Arakini Enker Company Intends To Invest $1.5 Million In Creating Rad

ARAKINI ENKER COMPANY INTENDS TO INVEST $1.5 MILLION IN CREATING RADIO MODEM COMMUNICATION NETWORK IN YEREVAN

ARKA
Nov 7, 2007

YEREVAN, November 7. /ARKA/. Arakini Enker Company intends to invest
$1.5 million in creating radio modem communication network in Yerevan.

Alexander Yesayan, the company director, told ARKA News Agency on
Tuesday that the network will cover the entire territory of Armenia’s
capital.

"At initial stage, the company is planning to invest $500,000 and
provide wireless Internet services in Yerevan. This will ensure swift
connection and reliable communication", he said.

Yesayan said seven basic stations will be installed in Yerevan.

He said that the company plans to provide IP telephony and digital
video services later.

On Tuesday, Armenian Public Services Regulatory Commission gave the
company a license for ten-year exploitation of 5650-5725 megahertz
radio frequencies.

The company has transferred AMD 11 million to the state budget for the
frequencies exploitation authorization and another 8.5 million will
be paid every year for the exploitation. ($1 – AMD 325.18)

According To Specialist Of Electoral Technologies, Potential Candida

ACCORDING TO SPECIALIST OF ELECTORAL TECHNOLOGIES, POTENTIAL CANDIDATES RUNNING FOR PRESIDENCY DO NOT BUILD THEIR TACTICS IN A LITERATE WAY

Noyan Tapan
Nov 6, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 6, NOYAN TAPAN. According to Armen Badalian,
a specialist of electoral technologies, In Armenia those political
figures, who want to put forward their candidatures in the presidential
elections, do not build their pre-electoral tactics in a literate
way. As he mentioned at the November 6 press conference, the rude
mistake of Prime Minister Serge Sargsian, in particular, was the
meeting with Ashot Bleyan, the Head of the "Mkhitar Sebastatsi"
educational complex, as a figure, who has his contribution in the
Karabakh war, should not meet with a person, who visited Azerbaijan
at the beginning of 1990. The next mistake of the Prime Minister,
according to Armen Badalian, is that he spoke about the paradise
and hell in his recent interview with the editor of the Daily Azg,
saying that "the rich will go to the hell, thus coming out of the
role of the prime minister and taking the role of Mahatma Gandhi."

Armen Badalian added that the members of the Republican party make a
rude mistake every time they declare that they do not consider the
first president as a main rival for their candidate. Repeating the
same expression for too many times, according to the specialist,
speaks about the contrary, that is to say, their main rival is the
very Levon Ter-Petrosian. "Why the members of the Republican Party
of Armenia do not continuously declare, for example, that they do
not regard the chief marxist as their main rival," Armen Badalian said.

In his words, it is normal that the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
has put forward two potential candidates at once. However, according
to Armen Badalian, the mistake of the members of the Dashnaktsutiun
is that the two candidates do not compete with each other during
the meetings with the population, as it is accepted abroad, just
on the contrary, they present a united viewpoint with regard to all
the questions.

Berlin Discussions Over Lingered Conflicts Not To Lead To Progress –

BERLIN DISCUSSIONS OVER LINGERED CONFLICTS NOT TO LEAD TO PROGRESS – HEAD OF PACE SUBCOMMITTEE

Trend
05.11.07 18:23

Germany, Berlin / Trend corr A. Maharramli / The head of the
subcommittee on Nagorno-Karabakh of the Parliamentary Assembly of
the Council of Europe (PACE) lord Russell Johnston believes that the
Berlin discussions over lingered conflicts will not have positive
results. "I do not expect a special progress to occur as a result of
the discussions," he said in Berlin on 5 November.

The Monitoring Committee of PACE and the German Institute for
International Affairs and Security organized discussions over lingered
conflicts (Nagorno-Karabakh, Trans-Dniester, Georgian-Abkhazian,
and Georgian-Ossetian) in Berlin on 5 to 6 November. The forum
involves both official representatives of the conflicting countries
and international experts.

Russell Johnston reported that the meeting would enable an exchange
of views on peaceful settlement of the conflicts and once more to
study the viewpoints and positions of the sides.

