ANCA: Thousands Urge Congress to Schedule Genocide Vote

Armenian National Committee of America
1711 N Street NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel. (202) 775-1918
Fax. (202) 775-5648
Email [email protected]
Internet

PRESS RELEASE
July 24, 2007
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

THOUSANDS URGE CONGRESS TO SCHEDULE
A VOTE ON THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

— ANCA "Call for Justice" Second National Call-In Campaign
Highlights Increasing Focus on Key Human Rights Issue

WASHINGTON, DC – With over 220 Members of the U.S. House cosponsoring
the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106), thousands of Armenian
Americans and human rights advocates joined together yesterday in the
second Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) "Call for
Justice" campaign urging a swift vote on this human rights
legislation.

For the second time in the last 30 days, over 10,000 visited the ANCA
Call-in webpage on July 23rd and more than 2,500 submitted
caller-feedback forms reporting their conversations with Congressional
offices. The first "Click for Justice" Call-In Day, held on June
27th, and extended to the 28th, came only days before support for the
resolution cleared the 218 mark – a majority of the U.S. House. The
Call-In Day’s online counterpart, April’s successful "Click for
Justice" ANCA WebFax campaign to Congress, was touted as the
internet’s largest on-line genocide protest.

"We want to thank everyone who took part in our first Call-In Day –
which helped us reach the 218 mark – and to express our appreciation
to all those who, today, once again raised their voices to see this
measure brought to a vote on the floor of the U.S. House of
Representatives," said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA.

Commenting on the first Call-In Day, Rep. Adam Schiff, the
resolution’s lead author, said: "The ANCA’s national congressional
call-in day, ‘Call for Justice,’ is a great demonstration of the power
of grassroots advocacy. These calls are a useful tool in the fight to
get the Armenian Genocide resolution passed. I thank the ANCA and all
their supporters for making these important calls."

Introduced on January 30th by Rep. Adam Schiff and spearheaded by
Rep. George Radanovich (R-CA), Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs
Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), Rep. Anna Eshoo
(D-CA), Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Rep. Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI),
the Armenian Genocide resolution calls upon the President to ensure
that the foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate
understanding and sensitivity concerning issues related to human
rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide documented in the United States
record relating to the Armenian Genocide.

Currently, the Armenian Genocide Resolution, H.Res.106, has over 220
cosponsors,
more than 50% of the membership of the U.S. House. A similar
resolution in the
Senate (S.Res.106), introduced by Assistant Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-IL)
and Sen. John Ensign (R-NV) currently has 31 cosponsors, including Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and presidential candidate Hillary
Clinton (D-
NY).

#####

www.anca.org

Turkey: Islamic Creationist and a Book Sent Round the World

Science Times

Islamic Creationist and a Book Sent Round the World
By CORNELIA DEAN

New York Times
July 17, 2007

In the United States, opposition to the teaching of evolution in
public schools has largely been fueled by the religious right,
particularly Protestant fundamentalism.

Now another voice is entering the debate, in dramatic fashion.

It is the voice of Adnan Oktar of Turkey, who, under the name Harun
Yahya, has produced numerous books, videos and DVDs on science and
faith, in particular what he calls the `deceit’ inherent in the theory
of evolution. One of his books, `Atlas of Creation,’ is turning up,
unsolicited, in mailboxes of scientists around the country and members
of Congress, and at science museums in places like Queens and Bemidji,
Minn.

At 11 x 17 inches and 12 pounds, with a bright red cover and almost
800 glossy pages, most of them lavishly illustrated, `Atlas of
Creation’ is probably the largest and most beautiful creationist
challenge yet to Darwin’s theory, which Mr. Yahya calls a feeble and
perverted ideology contradicted by the Koran.

In bowing to Scripture, Mr. Yahya resembles some fundamentalist
creationists in the United States. But he is not among those who
assert that Earth is only a few thousand years old. The principal
argument of `Atlas of Creation,’ advanced in page after page of
stunning photographs of fossil plants, insects and animals, is that
creatures living today are just like creatures that lived in the
fossil past. Ergo, Mr. Yahya writes, evolution must be impossible,
illusory, a lie, a deception or `a theory in crisis.’

