Russian PM congratulated Armenian counterpart on Independence Day

PanARMENIAN.Net

Russian PM congratulated his Armenian counterpart on Independence Day
21.09.2007 14:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russian Prime Minister Victor Zubkov congratulated
his Armenian counterpart Serge Sargsyan on Independence Day, the RA
government’s press office reported.

`Please accept my sincere congratulations on occasion of the national
holiday – Independence Day. Close cooperation between the Armenian and
Russian governments promotes partner relations in various fields. I am
confident that your forthcoming formal visit to Russia will give an
impetus to the development of bilateral ties. I wish you every success
at the high post for the glory of the republic of Armenia and
consolidation of the Armenian-Russian relations,’ Mr Zubkov’s message
says.

BAKU: International Law Requires Definition of NK’s Status

Trend News Agency

20.09.2007 17:51:31

International Law Requires Definition of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Status –
Minister

Azerbaiajn, Baku / Тrend corr K. Ramazanova / International law
requires that Nagorno-Karabakh’s status be defined and Azerbaijan is
ready to provide for the highest status, which is autonomy within the
framework territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister, Elmar Mammadyarov, said to Italian journalists in Azerbaijan
on 20 September.

`The point is our national minorities have not more than their
self-determination,’ the Minister said.

The day before, Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister, Araz Azimov once
more confirmed the position of official Baku, which wishes peaceful
settlement of the conflict. Azerbaijan is ready to support the efforts
of the OSCE Minsk Group’s mediators and intends to continue the
settlement within the framework of the Prague Process, he said. `It
would be incorrect to lose the results achieved in the Prague
Process,’ Azimov said.

The conflict between the two countries of the South Caucasus began in
1988 due to territorial claims by Armenia against Azerbaijan. Since
1992, Armenia has occupied 20% of Azerbaijan, including
Nagorno-Karabakh and its seven surrounding districts. In 1994,
Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which time the
active hostilities ended. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group (
Russia, France, and the US) are currently holding peaceful
negotiations.

Armenia Fund Launches Telethon 2007

Armenia Fund, Inc.
111 N Jackson St. Ste. 205
Glendale, CA 91206

Tel: 818-243-6222
Fax: 818-243-7222
Url:

Contact ~ Sarkis Kotanjian
[email protected]

Armenia Fund Launches Telethon 2007

$210,000 Pledged as Seed Money for Village Development Program

10th International Telethon Bound with Many Surprises

Los Angeles, CA – Armenia Fund launched its 10th International Telethon
campaign on Wednesday, September 12, 2007 at Glendale’s Alex Theatre
Forecourt. The special event has been a tradition for the past four
years and features the unveiling of the Telethon’s logo. Over two
hundred long-time supporters and donors, as well as community leaders
and public officials were present during the unveiling. The reception
featured a live performance by Gor Mkhitarian and his band presenting
stunning modern arrangements of traditional Armenian folk music.

This year, the logo was designed by Los Angeles based graphic design
artist Edik Balaian, who was also present at the event. The new logo is
the face of Armenia Fund’s international Telethon campaign. It presents
a person holding a sun. The sun is reminiscent of the ancient rock
carvings from the Geghama Mountain range in Armenia. It symbolizes new
life and vitality for Armenia. The new logo’s slogan `One Nation. One
Future.’ will be at the forefront of the campaign.

`Since this is the 15th anniversary of Armenia Fund, this year is a very
important year for the Fund. We are holding our tenth annual
international Telethon knowing that Armenia is a better place because of
the infrastructure development work that Armenia Fund has done in the
past years. I want to assure you that by standing next to Armenia Fund
you made a difference in the lives of the children who were born fifteen
years ago. By renovating schools, rebuilding hospitals and constructing
major roads, together we have improved the quality of life in the
Republics of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh’, said Maria Mehranian,
Chairperson of Armenia Fund U.S. Western Region.

This multilevel project will revitalize Armenia’s rural villages through
the construction of schools, healthcare facilities, drinking water
systems, access roads and creating economic opportunities. The program
will be coordinated with the U.S. Government’s Millennium Challenge
Corporation and the United Nations Development Programme and all other
international organizations that are currently active in Armenia’s villages.

Telethon 2007 logo was unveiled by its two youngest supporters, Andrew
and Ariana Aghajanian. Upon unveiling the logo Archbishop Hovnan
Derderian and Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian were invited to bless the
logo.

