Raffi Hovannisian Full of Hope CEC To Reflect Picture Of Real Vote

RAFFI HOVANNISIAN: "WE ARE FULL OF HOPE THAT THIS TIME CEC TO REFLECT
PICTURE OF REAL VOTE BY ITS SUMMING UP"

YEREVAN, MAY 12, NOYAN TAPAN. "I am proud that I participate in the
state elections for the first time, and I wish success to all our
rivals. I am sure that from today we shall re-find liberty of the
citizen of Armenia, the nation’s dignity," Raffi Hovannisian, the
Chairman of the Zharangutiun (Heritage) party stated after voting at
polling station No10/06 of Yerevan on May 12.

According to his estimation, fair and proper elections will be fixed in
Armenia during the last 16 years. "I believe that the electoral victory
of not one candidate, one party but the Armenian people will be fixed,"
R. Hovannisian mentioned.

Touching upon the electoral violations, he stated that they gather all
the facts and will periodically present them to mass media. And R.
Hovannisian will express his viewpoint only on May 12 when the CEC
preliminary results will already be made public. "We are full of hope
that this time that responsible body will reflect with its summing up
the picture of real vote. And if as a result we have a non-electoral
result, our viewpoint will be another. But we believe in our country,
our law, our rights and want that this time we fix victory of the
citizen of Armenia, of the Armenian state," R. Hovannisian mentioned.

Chairman of the Zharangutiun party expressed a hope that post-electoral
processes are the period of only forming a parliament, having a new
majority, forming a government of national solidarity.

MFA: FM Participates in the Session of CE Committee of Ministers

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
Government House # 2, Republic Square
Yerevan 0010, Republic of Armenia
Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

11-05-2007

Foreign Minister Oskanian Participates in the Session of CE Committee of
Ministers

Minister Oskanian participated in the 117th Session of the Council of Europe
Committee of Ministers. In his statement, Minister Oskanian recognized how
Armenia has changed during the years since Council of Europe membership, as
well as the evolution of the Council of Europe itself. He also referred to
the major domestic and foreign policy issues — the parliamentary elections
and the resolution process of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

The Session, held in Strasbourg on May 11, 2007, included several agenda
items, including closer cooperation between the Council of Europe and the
European Union. This was the topic of a special meeting held a day earlier,
during which Minister Oskanian’s intervention addressed the need for closer
and more efficient institutional links between these two major European
institutions.

In the margins of the Ministerial Meeting, Minister Oskanian met with the
Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, and discussed regional
issues, as well as the Commissioner’s future visit to Armenia. He also held
meetings with the Secretary of State of Spain, which currently holds the
Chairmanship of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, as
well as the Secretary of State of Sweden.

Minister Oskanian also met with the Council of Europe Monitoring Group,
known as the Ago Group, and responded to questions on Armenia’s regional
relations, and on the parliamentary elections. The Minister confirmed that
he shared the Council of Europe’s strong interest in open and fair elections
and looked forward to a favorable report by the OSCE ODIHR observation
mission. Minister Oskanian also responded to the Ago Group’s question about
the Nagorno Karabakh negotiation process.

Below is the text of the Minister’s statement:

Statement by
H.E. Mr. Vartan Oskanian
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Republic of Armenia
At the 117th Session of the Committee of Ministers
Strasbourg
May 11, 2007

Mr. Chairman,

As I was heading to this hall this morning, it occurred to me that I haven’t
missed a single Ministerial meeting since our membership in this
organization. I also remember my first Council of Europe ministerial when I
had been invited in the run-up to our membership, when I had tremendous
difficulty finding a way to get to Strasbourg from Yerevan in time to
deliver a speech and return that same evening. Those days we were still
suffering from the consequences of the collapse of an era, which had also
brought with it the collapse of our economic and transport connections to
the world.

Yesterday, as I left to come to this meeting, I had a choice among 6
European carriers, and left a country that has been growing on average 12% a
year. So survival is no longer a question. We, too, can now take survival
for granted. That’s a luxury we didn’t used to have.

