CIS Defense Ministers To Meet In St. Petersburg

CIS DEFENSE MINISTERS TO MEET IN ST. PETERSBURG

RIA Novosti
10:21 | 15/ 10/ 2008

ST. PETERSBURG, October 15 (RIA Novosti) – The Council of CIS defense
ministers will hold its 55th meeting in St. Petersburg on Wednesday,
a spokesman for the alliance’s executive committee said.

During the meeting defense ministry officials from the
Russian-dominated Commonwealth of Independent States are expected to
consider around 20 defense cooperation issues.

The defense ministers will also focus on ways of improving the united
air defense system of CIS countries.

In the light of developments in the North Caucasus, CIS members will
also review the role and activity of the collective CIS peacekeeping
force in the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict zone.

The CIS, a loose alliance of former Soviet states, comprises Russia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Moldova,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Ukraine is a founding and participating
country but technically not a member state. Turkmenistan holds
associate status.

ANKARA: Gul Urges "Positive Climate" With Armenia

TURKISH PRESIDENT URGES "POSITIVE CLIMATE" WITH ARMENIA

Anatolia News Agency
Sept 25 2008
Turkey

New York, 26 September: The Turkish president said on Thursday that
his aim was to create a positive climate between Turkey and Armenia.

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul said that he wanted that climate to
eliminate problems between the two countries.

"I am very hopeful about this," he said in a meeting organized by
the American-Turkish Society in New York.

Gul said that Turkey and Armenia did not have diplomatic relations,
and their borders were closed although Turkey was one of the first
countries recognizing Armenia’s independence.

"However, two countries have had humanitarian activities," Gul said
and gave Turkey’s wheat assistance to Armenia in 1990s as an example.

Gul said thousands of Armenian citizens were working in Turkey due to
economic reasons, there were flights and cultural activities between
the two countries.

"My recent visit (to Armenia) was for a soccer game, but I did not only
watch the game with Mr [Serzh] Sargsyan (the Armenian President). We
had the opportunity to discuss bilateral relations, Caucasus and
Azerbaijan," he said.

Gul underlined necessity of solving regional problems through dialogue,
and expressed his hope that everything would normalize in the end.

President Gul also said that one of indicators that relations would
normalize one ay was the trilateral meeting the foreign ministers of
Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia would hold in New York on Friday.

"What leaders should do is to eliminate problems, not to feed
enmities," Gul also said.

Gul said that many projects could be carried out between Turkey and
Armenia, like establishing industrial zones at the border, after
problems were solved.

Astrophysics: Research From P.K. Sinamyan And Co-Authors Provides Ne

ASTROPHYSICS: RESEARCH FROM P.K. SINAMYAN AND CO-AUTHORS PROVIDES NEW DATA ABOUT ASTROPHYSICS

Science Letter
September 30, 2008

According to a study from Armenia, "The next list of spectral data on
blue stellar objects (BSOs) is presented. 58 FBS objects in a zone
with a central declination delta = + 35 degrees were observed with
the 2.6-m telescope at the Byurakan Observatory during 1990-1991."

"In addition, 3 objects were observed (3 CCD spectra were obtained)
with the BAO 2.6-m and OHP 1.93-m telescopes in 1997-2000 using
modern instrumentation. 9 white dwarfs, 47 hot subdwarfs, and 2
HBB stars have been discovered," wrote P.K. Sinamyan and colleagues
(see also Astrophysics).

The researchers concluded: "Spectra of the 10 most interesting objects
are given."

Sinamyan and colleagues published their study in Astrophysics (Spectral
observations of FBS blue stellar objects in the zone delta = +35
degrees. Astrophysics, 2008;51(2):226-232).

For more information, contact P.K. Sinamyan, VA Ambartsumyan Byurakan
Astrophysics Observ, Byurakan, Armenia.

Publisher contact information for the journal Astrophysics is:
Springer, Plenum Publishers, 233 Spring St., New York, NY 10013, USA.

