Victory And Peace Holiday Marked In Akhalkalak

VICTORY AND PEACE HOLIDAY MARKED IN AKHALKALAK

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 11 2006

AKHALKALAK, MAY 11, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Victory and
Peace Holiday was celebrated on May 9 at the Akhalkalak Culture
House on the initiative of the “Zori Zorian” youth union. Khachatur
Stepanian, the “A-Info” Information Agency Director, Grigor Minasian
and Nairi Kaghktsian, members of the “Zori Zorian” youth union,
Fedya Torosian, a freedom-fighter from Javakhk, Artashes Shahbazian,
a public-political figure from Armenia made speeches at the solemn
part of the event. According to “A-Info”, those making speeches
attached importance to the role of the May 9 victories, the one in
the Great Patriotic War and the liberation of Shoushi in the Armenian
history. Favourite singers Samvel Yeranian and David Amalian arrived
from Yerevan made speeches in the artistic part of the event. The
“Legend of Shoushi” film was shown after the concert.

Russian Political Analyst: European Expansion Impossible WithoutReco

RUSSIAN POLITICAL ANALYST: EUROPEAN EXPANSION IMPOSSIBLE WITHOUT RECOGNIZING LESSONS OF THE PAST

Regnum, Russia
May 11 2006

“European expansion, as well as developing cooperation within
CIS framework are impossible without recognizing lessons of the
past. It concerns not just the Armenian Genocide in 1915, but all
the consequences it caused for states, including legal, political and
moral ones,” chair of comparative politics department of Moscow State
Institute of International relations of Foreign Affairs Ministry of
the Russian Federation (MGIMO), Mikhail Ilyin, PhD, has said to a
REGNUM correspondent.

According to the analyst, the issue of recognizing the Armenian
Genocide in 1915 is settled for Russian society “naturally and
clear.” “Our ancestry as long ago as during World War I expressed
their solidarity with the Armenian people, and for me as a Russian,
this issue is clear as well.” “As for international recognition, I
am sure, without final and overall settlement of the issue, certain
countries, certain nations and the international community will face
difficulties in their movement forward,” the analyst is sure.

Earlier, eleven years ago, Russia officially recognized the Armenian
Genocide. The fact of the Armenian Genocide was recognized by many
countries, including France, Uruguay, lower chamber of the Italian
parliament, several US states, parliaments of Greece, Cyprus,
Argentina, Belgium, Wales, Swiss National Council, House of Commons
of the Canadian Parliament and Seym of Poland.

Mismatch Of The Century

MISMATCH OF THE CENTURY
by Justin Burke

Transitions Online, Czech Republic
May 11 2006

As the United States enters a potential Cold War II with Russia,
it has one hand tied behind its back. From EurasiaNet.

It was just about five years ago when President George W. Bush said
he looked into the soul of his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin,
and pronounced that their meeting was “the beginning of a very
constructive relationship.” Now, amid sharp geopolitical maneuvering
in the Caucasus and Central Asia, the United States and Russia seem
to be girding for Cold War II. Unlike the epic conflict during the
last half of the 20th century, Washington is poorly positioned to
defeat Russia in a new superpower standoff.

Talk of a revived Cold War followed U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney’s
blistering attack on Russia in a 4 May speech in Vilnius, Lithuania.

Cheney criticized the Kremlin for carrying out a drastic rollback
of political rights, as well as using its energy infrastructure as
“tools of intimidation or blackmail.”

The bulk of Cheney’s speech in Vilnius focused on the Bush
administration’s global democratization mission. The vice president
used terms that, ironically, seemed to parallel the Marxist belief
in determinism. “We have every reason for confidence in the future
of democracy because the evidence is on our side and because we are
upholding great and enduring values,” Cheney said. He lent a messianic
tone to his comments by adding, “We are created in the image and
likeness of God, and he planted in our hearts a yearning to be free.”

Referring specifically to the former Soviet Union, Cheney indicated
that the United States wants to “free this region from all remaining
lines of division, from violations of human rights, from frozen
conflicts,” including the stalemated Caucasus wars in Nagorno-Karabakh,
Abkhazia, and South Ossetia.”

