Teshoian gets a warm sendoff

Teshoian gets a warm sendoff

Worcester Telegram , MA
July 15 2006

By Gary V. Murray TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
[email protected]

Retiring Judge Sarkis Teshoian, left, receives the key to the city
from retired Judge Paul V. Mullaney. (ED COLLIER) Enlarge photo

I attempted to be understanding and, when warranted, to be
compassionate, while at the same time trying to honor the oath that I
had taken to uphold the laws of the commonwealth and the Constitutions
of the commonwealth and the United States.

WORCESTER- His stern demeanor on the bench belied an inherent
compassion and sense of fairness that earned him the respect of his
peers and the lawyers who appeared before him.

That was part of the portrait of Judge Sarkis Teshoian that emerged
yesterday as more than 100 sitting and retired judges, lawyers,
court employees, friends and family members gathered to wish him a
happy and healthy retirement.

A Worcester native and son of Armenian immigrants, Judge Teshoian
will turn 70 tomorrow, the mandatory retirement age for state court
judges. Yesterday was his last day on the job.

"It’s a sad day, my friend," said Darlene M. Perro, a sessions
clerk in Central District Court, where Judge Teshoian was regularly
assigned over the last several years. Ms. Perro, among those on hand
in Courtroom 408 to bid Judge Teshoian adieu, described the guest of
honor as "a man respected by all because he respects all."

"In 32 years of practicing law, he’s as fine a judge as I’ve been
before," said lawyer Michael M. Monopoli. "He’s consistent and you know
what to expect when you’re before him. He follows the law and does what
he thinks is right. He’s never been affected by the outside pressures."

Born in Worcester and a product of the city’s public school system,
Judge Teshoian graduated from Clark University and Boston College
School of Law. He passed the bar in 1962 and was then named secretary
to Worcester Mayor Paul V. Mullaney, who would also later become a
district court judge.

It was while he was working for the mayor that he formed a law firm
with Mel. L. Greenberg, now a state Appeals Court judge. The two were
soon joined by lawyer Alexander E. Drapos, who died earlier this week.

"We didn’t make much money, but we had a lot of fun," Judge Greenberg
told former City Clerk Robert J. O’Keefe at yesterday’s gathering.

"And you were good lawyers," Mr. O’Keefe said.

Mr. Mullaney, also retired from the bench, presented Judge Teshoian
with a key to the city yesterday on behalf of Mayor Timothy P. Murray.

In 1988, Gov. Michael S. Dukakis appointed Judge Teshoian as the
presiding justice of Uxbridge District Court, a position he held until
1997. For the last several years, he has generally been assigned to
his hometown court.

Regional Administrative Judge Paul F. LoConto, who was master of
ceremonies at yesterday’s retirement party, said Judge Teshoian was
"a person that all of us went to for advice" and "a mentor and model
to many, many new judges."

Judge LoConto said one of the things he admired most about Judge
Teshoian, who received the Judicial Excellence Award this year at
the Massachusetts Judges Conference annual dinner, was "his respect
and his love for his fellow man."

Chief Probation Officer William P. Mattei spoke of Judge Teshoian’s
integrity, work ethic and willingness to listen.

"He’s very fair to people and when people deserve a break, they get
a break," Mr. Mattei said.

"I’m humbled by your presence and I thank you," Judge Teshoian said
to those gathered in his honor.

In an earlier interview, Judge Teshoian reflected on his nearly 18
years on the bench.

"What I would like to think is that I was fair in the judgments that
I made. I attempted to be understanding and, when warranted, to be
compassionate, while at the same time trying to honor the oath that I
had taken to uphold the laws of the commonwealth and the Constitutions
of the commonwealth and the United States," he said.

While he feels he was able to contribute to society and do some good
as a judge, he said, the job also sometimes left him with a certain
sense of frustration."When you look at society as a whole, the level
of civility has diminished. It seems to me that the work ethic that
was the bedrock of this country developing is being eroded," Judge
Teshoian said. As times have changed, judges have increasingly been
called upon to try to modify behavior, according to the judge. "And
that is an extremely difficult goal to achieve," he said.

Although he has no specific plans for retirement at the moment,
Judge Teshoian said he was looking forward to just taking it easy
and spending more time with his wife of nearly 33 years, Ardemis
(Afarian) Teshoian, the woman he calls "God’s gift to me."

"I do have mixed feelings," he said of retirement. "I will miss some
of the camaraderie. I will miss some of the people. But I do think
it’s time for me to move on."

RA Defense Minister: Second Referendum in Karabakh Unnecessary

RA Defense Minister: Second Referendum in Karabakh Unnecessary

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.07.2006 19:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Referendum in Nagorno Karabakh may be held only
in case if it’s proposed by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs, said
RA Defense Minister Serge Sargsyan in Yerevan today. However, in
his words, there is no need in a second referendum. "The people of
Karabakh have conducted a referendum once and expressed their will,"
the RA Defense Minister stated.

EU rebukes Armenian journalist sentece in Turkey

EU rebukes Turkey because of journalist condemnation
By our correspondent

NRC Handelsblad (Dutch Daily Newspaper)
13 July 2006

Brussels, 13 July. The Turkish government must amend the Penal
Code to the point that judicial sentences, that restrict freedom
of speech will no longer be possible. This is the reaction of EU
Commissioner for Expansion Olli Rehn to the judgement of the Turkish
Court of Appeal. This week the Court confirmed the sentence of a
Turkish-Armenian journalist, who in an article would have insulted
the Turkish identity. Rehn said he is "disappointed". In autumn the
EU Executive will present a interim report concerning the reforms
in Turkey. This report will then decide about the negotiations with
Turkey on the EU-membership.

RA Prime Minister and French Ambassador Attach Importance To Extensi

RA PRIME MINISTER AND FRENCH AMBASSADOR ATTACH IMPORTANCE TO EXTENSION
OF ARMENIAN-FRENCH ECONOMIC COOPERATION

YEREVAN, JULY 13, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Prime Minister Andranik Margarian and
Ambassador of France to Armenia Henry Cuny touched upon the large-scale
events dedicated to Year of Armenia in France, the coming visit of
RA Prime Minister to France in connection with the start of Year of
Armenia at the July 13 meeting. Noyan Tapan was informed about it
from RA Government Information and Public Relations Department.