The Week In Books

THE WEEK IN BOOKS
Dominique Guiou, John Dugdale and Maya Jaggi

The Guardian
Saturday October 11 2008

An ‘engagé’ wins the Nobel, betting on the Booker, and Istanbul goes
to Frankfurt

This year the Nobel prize for literature has been awarded to a real
French writer – a writer who started when he was very young and is
still going strong today. In 1963, Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio did
the unthinkable by winning, while still an unknown novelist of 23, one
of France’s top literary prizes, the Renaudot, for his debut novel,
The Interrogation. He has not stopped writing since, with some 30
books to his name, including Désert (1980), which received a prize
from the French academy. The Interrogation was the work of a young
man but, 40 years later, it is still as pertinent as ever.

That is not to say that his work has not developed enormously
throughout his career. He has gone from being a rather "difficult"
young writer influenced heavily by the avant garde to a more accessible
author who has made his voice heard on numerous political and social
issues from pollution to exploitation. Le Clézio has also managed
to do something very rare in France: to be loved by both the public
and the critics. To please both, and to know how to impress both, is
very special. He is what we in France call an "engagé", a humanist –
and, above all, a great writer.

Dominique Guiou, Le Figaro0D

Le Clézio was a surprise choice as winner of the Nobel – but,
fascinatingly, not to Ladbrokes. Evidently possessing an uncanny
ability to second-guess the secretive cabal of Swedish worthies
who pick the laureates, the bookies had made Le Clézio their 2-1
favourite, ahead of far better-known figures such as Amos Oz, Philip
Roth and Haruki Murakami. Even though the Academy picking a fifth
European author in a row – following Doris Lessing in 2007, Orhan
Pamuk in 2006, Harold Pinter in 2005 and Elfriede Jelinek in 2004 –
seemed unlikely.

The academy specialises in strange, windy citations, and true to form
hailed Le Clézio as "author of new departures, poetic adventure
and sensual ecstasy, explorer of a humanity beyond and below the
reigning civilisation".

That at least makes his work sound more exciting than that of his
immediate predecessors: Lessing was praised for "subjecting a divided
civilisation to scrutiny", Pamuk for disclosing "the melancholic soul
of his native city", Pinter "uncovered the precipice under everyday
prattle" and Jelinek revealed "the absurdity of society’s clichés
and their subjugating power".

Recent Nobel choices have provided bonanzas for their British
publishers – especially Harvill Secker who publish Coetzee, Grass,
Kertész and Saramago.

In the case of Le Clézio, however, they were caught napping. The
only English translation from the past five years listed on Amazon
is Wande ring Star, from the small US publisher Curbstone.

John Dugdale

An Indian or an Irishman will be named as this year’s Booker winner
on Tuesday, if the bookies are to be believed. William Hill makes
Sebastian Barry’s The Secret Scripture 5-2 favourite, with Amitav
Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies at 7-2; while Ladbrokes reverses the order,
offering Ghosh at 2-1 with the remaining four authors at 4-1 or
5-1. Paddy Power has Ghosh at the remarkably short odds of 7-4 and
Barry at 3-1. Don’t take this, though, as any indication of the likely
outcome. Until the shortlist appeared and both were omitted, the
bookies had Salman Rushdie and Joseph O’Neill as frontrunners. Last
year’s winner, Anne Enright, was a 12-1 outsider, and no favourite
has won since Yann Martel in 2002.

JD

Alice Munro appeared at the New Yorker magazine’s recent festival
in Manhattan, drily revealing to her interviewer that when her first
book appeared the local paper’s report was headlined "Housewife Finds
Time to Write Stories", and that her father decided to take up writing
late in life on the assumption that "if Alice can do it there should
be no problem".

Sticking to short fiction was not her original plan, Munro said,
but she now recognises she needs to know when a project will be
completed, and so is unsuited to working on anything more open-ended –
"you might die while writing a 500-page novel".

The Canadian writer talked of a per iod when she gave up writing two
years ago, worried that an author’s constant need to observe was
robbing her of experiencing life as "an ordinary person". Happily
she soon realised she "wasn’t very good" at this, managing only
"three months, maybe" of being ordinary.