In fact, there is no credible scientific challenge to the theory of
evolution as an explanation for the complexity and diversity of life
on earth.

The book caused a stir earlier this year when a French translation
materialized at high schools, universities and museums in
France. Until then, creationist literature was relatively rare in
France, according to Armand de Ricqles, a professor of historical
biology and evolutionism at the College de France. Scientists spoke
out against the book, he said in an e-mail message, and `thanks to the
highly centralized public school system in France, it was possible to
organize that the books sent to lycées would not be made available
to children.’

So far, no similar response is emerging in the United States. `In our
country we are used to nonsense like this,’ said Kevin Padian, an
evolutionary biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who,
like colleagues there, found a copy in his mailbox.

He said people who had received copies were `just astounded at its
size and production values and equally astonished at what a load of
crap it is.

`If he sees a picture of an old fossil crab or something, he says,
`See, it looks just like a regular crab, there’s no evolution,’ ‘
Dr. Padian said. `Extinction does not seem to bother him. He does not
really have any sense of what we know about how things change through
time.’

Kenneth R. Miller, a biologist at Brown University, said he and his
colleagues in the life sciences had all received copies. When he
called friends at the University of Colorado and the University of
Chicago, they had the books too, he said. Scientists at Brigham Young
University, the University of Connecticut, the University of Georgia
and others have also received them.

`I think he must have sent it to every full professor in the medical
school,’ said Kathryn L. Calame, a microbiologist at the Columbia
University medical school who received a copy. `The genetics
department, the biochem department, micro – everybody I talked to had
it.’

While they said they were unimpressed with the book’s content,
recipients marveled at its apparent cost. `If you went into a
bookstore and saw a book like this, it would be at least $100,’ said
Dr. Miller, an author of conventional biology texts. `The production
costs alone are astronomical. We are talking millions of dollars.’

Fatih Sen, who heads the United States office of Global Impex, a
company that markets Islamic books, gifts and other products,
including `Atlas,’ would not comment on its distribution, except to
describe the book as `great’ and refer questions to the publisher,
Global Publishing of Istanbul. Repeated attempts by telephone and
e-mail to reach the concern, or Mr. Yahya, were unsuccessful.

In the book and on his Web site (), Mr. Yahya says
he was born in Ankara in 1956, and grew up and was educated in
Turkey. He says he seeks to unmask what the book calls `the imposture
of evolutionists’ and the links between their scientific views and
modern evils like fascism, communism and terrorism. He says he hopes
to encourage readers `to open their minds and hearts and guide them to
become more devoted servants of God.’

He adds that he seeks `no material gain’ from his publications, most
of which are available free or at relatively low cost.

Who finances these efforts is `a big question that no one knows the
answer to,’ said another recipient, Taner Edis, a physicist at Truman
State University in Missouri who studies issues of science and
religion, particularly Islam. Dr. Edis grew up in a secular household
in Turkey and has lived in the United States since enrolling in
graduate school at Johns Hopkins, where he earned his doctorate in
1994. He said Mr. Yahya’s activities were usually described in the
Turkish press as financed by donations. `But what that can mean is
anybody’s guess,’ he said.

The effort seems particularly odd given the mailing list. Both
Dr. Padian and Dr. Miller testified for the plaintiffs in the Dover,
Penn., lawsuit that successfully challenged the teaching of
intelligent design, an ideological cousin of creationism, in schools
there. Other recipients include Steve Rissing, a biologist at Ohio
State University who has been active on behalf of school board
candidates who support the teaching of evolution and science museums
that accept evolution as the foundation for modern biology.

`I don’t know what to make of it, quite honestly,’ said Laddie Elwell,
the director of the Headwaters Science Center in Bemidji, Minn., which
she said received a dozen copies. Chuck Deeter, a staff member, said
he and his colleagues might use the books’ fossil photographs in their
programs on Darwin, which he said can be a hard sell in a region where
many people are fundamentalist Christians with creationist beliefs.

Support for creationism is also widespread among Muslims, said
Dr. Edis, whose book `An Illusion of Harmony: Science and Religion in
Islam’ was published by Prometheus Books this spring.