The highlight of the reception was Mehranian’s surprise announcement
that through the continuous efforts of Mark Geragos, a long time
supporter and a member of the International Board of Trustees of Armenia
Fund, the New York Life Insurance Settlement Fund has allocated $200,000
for the Village Development Program as seed money. Adding to the
excitement, long time Armenia Fund donors Mr. & Mrs. Harry and Aida
Chakarian presented a check totaling $10,000.

`The Village Development Program is a monumental project that will
require the undivided and continuous support of Armenians living across
the globe – something that Armenia Fund has solidly garnered for the
past 15 years’, said Sarkis Kotanjian, Executive Director of Armenia
Fund U.S. Western Region.

Armenia Fund, Inc., is a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation
established in 1994 to facilitate large-scale humanitarian and
infrastructure development assistance to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.
Since 1991, Armenia Fund has rendered more than $160 million in
development aid to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. Armenia Fund, Inc. is
the U.S. Western Region affiliate of "Hayastan" All-Armenian Fund. Tax
ID# 95-4485698

www.armeniafund.org

Carrying The Torch For The "Genocide Olympic

CARRYING THE TORCH FOR THE "GENOCIDE OLYMPICS"

Blogger News Network
by The Stiletto
September 14th, 2007

On September 9th, actress and U.N. Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow
kicked off a symbolic torch relay on behalf of Olympic Dream for Darfur
from Dag Hammerskjold Plaza across the street from the Sudanese Mission
to the United Nations. Genocide and holocaust survivors from Darfur,
Armenia, Auschwitz, Berlin, Cambodia and Rwanda passed the torch to
each other until the relay reached the Chinese Mission to the U.N. for
a candle lighting ceremony.

The torch relay will travel through more than 30 U.S. states "to raise
awareness about the atrocities in Darfur and to urge China, as the
next Olympic host, to use its influence to end the ongoing suffering,"
according to press materials issued by Dream for Darfur. The route
includes sites of memorials for victims of crimes against humanity.

The U.S. torch relay is organized in solidarity with an international
relay launched by Farrow on August 15th – one year before the Beijing
Olympic Games begin – from western Sudan at the Darfur-Chad border
"to carry the Olympic spirit and a message of ending the violence in
Darfur all the way to China," reports Voice of America. The torch
has passed through Chad and Rwanda, and will travel through every
other country whose people have suffered genocide in modern times –
Armenia, Bosnia, Cambodia, Germany and Poland – before arriving in
Hong Kong in December.

Since 2003, more than 200,000 people have died and 2.5 million have
been driven from their villages in Darfur. Thanks in part to Farrow’s
efforts, the government of Sudan finally relented and will allow a
joint U.N.-African Union peacekeeping force in Darfur, which should
be in place by the end of the year. The operation will consist of
20,000 peacekeepers and 6,000 civilian police, as well as a 7,000
African peacekeeping force already in Darfur.

"China is hosting the 2008 Olympic Games and their slogan for the
games is `One world, One dream’ but there is one nightmare – that
China is not allowed to sweep under the rug – and that nightmare is
Darfur," Farrow told reporters at the start of the international
torch relay. She explains that China’s oil interest in Sudan is
funding the ongoing attacks on the people of Darfur.

In other news concerning the Armenian Genocide, The Stiletto has been
following the controversy over the Anti-Defamation League’s No Place
For Hate program for schoolchildren, because the organization refuses
to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Armenians in MA want schools in
their state to reject the program. On September 8th, at a meeting
of the Belmont Human Rights Commission, Lenna Garibian – a mother
of two daughters, one 7 years-old and the other 5 – gave a speech
(video link) about how Armenian Genocide denial affects the families
of survivors and victims. Here is some of what Garibian had to say:

Over the past few months, as this No Place for Hate issue has gone
on, Armenians have become more and more frustrated and angered by
the insensitivity of the Anti- Defamation League – and also with the
individual towns and politicians that host No Place for Hate programs.

A number of suggestions have been made to Armenians:

~F It has been suggested that Armenians sit down with Turkish
historians to "uncover the truth" about the events of 1915.

~F It has been suggested that Armenians withdraw the Congressional
resolution, already supported by a majority of U.S. Congressmen,
that calls for the U.S. Congress to set aside April 24 as a day to
commemorate the victims of the Armenian genocide.

~F It has also been suggested that Armenians reconcile with Turkey
and put away the bad feelings of almost 100 years ago.

~F And finally, it’s been suggested that Armenians give Mr. Foxman
and the ADL more time, perhaps until November, to decide on what the
ADL’s policy regarding the Armenian Genocide should be.