The vice president attempted to hedge his harsh words about the
Kremlin’s behavior, saying “None of us believe that Russia is fated
to be an enemy.” In Moscow, though, officials and media analysts were
having none of it. The Kremlin termed Cheney’s speech “completely
incomprehensible,” while Russian media outlets fulminated that
Washington was trying to stoke a new Cold War. The Kommersant daily
published a commentary that compared Cheney’s comments to Winston
Churchill’s famed “Iron Curtain” speech in 1946. “The Cold War has
restarted, only now the front lines have shifted,” Kommersant said.

To a great extent, Cheney’s words were merely a public admission of
a trend that has been readily evident for at least two and a half
years. The sharp decline in relations can be traced to the point when
U.S. forces began struggling to contain the insurgency in Iraq. It
has long been clear to anyone who truly follows developments in the
Caucasus and Central Asia that the two countries were antagonists,
not allies. Both sides maintained the increasingly apparent fiction
that they were partners when, in fact, they were competitors for
political and economic influence in those two regions.

Cheney’s comments on Russia are largely accurate: The Putin
administration has indeed restricted individual liberties, and the
Kremlin has certainly used state-controlled energy companies to
increase its geopolitical leverage, especially in Central Asia.

But in picking a fight with Russia, the Bush administration seems to be
making dangerous assumptions about the United States’ current strengths
and weaknesses, while ignoring the old Wall Street caveat that says
“past performance does not ensure future results.” It’s already clear
that a new-style Cold War – if it unfolds, as now seems likely – will
be more economic than political and ideological in nature. And instead
of the struggle focusing on Western and Central Europe, the epicenters
of the new conflict stand to be the Caucasus and Central Asia. Given
these factors, the United States is at a severe disadvantage as it
moves toward the next stage of geopolitical competition with Russia.

For one, Russia has a decided geographic advantage, as its territory
borders the Caucasus and Central Asia. More importantly, as the United
States has become bogged down in Iraq, Russian energy companies have
made deep inroads into the Caucasus and Central Asia.

Moscow even wields extensive influence over the energy infrastructure
of Georgia, the closest U.S. ally in the two regions. In just the
last few months, Moscow also has significantly reinforced its grip on
energy export routes, the key to victory in the geopolitical struggle.

The United States has few mechanisms at its disposal to break the
Russian stranglehold. Any chance of U.S. success seems to be tied to
the fate of two pipelines running through Azerbaijan and Georgia to
Turkey; the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil route that opened in 2005
and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural gas link that is projected to
open later this year. It appears that for both pipelines to accomplish
their strategic aims, Kazakhstan must opt to ship a large amount of
its abundant natural resources via those two routes.

After making his speech in Vilnius, Cheney flew to Kazakhstan to
lobby President Nursultan Nazarbayev on making a commitment to the
U.S.-backed pipelines. At the same time Cheney was in Astana, Kazakh
Prime Minister Daniyal Akhmetov was on a working visit to Azerbaijan,
where he announced that the Kazakh government was interested in
exporting oil via BTC and exploring the feasibility of also sending
natural gas to Western markets via the Baku-Erzurum route. On the
surface, such statements seem encouraging. But deep down they don’t
have much value. Kazakh officials, including Nazarbayev, have made
similar statements in the past. Akhmetov may have gone further than
any Kazakh official by saying that the country could sign a BTC export
agreement as soon as next month. Still, there is no certainty that
an agreement will in fact be signed in June.

Whether or not that happens, the crucial issue is how much energy
Kazakhstan is willing to export via Azerbaijan. And on this Astana
remains mum. In April, Kazakhstan committed to significantly increasing
its oil exports via Russia. It could well turn out that Kazakhstan
could decide to send only a token amount of its oil and gas via
Azerbaijan – just enough to remain in the Bush administration’s favor,
without tilting the U.S.-Russian energy contest in Washington’s favor.

LOOKING SOUTH

Another U.S. response to Russia’s growing influence in Central Asia
is to try and reorient the region toward South Asia. This intention
was reflected in a recent U.S. State Department reorganization that
created the Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs. Central Asian
policy had formerly been handled by the State Department’s Europe
and Eurasia bureau. Apparently connected with the State Department
reorganization, U.S. officials in late April advanced a plan to
develop a new electricity grid linking Central and South Asia. The
plan counts on electricity generated in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to
serve as the engine for the development of stronger inter-regional
ties. This vision stands a good chance of short-circuiting, however, as
it does not seem to take into account that Russian companies control a
significant part of Tajikistan’s electricity-generating infrastructure.