`Taken at face value, the Koran is a creationist text,’ he said,
adding that it would be difficult to find a scholar of Islam `who is
going to be gung-ho about Darwin.’

Perhaps as a result, he said, Mr. Yahya’s books and other publications
have won him attention in Islamic areas. `This is a guy with some
influence,’ Dr. Edis said, `unfortunately for mainstream science.’

Dr. Miller agreed. He said he regularly received e-mail messages from
people questioning evolution, with an increasing number coming from
Turkey, Lebanon and other areas in the Middle East, most citing
Mr. Yahya’s work.

That’s troubling, he said, because Mr. Yahya’s ideas `cast evolution
as part of the corrupting influence of the West on Islamic culture,
and that promotes a profound anti-science attitude that is certainly
not going to help the Islamic world catch up to the West.’

As the scientists ponder what to do with the book – for many, it is
too beautiful for the trash bin but too erroneous for their shelves –
they also speculate about the motives of its distributors.

`My hypothesis is, like all creationists, they believe that they have
a startling truth that the public has been shielded from, and that if
they present the facts, in quotation marks, that the scales will fall
from the eyes and the charade of evolution will be revealed,’ said
Eugenie Scott, director of the National Center for Science Education,
which fights the teaching of creationism in public schools. `These
people are really serious about this.’

That may be, Dr. Miller said, but it’s also possible `that Harun Yahya
and his people have decided that there are plenty of Muslim people in
the United States who need to hear this message.’

In his e-mail message, Dr. de Ricqles said some worried that the book
was directed at the Muslim population of France as a strategy to
`destabilize’ poor, predominantly immigrant suburbs `where a large
population of youngsters of Moslem faith would be an ideal target for
propaganda.’

But despite its wide distribution, Dr. Padian predicted that the book
would have little impact in the United States. `We are used to books
that are totally wrongheaded about science and confuse science and
religion,’ he said. `That’s politics.’

Correction: July 21, 2007

An article in Science Times on Tuesday about the widespread
distribution of `Atlas of Creation,’ a book with an Islamic
creationist point of view, misstated the name of a company that
shipped some of the books. It is SBS Worldwide Ltd., not SDS
Worldwide.

science/17book.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/17/
www.harunyahya.com

Azerbaijan Guarantees Safety Of Armenian Sportsmen At Upcoming World

AZERBAIJAN GUARANTEES SAFETY OF ARMENIAN SPORTSMEN AT UPCOMING WORLD WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP IN BAKU

arminfo
2007-07-20 08:37:00

Azerbaijan guarantees the safety of Armenian sportsmen at the
upcoming World Wrestling Championship in Baku on September 16-23. The
championship will be a licensed Olympic tournament, vice-president
of the National Olympic Committee Chingiz Huseynzade said at a press
conference today.

Azerbaijan will fulfill the requirements of FILA (International
Wrestling Federation) regarding the safety of participants, Huseynzade
said.

Representatives of the IOC and Armenia’s Wrestling Federation visited
Baku several months ago, and they were told that Azerbaijan will
provide them with additional safety guarantees.

Armenian has not confirmed its participation in the championship
yet, but refusal on the grounds of safety issues would be unfounded,
Huseynzade said.

FILA published a list of arbiters for the World Wrestling Championship
in Baku, including Armenian representative Samvel Haroutunian.

Iran Lends A Helping Hand To Armenia

IRAN LENDS A HELPING HAND TO ARMENIA
Vardan Grigoryan

Hayots Ashkharh Daily
20 July 07

The sitting of the Armenian -Iranian Intergovernmental Committee, which
is going to begin its work in Yerevan today, will turn a new leaf in
the history of the two countries’ economic relations by confirming the
establishment of a free trade regime between the neighboring countries.

It is noteworthy that the Iranian Foreign Ministry has recently
undertaken the direct leadership of the Intergovernmental Committee
dealing with the issues of cooperation with Armenia. So, Foreign
Minister Manoucher Motaki is arriving in Yerevan today with the
purpose of participating in its activities.