Indeed a lot has changed since the first days of our membership. The Council
of Europe has evolved and grown and Armenia has changed greatly. Our
economic growth is gratifying, it must become more distributed, must reach
further into the rural communities and the sources of that growth must
themselves become more refined and sophisticated. Our political allegiance
to the values that define our era – the rights of the individual over the
rights of the state, the rule of law over the rule of man, the path of
compromise over the path of confrontation is also irreversible. These are
values that Europe articulated and embraced.

Over this last half century, Europe has proven that not only are these
ideals good ends in themselves, but they are the necessary means to
stability and prosperity. We have understood that we don’t need to choose
between human rights and development, but that one is a means to the other.

Over this last half century, the Council of Europe has changed. Membership
has grown, the Court of Human Rights and the Commissioner of Human Rights
have become solid institutions. Thus, with overlapping membership with the
EU, and sometimes with overlapping processes, these two organizations are
complementary. The Council of Europe is the organization where one hones
these values, adapts them as tools to the conditions and demands of the day
and place, perfects them, and makes it possible to take them, too, for
granted. The European Union is the shop that turns these values into the
instruments of reconciliation, prosperity and peace. Cooperation between
these two institutions takes place by default. The decision is not whether
to cooperate but, after the Juncker Report, the question is the depth,
specificity and institutionalization of that cooperation. The best
organizational minds must fashion mechanisms which are not self-serving,
which do not compromise the integrity or capacity of these institutions, but
enable them to meet the noble goals of creating and bolstering bonds between
human beings that transcend older boundaries and make of these new
institutional forms a functioning, productive, peaceful community of
nations. This is why, today, we can proudly point to a memorandum of
understanding between the Council of Europe and the EU, and why tomorrow, we
must put our credibility and resources behind the San Marino chairmanship in
making this memorandum a reality. I would also like to commend the Chairman
for making intercultural and inter-religious dialogue a priority on the
agenda of the Council of Europe this year. Armenia also attaches great
significance to these issues.

Mr. Chairman,

I have frequently said from this podium that Council of Europe membership
provided for Armenia a roadmap and a guidepost. It’s not enough to decide
which direction to take, it’s important to choose the right path to get
there. Our membership commitments pushed us along the path of reforms more
quickly and more purposefully than we could have done ourselves, alone.
Today, literally on the eve of parliamentary elections, we have a
Constitution which better protects the rights of the individual citizen and
better articulates the responsibilities of the government. These elections
will be held under new conditions, new laws, new working mechanisms, all
designed with the wisdom and experience of the Council of Europe and the
Venice Commission, the OSCE, the European institutions, to encourage our
citizens to suspend the decades of inbred cynicism and distrust, and believe
in the power of their voice and their vote. The stakes are high. We hope
that, next week, we will all be able to look at each other and say these
elections are significantly better than any we’ve had. Thus, we will be
well on our way towards the last of our Council of Europe commitments.

There is of course, Mr. Chairman, one commitment left which we made together
with Azerbaijan, when we entered this organization – that we would achieve a
peaceful, lasting resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Judging
purely from the content of the negotiating document and the nature of the
principles included there, and the progress we’ve made on that document, we
have hope that an agreement is possible. A major part of the progress comes
from the fact that all involved have come to acknowledge and agree that at
the end of the day, it’s the people of Nagorno Karabakh which should
determine their future status through a referendum, and through the exercise
of their right to self-determination.

But there are some factors which dampen our optimism. First, I worry that
the content and spirit of the negotiations are not matched by the public
statements that are regularly heard from the Azerbaijani leadership. Second,
the endless Azerbaijani references to a possible military solution are
counterproductive, not to say dangerous. Third, Azerbaijan’s actions do
little to bolster confidence. On the contrary, intentional violence such as
the organized destruction of Armenian cross stones in the Nakhijevan region
of Azerbaijan serve to further sow distrust between our peoples.

Still, this is a basic document on principles that is a balanced, fair set
of tradeoffs and we will continue to work on it.

Mr. Chairman,

Let me say thanks to you for San Marino’s leadership, and welcome Serbia to
the presidency, and also congratulate Montenegro on their membership to this
organization.