In addition, the United States is now vulnerable on an issue that
used to be its strength: ideology. During the original Cold War, the
appeal of democracy enabled the United States to occupy the moral
high ground. In recent years, U.S. credibility on democratization
and human rights issues has been severely damaged by scandals, in
particular the Abu Ghraib prison torture incident in Iraq.

Authoritarian-minded leaders in the Caucasus and Central Asia,
even those on friendly terms with the United States, are now less
inclined than ever to listen to U.S. rhetoric on the need to respect
human rights. For example, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev during
his recent visit to Washington brushed aside criticism over his
administration’s human rights record by invoking Abu Ghraib. “Things
happen everywhere. Does Abu Ghraib mean that the U.S. government is
not democratic?” Aliyev said during a meeting with nongovernmental
organization representatives.

Many policy-makers in the Caucasus and Central Asia also view U.S.

statements concerning democratization with cynicism, believing that
the Bush administration harbors double standards. Cheney during his
recent trip helped stoke such cynicism: Immediately after his Vilnius
speech, he traveled to Kazakhstan, where democratization concerns took
a back seat to energy issues. Nazarbayev’s administration has faced
considerable international criticism in recent years for manipulating
elections and for restricting political freedoms, yet Cheney glossed
over Kazakhstan’s shortcomings. During a short news conference
on 6 May, according to a White House transcript, Cheney expressed
“admiration for all that’s been accomplished here in Kazakhstan in the
last 15 years, both in the economic and political realm.” Earlier,
Cheney held a high-profile meeting with several representatives of
Kazakhstan’s political opposition. But he remained silent when Kazakh
authorities prevented one of the country’s highest-profile opposition
figures, Galymzhan Zhakiyanov, from attending that meeting.

Since March 2005, when Kyrgyzstan experienced its Tulip revolution,
democratization has come to be associated with upheaval by many in
Central Asia. Indeed, Kyrgyzstan has seen a dramatic rise in crime
and corruption since the ouster of former president Askar Akayev.

Russia has been able to capitalize on this by casting itself as a
purveyor of political stability, even if such stability comes at the
cost of political and civil liberties.

During that 6 May news conference, Nazarbayev appeared to tell the
United States, in diplomatic terms, that Kazakhstan is going to go
its own political way, regardless of what the United States thinks.

“We have to get used [to the fact] that every independent state,
while solving its problems, has a certain policy, and everybody should
learn to respect this policy,” Khabar television quoted the Kazakh
president as saying.

Justin Burke is editor of EurasiaNet.

ANKARA: Turkey Pressures France To Prevent Pro-Genocide Bill

TURKEY PRESSURES FRANCE TO PREVENT PRO-GENOCIDE BILL
By Salih Boztas, Ali Ihsan Aydin, Ankara, Paris

Zaman, Turkey
May 10 1006

Turkey is acting to prevent France’s legislative proposal to penalize
those who deny the so-called Armenian genocide.

The Turkish administration briefly recalled its Ambassador to France
this week, Osman Koruturk, who returned to Ankara to offer an official
analysis through diplomatic channels. A group of Turkish deputies
traveled to France to persuade their French counterparts.

Foreign Ministry sources say Koruturk was called to Ankara to discuss
issue, and he will head back to Paris by the weekend.

Turkey is exerting efforts in diplomatic, political and economic
channels against the bill in question.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, meeting with business leaders
partnered with French companies yesterday, asked for their support
to obstruct the submission of the motion to the French Parliament on
May 18.

Business executives representing French economic interests in Turkey
said they sent a letter to French President Jacques Chirac and will
do all they can to stop the motion.

Ankara does not expect rocky relations with Paris at this point. No
extreme measures, such as officially withdrawing the Turkish
ambassador, will be resorted to at this stage. However, Turkey will
convey the message that it believes in the “liberalistic environment
of France.”

The motion, proposed by the main opposition Socialist Party in France,
will be discussed today at the French parliamentary Regulations
Commission. Even if the motion passes on May 18, a long process is
required to render it law.