During the meeting of the two countries’ experts on July 17, a day
before the visit, Seid Mahsi Mirutabeli, Head of the Iranian Foreign
Ministry’s Chief Department of Economic Cooperation expressed hope
that it is possible to extend the bilateral circulation of goods to
1 billion US dollars due to the establishment of free economic regime
between the two countries.

Of course, extending economic cooperation with its immediate neighbors
at the current stage has not only economic but also political
significance for Iran, considering the risk of the United States
initiative to use punitive measures.

However, it is necessary to bear in mind that unlike our country,
Iran has various alternatives for appearing on the foreign market
due to the diversity of its communicative potentials. And Armenia,
in turn, cannot be viewed by the United States as an obstacle to the
punitive measures as long as the Armenian-Turkish is closed.

Moreover, possessing 15 per cent of the international gas reserves,
Iran is currently facing new and interesting prospects in terms of
choosing a route for appearing on the European market. On July 14,
negotiations were held in Ankara between Hilmi Gyuleri, the Energy
Minister of Turkey and Vaziri Hamaneh, the Oil Industry Minister of
Iran. This resulted in the signature of a preliminary agreement or a
memorandum of intentions on transferring the Iranian and Turkmenistani
gas to the EU member-states via the territory of Turkey. To that end,
Iran is ready to provide Turkey with around 30 cubic meters of gas. A
number of units in Pars, a mine situated in the South of the Persian
Gulf, can also be transferred to Turkish companies.

This marks the beginning of the attempts aimed at finding "southern
solutions" to "Nabuko" program, which seemed to be blockaded by Russia
and deprived of any prospect. And such situation has given rise to
concerns not only in Moscow but also in Washington.

Russia, our ally, which in time spared no effort to limit the
Iran-Armenia gas transfer capacity and thus reduced the program
purely to the local level, is now becoming faced with the fact of the
impossibility to blockade the Turkish route exporting the Iranian and –
in the long-range perspective – the Turkmenistani gas to Europe. And
the issue is whether in such conditions the construction of a second
transit gas pipeline is not advantageous to Armenia, as well as
Russia. After all, it is better for the Iranian gas to pass via the
territory Armenia, an ally country, rather than Turkey which is a
big consumer.

Besides, Iran, unlike Turkey, has no political problems with Armenia,
and for many years on end it has been trying to export its gas to
Europe via our country. Therefore, the Turkish-Iranian memorandum
of intentions signed recently creates conditions for revising the
issue of the construction of a new Armenian-Iranian gas pipeline. The
Armenian-Georgian route is becoming an alternative and at least –
an option of mutual concessions for both parties.

We believe the participation of the Iranian Foreign Minister in
the Armenian-Iranian Intergovernmental Committee’s sitting to be
held in Yerevan, is a proper occasion for revising the issue of the
construction of a second Iranian-Armenian gas pipeline, before the
Turkish-Iranian memorandum of intentions changes into a specific
agreement implying specific obligations.

The deepening of the Armenian-Iranian economic cooperation also demands
that we take specific steps from now on for the implementation of
the programs aimed at building the Armenian-Iranian railroad.

TEHRAN: India-Delhi-Osian Festival Iranian Director’s Film "Raami" T

INDIA-DELHI-OSIAN FESTIVAL IRANIAN DIRECTOR’S FILM "RAAMI" TO OPEN 9TH OSIAN CINEFAN FESTIVAL HERE TOMORROW

IRNA, Iran
July 20 2007

Iran-Azerbaijan co-production "Raami" by Iranian director Babak
Shirinsefat will be the opening film of the 9th Osian Cinefan Festival
beginning here July 20.

The film tells the story of a middle-aged Azerbaijani folk music
composer who has spent a decade in a war refugee camp in Sabirabad
and then goes looking for his Armenian wife and child 10 years after
the Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Around 140 films from more than 35 countries are to be screened during
the festival dedicated to Asian and Arab cinema, which will continue
till July 29.

"Arab films have proved to be inventive, imaginative and bold; some
are personal statements, others social comments, questioning and
chronicling tradition, everyday life, war, gender, fundamentalism
and much else," says Neville Tuli, chairman of Osian’s Connoisseurs
of Art, organisers of the annual fete.

The competition section which was till last year limited to films
from Asia now broadens its base to include films from the Arab world.