Besides cultural cooperation, the interlocutors also attached
importance to extension and development of economic cooperation,
attraction of French capital, new investments to the Armenian market.

To Enhance The Role Of Wronged Persons And Cut Expenses

TO ENHANCE THE ROLE OF WRONGED PERSONS AND CUT EXPENSES

Lragir.am
13 July 06

On June 13 the citizens, whose houses were expropriated for the
development of the Center of Yerevan, staged a protest in front of
the government of Armenia. And the government has approved the bills
on changes to the Criminal Code, Judicial Code and the Civil Code,
which are intended to enhance the role of wronged persons, said
Davit Harutiunyan, minister of justice. The people whose property was
expropriated for the development of the center of Yerevan cried "go
away, leave", which on entering through the windows of the Armenian
government sounded like "go away, thieves". Or who knows, maybe
the original chant of the protestors was "go away, thieves".

Davit Harutiunyan said in accordance with the reform of the Crime
Code if the plaintiff announces that he has been reconciled with the
charged, indicted or suspect, the case will be dismissed. The type of
damages will be decided by the plaintiff and the charged, indicted
or suspect. Davit Harutiunyan does not think it is absurd that the
parties agree on damages totaling one million dollars for a word of
abuse. In this case, the court only has to record the agreement. The
government proposed in about thirty articles of the Crime Code to
define damage to one’s health if it is not dangerous for life,
beating, torture, infecting people with venereal and other sexually
transmitted diseases, leaving someone in danger, slander, insult,
embezzlement or dissipation, theft, etc. as crimes.

The reconciliation of the wronged person and the suspect, charged
or indicted must take place before the judges retire. The government
proposed defining imposed reconciliation as an offense.

Proceeding from the experience of European democratic countries,
the government proposed adopting a special order of trial. If the
indicted pleas guilty, the case is tried without consideration
of evidence and examination of witnesses. Only personal data and
aggravating and extenuating circumstances are studied. Moreover, the
punishment, provided for by the corresponding article is shortened by
one third. There are restrictions too. For instance, the procuracy
does not participate in this type of trial, and cases involving 10
years of imprisonment are subject to special trial. Davit Harutiunyan
said the procuracy was against this provision, but the government
found it right. And the application of the special trial will allow
saving funds, for "legal proceedings and the system of justice
are expensive to sustain".

Turkish PM warned that terror law changes could impose censorship of

PRIME MINISTER WARNED THAT TERROR LAW CHANGES COULD IMPOSE CENSORSHIP OF KURDISH ISSUES

Int’l Freedom of Expression eXpress (IFEX), Canada
July 11 2006

Reporters Without Borders has written to Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Erdogan voicing concern about amendments to the anti-terrorism law
that have just been passed by parliament. The organisation roundly
condemns articles providing for prison sentences for the
dissemination of statements and propaganda by "terrorist
organisations," fearing they could lead to arbitrary prosecutions of
journalists covering issues related to these organisations.

The amendments are sufficiently vague that any member of a news media
organization producing a contested report or article could be
prosecuted, especially as several journalists are already charged
with collaborating with the successor to the outlawed Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK) and face stiff sentences for covering military
operations or pro-Kurdish demonstrations.

Paris, 6 July 2006

Dear Prime Minister,

Reporters Without Borders, an organisation that defends press freedom
worldwide, would like to share with you its concern about the
situation of free expression in Turkey, a country currently holding
negotiations with a view to joining the European Union. We are
worried about amendments to the 1991 Law on the Fight against
Terrorism (Act 3713) that were passed by parliament on 29 June, as
they introduce new restrictions on press freedom and above all target
the pro-Kurdish media, whose very existence you are threatening.

Article 6, paragraph 2 of this law now provides for a three-year
prison sentence for "any dissemination of statements and communiques
by terrorist organisations." The owners and editors of news
organisations risk a heavy fine.

Article 7, paragraph 2 of the law says that: "Whoever makes
propaganda for a terrorist organisation will be sentenced to five
years in prison. If the crime is committed by means of the press, the
penalty may be increased by half. Owners and editors will also be
sentenced to a heavy fine."

Reporters Without Borders would very much like the term "terrorist
organisation" to be precisely defined in order to avoid any abuse of
this provision for the purpose of arbitrary arrest or imprisonment.

For example, an official list of organisations considered to be
terrorists could help avoid misunderstandings.

Parliament also added a new article (article 8, paragraph b)
providing for "chain liability," under which, for example, a
newspaper report with no byline could result in a prosecution being
brought against the editor in charge, the editor-in-chief, the
newspaper’s owner, the printer and even the translator if it was
translated from another language. The amendment says "persons
responsible for a programme" or "persons responsible for an issue of
a publication" can be prosecuted and sentenced to heavy fines.

Parliament introduced this extremely dangerous concept with the aim
of extending the range of editors, executives and others liable for
prosecution. The entire chain of command becomes potentially guilty.

The persistent legal obstacles to free expression in Turkey have been
highlighted by Reporters Without Borders in the past. The government,
the armed forces, militant nationalists and any state institution can
abuse the law to target journalists commenting on sensitive or
controversial issues or episodes in Turkish history such as the
Armenian genocide, the withdrawal of the Turkish armed forces from
Cyprus or the Kurdish question.

The fight against terrorism is, of course, necessary and legitimate,
but Reporters Without Borders is concerned about the possible
intention of these new amendments. We think they are especially
targeted at pro-Kurdish journalists who are often accused of
terrorist collaboration with the outlawed Kurdish separatist
organisation PKK/Kongra-Gel.

We could cite the case of Rustu Demirkaya, a reporter with the
pro-Kurdish news agency DIHA, who has been held in Tunceli prison, in
eastern Turkey, since 14 June on a charge of "collaborating with the
PKK/Kongra-Gel." A former PKK activist reportedly accused him of
supplying PKK members with a laptop computer and 10 blank CD-ROMs and
of tipping them off about an ongoing military operation. He could be
sentenced to up to 12 years in prison.

The police handling the investigation have not produced any concrete
evidence in support for the allegations made by the former PKK
member. It is completely unacceptable that Demirkaya should have to
remain in prison while the investigation continues.