Thank you.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Davit Harutyunian: Global Gold Mining Does Not Indicate Definitely W

DAVIT HARUTYUNIAN: GLOBAL GOLD MINING DOES NOT INDICATE DEFINITELY WHO DEMANDED BRIBE FROM THEM IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
May 09 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 9, NOYAN TAPAN. Statements of US company Global Gold
Mining to the effect that they were demanded to give a bribe in
Armenia resemble a political statement, the RA justice minister Davit
Harutyunian stated at the May 9 meeting with reporters. According
to him, this story was linked to the Armenian ministry of nature
protection, but no name was given by the US company.

In response to a reporter’s question that the company indicated the
RA minister of nature protection Vardan Aivazian as the person who
demanded a bribe, D. Harutyunian said: "If there had been a definite
statement that "this person has demanded a bribe for the given action",
I can confidently say that the prosecutor’s office would have attended
to this fact."

Election Frauds Are Inevitable

ELECTION FRAUDS ARE INEVITABLE

A1+
[07:42 pm] 09 May, 2007

"Unlike other political forces, the Republican Party is concerned over
the country’s social state and offers a program of political reforms in
the political sphere and in the local governments," David Harutyunyan,
the RoA Justice Minister, and member of the Republican Party said
today. The Minister states that election frauds are inevitable:
each country encounters such problems.

All RoA parties have made violations. Irregularities and inaccuracies
of electoral rolls testify to the fact that the elections are already
faked.

"I believe that the outcome won’t be that serous," the Justice
Minister says.

Mr Harutyunyan highlighted the role of international observers in
the conduction of free, fair and transparent elections.

"In comparison with the previous elections, the judicial system is
prepared for the upcoming elections," the minister stated.

BAKU: Georgian Ex-President Says Armenia Should Respect Azerbaijan

GEORGIAN EX-PRESIDENT SAYS ARMENIA SHOULD RESPECT AZERBAIJAN

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
May 10 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku/ Trend , corr. P. Amirdjanov/ Eduard Shevarnadze,
the Georgian Ex-President, who worked together with Azerbaijan’s
All-Nation Leader heydar Aliyev for many years, urges Armenia to
respect Azerbaijan, since it is the most powerful state in South
Caucasus, Trend reports referring to the National AzTV Channel.

According to Mr. Shevarnadze, just owing to the political will of
Heydar Aliyev, Azerbaijan has taken the leading position in the region.

" Armenia should respect Azerbaijan, otherwise it may lost its
independence. I think that Armenians will realize the necessity
to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The delay in this issue
may represent even more heavy results than the present-day ones,
as Azerbaijan has left behind both Armenia and Georgia by economic,
military and defence, and other indicators," stated Mr. Shevranadze.

"Heydar Aliyev was a unique person. He founded the independent state
on an empty place. The existing Azerbaijani leader is a wise man too.

Heydar Aliyev did not make a mistake when he chose him as his
successor," concluded the Georgian Ex-President.

"Group For Defence Of Four" Created

"GROUP FOR DEFENCE OF FOUR" CREATED

Noyan Tapan
Mat 10 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 10, NOYAN TAPAN. The newly creared "Group for Defence
of Four" aims to protect the rights of former Armenian foreign
minister Alexander Arzumanian, coordinator of the social initiative
"For Defence of Liberates Territories" Zhirayr Sefilian, his comrade
Vardan Malkhasian, and editor of the newspaper "Zhamanak Yerevan"
Arman Babajanian, as well as to oppose any persecution of political
dissidence and to eliminate causes of such actions. It is noted
in the statement issued by the group that in the period of active
social-political development, the Armenian authorities once again
are trying to intimidate and silence the political dissidence by KGB
methods – eavesdropping, arrests with the use of force.

According to the authors of the statement, this is a logical
continuation of home political situation in recent years. "Alexander
Arzumanian – the political motives for his arrest are obvious – as
well as the other above mentioned prisoners are subjected to criminal
prosecution for their social and political activities and ideas," the
group’s statement reads. Human rights supporters Avetik Ishkhanian,
Gayane Markosian, Amalia Kostanian, Vardan Harutyunian, Artur Sakunts
and Edik Baghdasarian put their signatures to this statement.