JD

Istanbul’s bookshop windows are full of copies of Orhan Pamuk’s
first novel since his 2006 Nobel prize, with its retro photo of a
high-society family in a car tinted flamboyant pink. Artist manqué
Pamuk designed his own cover for the book, Museum of Innocence,
a filmic melodrama of a 1970s love affair in which a man collects
objects touched by his beloved before her death. For the first time
in so long, a relaxed Pamuk says on his balcony, "the media are sweet
to me". About 100,000 copies were sold in 10 days.

A swift German translation was commissioned for next week’s Frankfurt
book fair, which Pamuk will open on Tuesday alongside the Turkish
president, Abdullah Gul, marking Turkey’s year as guest of honour. The
tag is "Turkey in all its colours" – a seemingly bland coinage by
Turkish publishers that is revolutionary for the culture ministry
that signed up to it. In the teeth of an official nationalist ideology
guarded by the military since the Kemalist republic’s birth in 1923,
stressing a unitary Turkish ethnicity, publishers led by Muge Gursoy
Sokmen of Metis are proclaiming Turkey’s diversity, with Kurdish,
Armenian and Jewish a uthors – mirrored in art exhibitions and music,
from ghazals to jazz. Pamuk feels he is representing a book culture
led by "westernisers" and pro-EU intellectuals against stifling,
insular nationalism.

President Gul, a former radical Islamist whose AK party favours EU
membership, has been lunching writers and artists. Several authors
bound for Frankfurt, including Pamuk, Elif Shafak and Perihan Magden,
have been prosecuted under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code,
which prohibits "insulting Turkishness" – notably by mentioning the
Armenian massacres of 1915-17. Publishers say it is too early to
tell how the April amendments of 301 – sought by the president but
criticised by some as cosmetic – will bite.

Magden, "traumatised" by her trial and by "fascists and fanatical
Kemalists out in the streets", published a novel last year, Escape,
about a mother and daughter on the run, at a time when she had two
bodyguards. For her, the threat comes not from the AK party, but from
secular ultra-nationalists and a "military democracy". Headscarves
are an issue of a rising class threatening an army elite: "Girls who
were locked in their villages want to go to university and wear a
headscarf. It’s not a fundamentalist threat – I welcome it."

The lawyer who led the prosecution of Pamuk is among the 80-plus
people now charged in the bizarre Ergenekon case – an alleged
ultra-nationalist coup conspiracy involving death threats an d
assassinations, including the 2007 murder of Hrant Dink, editor of
the Turkish-Armenian paper Agos. In Dink’s office, where the walls
bear photographs of his funeral, when tens of thousands of Turkish
mourners marched under the banner "We are all Armenians", his lawyer,
Fethiye Cetin, says the "only way to overcome the trauma of the past
is to talk; being silent destroys everybody". Her 2004 memoir, My
Grandmother (out in Britain earlier this year), about the relative she
discovered had been Armenian, adopted by a Turkish officer after the
massacres, was a bestseller. She feels it left a "crack in official
state ideology in the minds of people".

An estimated two million Turks have at least one Armenian grandparent.

Murathan Mungan, a novelist and playwright who has Kurdish, Arab and
Bosnian grandparents, feels his plays were not taken into the state
theatre repertoire because he used Kurdish names. Mungan, who also
describes himself as the first openly gay author in Turkey, says his
fight is against "conservatives on the right and the left". Other
writers, including Shafak, seek to recover a language lost in the
1928 alphabet and language revolution which, in its drive to "purify"
Ottoman Turkish of Persian and Arabic words – perhaps two-thirds
of its vocabulary – sunders young Turkish readers from their own
literary heritage.

–Boundary_(ID_DdQ3F3tDbJf3+tTJdTr1TA)- –

Local Self-Government Elections To Be Held In Aragatsotn, Gegharkuni

LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS TO BE HELD IN ARAGATSOTN, GEGHARKUNIK, AND SHIRAK REGIONS ON OCTOBER 26

Noyan Tapan

Oc t 8, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 8, NOYAN TAPAN. On October 26, local self-government
elections are scheduled in the communities of the Aragatsotn,
Gegharkunik, and Shirak regions.

As Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed by Tatev Ohanian, the
Spokesperson of the RA Central Electoral Commission, 3 non-partisan
candidates, current Mayor Gagik Tamazian, Ashot Azizian, and Grigor
Baloyan are registered for participation in the elections of Ashtarak
Mayor.

The candidates for Aparan Mayor are RPA member, current Mayor Gor
Abrahamian, ANM member Alexan Avetisian, and non-partisan Razmik
Petrosian.

The candidates for Talin Mayor are non-partisans, current Mayor
Mnatsakan Mnatsakanian, Armen Sargsian, Edward Grigorian, and RPA
member Gurgen Grigorian.

The only candidate registered for Gavar Mayor’s elections is current
Mayor, member of the United Labor Party Gurgen Martirosian.

The candidates for Sevan Mayor are current Mayor, RPA member Gevorg
Malkhasian, non-partisans Hrachik Karapetian and Vardges Kocharian.

The candidates for Martuni Mayor are RPA members, current Mayor
Bagrat Haroutiunian, Rashid Hakobian, Orinats Yerkir party member
Kamo Gasparian, and non-partisan Garik Hakobian,

The candidates for Chambarak Mayor are current Mayor, non-partisan
Yurik Avalian, RPA members Kochar Kocharian and Rita Hovhannisian.

Five candidates are registered for Vardenis Mayor’s elections, RPA
members, current Mayor Vardan Barseghian, Vardan Yeranosian, and
Volodya Khloyan, member of the Union of National Democrats Gevorg
Bokhian, and non-partisan Samvel Martirosian.

Four candidates are registered for Gyumri Mayor’s elections, current
Mayor, RPA member Vardan Ghukasian, National Assembly independent
deputy Martun Grigorian, member of the National Self-Determination
Union Daniel Darbinian, and non-partisan Karapet Nersisian.

The candidates for Artik Mayor’s elections are current Mayor,
non-partisan Hmayak Abrahamian, RPA member Khachatur Varagian,
member of the National Self-Determination Union Annman Khachatrian,
and ANM member Mkrtich Mkrtchian.

It should be mentioned that the registered candidates can use the
right of withdrawing their candidatures until October 16, 18:00.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117998

Baku – Baku-Tbilisi-Kars: Prospects Of Huge Transport Project

BAKU-TBILISI-KARS: PROSPECTS OF HUGE TRANSPORT PROJECT
[email protected]

TREND Information
08.10.08 12:47
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, 7 October / Trend Capital corr S.Aliyev / Project
on construction of a new railway communication Baku-Tbilisi-Kars
may be considerably accelerated. This route will become an only
transport corridor for cargo delivery from Caucasus and Asia via
Caucasus to the Mediterranean Sea and back after the completion of
the Georgian-Ossetia conflict.

It is necessary to construct 29-km railway section in Georgia (till the
border with Turkey) and 76-km section in Turkey to open communication
on this route. Establishment of a new branch will enable to increase
considerably cargo traffic via the Azerbaijan-Georgia-Turkey transport
corridor.

Construction of submarine tunnel under the Marmara project in Turkey
will enable to unite this transport corridor with Europe. A 1.3km-long
submarine section of the tunnel, which is laid under Bosporus, will
become a component part of 70-km railway road and elevated subway. It
is expected to finish both projects on the same term – in 2011.

There is one more railway line, which at present does not
function. The railway line crosses via Georgia, Armenia and Turkey
– Tbilisi-Gumri-Kars. Earlier goods turnover between the USSR and
Turkey was realized through this route. Repeated statements of the
project sides, which mention reasonability to resume traffic via the
Tbilisi-Gumri-Kars route, do not seem serious on the background of the
latest developments in the region. After the Georgian-South Ossetia
conflict, realization of the project does not seem as possible until
the restoration of Georgia’s territorial integrity (return of Abkhazia
to Georgia).