We could also cite the case of Evrim Dengiz and Nesrin Yazar, two
young women working for DIHA who were stopped by anti-terrorist
police on 15 February in Mersin as they returned from covering a
demonstration marking the seventh anniversary of the arrest of the
PKK/Kongra-Gel leader Abdullah Ocalan. We have been told that the
police took them some distance away from their car, which they then
proceeded to search and claimed to have found two home-made petrol
bombs inside.

Dengiz and Yazar were accused of making the bombs for the
demonstration. The judge in charge of the case has classified it on
security grounds. The Mersin prosecutor has requested life
imprisonment for a "threat against state unity and territorial
integrity" under article 302-1 of the criminal code. Their lawyer,
Bedri Kuran, who has not been allowed to see the prosecution case
file because it has been classified, says the search violated legal
procedure because it should have been carried out in a judge’s
presence. He also says there is no forensic report on the petrol
bombs.

Prime Minister, we cannot help being troubled by the speed with which
journalists are placed in pretrial custody in Turkey even when the
evidence against them is very slim. Free expression and press freedom
are inviolable democratic principles that must be respected.

We urge you, Prime Minister, to ask parliament to revise the
amendments to the Law on the Fight against Terrorism so that they
meet international standards.

We trust you will give this matter your careful consideration.

Respectfully,

Robert Menard
Secretary-General

Georgian Resort Town to Host Unique Armenian-Georgian Dance Festival

GEORGIAN RESORT TOWN TO HOST UNIQUE ARMENIAN-GEORGIAN DANCE FESTIVAL

Armenpress

YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS: Around thirty dance groups from Armenia
and Georgia will be dancing from July 12 to July 18 in the Georgian
resort town of Kobuleti on the Black Sea coast that has become a
popular place for Armenian holiday-makers.

The unprecedented festival will bring together almost 500
dancers. Vanush Khanamirian, chairman of the Union of Armenian Dancers,
said the festival is a unique and unprecedented display of friendship
of two neighbor nations.

He said there will be no awards, neither winners nor losers. He
said it is going to be simply a festival of dance to show the best
Armenians and Georgians are proud of.

TBILISI: Russia closes the border for ‘repairs’

The Messenger, Georgia
July 10 2006

Russia closes the border for ‘repairs’
Russian border closure angers Georgia, but Armenia could suffer most
By Anna Arzanova

Russian border guards closed the Zemo-Larsi checkpoint late at
night on July 7. Georgian border police received this information
by fax later the same day. Officially, ongoing repair works taking
place at the crossing are the reason for the closure; however, as no
information has been released as to how long these repairs will last,
some in Georgia think that the closure is a political move.

According to the head of the Border Protection Service, Koba
Bochorishvili, the Zemo-Larsi checkpoint has been closed for repairs
for an unspecified time, and that "Russian citizens will also have
problems as well as Georgians, as both sides use this checkpoint."

In a telephone conversation with Rustavi-2 Saturday, the president’s
representative in Mtskheta-Mtianeti region, Vasil Maghlaperidze,
said that Russians have closed the border "without any explanations,
they do not let or people cross the border."

"As a reason they name alleged repair works, but this is an absolute
lie. This is against all international norms. They unexpectedly closed
the border like this in Berlin as well," Maghlaperidze stated in a
reference to the Berlin blockade of 1948. He said that he and other
high-ranking officials visited the Zemo-Larsi checkpoint and made
every effort to clarify matters but "it seems that an absolutely
horrible situation has been created here."

Maghlaperidze noted that a vehicle backlog has been created at the
border, and that the police have been advising drivers approaching
the checkpoint about the ongoing situation.

The president’s representative said that, in unofficial talks, the
Russian side told him that the Zemo-Larsi checkpoint might be closed
for a month or twenty days. "So, they are waiting for the instructions
from above.

"It is absolutely obvious to me that the border was closed for
political reasons," Maghlaperidze noted.

Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli, while attending a business forum
in Batumi, commented on the incident. He argued that Armenia would
suffer from this closure even more than Georgia, Armenia’s borders
to both Turkey and Azerbaijan are closed, meaning that Georgia is a
vital link to the outside. Noghaideli ordered the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs to contact their Russian colleagues to try to find out concrete
reasons for the closure of the Zemo-Larsi checkpoint.

"Such an unexpected closure of border without any agreements, due
to alleged repair or rehabilitation works never takes place in a
normal situation. By the way, I want to stress that practically, all
exports from Georgia to Russia have been interrupted by this action,
Armenia has been damaged from the economic standpoint," Noghaideli
told journalists in Batumi July 8.

Noghaideli said that he has informed Armenian Prime Minister, who
also took part in the business forum, about this incident and hoped
that Armenia would also appropriately react to it.

Soon after Noghaideli’s statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
held a press conference about the issue. Speaking at the briefing
Saturday, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Merab Antadze confirmed
that Georgian border guards received information about the closure
by fax at midnight July 8.

"I would like to mention that, in 1993, Georgia and Russia signed an
agreement on the rules concerning founding, functioning and blocking
of checkpoints. It is indicated in the agreement that both sides
have to inform each other about any closures three months ahead,"
Antadze said at the press conference.

The statement, posted on the ministry’s website on July 8, says the
acting Russian ambassador was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of Georgia and was handed a protest note.

"Georgia has not received any appropriate notification. The Russian
side informed us two hours before the closure of the checkpoint, as
a result of which the situation at the checkpoint is difficult. The
Georgian side assesses this action of the Russian side as a violation
of their responsibilities, and expresses its protest in this regard. We
demand the obligatory fulfillment of the agreement and immediate
presentation of the deadline of the completion of the repair works,"
the protest note reads.

