Yerevan City: Project Of New Center Is Ready

YEREVAN CITY: PROJECT OF NEW CENTER IS READY

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 19 2007

The center of Yerevan is crowded. There are no more areas to develop,
and for various functions performed by the capital of an independent
state Yerevan needs a new business center. This approach is lying at
the heart of the map of Yerevan. The head architect of Yerevan Samvel
Danielyan says the project of a new business center to the left of
Admiral Isakov Avenue from Zvartnots Airport stems from this map.

Samvel Danielyan says this territory is convenient for modern
development. "It is of great development value, the ground and
geological structure do not necessitate restrictions. I think it is
time to have such a center in Armenia where mainly the international
and diplomatic organizations would be located. This project will take
a long time but the deadline is 2020."

Besides international organizations and embassies there will be also
cultural and business centers, hotels, places of entertainment. There
will be also green areas.

Artificial Attempts Of Dialogue

ARTIFICIAL ATTEMPTS OF DIALOGUE
Vardan Grigoryan

Hayots Ashkharh, Armenia
Dec 19 2007

"The Days of Azerbaijan", launched in "Mkhitar Sebastatsy" educational
complex on December 17, attracted the attention of the Foreign
Ministers of the two countries, Mass Media and part of society.

The group of Azerbaijani human rights defenders, writers and political
scientists, who have arrived in Yerevan in the framework of the
"Days of Azerbaijan", organized by Gevorg Vanyan’s "Caucasian Center
of Peaceful Initiatives", by the sponsorship of the British Embassy
has already participated in various events. They have summed up the
results of the compositions and paintings regarding the future of
Armenian- Azerbaijani relations organized in "Mkhitar Sebastatsy"
educational complex, watched films, etc.

>From the first glance this event seems to be a very innocent step,
in harmony with the spirit of the time and the Foreign Ministers
of the two countries have already expressed their positive attitude
regarding this initiative.

In particular the Spokesman of Armenian Foreign Ministry Vladimir
Karapetyan underscored that: "due to public diplomacy and communication
between the peoples it is possible to contribute to the peaceful
regulation of Karabakh conflict." In his opinion "The "Days of
Azerbaijan" in Armenia is a bright example of Armenia’s devotion to
the idea of peace and dialogue."

In his turn Spokesman of Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Khazar Ibrahim
made quite different comments: "Taking into consideration the fact that
Armenian political figures spread information that has nothing to do
with the reality, the attempt of Azerbaijani civilians to reveal the
truth to Armenian society, I think will contribute to having a true
idea about the reality."

Which means Armenian side views the organization of the "Days of
Azerbaijan" in Armenia as a chance to recover the atmosphere of mutual
trust between the two countries, whereas Azerbaijan considers it as
an opportunity to "split" the "informational blockade" of Armenian
society and to reveal the standpoints of Azerbaijani side to them. It
turns out that dialogues and mutual communications are components of
advocacy war.

By the way even these days when Armenia is hosting Azerbaijani human
rights defenders, writers, and political scientists, anti-Armenian
events continue in this country. In particular, the participants of
a similar event gathered in town Ghuba to lay wreaths on Azerbaijani
graves, allegedly annihilated by Armenian nationalists in 1918.

A question arises here. From where should we start to form the
atmosphere of mutual trust, for which British Embassy has sponsored
this even? If advocacy hysteria and intolerance on the state level,
continues in one country and meanwhile Azerbaijani and Turkish language
and music becomes more frequent in the streets of the capital of
another country, in such circumstances the two parts must adopt certain
norms of mutual behavior. That is: First: Azerbaijan must quit sowing
racial hatred, on state level, towards Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh,
and Armenians in general, the new manifestations of which are being
recorded, at the moment, in parallel with the "Days of Azerbaijan"
in Armenia.

Second: The mediators, British Embassy in this particular case,
must organize dialogues not through odious figures such as Gevorg
Vanyan and Ashot Bleyan, but through the involvement of Armenian and
Azerbaijani influential intellectuals such as P. Byulbyulogly and
A. Smbatyan who visited Yerevan, Stepanakert and Baku recently.

Third: Similar events must provide an opportunity for the both sides
to express their standpoints, give chance to Armenian intellectuals
to appear in front of Azerbaijani audience, instead of creating an
atmosphere of unilateral advocacy, as the Spokesman of Azerbaijani
Foreign Ministry Khazar Ibrahim underscored.