I am here to tell you that we Armenians are fed up with the callous
and insensitive suggestions that have been proposed to us. We are the
sons and daughters of a generation who were driven from their lands,
raped, tortured and slaughtered in the deserts of Turkey. …

My grandmother was five years old when she was taken from her home
and told to start walking. Her father had been taken by the Turkish
police weeks before.

When the same police returned, they told her family that their village
was no longer safe, and that they would be escorted to safety. She
left with her mother and three year-old brother, Edward.

In time, her mother weakened and died before her eyes.

My grandmother vividly remembered watching her mother’s body buried
in the Syrian Desert. But what she remembered most was being told
by her mother before she died to take care of her three year-old
brother. The two of them continued alone, and she held her brother’s
hand, walking through the desert for weeks, until one day she found
that she had lost him.

Somewhere along the way, she became too weak or too tired or too
delirious to keep hold of a three year-old boy’s hand, and he was
lost forever.

Lost forever, except in my grandmother’s mind. Because for the rest
of her life [she] lived with the guilt of letting her little brother
die alone in the desert.

Until the last weeks of her life – when she was most confused – she was
tearing around the nursing home still trying to find Edward. … She
could never forget the horror of letting him wander alone in the
desert, presumably to die. She never forgave herself for that.

When I think of my grandmother’s guilt, and her pain, and I think of
these suggestions that have been made to Armenians, I am outraged. And
when I read of the statements between Mr. Foxman and Turkish officials
– referring to this crisis as an uncomfortable episode that Turks
must endure, I am incensed. Having grown up with countless stories
like the ones you have heard this evening, I have lost the ability
to be patient – with the politicians and people who want me to wait
a bit while they think things over.

Gazprom To Increase Gas Prices For Armenia

GAZPROM TO INCREASE GAS PRICES FOR ARMENIA

Earthtimes.org
Energy Watch
Sept. 14
Washington

Russian gas giant Gazprom plans to gradually raise prices for natural
gas supplied to Armenia, Valery Golubev, Gazprom deputy chairman and
chairman of the board at ArmRosgazprom, told reporters Wednesday.

"Raising prices abruptly would destroy the economy.

They will grow as the economy grows," Golubev was quoted as saying
by Russian financial newswires.

Golubev said Russia is to a significant extent subsidizing gas prices
for Armenia. The price per 1,000 cubic meters is $110, far below the
market price. Most of Europe pays near $230 for 1,000 cu m of gas.

He said only Belarus pays less for gas, but the price for Belarus will
grow to $130 per 1,000 cu m next year. The price in Russia will grow
as well and will reach $150 per 1,000 cu m by 2011. Gas prices for
Armenia will increase in 2009, he said, but did not indicate how much.

Natural gas prices are subsidized through the sale to Gazprom of the
fifth block of the Razdan Heat and Power Plant for $248.8 million.

He said $188 million was used to subsidize domestic gas consumers
until Dec. 31, 2008.

Golubev said the level of gasification in Armenia is one of the
highest in the world and surpasses even Russia.

Turks To Protest Against Article 301 Saturday

TURKS TO PROTEST AGAINST ARTICLE 301 SATURDAY

AZG Armenian Daily #168
15/09/2007

Recently established "No to racism and nationalism" Turkish public
movement is launching a campaign tomorrow to demand annulment of
article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code. The slogan of the action is
"Article 301 must be cancelled. Racists must be punished." The
initiators are convinced that article 301, which criminalizes
"insulting Turkishness", is a serious obstacle to freedom of speech
in Turkey. The action participants intend to issue a declaration
to be submitted to the Turkish parliament. The measure is supported
by Heinrich Boll Foundation. "No to racism and nationalism" public
movement was formed after the killing of Agos editor Hrant Dink. The
movement members are going to participate in court sessions on Dink’s
murder and in hearings of suits brought against Agos current editors,
RFE/RL reports.Editor Hrant Dink, Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk,
novelist Elif Shafak stood trial under article 301, which was
numerously subjected to severe criticism by Turkish intellectuals
and European Union.