The legislative proposal brings a fine of 45,000 Euros and a prison
sentence to those who deny the so-called Armenian genocide. Trade
unions, labor unions and non-governmental organizations in Turkey
issued a full-page notice in French newspapers asking for the motion’s
withdrawal.

As part of the concerted efforts, the Turkish Parliament Foreign
Affairs Commission went to Paris Tuesday before discussions for the
motion begin.

Turkish Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Commission Chairman Mehmet
Dulger from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), and
deputies Musa Sivacioglu, Onur Oymen and Gulsun Bilgehan Toker will
meet with representatives of political parties present at the French
Parliament and ask for the motion to be withdrawn.

The Turkish deputies are expected to warn the French politician
that the motions’ becoming law may lead to irreparable damages in
bilateral relations.

Erdogan: 10 days of hard work await

In the frame of economic efforts, Ankara pointed out Turkey is
an important export point for France and asked for the support of
business circles.

The Prime Minister had a 45-minute meeting with the executives of
French companies operating in Turkey. “This is unfair,” said Erdogan,
“This is the job of historians, we expect support from your business
partners in France; we want them to lobby.”

Twenty-two of 28 companies joined the meeting. TEB-BNP CEO Yavuz
Canevi, one of the participants, said: “We all agree with the Prime
Minister. We have not reached decisions like an embargo yet,” and
Omnium Plastic Industry Chairman Bulent Akman warned, “There will be
much reaction if the motion passes. It will cause trouble both for
the French and us.”

Russian specialists try to identify big object on A-320 crash site

Russian specialists try to identify big object on A-320 crash site

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 6, 2006 Saturday

MOSCOW, May 6 — Russian specialists are in the process of identifying
a major object measuring tens of meters, spotted on the sea bed in
the area of the Armenian A-320 jet liner’s crash near the Russian
Black Sea resort of Sochi, sources in the TETIS PRO Ltd. company
said with reference to its executive director, Sergei Biryukov,
who is running the underwater search work on the site of the disaster.

Biryukov commands the search operation from a tugboat with the use
of the experimental search and examination complex Kalmar, equipped
with a multi-beam sonar.

The company said “since the spotted object may prove a piece of rock,
several dives and the use of a small-size TV camera may prove necessary
to understand what exactly has been found.”

A TETIS PRO Ltd. official said the search complex Kalmar had been
developed under a contract with the Russian Navy.

“At the moment of the A-320’s crash an experimental sample of the
Kalmar complex was in Novorossisk, where it was undergoing preparations
for state certification tests before entering service in the Russian
Navy,” the company’s official said. “By agreement with the naval
command specialists joined the search for the fuselage of the A-320
liner.”

The Kalmar complex was designed to search for and examine underwater
objects at depths up to 600 meters.

It consists of a multi-beam sonar capable of spotting objects on the
seabed and a small-size remote-controlled underwater apparatus for
the visual examination of found objects.

Another deep sea diving apparatus created by the same company, the
Tiger, proved very effective in the operation to rescue the AS-28
mini-submarine off the Kamchatka Peninsula in August 2005.

TETIS PRO Ltd. was founded in 1991. The company is focused on the
development, manufacture and supply of equipment for professional
diving companies and service companies, including breathing
apparatuses, underwater communication equipment, divers supply
equipment, tools for commercial diving and some others.

TETIS PRO Ltd. products are manufactured according to state
standards. The company has a certificate of the Russian Shipbuilding
Agency for development, manufacturing and repair of military equipment,
including equipment for underwater technical jobs.

Bereaved families to return home with water, sand from crash area

Bereaved families to return home with water, sand from crash area
by Dmitry Nezdorovin

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 6, 2006 Saturday 09:54 AM EST

SOCHI, May 6 — Russian Deputy Transport Minister Sergei Aristov has
recommended to relatives of people who died in the recent air crash
near Sochi to return home.

He promised that all documents concerning their loved ones would be
prepared and mailed to families.

The A-320 plane of Armenia’s company Armavia that was en route from
Yerevan to Russia’s sea resort of Sochi crashed into the Black Sea
during a landing approach in the night of May 3, killing all 113
people on the board.

No bodies could be found in the sea over the past 24 hours.

Fifty-three bodies have been recovered in search operations, 42 of
which have been identified.