In its turn Turkey in 1993 closed its borders with Armenia, which
led to delay in communication via the route. The possible cargo
transporting via the Tbilisi-Gumru-Kars from Azerbaijan or through
the country is impossible before restoring the territorial integrity
of Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan joined two fundamental agreements in
cargo transportation sphere in the region with clause due to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Under the clause to the Main multilateral agreement on international
transport to develop Europe-Caucasus-Asia corridor (TRASECA -signed
in 1998), "The Azerbaijan Republic stated that neither rights,
obligation and offers stated in the ‘Main multilateral agreement on
international transport to develop the Europe-Caucasus-Asia corridor’
and its Technical enclosures, will be used by the Azerbaijani Republic
for transporting purposes through its territory for which the territory
of the Armenian Republic is initial, transit or final. The similar
clause is available in the ‘Transit order through state territories
-participants of the Commonwealth of Independent States".

So, the railway communication opening project via the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars
route is more real and economically expedient for cargo transporting
in the region. Project’s economical efficiency is to accelerate cargo
supply term to Turkey and ports in the Mediterranean Sea from Asia and
back. Main cargo transport type, which is expected via the transport
corridor, will be container traffic.

Experts forecast about 1mln passengers and 6.5mln tons of cargo
will be transported in the first stage of works (since 2010) on the
Baku-Tbilisi-Kars communication. In 2034, this index will reach 3mln
passengers and 18mln tons of cargo.

The Baku- Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki- Kars project includes the construction
of 105km-railway lines, with 76 km section running via Turkey
and 29 km section via Georgia. Moreover, 183 km section of
Akhalkalaki-Marabda-Tbilisi railway will be also reconstructed to
improve the carrying capacity to 15mln tons of cargo per year. It is
planned to build in Akhalkalaki a place for the transition of trains
from the track existing in Georgia to the European one. The project
is estimated at $422mln and taking into consideration the accompanying
infrastructure its cost will comprise $600mln.

Not Only Patronize But Also Involved

NOT ONLY PATRONIZE BUT ALSO INVOLVED

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
07 Oct 2008
Armenia

The inquest on the criminal case linked with the death attempt on
Armenian political scientist Levon Melik- Shahnazaryan is over and
has been sent to the court.

In his interview given to the correspondent of "Hayots Ashkharh"
daily Levon Melik Shahnazaryan said: "I must say that this hostile
attitude of Azerbaijan towards me is not a secret, but I will continue
to work. The case has been sent to the court and as far as I know it
is under the proceeding of the Northern Criminal Court. I expect the
participation of the journalists and foreign diplomats in the court
procedure, because, in my view, we must use our chance to show the
world that not only does Azerbaijan patronize international terrorism
but they are also involved in it.

And Ilham Aliev is on the top of the pyramid. The world must know
with what country we Armenian’s deal with.

Synod on the Word of God Meets in Rome

Catholic Online, CA

Synod on the Word of God Meets in Rome
10/4/2008

Asia News ()

The Synod Assembly opens as a sign of the Pauline Year and the
Church’s Committment to the centrality of the Word of God in the Life
of the Church.

VATICAN CITY (AsiaNews) ` The 12th General Assembly of the Synod of
Bishops opens this Sunday with a solemn Mass celebrated by Benedict
XVI. Dedicated to `The Word of God in the Life and the Mission of the
Church’, it brings together 253 bishops from the Churches of the
world. It will not include those from Communist China, Vatican Press
Office Head Fr Federico Lombardi said today at a press conference. `It
was clear that there would be no agreement [with Beijing] and they
[Chinese bishops] won’t come,’ he said `because the conditions weren’t
there.’