RFE/RL Iran Report – 07/07/2006

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
_________________________________________ ____________________
RFE/RL Iran Report
Vol. 9, No. 24, 7 July 2006

A Review of Developments in Iran Prepared by the Regional Specialists
of RFE/RL’s Newsline Team

******************************************** ****************
HEADLINES
* NEW FOREIGN POLICY COUNCIL COULD AFFECT IRAN-U.S RELATIONS
* SUPREME LEADER QUESTIONS USEFULNESS OF TALKS WITH U.S
* TEHRAN CRITICIZES U.S. AND U.K. ON HUMAN RIGHTS
* AHMADINEJAD HEADS FOR GAMBIA
* WORLD AWAITS IRAN’S RESPONSE TO NUCLEAR PROPOSAL
* TEHRAN DENIES INTERFERING IN IRAQ
* WORLD NARCOTICS SUPPLY REDUCED, BUT IRAN AND AFGHANISTAN STILL SUFFERING
* HIV/AIDS RATE IN IRAN EXCEEDS PREDICTIONS
* IRAN COMPLAINS OF INSUFFICIENT COUNTERNARCOTICS ASSISTANCE
* RELIGIOUS OFFENSES RESULT IN SIX EXECUTIONS IN SOUTHEAST
* TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS TEHRAN…
* …AS FIGHTING ERUPTS IN NORTHWESTERN IRAN
* IRANIAN KURDS RECEIVE DISCIPLINARY SUMMONS
* MORE IRANIAN ARABS FACE EXECUTION
* OFFICIAL FALLOUT CONTINUES OVER AZERI PROTESTS
* RELUCTANCE TO USE OIL AS WEAPON
* IRAN REFUTES FOOD-IMPORT CLAIMS
******************************************* *****************

NEW FOREIGN POLICY COUNCIL COULD AFFECT IRAN-U.S RELATIONS. The
creation in Iran this week of a foreign policy council connected with
the Supreme Leader’s Office may reflect a desire to balance the
brash and inexperienced foreign affairs apparatus of President Mahmud
Ahmadinejad with the more measured input of elder statesmen. It also
could be a sign of the Iranian leadership’s outright
dissatisfaction with the Ahmadinejad team. A third possibility is
that the new council will serve as a back-channel foreign policy
instrument. Coming on the heels of Washington’s willingness to
take part in multilateral talks with Tehran on the nuclear issue, the
creation of this council could have profound implications on
Iran-U.S. relations.
The new Strategic Council for Foreign Relations (Shora-yi
Rahbordi-yi Ravabet-i Khareji) was created by a June 25 decree from
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The council is supposed to
facilitate the country’s decision-making process, find new
foreign policy approaches, and make use of foreign policy experts,
according to the decree.

Vast Experience On Council

The council’s membership reflects a search for practical
expertise. Kamal Kharrazi, who served as foreign minister from
1997-2005, will head the council. Other members are Ali Akbar
Velayati, who preceded Kharrazi as foreign minister and who currently
serves as Khamenei’s foreign affairs adviser, and former Islamic
Revolution Guards Corp admiral Ali Shamkhani, who served as defense
minister from 1997-2005. These three officials have experience in the
highest levels of foreign policy.
Two other council members — Mohammad Shariatmadari and
Mohammad-Hussein Taremi-Rad — are not as well known.
Shariatmadari’s whole career, it seems, has been spent in the
Commerce Ministry, and he served as minister from 1997-2005.
Taremi-Rad is the only cleric on the council. An alumni of the
hard-line Haqqani Seminary, he has headed the Iranian Center for
Historical Studies since May 1997 but, more significantly, has served
as ambassador to China and Saudi Arabia.
The cumulative experience of this council surpasses that of
the youthful and inexperienced foreign policy team under President
Ahmadinejad. Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki is a relatively young
53 years old, although he has served as a foreign envoy (ambassador
to Turkey from 1985-1989 and ambassador to Japan from 1994-1999) and
also as a legislator. Individuals named to ambassadorial postings
have been criticized for their relative inexperience, furthermore,
and the replacement by Ahmadinejad of some 60 envoys in important
posts such as Berlin, Brussels, London, and Paris, is viewed as
disruptive.

Unhappy With The President…

The creation of the new foreign relations council is the most
recent indication that Supreme Leader Khamenei is concerned about
Ahmadinejad’s confrontational approach as well as his management
style. Shortly after the president’s August 2005 inauguration,
Khamenei tasked the Expediency Council with overseeing the
system’s policies by supervising the executive, legislative, and
judicial branches of government and reporting on their performance to
him.
This development was followed by the addition of old foreign
affairs hands — former Supreme National Security Council Secretary
Hojatoleslam Hassan Rohani and former President Hojatoleslam Mohammad
Khatami — to the Expediency Council’s Strategic Research Center.
The Expediency Council must consider any issue submitted to it by the
supreme leader, according to the Iranian Constitution (Article 112),
so it appeared that he was turning to it for foreign policy advice.
This coincided with speculation that responsibility for the
nuclear account no longer rested with the Supreme National Security
Council, which is chaired by the president. Expediency Council chief
Ayatollah Ali-Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, however, rejected such claims
and observed that decisions on this subject are reached collectively.
Collective decision-making almost certainly continues to be
the case. Last autumn, however, there were calls for the creation of
a foreign-policy guidance team. The new Strategic Council for Foreign
Relations appears to fulfill that role. The leadership is keen to
preserve the illusion of unity within the governing system, so it
will not publicly chastise or shunt aside the executive branch of
government. Behind the scenes — where real power is wielded — it
could be that this is what has happened.

…Or A Means To Talk To The U.S.?

The third possible explanation for the creation of this
foreign relations council rests in Supreme Leader Khamenei’s
repeated disavowals of any interest in holding talks with the U.S.
Most recently, during a June 27 meeting in Tehran, he said, "Talking
with America does not have any benefits for us; and we do not need
such talks," state television reported. Nevertheless, it was Khamenei
who in March defended Tehran’s willingness to discuss Iraqi
affairs with Washington bilaterally. He may not favor talks with
Washington, but he or his advisers recognize that they are necessary
if the nuclear impasse is to be resolved.
The Strategic Council for Foreign Relations could conduct
such talks away from the limelight that an official diplomatic
delegation would attract. Indeed, one of the council members,
Velayati, has been used for such communications in the past. He
established an office in Dubai to facilitate clandestine contacts
with U.S. officials in the run-up to Operation Iraqi Freedom,
"Al-Sharq al-Awsat" reported in August 2002. More recently, he was in
Riyadh to relay a direct message from Khamenei to the Saudi monarch.
Some observers hope the new foreign relations council will
supplant the executive branch in foreign affairs. An enthusiastic
"Sharq" on June 27 described this as the return of the "moderates" to
foreign relations. The pro-reform daily noted that the council has
the makings of a presidential cabinet — a military person
(Shamkhani), a commerce person (Shariatmadari), and a political and
cultural person (Velayati), working along with the head of the
council (Kharrazi).
At this early stage it is difficult to determine if this will
be the precise role of the new council. Executive branch spokesman
Gholam-Hussein Elham put on a brave face, saying on June 26 that the
council will add new views on foreign policy, but it is not empowered
to interfere with the Foreign Ministry or Supreme National Security
Council, the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported. Kharrazi,
the head of the council, was more blunt, suggesting that the
executive branch has failed to implement national strategies. He said
on June 27 that Supreme Leader Khamenei "sensed a deficiency" in
which there was no strategy for the implementation of his policies,
IRNA reported. He said the council will devise appropriate strategies
and present them to Khamenei. If he approves the strategies, Kharrazi
continued, the relevant foreign policy bodies will act accordingly.
(Bill Samii)