“The work will be continued until a decision is made to wind up the
search operation because of its hopelessness,” Aristov said.

About 180 people are staying in Sochi since the news of the demise
of the plane came to them.

Their initial shock of realisation of the loss appears to have blunted,
but the smell of sedative medicines fills Sochi’s hotels where the
bereaved have been put up.

Armenia’s Ambassador to Russia Armen Sambatyan said that families
of the unfound dead would take home the seawater and sand from the
crash area.

Armenian Entrepreneurs Render Financial Assistance To Families OfVic

ARMENIAN ENTREPRENEURS RENDER FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FAMILIES OF VICTIMS IN MAY 3 CRASH
By Tamar Minasian

AZG Armenian Daily
06/05/2006

In the course of May 4 sitting the members of RA Union of Entrepreneurs
expressed deepest condolences to the families of the victims in the
May 3 crash of A320 jet. Arsen Ghazarian, chairman of the union,
stated that the board of the union decided to allocate financial
assistance to the families of the victims.

They opened a special bank account at RA Finance and Economy
Ministry. The Armenian businessmen may allocate financial sources for
the families of the victims through the following account 900013017026.

Control Officer Kept Hidden From Relatives Of Killed

CONTROL OFFICER KEPT HIDDEN FROM RELATIVES OF KILLED

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.05.2006 19:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The airport administration keeps hidden the flying
control officers who were on duty on the Airbus crash night. The police
and FCS fear of lynch law. The control office, who was “leading” the
Yerevan-Sochi flight, was classified as secret the same morning. The
airport employees fear that the flying control officer can share the
fate of his Swiss counterpart Peter Nilson who was knifed near his
house by Ossetian Kaloyev who lost all his family in the crash.

The investigators have no claims to the control officers’ work. The
Russian law allows the pilots of foreign aircrafts to take decisions
on landing in complicated meteorological conditions. Pilot of the
crashed jet Grigory Grigoryan exercised the right unfortunately.

Meanwhile the relatives of the killed passengers blame the flying
control officers for the tragedy. “They could bar landing but did
not do it,” a man says.

Friends try to calm him down. “We should not look for those guilty. The
prosecution is dealing with it. Our duty is to pay our last respects
to our relatives, to bury them and bewail,” they say.

However, situation is tensed and any sparkle of anger can cause an
outburst. A FCS member said any contacts with the flying control
officers are prohibited. It was decided to give them a leave. I
suppose they are in a safe place now,” he said, reported Zhizn (Life)
Russian newspaper.

Russian Prosecutors Rule Out Terrorism In Black Sea Plane Crash

RUSSIAN PROSECUTORS RULE OUT TERRORISM IN BLACK SEA PLANE CRASH

RIA Novosti, Russia
May 3 2006

MOSCOW, May 3 (RIA Novosti) – The Prosecutor General’s Office has
ruled out terrorism as the cause of an air crash above the Black Sea
that claimed 113 lives Wednesday morning.

“The only thing that can be said about the versions of what happened is
that a terrorist attack has been completely ruled out,” the Office’s
press service said Wednesday. “There is no objective information for
[a terrorist attack].”

The Emergency Situations Ministry said earlier that bad weather was
the most likely cause of the tragedy.

A total of 113 people, including eight crewmembers, were on board
of the A-320 plane, which belonged to Armenia’s Armavia Airlines,
when it crashed en route from the capital Yerevan to the airport
servicing the Russian resort of Sochi.

“The bodies of 46 people have been retrieved so far,” the prosecutors
said, adding that the tail section and the chassis of the plane had
been found.

The Russian Foreign Ministry earlier said 26 Russian citizens were
on the passenger list, but prosecutors in the Krasnosdar Territory
said there were 27 Russians on board.

“We received contradictory information about the number of Russian
citizens on board the plane,” a local prosecutor said. “But the
migration service has confirmed there were 27 Russians.”

May 5 and 6 have been declared mourning days in Armenia, and May 5
in Russia.

The greatest loss of life in a crash involving an two-engine A-320,
which was first built in 1984 and remains the most popular Airbus on
the market, occurred in August 2000, when a Gulf Air plane crashed
off Bahrain on a flight from Cairo, killing all 143 people on board.