There will be however, as delegates directly appointed by Benedict
XVI, Card Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, archbishop of Hong Kong, Mgr José
Lai Hung-seng, archbishop of Macau as well as a Taiwanese bishop, Mgr
Peter Liu Cheng-chung. The bishops will take part in activities
scheduled to last until 26 October `to reflect’, said Archbishop
Nikola Eterovic, secretary general of the Synod of Bishops, `on the
Word of God, on its central role in the life of the Church and on its
dynamism which encourages Christians in mission to announce in words
and deeds the Good News and the presence in our midst of the Risen
Lord Jesus.’ For the first time the Synod will open in the St. Paul’s
Outside-the-Walls Basilica, not in the Vatican, because of the ongoing
Pauline Year. and this will not be the only reference to the Apostle
to the Nations.

In the Synod Hall on 18 October, the Holy Father Benedict XVI and the
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I will preside at first Vespers. Each
will then pronounce an address on the subject of the Word of God, with
particular reference to the Pauline Year.This will be the first time
the Ecumenical Patriarch addresses the Synod Fathers. `He will bring
the greetings of Orthodox Churches that the Apostle to the Nations
founded before going to Rome where he suffered martyrdom,’ Archbishop
Eterovic said.

The Synod will be ecumenically important for fraternal delegates from
ten Churches and ecclesial communities will attend.

Representatives of the Ecumenical Patriarchate will be present along
with others from the Patriarchates of Moscow, Serbia and Romania, from
the Orthodox Church of Greece and the Armenian Apostolic Church, as
well as from the Anglican Communion, the World Lutheran Federation,
the Church of the Disciples of Christ and the World Council of
Churches.The Synod Fathers will represent 13 sui iuris Eastern
Catholic Churches, 113 Bishops’ conferences, 25 dicasteries of the
Roman Curia and the Union of Superiors General.

Of the 253 Synod Fathers 51 are from Africa, 62 from America, 41 from
Asia, 90 from Europe and 9 from Oceania. Of these 173 were elected
(72.3 per cent), 38 participate ex officio (15 per cent), 32 were
appointed by the Pope (12.6 per cent) and 10 were elected by the Union
of Superiors General (4 per cent).

Forty-one experts and 37 auditors from 21 and 26 countries
respectively will also be in attendance, including six women experts
and 19 women auditors, one more than the men.

The Synod Three will also receive three special papal guests. The
first one is Chief Rabbi Shear Yashuv Cohen of Haifa, Israel, who on 6
October will address the assembly on how the Jewish people reads and
interprets Sacred Scripture. As such it will be the first time that a
rabbi, and a non-Christian, has addressed the Synod Fathers.

The other special guests are Rev A Miller Milloy, secretary general of
the United Bible Societies, and Frère Alois, prior of the
Taizé Community.

www.asianews.it/

Serbia, Kosovo Target Islamic Nations Ahead Of Key U.N. Vote

SERBIA, KOSOVO TARGET ISLAMIC NATIONS AHEAD OF KEY U.N. VOTE
By Patrick Goodenough

CNSNews.com
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
VA

Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic speaks to the media at the United
Nations headquarters in New York on Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2008. (AP
Photo)(CNSNews.com) – The bitter dispute between Serbia and newly
independent Kosovo comes before the United Nations next week, and
both sides have been aiming their lobbying efforts at Islamic nations.

Serbia wants the General Assembly to back its request for the
International Court of Justice to give an "advisory opinion" on whether
its southern province’s unilateral declaration of independence is in
line with international law.

A U.N. committee earlier agreed to include the matter on the agenda,
and a debate and vote has now been set for October 8. A simple majority
in the 192-member assembly will be sufficient for the case to go to
the International Court of Justice. Based in The Hague, the ICJ rules
on disputes between states.

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia last February, nine years
after NATO went to war to end Serb aggression against the province’s
ethnic Albanian Muslim majority.

Pristina subsequently has won recognition from 47 mostly Western
countries. Ironically, despite the fact that around 90 percent of
Kosovo’s two million people are Muslims, only six members of the
57-state Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) have recognized
its independence.

The day after the independence declaration, OIC secretary-general
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu issued a statement declaring "our solidarity
with and support to our brothers and sisters there."

"There is no doubt that the independence of Kosovo will be an asset
to the Muslim world and will further enhance joint Islamic action,"
he said.