Two films from Tunisia — "Tender is the Wolf" and "Making Of" —
and one from Lebanon — "Falafel" – along with eight other works from
Asia are in the fray for the top award.

Other Arab films to be screened at the festival include — Saudi
Arabian director Abdullah Al-Muheisen’s "Shadows of Silence", "WWW:
What a Wonderful World" by Fouzi Bensaidi (Morocco), "Cut and Paste"
by Hala Khalil (Egypt), "The Yacoubian Building" by Marwan Hamed and
"None But That".

Commemorating the 150th anniversary of India’s First War of
Independence in 1857 will be a section of films that describe the
struggle for freedom in Asia and the Arab world.

The Festival is organized by Osian’s Connoisseurs of Art, India’s
pioneering arts institution and auction house established in 2000,
to create a merit-oriented and financially independent cultural
infrastructure.

This year it will take place from 20 to 29 July, 2007 in seven theaters
in New Delhi.

Armenia’s Foreign Trade Turnover In January-June Of 2007 Increased B

ARMENIA’S FOREIGN TRADE TURNOVER IN JANUARY-JUNE OF 2007 INCREASED BY 36,5%, THUS MAKING OVER $1892MLN

Mediamax, Armenia
July 20 2007

Yerevan, July 20 /Mediamax/. The foreign trade turnover of Armenia
in January-June of 2007 totaled 674.7bln drams or $1892.0mln, having
increased by 36,5% as compared to the same period of 2006.

As the press service of the National Statistical Service of Armenia
told Mediamax today, the export volume during the accounting period
made 187.7bln drams or $527.0mln, and the import volume totaled
487.0bln drams or $1365.0mln.

The deficit of the foreign trade balance in January-June of 2007
stood at 299.3bln drams or $838mln.

U.S. Observers Hail Karabakh Elections As Free, Transparent

U.S. OBSERVERS HAIL KARABAKH ELECTIONS AS FREE, TRANSPARENT

Interfax, Russia
July 20 2007

STEPANAKERT. July 20 (Interfax) – Members of the U.S. Public
International Law and Politics Group who worked at the July 19
presidential elections in the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorno-
Karabakh have said that the elections were free and transparent and
fully complied with Nagorno-Karabakh legislation and international law.

The electoral process was organized very well, the group’s executive
director Paul Williams told a news conference in Stepanakert on Friday.

The time will come when Nagorno-Karabakh will gain international
recognition of its independence, he said.

Nagorno-Karabakh is in a considerably more favorable situation than
other similar territorial entities, Williams said.

EU To Provide Grant Of 100m Euros To Armenia

EU TO PROVIDE GRANT OF 100M EUROS TO ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Jul 19 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 19, NOYAN TAPAN. The schedule of the primary events to
be implemented in 2007, envisaged by the EU-RA Actions Plan within the
framework of the European Neighborhood Policy was approved at the RA
government’s July 19 sitting. As Nerses Yeritsian, the RA Minister
of Trade and Economic Development, informed journalists after the
sitting, technical assistance will be provided to the departments
for the implementation of the events.

N. Yeritsian said that it is envisaged to allocate a grant of 100m
euros to Armenia for the coming five years by the EU-RA Actions Plan,
80% of which will be provided to the state budget for the purpose of
implementing reforms in various spheres, and the rest of the sum will
be provided for technical assistance.

To Be Seen As Democrats

TO BE SEEN AS DEMOCRATS
By Sergei Markedonov

Russia Profile, Russia
July 19 2007

Following the May parliamentary elections in Armenia and the formation
of a republican government in June, political life in the "Armenian
world" failed to free itself of turbulence. Today come the presidential
elections in the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR). In terms of their
significance, these elections will be a major event with repercussions
way beyond the borders of the Caucasus region.

Firstly, Karabakh today, as was the case at the beginning of the
1990s, remains something of a beacon for Armenia and for the Armenian
diaspora. While keeping watch as various candidates for the post
of head of state in Karabakh carry out meaningful and competitive
campaigns, Yerevan’s potential maneuvers in terms of extending the
mandate of the current president of the republic are very limited. He
will have to fit in with the image of a protector of freedom-loving
Karabakh. It’s no secret that there are many in Yerevan who would
like to see President Robert Kocharyan’s mandate extended. As an
important national symbol for Armenia, Karabakh serves as an example
of a civilized transfer of the upper tier of power and all leading
political forces in Armenia will be addressing and referring to this.

