fine be paid by leaders of the rebellion in
the city. It was eventually paid by the Mandate’s own puppet president,
Subhi Barakat, in a bid to buy peace.

In the aftermath, when the guerillas had withdrawn, the
pro-independence forces once again mobilized brigades to protect the
city’s Christians from reprisals. Interestingly, the leader of this
effort was Said al-Jazairi, grandson of Amir Abd al-Qadir al-Jazairi,
the famous Sufi warrior who was exiled to Ottoman Damascus after a
failed 1856 uprising against the French in Algeria.

The post-bombardment peace was illusory. France had regained control of
the capital, but guerilla control of the countryside around Damascus
was nearly total. Paris realized a change of direction was called
for. Sarrail and Barakat were both removed, and the more popular
Taj al-Din al-Hasani, son of Damascus’ leading Islamic scholar, was
installed as president. Moves towards greater self-government were
pledged. These measures weakened the links between the urban movement
and guerillas. In the summer of 1926, a French counteroffensive drove
al-Atrash first into the mountains and then, the following year,
into Transjordan, where the British authorities expelled him and his
followers across the border to the new Saudi Kingdom.

Al-Atrash and his comrades spent the next ten years in exile and under
sentence of death. They continued to agitate for Syrian independence
from their refugee encampment at Wadi al-Sirhan oasis.

In Jerusalem, their supporters launched the newspaper Jamiat
al-Arabiyya (Arab Federation), which protested Zionist designs on
Palestine as well as the continuance of Mandate rule in the Fertile
Crescent. In an early example of anti-imperialist solidarity, one
issue protested the US intervention in Nicaragua, where Marines
dispatched by President Calvin Coolidge were also pioneering the use
of the airplane to deliver terror and death to peasant villages.

In Syria, a new party called al-Kutla al-Wataniyya (National Bloc)
displaced the pro-independence leadership of 1925, and pursued a
course of "honorable cooperation" with the French. They called for
establishment of a constituent assembly to draft a constitution,
and a timetable for self-rule. Full independence, of course, did not
come until a full 20 years after al-Atrash’s revolt had been put down.

Provence writes that the history of resistance to French rule in
Syria has been "recolonized" by the Ba’athist regimes that have held
power since 1963. As the Allawi minority holds sway in the regime,
the new version favors the Allawi revolt in Latakia, led by Salih
al-Ali, which Provence downplays as one of a "series of uncoordinated
resistance movements" that followed the transition to French rule,
lacking the significance of the later 1925 revolt in terms of emerging
national consciousness.

Given Provence’s thesis, it is an irony as well as a testament to the
continuing efficacy of imperial divide-and-rule strategies that the
Druze today have been pitted against Arab nationalists. The relatively
favored status of the Druze under Zionist rule, and their widespread
use in the security forces against their Palestinian neighbors,
dates at least to 1948. In Lebanon, the Druze political patriarch
Walid Jumblatt is one of the harshest opponents of Syria-and recently
called openly for US military intervention against Damascus. (Druze
in the Israel-occupied Golan Heights continue to wage an anti-colonial
struggle.)

Provence makes only the most cautious and tentative references to the
obvious contemporary analogue to the 1925 Syrian revolt. "Resistance
against occupation remains a potent theme in the Middle East," he
states rather obviously. "Few scholars today would use words like
‘bandit’ or ‘extremist’ to describe insurgents against colonial rule,
though ‘terrorist’ is perhaps one equivalent."

The US makes no blatant claims to be protecting one minority in Iraq,
as France did with the Maronites in Syria and Lebanon, but does
purport to be defending secularism against sectarian fanaticism.

Groups such as al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia play into the self-serving
propaganda of Bush’s "Operation Iraqi Freedom" to a far greater degree
than the petty authoritarianism of the Druze sheikhs ever could have
with French auto-justifications for their colonial venture. If the
trajectory of the Syrian revolt was from sectarian particularism
to secular nationalism, in Iraq since 2003 it has all been in the
reverse direction.

Independent Syria would degenerate into the ugly Ba’athist regme of
Hafez Assad-due, in no small part, to ongoing US attempts to subvert
the more moderate nationalist regimes which preceded it. The world
will be lucky if Iraq now manages to avoid a far greater disaster.

http://www.ww4report.com/node/4284

UN May Adopt GUAM’s Draft Resolution On "Frozen Conflicts"

UN MAY ADOPT GUAM’S DRAFT RESOLUTION ON "FROZEN CONFLICTS"

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.07.2007 20:10 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ There exists a great possibility that the GUAM
proposed draft resolution on "frozen conflicts" will be adopted by the
UN General Assembly without voting, Assistant to Georgia’s permanent
representative in the United Nations Alexander Chelidze stated. The
diplomat said, currently active consultations are on the way in the
UN with GUAM’s allies. "We are holding intensive talks with a certain
group of countries, particularly with Baltic and Eastern European
states. And there exists a possibility that they will support our
resolution. As to key UN players they have repeatedly stated that
the main priority is the territorial integrity of states.