Fourth: Representatives from Nagorno Karabakh must have an active
participation in such events, those who were the first to "taste"
the bitter fruits of enmity and estrangement of the two peoples.

Otherwise, on the one hand "bleyanism" is taught to our pupils and on
the other hand Azerbaijani authorities form a generation, by means
of anti-Armenian propaganda, which is planning to speak with us not
about friendship, by means of compositions and posters, but in the
language of hostility and hatred.

Armenian Taekwondo Players To Partake In The European Championship

ARMENIAN TAEKWONDO PLAYERS TO PARTAKE IN THE EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIP

armradio.am
19.12.2007 14:30

Armenian taekwondo players will participate in the European
Championship to be held in Roma in April 2008.

Vice-President and Executive Director of the Taekwondo Federation of
Armenia Vardan Ghahramanyan told Armenpress that Armenian taekwondo
players will participate also in the European Youth Championship to
be held in Istanbul in May.

Kurdish Leader Says Turks Want To Destroy Iraqi Kurdistan’s Stabilit

KURDISH LEADER SAYS TURKS WANT TO DESTROY IRAQI KURDISTAN’S STABILITY

Iraqi Independent Weekly Awene, Sulaymaniyah, Iraq
Dec 12 2007

Text of interview with Nizamettin Toguc in Cirnak, northern Kurdistan,
by Shirin Ali Yunis entitled: "Nizamettin Toguc: Turkish governments,
including Erdogan’s, are enemies of the Kurdish people"

Nizamettin Toguc is a former DEP member of the Turkish parliament for
the city of Batman. In 1991, Toguc, Leyla Zana, Ahmet Turk, Orhan Dogan
[died of a heart attack in June 2007] and Zubeyir Aydar were elected
and formed a Kurdish parliamentary group. In 1993 he was seriously
injured in an attack by a Turkish chauvinist group.

Subsequently, he went to Brussels with a group of six Kurdish
parliamentarians and set up an office to defend the rights of DEP
parliamentarians and later established the Kurdistan parliament
abroad, laying the foundations for the Kurdistan National Congress,
KNK. He is now a member of the KNK leadership responsible for the
Kurdish community in Europe. We asked him a few questions about the
current status of Kurdish parliamentarians, the AKP [ruling Turkish
Justice and Development Party] policies and the recent crisis.

[Awene] What is the current status of Kurdish parliamentarians in
the Turkish parliament?

[Toguc] As you know, 22 members of the Turkish parliament are Kurds and
have immunity. They have set up a faction called Democratic Society
Party [Turkish: Demokratik Toplum Partasi], DTP, and are engaged in
a civil and democratic struggle for the settlement of the Kurdish
issue in a peaceful and democratic way. Regrettably, however, they
have been put under pressure from the outset by the Turkish regime
since they decline to describe the PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] as
terrorist because the children or cousins of the parliamentarian are
guerrillas and they cannot describe their own children as terrorists.

[Awene] Do you consider the [government of the] Justice and Development
Party better equipped than previous governments to find an appropriate
solution?

[Toguc] The Justice Party has assumed power under a new guise and
wishes to regenerate Ottoman policies to annihilate the Kurdish
people. It continues efforts to establish an Islamic current in
northern Kurdistan to crack down on the PKK. I believe that Erdogan
follows a soft Islamic policy which is the most threatening policy
to eliminate opposition, particularly the Kurdish people. Therefore,
we do not see any difference between Erdogan’s government and previous
Turkish governments: they are all arch enemies of the Kurdish people,
but the previous government’s hostility was open while Erdogan’s is
more subtle.

[Awene] How does the Kurdistan National Congress view Turkish
hostilities?

[Toguc] The presence of the PKK in southern Kurdistan is not new since
the PKK guerrillas have been in southern Qandil [mountain range on
the Iraq-Turkey border] and the main PKK leaders are in Kani Cheng
(Qandil). The Turkish army has crossed the Kurdistan Region border
many times without achieving anything, and the Turkish government
had reached an agreement with the Ba’thist regime against the Kurdish
national liberation movement. The Erdogan government is well aware of
these facts but it has chosen to ignore them. I can confidently say
that Turkey uses the attacks to put pressure on the USA, particularly
following the US Congress resolution on the genocide killing of
Armenians. Therefore, Turkey’s objective may not be the PKK but the
Kurdistan regional government.