Secondly, the situation within NKR remains a key problem for
Azerbaijan, whose "soft sultanate" has weakened Baku’s position in the
eyes of the world community with regard to returning Karabakh to its
jurisdiction. Democratic standards in unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh
are higher than in recognized Azerbaijan.

Thirdly, Karabakh poses a large number of inconvenient questions for
the international community. It’s axiomatic for the USA, the countries
of Europe and influential international organizations (UN, OBSE, PACE,
the Council of Europe) that democratization forms a key component in
regulating ethno-political conflicts. The reality, however, does not
always reflect the theory. None of the candidates for the top post in
NKR would claim to be against democratic principles. On the contrary,
democracy in Karabakh has long since been regarded not as an abstract
value but as an effective mechanism for garnering international
legitimacy. In this sense, a consensus has been reached among the
elite of NKR.

One of the main contenders for the presidential post, Bako Saakyan
(ex-chief of the NKR National Security Service), in one of his first
campaign appearances, announced that: "Our people has always been
faithful to democratic principles and observers have been unanimous
in noting not only the high level of organization in the elections
but also our commitment to democratic principles. I think that our
traditions won’t be infringed upon in these elections."

Other candidates have taken the same line. The NKR deputy foreign
affairs minister Masis Mailyan (considered to be the second most
likely candidate for the presidency) gave the following definition
of the main political goal of the 2007 presidential campaign: "The
holding of civilized elections should become the key goal for the
departing executive leadership and the political forces of Nagorny
Karabakh. It’s on this that the international image of the country
and its subsequent development depends."

The leading communist in Nagorny Karabakh, Grant Melumyan, also
regards embedding democracy as the main task facing the republic,
as does parliamentary deputy and professor at the local university
Vanya Avanisyan and parliamentary deputy Armeny Abgaryan, once one
of the republic’s military leaders.

At the same time, within NKR there isn’t a single candidate who sees
the future of the unrecognized state as being with Azerbaijan.

Democracy isn’t viewed here as being synonymous with the "surrender"
of independence and ideas of self-determination. Consequently,
the strengthening of democratic standards in NKR (and this has been
established as a priority) does not demonstrate a readiness among
the Karabakh elite to make concessions to Azerbaijan.

In addition, even those candidates considered to be most liberal in
Karabakh demonstrate "imperial" tendencies in their perceptions of
the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. Masis Mailyan believes that "the
republic can’t ensure its security within the originally recognized
borders of the NKAO," which is to say the former Nagorny Karabakh
Autonous Oblast within the Azerbaijani SSR of the Soviet era. Thus,
Mailyan, who has a well-earned reputation as a democrat and liberal
(in the context of Karabakh, at least), has no great desire to
put the regions occupied during the Karabakh War of 1991-1994 back
under the control of Baku. Democracy is one thing, and security is
another matter entirely. This formula could become the slogan not
only of the 2007 presidential campaign but of Karabakh politics in
general. In addition, democratic procedures – universal suffrage in
presidential and parliamentary elections – merely enforce this Karabakh
"imperialism", as it does not only derive from the elite. It also
expresses local public opinion, which in turn expresses itself through
voting. In July of 2007, this opinion will again be demonstrated.

On June 20, the NKR Central Election Commission officially got the
election campaign underway. The real battle for the presidential
post began long before candidates registered for the election. The
actual start of the election campaign in the NKR came in October 2006
when Arkady Gukasyan voluntarily refused to take part in the coming
election campaign. He explained his decision by saying that NKR’s
observation of democratic principals opened up the opportunity for
international legitimatization of this de facto state. A prolongation
of his presidential mandate would merely interfere with and impede
the strategic aims of the Karabakh Armenians.