Thus, in his latest interview Russia’s permanent representative
in the United Nations Vitali Churkin noted that the territorial
integrity of states is not a subject for discussions. True, he was
speaking about the conflict in Kosovo, however, Churkin’s words
may be referred to all "frozen conflicts", Chelidze underscored. He
also reminded according to UN rules no consensus is necessary for
adopting this or that resolution in the General Assembly. The Georgian
diplomat says adoption of the draft resolution on "frozen conflicts"
is useful for two reasons. "First, it will draw the attention of the
world community to activities of a young organization, GUAM and will
create resonance. From the other hand, this document will introduce
necessary corrections in approaches of such structures like OSCE, which
are involved in conflict settlement processes," Chelidze underlined,
APA reports.

Azerbaijani FM believes progress can be made by year end

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister believes progress can be made by year end

armradio.am
28.07.2007 12:10

`Opportunities for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict have
not run out and progress can be made by year-end,’ Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said in the interview to local TV channels.

The Minister does not agree with OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs who
consider that elections in Azerbaijan and Armenia in 2008 will impede
the process of negotiations.

Expecting good results from the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ meeting in
Moscow on August 2, the Minister said that American Co-Chair Mathew
Bryza will visit Azerbaijan after the meeting to present the Co-Chairs’
proposals.
`Everyone knows that it is a very delicate issue. I think if there is
political will, progress can be made,’ he said.

Noting that Matthew Bryza’s visit to Baku mainly aims at debating
bilateral relations, Elmar Mammadyarov underlined that the Karabakh
conflict will also be debated during his visit.

Dark history, suffocating love and mouthwatering food

The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)
July 28, 2007 Saturday

Dark history, suffocating love and mouthwatering food

by Robert Colvile

The Bastard of Istanbul
by Elif Shafak
360pp, Penguin, pounds 16.99
T pounds 14.99 (plus pounds 1.25 p&p) 0870 428 4112

Over the years, I’ve read a few modern novels that could be described
as criminally bad – but The Bastard of Istanbul is the first that’s
got its author put on trial. Elif Shafak’s crime was to use, or
rather have her characters use, words such as "genocide” in relation
to the pogrom against the Armenians that accompanied the dawn of the
Turkish state. This, under Turkey’s nationalistic legal code, was
tantamount to denigrating Turkishness, although Shafak avoided a
three-year jail sentence when the judge dismissed the case for lack
of evidence. (Shafak was heavily pregnant during the trial.)

If it is shocking that authors can be put on trial for what they
write (as has happened to many other writers and journalists in
Turkey, most famously Orhan Pamuk), it is also oddly appropriate,
given the subject of this novel. The central question in The Bastard
of Istanbul is whether it is best to disinter the past, with all the
trauma and pain that entails, or cut ourselves off from it. It is a
dilemma personified by two girls just emerging from their teens –
Asya, the illegitimate Turkish child of the title, and Armanoush, an
Armenian-American whose divorced mother took up with a Turk – Asya’s
uncle – mostly to spite her former in-laws.

Both girls are smothered by the suffocating love of their respective
clans (Asya’s aunts, especially, are "a pack of female animals forced
to live together”). But they differ over their attitude to the past.
Armanoush, seeking to explore her Armenian identity and confront the
Turkish oppressors, makes a daring trip to Istanbul. Asya, with a
blank space where a father should be, prefers not to explore her
roots. Each attitude is reflected more widely: Armanoush is egged on
by a crew of embittered Armenian message-board buddies from the US,
whereas Asya’s friends in Istanbul’s Café Kundera can offer sympathy
but not remorse for the fate of the Armenians.

All this talk of history and identity might suggest that this is a
rather po-faced novel. In fact, Shafak is a sprightly author,
generous with the comic touches – I particularly liked the San
Francisco restaurant in which the dishes are arranged to resemble
great Expressionist paintings. Indeed, the narrative is laced with a
mouthwatering appreciation of food.

The atmosphere is rich and slightly off-kilter: the story of the
Armenians’ expulsion is narrated by Armanoush, but confirmed to
Asya’s soothsayer aunt by the djinn who sits on her shoulder. When
Armanoush says of her trip to Turkey that she feels "like I am in a
Gabriel García Márquez novel”, the sensation is familiar.