Turkey has always had three practical objectives that it dreams
about: firstly, to attack the PKK with the cooperation of the USA;
secondly, to destroy the stability in the Kurdistan Region and wipe
out the achievements made by the regional government; and thirdly,
to support the Kirkuk Turkomans in establishing an independent Turkish
region in the name of the Turkomans.

[Awene] Do you believe that Turkey will be able to cross the border
with the Kurdistan Region?

[Toguc] I do not believe so because it will backfire, since the whole
world has expressed its displeasure. It may launch air raids against
guerrilla positions but that will be of no consequence. I believe
that if Turkey crosses the border into Kurdistan, the region will
turn into another Vietnam.

[Awene] How do you assess the stances taken by NATO, Russia, China,
the USA and most of the major countries in the world, which are
against a military move by Turkey?

[Toguc] These are good and essential stances because a border-crossing
by Turkey will destroy the stability in southern Kurdistan, which is
the most stable area in Iraq. Furthermore, terrorist organizations
will replace the PKK if it moves out of Qandil and this will create
a big problem for the USA and the regional government.

Hovannisian Unveils Election Questionnaire To Candidates

HOVANNISIAN UNVEILS ELECTION QUESTIONNAIRE TO CANDIDATES
By Ruzanna Stepanian

Radio Libert, Czech Rep.
Dec 18 2007

Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian challenged Armenia’s presidential
candidates to state whether they ever broke law, list their
shortcomings and answer two dozen other questions Tuesday as he
specified his conditions for endorsing one of them for the February
19 election.

Hovannisian publicized and sent the list of 22 questions to all
nine candidates after presiding over a meeting of his Zharangutyun
(Heritage) party’s governing board. A Zharangutyun statement said
its decision on whom to support in the race will be based on their
"frank answers."

Hovannisian’s questionnaire is just as frank, with the election
contenders asked to not only elaborate on their campaign platforms and
favored policies but also to list their "main merits and shortcomings"
and explain "the difference between your and your family’s assets
held now and in 1991." "In your biography, are there any facts (e.g.,
corruption, others deeds punishable by criminal law) that may enable
anyone to influence your decisions?" reads another question. "If so,
please specify."

Some of the questions are specifically addressed to the candidates
who hold or held a government post, notably Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisian and former President Levon Ter-Petrosian. Those of them
who seek Hovannisian’s endorsement will have to declare if they ever
jailed innocent people, benefited from vote rigging or committed other
"major mistakes."

Only one of the candidates, Artashes Geghamian of the opposition
National Unity Party, expressed readiness to answer all of the
embarrassing questions. Others found them populist and even offensive.

A spokesman for Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia (HHK)
dismissed the questionnaire as "unacceptable" and "ridiculous." "It
would be much better if every politician began from self-criticism,"
Eduard Sharmazanov told RFE/RL.

The campaign manager of one of Sarkisian’s main challengers, former
parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian, likewise said that Hovannisian
is wrong to claim a moral superiority over the election contenders.

"I think that acting on behalf of the entire public and holding an
examination for the presidential candidates is kind of ludicrous,"
said Heghine Bisharian.

Ter-Petrosian, another top opposition candidate, also made it clear
through an aide that he has no intention to send written answers to
the U.S.-born politician who had served as a foreign minister in his
administration. The Ter-Petrosian campaign chief, Aleksandr Arzumanian,
said Hovannisian can find those answers in the ex-president’s recent
and upcoming speeches.

Arzumanian also told RFE/RL that Hovannisian did not discuss his
questionnaire when he visited Ter-Petrosian on Sunday. The meeting
apparently focused on the possibility of the latter’s endorsement by
the Zharangutyun leader.

Zharangutyun is one of only two opposition parties represented in
Armenia’s parliament, owing to its leader’s popularity. Observers
believe that Hovannisian, who is not eligible to stand in the
presidential election, can therefore influence its outcome.

We Must Be Self-Sufficient

WE MUST BE SELF-SUFFICIENT

KarabakhOpen
17-12-2007 10:38:10

The first reading of the budget bill will be on December 19. Judging
by the positive evaluations by the leaders of factions, the bill will
be adopted.

The leader of the Democratic faction Vahram Atanesyan says conceptually
the budget of 2008 does not differ from the previous budgets.

"Apparently because the transition period is not over yet, although
it should be noted that it is lasting too long. There is a benchmark
of self-sufficiency which we must attain, and it should be reflected
in the budget first of all," Vahram Atanesyan said.