Six Suspects In Journalist’s Murder To Face Appear In Court June 2

SIX SUSPECTS IN JOURNALIST’S MURDER TO FACE APPEAR IN COURT JUNE 2

Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Germany
May 7, 2007 Monday 12:30 PM EST

DPA x Turkey Justice Media Six suspects in journalist’s murder to
face appear in court June 2 Ankara

The six suspects in the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink, will face court on June 2, with prosecutors seeking prison
sentences of up to 48 years, the Anadolu news agency reported on
Monday.

Dink was shot dead on January 19 outside the offices of the Agos
newspaper he published. The 52-year-old journalist had written
controversial articles on Turkish-Armenian relations that angered
nationalists and saw him sentenced to six months probation last year
under Turkey’s controversial law of "insulting Turkishness."

His attacker, Ogun Samast, was arrested a few days after the murder
and immediately confessed to police. The teenager from the Black
Sea city of Trabzon implicated a number of extreme nationalists from
Trabzon as having been behind the attack.

Media reports said the Samast had claimed to have carried out the
murder for the "honour of Turkey." He is to be prosecuted for murder,
membership of a terrorist organization and carrying an illegal weapon.

Five others, also implicated in the murder, have been charged with
various offences, including organizing a murder, accessory to murder
and forming a terrorist group.

Life Of Orinats Yerkir Leader Is In Danger: OY Member

LIFE OF ORINATS YERKIR LEADER IS IN DANGER: OY MEMBER

Arminfo Agency News
2007-05-09 14:58:00

The life of the "Orinats Yerkir" party leader Artur Baghdasaryan is in
danger, OY secretary Heghine Bisharyan said at today’s press-conference
in "Urbat" club. According to her, it is not ruled out that direct
threats may be shortly heard about him.

"Against the background of the recent events, it will not be
unexpected for me", H. Bisharyan said. As for the scandalous talk
of A. Baghdasaryan with the British vice-Ambassador, during which
the OY leader urged the Britons to give negative estimation to the
parliamentary election in advance, H. Bisharyan said that "the talk
was held not in secrecy and means nothing".

Moreover, she emphasized that the fact of the talk recording does
not surprise her. "The telephones of all the members of our party are
monitored. I feel ill at ease that we have to discuss some personal
and domestic problems in the presence of the third persons", she
said. At the same time, she thinks it is senseless to appeal the
country’s law machinery for assistance and protection. "Who shall we
address to? If they are not the clients or the executors?.

I think if the Government fears its people and resorts to such methods,
it means the Government is against the people", H. Bisharyan said.

PARADISE LOST Documentary ‘Over The Madness’ To Premiere At Cannes F

PARADISE LOST DOCUMENTARY ‘OVER THE MADNESS’ TO PREMIERE AT CANNES FILM FESTIVAL – MAY 9, 2007

Blabbermouth.net, NY
May 9 2007

Diran Noubar’s powerful new documentary "Over The Madness" about
U.K. band PARADISE LOST provides unique insights on a rock band and
the emergence of the "gothic metal" movement. The documentary referred
by SYSTEM OF A DOWN’s Serj Tankian as "THE film showing the inception
and progression of PARADISE LOST" has already been nominated for some
key film festivals this year, including Swansea Bay Film Festival
(U.K.), Everglades Film Festival (South Africa) and the Wave Gotik
Festival (Germany). The film’s world premiere is set for the Cannes
Film Festival’s Market on Monday, May 21 (Palais D, 11:30 a.m.).

This year, PARADISE LOST are celebrating their 20th anniversary and
the release of their 11th album. Along with country mates ANATHEMA
and MY DYING BRIDE, the band – named after John Milton’s epic 1667
poem – is credited for pioneering gothic metal. Throughout years
of creative challenging and musical experimentation, PARADISE LOST
have persisted in delivering a densely evocative and richly textured
brand of metal. Creating a cult-following in many countries around the
world, they have released commercially successful musical masterpieces,
selling over two million records. Today, their influence still clearly
transpires in the sound of most gothic and heavy metal bands.