Soccer-Serbia buoyed after stormy draw in Portugal

Guardian Unlimited, UK

Soccer-Serbia buoyed after stormy draw in Portugal

Please read in third para ‘Group A’ (corrects from Group E)

By Zoran Milosavljevic

BELGRADE, Sept 13 (Reuters) – Serbia kept alive their
hopes of reaching the Euro 2008 finals with a 1-1 draw
in Portugal on Wednesday, in a match that was marred
by ugly scenes at the final whistle.
Players pushed and shoved each other after Serbia left
back Ivica Dragutinovic had been sent off in stoppage
time and Portugal coach Luiz Felipe Scolari appeared
to throw a punch at him by the touchline.
The result means Serbia, fourth in Group A on 16
points from 10 matches, will qualify for next year’s
tournament in Austria and Switzerland if they win
their remaining games — away to Armenia and
Azerbaijan and at home to Kazakhstan and Poland.
A 0-0 draw at Finland left Poland top of the group
with 21 points from 11 matches ahead of the Finns on
19 from 11 and Portugal on 17 from 10.
"The draw against group favourites Portugal may turn
out to be a vital point because it left our fate in
our own hands," Serbia captain Dejan Stankovic told
reporters.
"We were able to get a result in spite of a poor first
half because our coach Javier Clemente made the right
substitutions after the break," he said.
Clemente finished the match with three strikers on the
pitch and the gamble paid off when centre back
Branislav Ivanovic swept home an 88th-minute equaliser
from a goal-mouth melee.
"I made the decision at halftime because I knew we had
to throw caution to the wind to score and it made no
difference whether we would lose 1-0 or 2-0," the
57-year old coach said.
Serbia were lucky to be only trailing 1-0 at halftime
but looked a different team in the second half and
deservedly drew level after pinning back the hosts.
Portugal appealed for offside when Ivanovic scored but
German referee Marcus Merk ignored their protests and
television replays showed the ball had come off a
Portuguese defender.
"I crept into the penalty box and reacted
instinctively. It’s my first goal for Serbia and I
will remember it for the rest of my life," Ivanovic
said.

A Thousand And One Iranian Delights

A THOUSAND AND ONE IRANIAN DELIGHTS
By Ruth Falconer

John O’Groat Journal, UK
Published: 14 September, 2007

THE wind snatched my headscarf and carried it away.

Aghast, I raced after it, grabbed it and tied it back on with my
bumbling hands as quickly as I could. I looked around anxiously. No-one
in the smoggy streets seemed to have noticed. Heaving a sigh of relief,
I dodged my way through the unrelenting traffic to meet my friend Reza.

It was my first day in Tehran, the capital of the Islamic Republic
of Iran. Reza, whom I had met in Kyrgyzstan, had been kind enough to
invite me to visit and had arranged for me to stay with his friends and
colleagues around the country during my one-month trip. I was a little
apprehensive about going to Iran because I had applied for my visa when
the Revolutionary Guard had "kidnapped" British sailors – how would
I be received as a lone female Westerner? I need not have worried.

As Reza had to work, his mother and sister adopted me and took me on
a tour of Tehran. The decadent palaces of the shahs were now museums
to a foregone age that had ended with the 1979 revolution. Each was
filled with incredible masterpieces, lush lawns and neat gardens with
Persian fables depicted in vivid tiles.

In the Golestan Palace there was a young girls’ school trip. Clutching
Barbie schoolbags they gazed attentively at whatever their teacher
instructed them to and skipped hand in hand around the gardens,
just like any other children. Except they were wearing white hijabs
to cover their hair. Islamic law states that, after the age of nine,
girls should cover up when outside of their home. Older, conservative
women wear the black chador, holding it closed with teeth or hands
(the chador, meaning "tent" in Farsi, is just a big piece of cloth),
but the Iranian reality is that women have bright headscarves barely
on their heads, hair carelessly flowing out, loud make-up, tight
jackets, increasingly risque hemlines and stilettos that would make
Naomi Campbell gasp.

I headed 400 kilometres south to Esfahan, where Reza had arranged
for me to stay with Faridae, who was 25 and an accountant. Iran’s bus
system is incredibly cheap (petrol is subsidised by the government),
efficient and comfortable. Men and women are segregated and snacks
and drinks are included in the ticket price, which is most welcome for
the massive distances covered. A former capital, it was known as "half
the world" in Persian times because of its cultural and architectural
diversity and wonder, including its stunning bridges. In the centre
lies Imam Square, formerly Shah Square, which has a palace and two
stunning mosques, the most beautiful being the Lotfallah. Originally
for the shah’s harem to worship in, the cream tiles of its domed
roof change colour to reflect the mood of the sun throughout the day,
contrasting beautifully with the rich greens and blues inside. Still
a place for contemplation, a young woman was sitting down on the
mosque floor vigorously typing into her laptop, oblivious to the slow,
shuffling gait of tourists.