But at an OIC summit in Dakar, Senegal, less than a month later, OIC
heads of state resisted an initiative led by Turkey and merely voiced
"solidarity," leaving recognition up to individual member states.

The only six to have taken the step so far are Turkey, Albania,
Afghanistan, Burkino Faso, Sierra Leone and Senegal.

Analysts attribute the Islamic states’ unwillingness to support
Kosovo to a reluctance to anger Russia, Serbia’s historical ally,
which strongly opposed the independence move.

In mid-March, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said before beginning a
Middle East visit that Moscow was urging Muslim states to withstand
pressure to recognize Kosovo, a state he said had been "illegally
formed."

"I would like to warn against the temptation to give in to calls
from non-Arab and non-Islamic states addressed to Islamic countries
to show Islamic solidarity and recognize Kosovo," he told the state
newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta.

Lavrov also pointed to unrest taking place in Tibet at the time,
suggesting that Kosovo’s breakaway had helped to trigger the "disorder"
in the Chinese-ruled region.

Some Kosovars have voiced dismay at the Islamic states’ hesitancy.

"We strongly believe that the support we got from the international
community to gain our freedom is the largest miracle of Allah and
the largest sign of his mercy towards his people in Kosovo," Blerim
Gashi, public information officer of the Kosovar-Arab friendship
and economic cooperation chamber, wrote in a recent article on the
al-Arabiya television channel’s Web site.

"We do hope that our brothers in faith will take their rightful place
on our side."

Separatist concerns

In the run-up to and during the U.N. General Assembly session now
underway in New York, Serbian and Kosovo politicians have been urging
Islamic and other governments to back their position.

En route to New York, Kosovo Foreign Minister Skender Hyseni visited
Saudi Arabia where he met with Ihsanoglu and "expressed the hope that
more OIC member states would recognize the independence of Kosovo,"
the Jeddah-based OIC said in a statement.

While the Kosovar was in Jeddah, his Serbian counterpart, Vuk Jeremic,
was in Cairo, visiting the seat of another organization, the Arab
League – all 22 of whose members are also in the OIC.

In New York, the lobbying has continued, led by the Serbian and
Kosovo presidents. Kosovo’s foreign ministry said in a statement that
Hyseni had met with ministers from Malaysia and Egypt, urging them
to recognize Kosovo and vote against the Serbian resolution.

Serbia’s delegation says it has held more than 50 bilateral meetings on
the sidelines of the General Assembly, and its ministers are voicing
optimism that the resolution will pass.

Belgrade’s Labor Minister Rasim Ljajic told Serbian media that some
OIC and Arab League members had indicated that they would not vote
against the measure, likely abstaining instead.

An ICJ opinion will not be binding on governments, but Serbia hopes
that any ruling in its favor will make it less likely that more
nations will recognize Kosovo.

Critics of the Serbian move worry that it could drag on for years,
delaying a consolidation of diplomatic and economic support for the
new state.

Putting on a brave face, Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci told a
government meeting Friday he did not believe Serbia’s initiative
would have any impact on the process of recognitions of Kosovo’s
independence.

In its lobbying, the Serbs are appealing to countries with unresolved
territorial or separatist disputes that the "precedent" set by Kosovo
could also be taken up by secessionists elsewhere, with serious
implications for national and regional stability.

The argument has resonated in Islamic countries like Indonesia,
which has grappled with separatist conflicts in Aceh and Papua,
and Azerbaijan, home to the ethnic Armenian breakaway enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Separatist concerns also lie behind the reluctance of some European
Union countries to recognize Kosovo. Only 20 of the union’s 27 members
have done so, with those opposed to the move – including Spain, Cyprus
and Romania – mostly uneasy because they face their own separatist
or ethnic minority issues.

With a vote on Serbia’s resolution coming up, the E.U. may struggle
to come up with a unified position once again, although few
Western countries will want to be seen not supporting an appeal to
international law.

After meeting with Jeremic in New York, Italian Foreign Minister Franco
Frattini predicted that E.U. member states would probably abstain.