At the same time, Gukasyan’s decision is a result of planting the
experience of Kosovo in the Karabakh soil. During the course of
the parliamentary elections in NKR in 2005, the Kosovo principle –
first democratic standards, then self-determination – was cited as
one of the basic demands being required by Karabakh politics and of
Karabakh politicians. Thus, even before Russian President Vladimir
Putin announced the possibility of using "the Kosovo precedent"
in the post-Soviet territories, the Balkan experience had been not
only addressed in NKR but even copied. Thus, the Karabakh elite has
tried to distance itself from "parallel CIS" summits and the leaders
of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Transdniestr, as well as diversifying
its foreign policies. An exception to this trend was the attendance
of Arman Melikyan, advisor to the NKR president on foreign policy
issues, at a meeting of the heads of foreign ministries of unrecognized
republics in Tiraspol.

The logic of the Karabakh leadership is clear: NKR needs to intensify
the resonance of the presidential elections. Nagorny Karabakh is
becoming a trendsetter for democratic fashions among unrecognized
republics. Thus, presenting its republic as a unique leader of other de
facto states, showing its competency in general and in the diplomatic
sphere in particular, has been the aim of the Karabakh elite. For
this reason, the presidential campaign in the NKR will also in a
certain way provide a political lesson to the "parallel CIS."

Today, the election campaign in Karabakh presents the full range
of political views to be found in the post-Soviet landscape. Here
we have representatives of the "party of power", Bako Saakyan (the
main Karabakh "chekist") and Masis Mailyan (one of the strategists of
Karabakh diplomacy), plus those who have come into severe conflict with
the authorities. In 1999-2001, in the conflict between Samvel Babayan
and Arkady Gukasyan, the current presidential candidate Armen Abgaryan
supported the commander of the republic’s defense forces rather than
the leader of the NKR. Grant Melkumyan represents the communists (he
was even put forward at a party forum rather than by an initiative
group) and Vanya Avanisyan represents the "creative intelligentsia."

As is the case everywhere in the CIS, the role of parties in the
election process in NKR is not so significant. The personal factor
plays a much more important role. Administrative resources are also of
consequence. Nevertheless, it should be noted that the chief of the
National Security Service, Bako Saakyan, was relieved of his duties
on the eve of the campaign. The fact that representatives of power
(Saakyan and Mailyan) didn’t create a united front and that each is
conducting his own campaign (although their criticism is kept within
the limits of political decency) indirectly indicates that no single
political vision dominates.

Any leader of the NKR, whatever structure he or she comes from, will
strive to remain within the framework of democratic discourse. And
this is not down to ideological considerations. Among the Karabakh
politicians, both those for and against the authorities, there
is a consensus on the future of the republic. And that future is
envisaged as bringing international recognition. And, as we know,
self-determination without democratic standards is problematic.

Ignoring this fact would amount to a rejection of NKR’s national
aspirations. Such a rejection would drastically reduce the impact
and prospects of any Karabakh leader. This means that opportunities
for democratic development and maintenance of a positive dynamic will
be preserved.

The author, Sergei Markedonov, is the head of International Relations
Issues at the Institute of Political and Military Analysis and a
Candidate of Historical Sciences.

It Is Envisaged To Build Several Underground Parking Lots In Yerevan

IT IS ENVISAGED TO BUILD SEVERAL UNDERGROUND PARKING LOTS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Jul 17 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 17, NOYAN TAPAN. 2007-2011 mid-term program of
construction of Yerevan’s transport network, highways and pedestrian
crossings has been worked out at Yerevan Mayor’s Office. As Samvel
Danielian, Yerevan’s Chief Architect, reported at the July 16 press
conference, according to the program, large-scale construction measures
are being done in Yerevan’s streets. Construction of underground
motorways is proceeding from Khanjian street to Tigran Mets, from
Vardanants street to Khanjian street at present.

By the end of the year underground passages will be built on the
crossroad of Nalbandian-Isahakian streets, in Isakov street, in
Miasnikian Avenue, near the Zoological Garden and Waterworld.

S. Danielian said that reconstruction measures of Kievian-Kasian-Kochar
road sector will start soon. Besides, it is envisaged to build
underground parking lots in territories near Mashtots-Sayat Nova,
Vazgen Sargsian stadium, Miasnikian and Shahumian squares.