The Armenian quarter, New Jolfa, was founded in 1606 when the
shah kidnapped the entire population of Jolfa, famed for their
artistic skills, near the Armenian border and relocated them to
Esfahan. The area is a series of twisting lanes with distinctly
Christian architecture, in particular the striking Vank cathedral
bearing grisly images of saints being tortured, and containing one
of the world’s smallest bibles, weighing just 0.7 grams.

To round off the day’s sightseeing, Faridae and I went to an old
teahouse that was straight out of 1001 Arabian Nights overlooking Imam
Square. The smoke from hookah pipes twirled and vaporised into the
twinkling night as she told of the frustrations she felt living in
Iran, particularly of her lack of freedom to travel: the permission
of a father, brother or husband is needed before a woman can go
anywhere. All of the women I spoke to felt this way, and there is
an increasingly powerful movement among both men and women to allow
equal rights.

Friday is the Muslim day of rest, and when almost the entire population
of Iran goes for a picnic. Faridae had to work, but her friend Atifeh,
keen to practise her English, invited me to join her and her family in
the park. The park was packed with groups dining on enormous banquets
of roasts, breads, rice, salads and ice-creams whilst supping tea
from large urns they had taken from their kitchens. I was amazed
at the sheer quantity of food that was consumed and how on earth it
fitted into the car. Sitting in the shade to get protection from the
fierce sun, Atifeh’s family began to talk about their strong dislike
of their government, the current political situation and fears about
an American attack. I felt great pangs of sadness and guilt when
they asked me what I thought was going to happen, a question I would
be asked many times. Potentially my government could drop bombs on
these moderate people who had shown me nothing but incredible warmth,
respect and kindness, wishing nothing in return.

My next stop was east in the oasis city of Yazd, where I was to stay
with Leila, a secretary for a tile manufacturing company, who was
fiercely independent and drove faster than Schumacher. Yazd is the
heart of Zoroastrianism, the first religion to embrace the dualist
concept of good and evil and a single god, Ahura Mazda. Zoroastrian
symbols permeate the city: two huge "towers of silence" sit brooding
on the outskirts of town, and an eternal flame blazes within a fire
temple in the town centre. Worshippers believed a dead body to be
unclean, and to bury it in the earth would pollute it, so the body
would be placed atop a tower under the watch of a priest, who would
observe which eye the waiting vultures plucked first. If it was the
right eye, the soul would fare well; if the left then certain doom.

Lotfallah, Esfahan.

Going still further south to Kerman – famed for pistachios – Bijan,
a computer analyst, and his wife Marian and their daughter were
kind enough to put me up for a few days. Like everyone in Iran,
they constantly fed me huge plates of food, cakes and sweets. From
breakfast till the late 10pm Iranian dinners I could feel my body
crying out for mercy from the gastronomic onslaught. Their English was
quite rudimentary, but Bijan’s cousin Mohammad was fluent and more than
happy to take time off from work to show me around. He was the manager
of an insurance company, but had been the BBC’s translator after the
2003 Bam earthquake when 26,000 were killed. Bam was renowned for
its enormous citadel, the biggest mud-brick structure in the world,
which had collapsed in the disaster. Mohammad hadn’t been there since,
and was shocked at how it had changed. He recalled that when he was
young it would take four hours to walk around.

It now took four minutes. The site is being rebuilt with the help of
UNESCO but will never achieve its past glory.

Shiraz, brimming with rose-filled gardens whose scents permeate the
air, is the birthplace of the famous grape, and of Iran’s most famous
poets Hafez and Sade – the Shakespeares of their time. Indeed it is
said that Hafez is more revered and read than the Koran, and people are
to be found in every park engrossed in his works. A young family, one
of whom spoke English, allowed me to be their guest. Ali was a musician
with the Shiraz symphony orchestra and Firozeh was a new mother to
10-month-old Dorsa and had studied English at university. Dorsa and I
were at the same Farsi level, much to the mirth of everyone else. We
would both point at things, delighted that we knew what they were
called, grinning widely at the praise this received.

The main tourist draw in Shiraz is the ancient ruined city of
Persepolis, which dates from 500 BC and was ransacked by Alexander
the Great. The grand stairway leading up to the huge Gate of Nations
has shallow steps so that dignitaries could glide up with their robes
flowing majestically behind them. The immense marble walls of the
complex are adorned with reliefs of subject countries bringing gifts
to the Persian king, legendary battles and elaborate mythical beasts.