SUPREME LEADER QUESTIONS USEFULNESS OF TALKS WITH U.S. Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said during a June 27 meeting with
Senegal’s President Abdoulaye Wade that talks with the United
States would be of no benefit to Iran, state television reported.
However, Khamenei did not appear to rule out the suspension of some
aspects of Iran’s controversial nuclear program. "We shall not
negotiate with anyone over our absolute right to acquire nuclear
technology and to benefit from this technology," Khamenei was quoted
as saying. "However, if they were to recognize this right of ours, we
are ready to talk about controls, supervision, and international
guarantees. And grounds have been paved for such talks, too."
Khamenei ascribed Iran’s technical and scientific
accomplishments to necessity that resulted from "resistance in the
face of the arrogant powers’ conspiracies and excessive demands."
Khamenei added that President Mahmud Ahmadinejad will
participate in the upcoming Organization of African Unity (OAU)
meeting as an observer. The OAU should meet in Banjul, Gambia, in
early July, according to the organization’s website. Khamenei
discussed Islamic unity and claimed that the United States and the
"Zionist regime" oppose the emergence of a powerful global Muslim
community.
Khamenei told Justice Ministry and judiciary officials on
June 28 that national officials are expected to strengthen the
country against "hegemonic powers" by promoting "responsibility and
national solidarity," IRNA reported. Khamenei said popular support
serves as security for the government. (Bill Samii)

TEHRAN CRITICIZES U.S. AND U.K. ON HUMAN RIGHTS. Foreign Ministry
spokesman Hamid Reza Assefi said on June 27 that the United States
cannot credibly criticize any other country’s human rights
record, Fars News Agency reported. Assefi was reacting to
Washington’s critical comments about the Iranian delegation at
the previous week’s United Nations Human Rights Council meeting.
State Department spokesman Tom Casey said on June 23, "We join the
government of Canada in deploring the presence of Tehran general
prosecutor Said Mortazavi at the inaugural meeting of the Human
Rights Council in Geneva," AFP reported the next day. Assefi referred
to the military prison for terrorism suspects at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, and added, "America is the main culprit for violating human
rights in the world." U.S. support for Israel is another example of
the lack of U.S. respect for human rights, Assefi claimed.
The Iranian Foreign Ministry protested on June 26 against
human rights violations in the United Kingdom, IRNA reported. In a
note to the Foreign Office, Tehran referred to alleged "systematic"
violations of human rights in the guise of counterterrorism, and it
noted the early-June raid on the London home of a Muslim family, as
well as last year’s killing of a Brazilian who appeared to flee
from police.
Also on June 26, Mahmud Ahmadinejad accepted the credentials
of the British ambassador to Iran, Geoffrey Adams, Mehr news agency
reported. Adams arrived in Tehran on April 1. Ahmadinejad told Adams
that the United Kingdom must take practical steps to compensate for
its past policies toward Iran. Ahmadinejad also called for calm
regarding the nuclear issue. According to state television, Adams
responded, "Britain intends to improve its relations with Tehran on
the basis of mutual respect and the principles of international
relations; and is prepared to learn a lesson from history and lay the
foundations of new ties." (Bill Samii)

AHMADINEJAD HEADS FOR GAMBIA. President Mahmud Ahmadinejad left
Tehran on June 29 to attend the Organization for African Unity
conference in Banjul, Gambia, Iranian news agencies reported.
Ahmadinejad met with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei before his
departure, IRNA reported, and the cleric prayed for the
president’s success. Iran has observer status at the conference,
and Ahmadinejad is scheduled to give a speech at the event — Iran is
making strenuous efforts to enlist the backing of developing
countries in the controversy over its nuclear program. Ahmadinejad
said before his departure that he will spend 36 hours in Gambia,
state television reported, and most of his time will be committed to
discussing bilateral relations. (Bill Samii)

WORLD AWAITS IRAN’S RESPONSE TO NUCLEAR PROPOSAL. Tehran has
repeatedly denied seeking nuclear weapons. Iran could, however, build
an atomic bomb by 2009 if it prepares for the production of highly
enriched uranium this year, American physicist David Albright writes
in the July-August edition of the "Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists," Reuters reported on June 29.
The international community, meanwhile, is encouraging Iran
to respond a proposal it received in early June that calls for the
implementation of certain measures — such as the suspension of
uranium enrichment and greater cooperation with nuclear inspectors —
while the peaceful nature of its nuclear program is ascertained.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in Moscow on June
29 that G8 foreign ministers expect Iran to reply "soon," RIA-Novosti
reported. France’s Philippe Douste-Blazy said in Moscow on June
29 that Tehran must respond to the proposal "by 15 July," AFP
reported. U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said in Kabul on
June 28 that the world awaits an authoritative response from Tehran,
the State Department reported (usinfo.state.gov). She added,
"We’ve made very clear that we need an answer soon," and referred
to "weeks, not months."
Supreme National Security Council Secretary Ali Larijani said
on June 29 that Iran will not submit to pressure on the nuclear
issue, state television reported. "As we have said, a harsh approach
to Iran’s nuclear case would not yield any results. Iranian
people would not forfeit their irrefutable rights," Larijani said.
The international community’s proposal, which Larijani received
from visiting EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana on June 6, "was a
positive step forward." Larijani spoke optimistically about his talks
with Solana in the coming week. Larijani denied that Iran is facing a
deadline, IRNA reported. (Bill Samii)

TEHRAN DENIES INTERFERING IN IRAQ. Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid
Reza Assefi denied on June 24 that Iran is interfering in Iraqi
affairs, IRNA reported. The previous week, Ambassador David
Satterfield, currently the senior adviser for Iraq to U.S. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice, and General George Casey, the top
commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, ascribing to Iran support for
insurgent activities. Assefi said such accusations are meant to hide
alleged U.S. failings in Iraq, and he added that Washington wants a
weak Iraqi state in order to justify its occupation. (Bill Samii)