"On the whole, the budget allows enlarging social activities. The
members of the faction think it is the starting point of the social
policy.

Although we think social aid should be entitled. Next year the
cost of living should underlie the social policy," the member of
parliament added.

"I understand that the government did not have enough time to work
out the new concept of the economic policy. We offer the government
to propose programs on the budget priorities," said the leader of
the Democratic faction.

"Our political independence should be enforced through economic
self-sufficiency. Unfortunately, we did not find a solution to this
in the budget 2008. However, the bill involves a number of components
which could become basis for self-sufficiency. We need to learn to plan
not only expenditure but also income, otherwise we will constantly
have to rely on the interstate loan, remittances and donations by
our compatriots," Vahram Atanesyan said.

The estimated budget receipts in 2008 are up by 35 percent from 2007
and total 49 billion drams. Own income is estimated at 19.8 billion
drams. The government expects an interstate loan of 26.7 billion
drams from Armenia.

Armenia To Offer Third Mobile Licence Next Year

ARMENIA TO OFFER THIRD MOBILE LICENCE NEXT YEAR

TeleGeography, DC
Dec 17 2007

The government of Armenia plans to award a third mobile licence in
2008, a senior official at the Public Services Regulatory Commission
(PSRC) has said. Robert Nazarian, chairman of the PSRC, says Armenia
will call an international tender next year, with bidding for the third
licence due to start on 1 May and last for 90 days. The process will be
overseen by a new commission due to be established by the government,
Nazarian said. No further details have been given about the award.

A Time-Bomb For The C.I.S.: Scenarios Of Potential Hostilities In An

A TIME-BOMB FOR THE C.I.S.; SCENARIOS OF POTENTIAL HOSTILITIES IN AND AROUND THE CIS
by Anatoly Tsyganok

What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
December 17, 2007 Monday

Hypothetical conflict scenarios for the Caucasus and Central Asia; The
basic hypothetical conflict scenario with the potential to destabilize
security in the Caucasus could start in a similar way to the Balkans
scenario: "restoring justice according to the NATO model." This might
happen almost simultaneously in Nagorno-Karabakh and Georgia.

The basic hypothetical conflict scenario with the potential to
destabilize security in the Caucasus could start in a similar way
to the Balkans scenario: "restoring justice according to the NATO
model." This might happen almost simultaneously in Nagorno-Karabakh
and Georgia. It could be triggered if Azerbaijan and Georgia decide
to appeal to the European Union for police assistance to "protect
returning refugees and the provisional government of Abkhazia,
located in the Kodori Gorge, and the Sanakoyev government in South
Ossetia." It would be proposed that in addition to the peacekeeping
forces operating in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, there should also be
a police corps to force the "unlawful governments" of Sergei Bagapsh
(in Abkhazia) and Eduard Kokoity (in South Ossetia) to resettle the
returning refugees. A similar scenario could happen in the seven
districts "occupied by Armenia" in Nagorno-Karabakh.

With the European Union’s approval, police forces could include
military personnel from Ukraine, Poland, Lithuania, Estonia, the
Czech Republic, and Britain; these governments have already stated
that they may contribute personnel. The forces could be sent in from
NATO bases in Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria; by sea from the Romanian
port of Constanza; by land via Turkey; or via NATO’s air corridors
toward Central Asia. At the request of Tbilisi and Baku, NATO could
assign part of the troops to guard NATO communications missions and
the property of oil companies; this could be done by transferring
several brigades of rapid response forces to the Caucasus – eastern
Georgia and areas near the Iranian border.

In those circumstances, Russia would speak out against destabilization
of the Caucasus situation; presumably, it would have to recognize
the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Without absorbing
these recognized states into the Russian Federation, Russia would
send one division of Interior Troops into each of them "to protect
Russian citizens living in Abkhazia and South Ossetia." At the same
time, declaring that its southern borders are under threat, Russia
would appeal to the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization and
the Shanghai Cooperation Organization for diplomatic, political,
economic, and military support; it would close its airspace to NATO
aircraft in the Afghanistan direction.

Supporting Russia, the Asian CIS countries would also close their
airspace to NATO aircraft and shut down NATO military bases on their
territories.

Volunteers from the highland peoples and Cossacks of the Kuban, Don,
Terek, and North Ossetia, and partisan detachments, would move toward
the Georgian border, while also causing "technical interruptions" to
oil supplies along the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. At the same time,
Russia would start maintenance work on pipelines leading to Poland,
the Baltic states, Georgia, and Azerbaijan.