The former grand halls and temples, full of cuneiform (one of the
oldest alphabets in the world) tablets, are protected by huge statues
of bulls and griffins that are still awe-inspiring. Even at this
tourist site, locals, a little shyly, would stop you to ask if you
needed any help, to welcome you to Iran or to invite you to dinner
at their house.

Every week Ali and Firozeh had a dinner party with their friends,
most of them also in the Shiraz symphony. The guests brought their
instruments rather than an illegal bottle of wine, and the evening was
spent singing and dancing to Iranian songs. It ended in great laughter
as they tried to remember the words to the only English song they knew:
"Hotel California". I couldn’t remember the words either.

I took off my headscarf as I left Iran and entered Armenia, the first
country to declare itself Christian. A dour Russian with bleached
hair and a skirt up to her oxters glared at me while her colleague
scowlingly gave me a visa. I had not even left the border town and
I was feeling nostalgic about saying farewell to such a fascinating
place. My Iranian companions were not. They were already in shorts
and T-shirts and filling their bellies with vodka.

* Ruth Falconer, from Wick, travelled to Iran after working for a
year in Kyrgyzstan where she taught English. En route to Iran she
spent some time in Uzbekistan, and an account of her experiences
there appeared in the John O’Groat Journal on August 24.

Witnesses Are Not Prosecuted In Armenia

WITNESSES ARE NOT PERSECUTED IN ARMENIA

A1+
[04:18 pm] 13 September, 2007

It turns out that witnesses and suspected persons are not persecuted
in Armenia. This was announced by the RA General Prosecutor Aghvan
Hovsepyan at the NA today. He asked the deputies not use that term. He
also noted that all amendments in prosecutorial system were carried
out when he officiated. "The reforms in the system were carried out
twice in 1998 and now. And both times I was the General Prosecutor".

As to the independence of the system he noticed: "The fact that I am
standing in front of and you are to appoint me, is the independence
of the system".

During the whole session the General Prosecutor had to answer to the
questions of the "Heritage party". He answered to all questions of
the fraction with patience. The main stress was put on the question
of Zaruhi Postanjyan, concerning the accusation of Zhirayr Sefilyan,
since tomorrow the Appeal Court was to hear his case.

Aghvan Hovsepyan pointed out that the deputies of the mentioned
fraction demanded the independence of prosecutors, but on the other
hand "they disturb the independence of the General Prosecutor". "I
am not going to waive the accusations, since I do not want to put
pressure on the prosecutor",- he said. Mrs Postanjyan reminded that
only in exceptional cases preliminary arrest was used and asked why
Alexander Arzumanyan’s case was of exceptional importance.

Aghvan Hovsepyan did not answer to this question properly. As to
other cases examined by courts, he said he would not interfere in
them. Postanjyan was also interested in actions started against
certain prosecutors. The General Prosecutor pointed out that those
people were charged with roguery.

Answering to the question of Hovhanness Margaryan, who represented
"Orinats Yerkir"party, reffering to the sale of "Ararat" gold factory,
Mr Hovsepyan said: "That question has nothing to do with my deserving
the post of the prosecutor". Mr Hovsepyan also reflected on the
question of the NA Vice-Speaker Vahan Hovsepyan on establishing
independent investigation bodies. Mr Hovsepyan informed that this body
would not submit to the Prosecutor’s Office, it would be monitored
by the latter and its main function would be the reveal of corruption
cases, including those committed by legislative bodies.

Local Elections Should Not Be Politicized

LOCAL ELECTIONS SHOULD NOT BE POLITICIZED

KarabakhOpen
12-09-2007 18:21:59

The Democratic Party of Artsakh has not considered nominating
candidates for the local elections on October 14, Vahram
Atanesyan, member of the Democratic Party, said in an interview
with Karabakh-open.com. "We think the local elections should not be
politicized," Vahram Atanesyan said.

"The election for the mayor of Stepanakert in 2004 and the events that
followed it show that a politicized head of the municipality cannot be
effective," said Vahram Atanesyan although he did not rule out that
their decision may change before the deadline of nomination. "If we
nevertheless decide to run a political race, we will have sufficient
potential," he said.

Vahram Atanesyan thinks the presidential election has just ended, and
"it is not expedient to give more party pledges to people." "Better
people be nominated on civil initiative, and the community elect
definite persons," the member of parliament said. The Azat Hayrenik
Party has not taken a stance regarding nomination of candidates.

Arayik Harutiunyan, leader of the party, said it will become known
in the upcoming days.