WORLD NARCOTICS SUPPLY REDUCED, BUT IRAN AND AFGHANISTAN STILL
SUFFERING. As the United Nations marks its International Day against
Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking today, there is some good news:
according to the UN’s latest World Drug Report, global opium
production fell last year. Though it is a welcome development, the
head of the UN’s counternarcotics office says Afghan opium
production could increase this year. That will have a strong impact
on Iran, which has the world’s highest drug-seizure rate but also
suffers from drug crime and abuse problems. While the UN believes a
reduction in demand for drugs is the most important aspect of
counternarcotics, the Iranian government continues to emphasize
supply interdiction.
Global opium production is estimated to have reached 4,620
tons in 2005 — 5 percent less than the previous year, according to
the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s (UNODC) World Drug
Report 2006, which was released on June 26.
UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa gave an overview
of which countries are growing the opium.
"By and large, 90 percent is from Afghanistan," he said.
"There is still a certain amount of cultivation — I think over
30,000 hectares but going down rapidly — in Myanmar (eds: Burma). On
the 14th of February this year we certified Laos as opium free; there
is practically nothing from… Thailand; about 5,000-6,000 hectares
were detected over time in Colombia — to some extent eradicated but
some is still there — and the Colombia crop goes to the United
States while the Afghanistan crop goes basically to Europe, China,
and Russia."
Overall cultivation figures from Afghanistan have fallen, but
cultivation in some areas of the country has increased. There are
indications, furthermore, that opium poppy planting increased this
year, particularly in the south.
Some 24 percent of all the opiates produced annually are
eventually seized by security forces. Afghanistan produced some 4,100
tons of opium in 2005, so it is natural that its neighbors — Iran,
Pakistan, and China — accounted for the highest seizure rates.
But Costa says it is not enough to interdict drugs or even to
eliminate opium crops. Costa recommended aggressive measures be made
to reduce demand for narcotics.
"We can consider drugs as an addiction problem and therefore
a behavioral problem," he said. "We can consider drugs as a
cultivation [and] an economic problem; but by and large it’s a
market, with a demand and a supply. An illicit market — an
‘evil’ market, if you wish — but still it has a demand and a
supply. Like for any other product, if you cut the supply the demand
persists. Something is going to happen. First of all the price will
skyrocket."
Costa added that more people will enter the drug business as
it becomes more lucrative, and therefore more land will be devoted to
drug production. It is also possible that heroin addicts will turn to
other drugs that could be more dangerous.
"Therefore, my plea is indeed to forcefully act on curbing
the cultivation, and also, and perhaps even more forcefully, acting
on reducing demand, namely abuse, namely consumption."
According to the UN report, narcotics trafficking to Central
Asia and Pakistan has decreased, whereas trafficking towards Iran has
increased. Almost 60 percent of Afghan opiates go to or through Iran
and, according to the UNODC, this figure will rise. But UNODC chief
Costa also pointed out that Africa is playing an increasingly
important role in drug trafficking as interdiction efforts make it
more difficult for traffickers to use traditional routes.
"Africa is under threat. Nobody suspects transhipment of
narcotics from Africa into Europe," Costa said. "Therefore,
traffickers are using Africa to transship cocaine coming from
Colombia and the [Andes mountain region] and heroin coming from South
Asia and Afghanistan, in particular."
The amount of narcotics entering Iran is having a profound
impact on public health. Dr. Mohammad Mehdi Gooya, the chief of the
Iranian Health Ministry’s disease-management center, said in
April that approximately 3.7 million Iranians abuse drugs, "Mardom
Salari" reported on April 18. He said there are 2.5 million addicts,
and that some 137,000 inject drugs occasionally.
Gooya said that research conducted five years earlier in six
cities in Tehran Province found that many addicts are female sex
workers.
He added that, "Some 94.8 percent of AIDS patients are men,
and 64.3 percent of them caught the disease through the use of
infected and shared syringes, while only 7.3 percent caught AIDS
through sexual intercourse."
The impact of narcotics on the Iranian penal system is
noticeable as well. More than 60 percent of the country’s
convicts, Iranian officials say, have been imprisoned for
drug-related crimes. And more than 10,000 narcotics traffickers and
drug users have been executed over the past few decades, while
hundreds more face the death penalty.
Ali Akbar Yesaqi, the head of Iran’s Prisons, Security,
and Corrections Organization, said some 50,000 people go to prison
every month, "Aftab-i Yazd" reported on June 14. Yesaqi said that the
prison population increased by 1.7 percent in the last year. He added
that some 70 percent of the prisoners seek drugs, and he admitted
that it is difficult to prevent drugs from getting into prisons.
Another prison organization official, Mohammad Ali Zanjirei,
said drug-related crimes are the most common in 19 of Iran’s 30
provinces, "Aftab-i Yazd" reported on June 20.
The narcotics trade is not just having an impact on the
public-health sector and the penal system. The Iranian government
says more than 3,000 security officers have lost their lives fighting
drug trafficking, and Tehran asserts that it has spent billions of
dollars creating static defenses along its 1,800 kilometer border
with Afghanistan and Pakistan. As most of the drugs smuggled into
Iran are destined for Europe, Iranian officials say Western states
should be greater financial support to their efforts.
Fada Hussein Maleki, the secretary-general of Iran’s Drug
Control Headquarters, addressed these issues in a speech before the
June 23 Friday Prayers sermon at Tehran University. He criticized
American and British efforts in Afghanistan because of the failure to
stop drug trafficking, and he accused them of wanting to legalize
opium cultivation, IRNA reported. Maleki added that the prevalence of
crystal methamphetamine, Ecstasy, and other synthetic drugs is
complicating the situation in Iran.
Expediency Council Chairman Ayatollah Ali-Akbar
Hashemi-Rafsanjani dedicated a great deal of his June 23 sermon in
Tehran to counternarcotics as well. In countries like Iran, he said,
synthetic drugs are more dangerous than opium, state television
reported.
Hashemi-Rafsanjani failed to discuss Iranians’ demand for
drugs, and he focused instead on the supply side, for which he blamed
other countries. He referred to "traces of colonialism" and added:
"We realize that the leaders of all these major trafficking bands
that we arrest are supported by colonial countries." The West could
wipe out opium in Afghanistan by using chemical sprays,
Hashemi-Rafsanjani continued, and if it can track down terrorists
hiding in caves, why can’t it deal with narcotics dealers in the
streets and heroin-manufacturers?
Iran’s Expediency Council is revising current laws,
Hashemi-Rafsanjani told the congregation, but the police, Ministry of
Intelligence and Security, and legislature must work together as well
to help combat drug use and trafficking. Public awareness is
important, too, he said. "After all, if we can change the destiny of
a young addict, be it a boy or a girl, and give proper guidance to a
household where an addicted person was brought up, we can help
prevent others from falling into this dangerous trap."
Hashemi-Rafsanjani called on all citizens to work against drugs: "We
should all join hands and act together to tackle the problem."
It is notable that for UNODC chief Costa reducing the demand
for drugs is the most important issue, whereas Iran’s leaders
seem to continue to focus on reducing the supplies of drugs. More
than a year ago the Iranian government said that greater attention
needs to be given to reducing demand, but with the election of
President Mahmud Ahmadinejad the old yet unsuccessful prioritization
of law and order and interdiction have been reinstated. (Bill Samii)