European diplomats have also warned, though, that Serbia is not doing
its bid to join the E.U. any good by pursuing the matter.

The ICJ initiative "does not contribute to Belgrade’s aspirations
to move closer to the E.U., since most E.U. members have recognized
Kosovo," the E.U.’s representative in Kosovo, Dutchman Pieter Feith,
said in a recent interview.

By The Joint Efforts Of The Two Presidents

BY THE JOINT EFFORTS OF THE TWO PRESIDENTS
Gevorg Harutyunyan

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
30 Sep 2008
Armenia

The transportation knot, which connects Abovyan Park with Myasnikyan
Avenue by an underground route, and Saralanj highway, was handed over
for operation yesterday.

The construction of the knot that unloaded another overloaded highway
of the capital city was the idea of the Republic’s second President
Robert Kocharyan. The construction started in 2006 and was continued
under the personal control of the newly elected President Serge
Sargsyan. So it is not accidental that yesterday the country’s
President Serge Sargsyan and ex-President Robert Kocharyan both
participated in the solemn ceremony.

After watching Yerevan’s panorama from the top of the Victory memorial
and after familiarizing themselves with the construction of Saralanj
highway the country’s second President Robert Kocharyan and President
Serge Sargsyan responded to the questions of the journalists.

Robert Kocharyan

I’m Not Bored Of My Rest

"Mr. Kocharyan how do you estimate the process of the road construction
in the capital city?"

"I will not be wrong if I say that this is the last project of
road construction implemented in Yerevan. It is really regrettable
that the process is over. But we hope that the project will have
continuation. But not we are the ones to give as sessment to all
this work but the people. Whatever has been constructed is really
beautiful. Yerevan has indisputably become very comfortable. I’m
really grateful to Kirk Kirkoryan for providing this opportunity. In
my view this man’s activity will be appreciated."

"Mr. Kocharyan what are your personal programs?"

"This is the main topic of gossip. I’m not yet bored of the rest that I
finally got. I must confess that during the last six months it is for
the second time that I’m wearing a tie. First was on May 28, when I
participated in the ceremony organized in Sardarapat. I have no desire
to return to similar working schedule. Once I have such desire I will
let you know. I will not give ground to gossips. These gossips prevent
people from working. And it is also clear why these gossips spread.

Serge Sargsyan

We have strong and powerful compatriots

"Mr. Sargsyan which construction project do you consider the most
important one?"

"I highly appreciate all the construction works implemented during
the second stage of Lins program. I’m grateful to Kirk Kirkoryan and
Lins fund for financing these works. I really hope that Kirk Kirkoryan
and Lins will continue to implement their projects in Armenia.

I attach great importance to road construction, school construction
and the reconstruction of Yerevan streets. It will not be ri ght to
favor one over another, or to compare them. Because it is due to the
project of the school construction that our children have such modern
educational centers that we have never had in Armenia.

The project of road construction is also very important, because the
blood vessels that connect the Republic’s dwelling places with one
another finally opened. The reconstruction of the streets was the only
option to unload Yerevan streets, though usually there are complaints
at the first stage of the construction. Anyway Kirk Kirkoryan’s work
is definitely appreciated."

"Mr. Sargsyan how do you estimate your visit to the USA?"

"For two and a half days it was a rather saturated program. I had
various meetings. But the meeting with the Armenian community was
the warmest and the most exciting program, especially the one with
the pupils who visited St. Vardan church. I told the children that
they must be tolerant and competitive, and that our power is in
our diversity.

Diaspora seems quite different from Armenia. Armenians have quite
different image about the Diaspora. But when you are with these people
you really feel their power. And I’m really proud that we have strong
and powerful compatriots in the most powerful country in the world."

"Mr. Sargsyan did the meeting between the Foreign Ministers of Armenia,
Turkey and Azerbaijan show any results?"

"We didn’t h ave great expectations from that meeting. There is no
concrete result. But be sure these meetings are the rings of the
total chain and they will definitely show results."