Iran would provide material and humanitarian aid to Armenia. To fight
the "separatists of Southern Azerbaijan," it might even announce a
significant shift of its sea borders to the north, thus blocking the
Azeri Navy.

Military scenarios across the security area of Central Asia could go
in any of several directions. The first possible scenario would entail
the empire of Communist China collapsing like Yugoslavia or the Soviet
Union. That might lead to instability zones emerging along the borders
of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan, with peoples in the Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region and Jungaria seeking self-determination.

The second scenario posing a danger to Central Asian security might
entail border disputes between Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, given
that around 20% of their state border has yet to be defined on a map
(let alone demarcated on the ground). A conflict between these two
Central Asian CIS countries, possibly escalating to hostilities,
could be triggered if Tajikistan were to take unilateral measures
to clear landmines from the border area. Experts have estimated
that Tajikistan still has 25 million square meters of minefields,
with 150 districts at constant risk from landmines. The government
of Tajikistan and locan non-governmental organizations, working with
international mediators, have cleared only 500,000 square meters in
recent years, destroying 3,200 mines.

The third military conflict scenario could involve an abrupt increase
in Islamic extremism and radicalism, striving to establish a kind of
"Islamic cordon sanitaire" along the southern borders of the CIS. As
in 1999, attacks on the CIS security zone could be led by the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan. If the NATO operation in Afghanistan fails
to achieve its objectives in rebuilding Afghnaistan’s statehood,
Afghan drug-traffickers interested in expanding their northern route
for transporting heroin to Russia and Western Europe might attempt
to take advantage of this situation in order to increase their drug
deliveries; thus, they would assist Islamic extremists and radicals.

A phase of tension in the Ferghana Valley and along the southern
borders of Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan might be followed by attacks on
Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and southern Kyrgyzstan – an area populated
by ethnic Uzbeks and Tajiks, who are more Islamized than the Kyrgyz
people.

The fourth potential scenario could happen within the next few years,
in the event of an unsuccessful conclusion to NATO’s operation in
Afghanistan, which has been under way since 2001. This might involve
a combined offensive by mujaheddin groups, Al Qaeda guerrillas,
Afghan militia, detachments led by field commanders from Turkmen,
Uzbek, Tajik, and Pushti tribes, and armed detachments from the
drug trade. These combined forces could take over whole provinces of
Afghanistan, with NATO unable to repel simultaneous attacks from all
directions; hostilities would spread to adjacent countries hosting
NATO and US bases. Pakistan, Iraq, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan would
be vulnerable. The evacuation of coalition forces might be similar
to the Soviet withdrawal scenario.

It’s hard to imagine the dispute between Russia and Japan over the
status of the Kurile Islands escalating into a military conflict.

Alterations to the sea borders between the Russian Federation and the
Unites States, approved by former Soviet foreign affairs minister
Eduard Shevardnadze, are also unlikely to become a pretext for
a conflict.

Source: Nezavisimoe Voennoe Obozrenie, No. 44, December 14, 2007, p. 5

Translated by Elena Leonova

Belarus From Poland

BELARUS FROM POLAND

KarabakhOpen
12-12-2007 11:11:22

The government of Karabakh is likely to buy 30 new Belarus tractors
from Poland where they are sold at the cost price, stated the minister
of agriculture Armo Tsatryan. In answer to the question of reporters
on other programs on buying agricultural machines the minister said
Armenia Foundation has set up a tractor station in the regions of
Martakert and Hadrut, and next year a tractor station will be set up
in Martuni.

The minister thinks it is not sufficient, and the ministry of
agriculture is working on a strategy of development of agriculture,
which involves purchase of tractors as well. The machines will be
leased to both separate farmers and farms.

Karabakh Transfers Azeri Captive To Azerbaijan

KARABAKH TRANSFERS AZERI CAPTIVE TO AZERBAIJAN

2007-12-12 20:07:00

ArmInfo. Karabakh has transferred the Azeri captive to Azerbaijan.

As Day.Az reports with reference to ANS-press, Azeri captive Anar
Aliyev was transferred through the intermediary of the International
Committee of the Red Cross near the village of Bash Gervend of Aghdam
region, Wednesday.

A.Aliyev is said to be mentally sick. To recall, Aliyev, a resident
of Terter, fell prisoner on August 2. According to A.Aliyev, he
"was lost in thought" when he found himself on the Karabakh side.