HIV/AIDS RATE IN IRAN EXCEEDS PREDICTIONS. Deputy Health Minister
Seyyed Muayyed Alavian said on June 27 that the number of HIV/AIDS
cases in Iran exceeds earlier estimates and ascribed the trend to
intravenous drug use, AFP reported. "About 40,000 of the total number
of intravenous drug addicts are infected with HIV," Alavian said. He
warned that the number could rise to 100,000 by March 2008. Alavian
said the rate of drug addiction is rising by 8 percent annually.
(Bill Samii)

IRAN COMPLAINS OF INSUFFICIENT COUNTERNARCOTICS ASSISTANCE. The head
of Iran’s Drug Control Headquarters, Fada-Hussein Maleki,
provided details on drug-seizure rates on June 25, one day before the
UN-sponsored International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit
Trafficking, Mehr News Agency reported. Maleki said Iran confiscated
360 tons of illegal drugs in the year from March 2005-March 2006.
Some 955 gangs of smugglers were broken up during this time frame, he
added. Maleki complained that the international community is not
supporting the Iranian counternarcotics effort. The United States
provided the UN with $700 million to spend on counternarcotics in
Latin America in 2002, Maleki noted, while in the same year the UN
provided Iran with $10 million. Maleki said Iran has asked the UN for
$500 million in counternarcotics assistance.
Provincial officials, meanwhile, described some of their
efforts. Ahmad Kavandi, an adviser to the governor-general of western
Iran’s Hamedan Province, said on June 25 that demand for
narcotics is plaguing 90 percent of Iranian society in different
ways, Fars News Agency reported. Kavandi said the trade in illegal
drugs is demand driven, and this is why there is a supply. Demand
reduction is necessary, he said.
In Urumiyeh on June 25, a police official said 439 kilograms
of drugs were seized in the first three months of the Iranian year
(which began on March 21), Fars News Agency reported. Qasem
Rashidnejad, the deputy-chief for counternarcotics in West Azerbaijan
Province, said 2,945 people were arrested in the same period for
smuggling, dealing, or being addicted to drugs.
Other security efforts are under way, as well. Interior
Minister Mustafa Pur-Mohammadi said in Tehran on June 27 that
authorities so far have identified 10 gangs responsible for
kidnappings, smuggling, terrorism, and vandalism in the eastern part
of the country, IRNA reported. Not all of the gangs have links to
foreigners, he added.
General Ismail Ahmadi-Moghaddam, chief of the national police
force, said the previous week that domestic security issues are a
priority this year, "Aftab-i Yazd" reported on June 22. Seven of
those responsible for May killings along the Kerman-Bam highway have
been arrested and six others were killed, he said. Pur-Mohammadi said
that security in the eastern part of Iran, as well as southwestern
Khuzestan Province, has increased due to a strengthening of military
bases in those regions, "Aftab-i Yazd" reported. Pur-Mohammadi said
violent crime has decreased by 30 percent, although he did not say
over what period. (Bill Samii)

RELIGIOUS OFFENSES RESULT IN SIX EXECUTIONS IN SOUTHEAST. Mohammad
Ebrahim Nikunam, director of the justice administration in the
southeastern Sistan va Baluchistan Province, has said six people have
been executed locally for violating religious laws, "Mardom Salari"
reported on June 22. He did not say when the executions took place,
nor did he identify the alleged violations of religious law. Nikunam
noted local problems and said there are efforts under way to overcome
them: "The administration and judicial system of the province are
inefficient. There are many system blockages. But despite all these
problems, we will use all our power in order to solve them. There is
no doubt that, with the attention of the [head] of the Judiciary
[Ayatollah Mahmud Hashemi-Shahrudi] and the eminent leader [Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei] to this province, the religious orders will be executed
as fast as possible." (Bill Samii)

TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS TEHRAN… On June 25, the second day
of his visit to Iran, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul met with
his counterpart, Manuchehr Mottaki, Expediency Council Chairman
Ayatollah Ali-Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, Supreme National Security
Council Secretary Ali Larijani, and parliament speaker Gholamali
Haddad-Adel, IRNA reported. At a joint press conference with Mottaki,
Gul said Ankara wants to see the Iranian nuclear crisis resolved
peacefully and through diplomacy, as this would help the region and
the world. (Bill Samii)

….AS FIGHTING ERUPTS IN NORTHWESTERN IRAN. Two members of the
Kurdish Pejak group were killed and two others were wounded and
arrested in a clash with Iranian police in Salmas, West Azerbaijan
Province, Fars News Agency reported on June 25. Pejak is affiliated
with the PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party). Four soldiers were killed and
three others were wounded during Turkish and Iranian military
operations against PKK-affiliated People’s Defense Forces (HPG)
guerrillas on June 23, the Kurdish Roj television reported on June
24. The clash, in which one guerrilla was killed, took place in the
Ozalp District of Van (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 1 December 2004.) (Bill
Samii)