Towards the end, the novel swings from the political to the personal,
as Shafak reveals buried secrets and unexpected ties between the two
families, both of which feel rather clichéd. Things aren’t helped by
the re-entry into the narrative of Rose, Armanoush’s mother, who is a
caricature of the insular American – the kind of woman who will take
a cactus-shaped bottle of Mexican sauce to Istanbul in case the food
isn’t any good. But this is still an engrossing novel, and one can
only hope that its author’s courage in tackling this subject, and
defending herself from an unmerited prosecution, will hasten the
abandonment of an unconscionable taboo.

Turkey Will Not Launch Large-Scale Operation In Iraq

TURKEY WILL NOT LAUNCH LARGE-SCALE OPERATION IN IRAQ

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.07.2007 14:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey will not launch a large-scale operation in
Northern Iraq, Director of the Institute of Oriental Studies at the
RA Academy of Sciences, Dr Ruben Safrastyan told a news conference
July 27. There are several political and economic reasons for it,
according to him.

"The commodity turnover between Turkey and Iraq makes $2,7
billion. Many deputies of the new parliament are of Kurdish origin,"
Safrastyan noted.

"Ankara will probably increase pressure on Baghdad and deploy troops
at the border but it will not launch a large-scale operation. Turkey
is a state with army, power, science and policy. However, the most
horrifying thing is that this state is connected to criminals whose
aim is to preserve Turkey as in Ataturk’s time," Dr Safrastyan said
adding that Agos editor Hrant Dink fell victim to this union, IA
Regnum reports.

Italy Hampers Armenian Sportsman

ITALY HAMPERS ARMENIAN SPORTSMAN

A1+
[01:22 pm] 26 July, 2007

The Italian Embassy in Yerevan did not allow the Armenian national
girls’ basketball team (14-16 years) to leave for Italian Chieti city
to participate in European Championship. Earlier the Irish Embassy
in Moscow did not allow Armenian national hokey team to participate
in World Championship in Ireland.

The Armenian girls’ basketball team was to participate in European
Championship for the first time. The coach of the team Edik Vardanyan
said that the team was involved in Group D where they were to compete
with the national teams of Germany, Israel and Romania.

On 27 July Armenia was to play with Germany. The Embassy did not
motivate the reason of denial first, but when the FIBA interfered,
the employees of the Embassy explained that the passports of the
Armenian girls caused suspicion. The Armenian national team received
an invitation from the Italian Basketball Federation and Committee
of tournament. Armenia was obliged to take part in the tournament
which would promote the development of basketball in Armenia.

Vahagn Harutunyan, director of Armenian Basketball Federation,
mentioned that it was a shock for the team. "We wonder how they made
such a decision in 21-st century. This is a professional sport and
Armenia was obliged to take in part in the tournament. We were not
leaving as tourists; we were to participate in European Championship,
like other countries". Harutunyan mentioned that the girls were also
upset with it: "They were waiting for the tour impatiently, since they
were to participate in a European Championship for the first time".

Turkey Must Move Fast To Avoid EU Setbacks

TURKEY MUST MOVE FAST TO AVOID EU SETBACKS
By Paul Taylor

Gulf Times, Qatar
July 26 2007

BRUSSELS: Turkey faces a potential ‘triple whammy’ of blows to its
European Union membership bid later this year unless re-elected Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan moves quickly to enact human rights reforms,
EU diplomats say.

Ankara’s accession talks, launched in October 2005, have already been
slowed to a trickle by the suspension of part of the negotiations
over its refusal to open its ports and airports to traffic from EU
member Cyprus.

Now the Turks face a negative European Commission progress report,
renewed pressure from Cyprus, and French demands for the EU to discuss
setting final borders, with Turkey on the outside.

"Erdogan needs to push laws through the new parliament on freedom of
expression, the rights of religious minorities and other fundamental
freedoms quickly to give the Commission something positive to report,"
a senior EU official said.

Without that, the annual progress report due on November 7 is bound
to conclude that reforms have virtually ceased over the last year,
he said.

EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn made the point forcefully in
congratulating Erdogan on Sunday’s landslide general election victory
for his Islamist-rooted AK party.

"We need in particular to see concrete results in areas of fundamental
freedoms such as freedom of expression and religious freedom," he
told a news conference.

"I trust that the new government in Turkey will immediately relaunch
the reform process so we can produce results (before) our next progress
report in early November."

Joost Lagendijk, co-chairman of the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary
Assembly, said the top priority was to amend or abolish article 301 of
the Penal Code, used repeatedly to prosecute writers and journalists
for "insulting Turkishness".

That law was used to prosecute Nobel prize winning author Orhan Pamuk
and to convict Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink, later murdered,
for expressing peaceful views on the mass killing of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks in 1915.

A long-stalled law on religious foundations giving more rights to
Christian and other minorities and better treatment to the Orthodox
Ecumenical Patriarch in Istanbul is another priority, Lagendijk said.