Comparably to his critically acclaimed social documentary "Armenia,
A Country Under Blockade" (2005), Noubar achieves in-depth analysis of
the topic he addresses with "Over The Madness". Through first-hand
accounts from the band themselves and many other dramatically
influential acts, he follows the band from their native Halifax, U.K.
to tour stops in Greece and Mexico, where they are regarded as rock
"gods." "This is a thorough and detailed account on one of the most
important and influential bands of all time," says Metal Hammer’s
Dimitris Symeliadis.

In a changing music industry where the proliferation of musical
content creates interest in new genres that don’t have sufficient
audience size to warrant a subculture, "Over The Madness" provides
a better understanding of a strong but concealed musical movement of
the past twenty years (and counting). "Noubar’s work finally opens up
the closed doors of a music genre gathering hundreds of thousands of
fans worldwide, through his captivating documentary covering both the
big picture and smaller, personal stories," states Romuald Boulanger,
NRJ Group.

uth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=7213 7

http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermo

Hope For The City Donates Medicine to Armenia Valued at $9.5 Million

PRESS RELEASE
Cafesjian Family Foundation
15 South 5th Street, 900
Minneapolis, MN 55402

USA Contact: Mr. John Waters
612-359-8991
[email protected]

Armenia Contact: Ms. Madlene Minassian
[email protected]

Minneapolis, MN
May 8, 2007

Hope For The City Donates Medicine to Armenia Valued at $9.5 Million US
Dollars

Minneapolis, MN and Yerevan, Armenia – Hope For The City, working in close
collaboration with the United Armenian Fund and the Cafesjian Family
Foundation, has donated essential medicine, valued at over $9,500,000 USD
to the Central Commission of Humanitarian Assistance of the Government of
Armenia. The airlift arrived on April 13, 2007 and was personally greeted
by Dennis and Megan Doyle, Co-Founders of Hope For The City and Board
Members of the Cafesjian Family Foundation.

The airlift of medicine, including anesthetics, anti-infective,
anti-tuberculosis, cardiovascular, dermatological, psychotherapeutic and
respiratory system drugs, vitamins and minerals, and many other
pharmaceuticals will be distributed to a number of medical institutions in
Armenia and will assist in covering a vast scope of needs.

`We were glad to make a donation of precious life saving medicines for
those in need in Armenia,’ said Megan Doyle, Co-Founder of Hope For The
City.

The United Armenian Fund and the Cafesjian Family Foundation worked
closely with Hope For The City in order to facilitate the relationship
with the Ministry of Health of RA. These two organizations have assisted
Hope For the City’s work in Armenia.

The Hope For The City delegation, including Co-Founders Dennis and Megan
Doyle, Executive Director Clare Brumback and bio-medical technician
Patrick Donahue from Universal Hospital Services (UHS), arrived in Armenia
on April 12, 2007. They paid visits to various institutions that have
already received assistance from Hope For The City; thus fostering
cooperation and compiling assessments for further needs. New relationships
with institutions were also established for future aid. Since their
initial visit in April of 2005, Hope For The City has donated over eleven
million dollars of aid from the United States to Armenia.

Hope For The City is a humanitarian aid organization that was established
by Dennis and Megan Doyle that uses corporate surplus to fight poverty,
hunger and disease. The US/Minnesota-based, non-profit organization
collects overstock products from top retailers, medical companies, and
food distributors and donates the items to people in need through partner
non-profit organizations and foundations. Since its inception, Hope For
The City has donated over $360 million USD in wholesale value goods.

The United Armenian Fund is a collective effort of the Armenian Assembly
of America, the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Armenian Relief
Society, the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, the Prelacy of the
Armenian Apostolic Church of America, and the Lincy Foundation. Since its
inception in 1989, the United Armenian Fund has sent over $469 million USD
of humanitarian assistance to Armenia on board 142 airlifts and 1,424 sea
containers.

The Cafesjian Family Foundation, Inc., was established in 1996 by Gerard
L. Cafesjian. The US based, non-profit organization supports a variety of
Armenian causes in Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and the United States. A
primary focus of the Cafesjian Family Foundation is the security of
independent Armenia and the further development of a free, democratic
society through economic development and the strengthening of the
US/Armenia relationship.