IRANIAN KURDS RECEIVE DISCIPLINARY SUMMONS. Three Kurdish students —
Asu Saleh, Asad Baqeri, and Shuresh Moradi — were summoned by the
Kurdistan University disciplinary committee on June 17, the Iranian
Labor News Agency (ILNA) reported. The summonses followed a protest
against the "cultural situation" on campus and against the closure of
the Islamic Students Association, ILNA reported. One day after that
demonstration, some 18 of the participants were not allowed on
campus, prompting 1,200 students to sign a petition. (Bill Samii)

MORE IRANIAN ARABS FACE EXECUTION. Iraj Amirkhani, the
prosecutor-general in Ahvaz, said on June 25 that the "charge sheet"
for people accused of having a role in bombings in Ahvaz was issued
the same day, the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) reported.
Twenty-two people are accused of crimes, he said, 19 of whom are
still in prison. Amirkhani did not say when the bombings took place
— such incidents have occurred in June 2005, October 2005, and
January 2005.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) said on June 23 that the judiciary
should overturn the death sentences against at least 10 Iranian-Arabs
who were convicted of plotting against the state. HRW reported that a
lawyer who represents the accused said the trials were held in camera
and that defense lawyers had no chance to discuss the case with their
clients beforehand. The defense lawyers said that on June 7 the
Revolutionary Court sentenced Zamel Bawi, Jafar Sawari, Raisan
Sawari, and Abdolreza Navaseri to death. (Bill Samii)

OFFICIAL FALLOUT CONTINUES OVER AZERI PROTESTS. Said Muganli, editor
in chief of "Yashmaq" magazine, said on June 20 that three of his
staff members arrested in connection with protests in May remain in
jail, APA news agency reported. The three men — Sirus Husseininejad,
Yunes Fakhtari, and Ali Reza Qulunju — were arrested over their
roles in protests in Tehran over the publication of a cartoon that
offended many ethnic Azeris. Muganli said Azeri-language media face a
hostile atmosphere, and he said his magazine might be suspended.
Meanwhile, APA news agency reported on June 19 that Saleh
Kamrani, the attorney representing several imprisoned Iranian-Azeris,
has been arrested. Said Naimi, who chairs a committee for the
protection of Azeri political prisoners, told APA that Gholamreza
Amani, Abbas Lisani, Ayat Mehralibayli, and many others were jailed
in connection with a march to the Babak Castle near the East
Azerbaijan Province town of Kelidar. The Iranian central government
normally responds to this annual commemoration of Babak Khorramdin,
one of the first popular Persian leaders to oppose the imposition of
Islam and Arab rule, with repressive measures (see "RFE/RL Iran
Report," July 12, 2004).
Agri Qaradagli, public relations chief for the National
Revival Movement of Southern Azerbaijan, said on June 29 that the
annual march to the Babak Castle has commenced, APA news agency
reported. According to Qaradagli, Iranian security forces detained 20
of the march’s organizers and their whereabouts are unknown. He
added that on the morning of June 29 seven other participants were
detained after a clash with police. (Bill Samii)

RELUCTANCE TO USE OIL AS WEAPON. Iranian Petroleum Minister Seyyed
Kazem-Vaziri-Hamaneh said on June 25 that Iran will use oil as a
weapon — presumably restricting oil exports — only "if the
country’s interests are jeopardized," Fars News Agency reported.
Vaziri-Hamaneh said that under normal conditions this is not an
issue, and, furthermore, Iran would like to enjoy normal relations
with other countries. The imposition of sanctions, he said, would
lead to oil price hikes, with the price for a barrel of oil reaching
$100. (Bill Samii)

IRAN REFUTES FOOD-IMPORT CLAIMS. Iranian Commerce Ministry official
Mohammad Sadeq Mofatteh said on June 26 that Iran does not need to
import 800,000 tons of Thai rice, Mehr News Agency reported. Mofatteh
added that Iranian rice imports amount to only 650,000 tons annually,
and 350,000 tons have been imported since March 21. Mofatteh was
reacting to a report earlier in the "Bangkok Post" which cited the
head of the Thai Foreign Trade’s Grain and Conformity Bureau,
Pranee Siripan, who was quoted as saying the Iranians are driving a
hard bargain, and added that Iran has imported roughly 60 percent of
the total rice it agreed to buy from Thailand.
In May there were reports from Thailand that Iran is
importing a surplus of rice as it prepares for the possibility of
economic sanctions (see "RFE/RL Iran Report," May 12, 2006).
Regardless of the amount of rice being imported, domestic
production is having difficulties. In the Iranian legislature on June
11, Lahijan parliamentary representative Iraj Nadimi posed questions
about the country’s failure to achieve self-sufficiency in rice
production and about wastage of the rice harvest, "Kayhan" reported
on June 12. Agricultural Jihad Minister Mohammad Reza Eskandari
responded by saying he hopes rice imports will be unnecessary in
three years. The Friday Prayer leader in the northern city of Rasht,
Ayatollah Zeynolabedin Qorbani, complained that Gilan Province rice
paddies are not getting enough water, the city’s "Moin" daily
reported on June 11. (Bill Samii)

****************************************** ***************
Copyright (c) 2006. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

The "RFE/RL Iran Report" is a weekly prepared by A. William Samii on
the basis of materials from RFE/RL broadcast services, RFE/RL
Newsline, and other news services. It is distributed every Monday.

Direct comments to A. William Samii at [email protected].
For information on reprints, see:
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Paruyr Hayrikyan: Constitution Has Been The Desire Of Centuries

PARUYR HAYRIKYAN: CONSTITUTION HAS BEEN THE DESIRE OF CENTURIES

ArmRadio.am
05.07.2006 15:40

On the Constitution Day the National Self-Determination Union called
a presidency sitting to speak about the positive and negative sides
of the amended Constitution.

"By calling the presidency sitting on July 5, we once again
stress the importance of the day," said President of the National
Self-Determination Union Paruyr Hayrikyan.

"Constitution is a program-code of the greatest national organization,
the nation state. It is document the existence of which has been the
desire of centuries," the said.

According to Paruyr Hayrikyan, the referendums of 1915 and 2005 surely
shadowed the idea of Constitution. However, today we have what we have,
let’s try to note its positive and negative sides. Generally, speaking
the positive and negative sides of the document, Hayrikyan underlines,
"We have made three steps forward and a step backward. The greatest
achievement is the accessibility of the Constitutional Court. The
regress is that the Parliament that was elected once in four years
will be elected every five years."