Turkish political commentators say Erdogan will face resistance from
a nationalist opposition, whose acquiescence he needs to get his
candidate for president chosen by parliament.

The presidency, though armed with few executive powers, is a potent
symbol of secularism for a conservative establishment that suspects
Erdogan of harbouring a secret Islamist agenda.

The prime minister must also tread carefully with a military suspicious
of his Islamist past and nervous about some EU-driven reforms. The
AK party has cut back the generals’ formal state powers under these
reforms, but they remain a force on the political stage.

Erdogan could win more European goodwill by withdrawing some troops
from northern Cyprus, making a concession on trade with Cyprus or
opening Turkey’s border with Armenia, but such moves seem unlikely
as they would inflame nationalist sentiment.

Diplomats said Cyprus and France would likely jump on a critical
European Commission report to demand further sanctions against Turkey
or a rethink of its candidacy. – Reuters

"Iran Is Ready To Provide Assistance To Negotiation Process Of Kara

"IRAN IS READY TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO NEGOTIATION PROCESS OF KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT," MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
Jul 23, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. Serge Sargsian, the RA Prime Minister,
received Manuchehr Mottaki, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the
Islamic Republic of Iran and Co-Chairman of the Inter-Governmental
Commission for the Coordination of Armenian-Iranian Relations, and
the delegation headed by him on Juty 20. At the beginning of the
meeting Manuchehr Mottaki, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the
Islamic Republic of Iran, conveyed the greetings of Parviz Davudi,
the first Vice President of Iran and the re-affirmation of the visit
of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran
to the RA Prime Minister. The Foreign Minister expressed hope that
the RA Prime Minister will accept the invitation and that they will
receive the RA NA Speaker and the RA Prime Minister in their country
as guests by the end of the year.

Serge Sargsian thanked him and accepted the invitation, attaching
importance to the bilateral high ranking mutual visits from the point
of view of a further strengthening of Armenian-Iranian relations. The
Prime Minister congratulated on the occasion of organizing the seventh
sitting of the Inter-Governmental Commission for the Coordination of
Armenian-Iranian Relations, considering the circumstance of appointing
the Foreign Minister at the post of the Chairman of the Commission as
a step directed at making the work of the Commission more productive
and strengthening Armenian-Iranian relations. In case of active work,
according to the RA Prime Minister, the Inter-Governmental Commission
can play a considerable role in the increase of commodity circulation
between the two countries, implementation of mutually beneficial
and prospective programs in a number of spheres, and in bringing
the arrangements made by the Presidents of Armenia and Iran to life,
in particular.

M. Mottaki mentioned that the implementation of infrastructural
programs greatly contributes to the development of bilateral relations
and considered the cooperation in the sphere of energy as a model one
in this respect. He as well attached importance to the increase in
volume of commodity circulation and mentioned that currently Iran
has over 10 billion dollars worth of commodity circulation with
different countries of the world and that it imports goods of about
40 billion dollars. "We consider the increase in the import volumes
from Armenia to Iran in the sphere of foreign trade as primary for
Iran," Iran’s Minister of Foreign Affairs said and added that there
are a lot of opportunities and potential, that have not been used so
far. According to him, Armenia can also become a country re-exporting
to Iran. He also mentioned the fact that goods of different countries
costing over 11 billion dollars have been exported to Iran from the
Arabic Emirates only in 2006.

The Minister of Foteign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of
Iran attached importance to the conclusion of an agreement
concerning the free commercial regime between the two countries,
which has become a topic for discussion in the sitting of the
Inter-Governmental Commission as well: they have been ordered to
prepare the document for signing in a very definite period, that is,
during two months. M. Mottaki also spoke about the prospectiveness
of cooperation in the bank system and implementation of mutually
beneficial programs in the sphere of transport, and stressed with
regard to the latter that Iran entitles Armenia to a great role in
the North-South transport passage.

M. Mottaki also informed the RA Prime Minister about the process
of negotiations concerning the program of nuclear energy of Iran,
and stressed that his country is for the settlement of any problem
through negotiations.

As for the Karabakh conflict settlement, the position of Iran,
in the conviction of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, is the same,
and taking into consideration this position, Iran is ready to provide
assistance for the negotiation process if necessary.

Serge Sargsian attached importance to the establishment of peace
and stability in the region as soon as possible and mentioned that
Armenia has always stressed and appreciated the role of Iran, which
has adopted a balanced position in providing peace and stability in
the region. "The economic development of a region, which is full of
dangers, cannot be compared with the one in a stable and safe region,"
the RA Prime Minister said. He stressed that the approach of Armenia is
the same: it is for the settlement of the problem through negotiations
and compromises.