Azerbaijan is represented at the Berlin forum by the head of the Office
on Planning of Foreign Policy & Strategic Researches Tofig Musayev,
the head of the Azerbaijani PACE delegation Samad Seyidov, and MPs.

Turkish Premier To Visit USA, Italy

TURKISH PREMIER TO VISIT USA, ITALY

Prensa Latina, Cuba
Nov 1 2007

Ankara, Oct 31 (Prensa Latina) Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan will travel to the United States as of November 2 and also
pay a three-day visit to Italy, the Turkish government confirmed.

In Washington, Erdogan is expected to meet with Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and with President George W. Bush, with whom he is
expected to discuss the military situation created in southeastern
Turkey, as well as other issues of common interest.

The meeting will occur at a difficult moment in bilateral relations,
following the approval of a motion by the House of Representatives in
October 12, describing as genocide the deaths of Armenians in central
Anatolia in early 20th Century.

The issue is highly sensitive among Turkish people, as they consider
the events have been distorted. Therefore, Bush has cut himself off it.

Erdogan is expected to stay in Rome on November 6-8 to meet with
President Giorgio Napolitano and also with the leaders of both chambers
in the Legislature.

He is also expected to meet with Prime Minister Romano Prodi and his
Foreign Minister Massimo D’Alema, and the source did not rule out a
meeting with conservative politician Silvio Berlusconi in his capacity
as opposition leader in Parliament.

ID=%7BEF7DAF75-21B7-4058-A82E-0547841F477C%7D)&amp ;language=EN

http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?

Second Line On Iran-Armenia Gas Pipeline May Be Completed In Late 20

SECOND LINE ON IRAN-ARMENIA GAS PIPELINE MAY BE COMPLETED IN LATE 2008

Russia & CIS General Newswire
October 31, 2007 Wednesday 8:38 PM MSK

Construction of the second line of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline
linking Kajaran and Yerevan may be completed by the end of 2008,
Armenian Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan said at a press conference
on Wednesday.

Of the pipeline’s 120-kilometer length, 60-65 kilometers have already
been completed, he said.

Work has halted due to the onset of poor weather and will resume next
year, he said.

The already completed 40-kilometer section linking Meghri and Kajaran
could deliver 350 million cubic meters to Armenia a year. With
construction of the second line capacity will rise to 2.3 billion
cubic meters, he said.

Iran is contracted to supply 1.1 billion cubic meters of gas a year
to Armenia from 2009 and 2.3 bcm a year from 2019. Armenia will
pay for the gas with deliveries of electricity at a rate of 3 kWh
of electricity per 1 cubic meter of gas. ArmRosGazprom is investing
about 52 billion dram (about $154 million) in the project, in line
with its investment program.

Para-Parajanov Exhibition In Bucharest

PARA-PARAJANOV EXHIBITION IN BUCHAREST

armradio.am
31.10.2007 17:39

"Para-Parajanov" exhibition of paintings and collages by young
Romainain artists Silvia Kostin and Bogdan Theodoresku based on
creative motives of Sergey Parajanov was opened in "Sigma" art gallery
of Bucharest on October 31.

The paintings on display reflect the spirit and uniqueness of
Parajanov’s art. The opening ceremony was attended by fans of the
great director, a number of guests and media representatives.

The event features the Armenian Ambassador to Romania Yeghishe
Sargsyan, who made a speech about Sergey Parajanov’s life and work.

Bakir: Kurdistan As A Model For Iraq

BAKIR: KURDISTAN AS A MODEL FOR IRAQ
Interviewer: Greg Bruno, Staff Writer

Kurdistan Regional Government
smap=02010200&lngnr=12&rnr=73&anr=2087 5
Oct 31 2007
Iraq

The Council on Foreign Relations, a US independent, nonpartisan
membership organisation, think tank and publisher, interviewed Minister
Falah Mustafa Bakir, Director of the Foreign Relations Department of
the Kurdistan Regional Government, Iraq.

Falah Mustafa Bakir, Director of the Foreign Relations Department
for the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq, says his government
favours a political solution to cross-border tensions with Turkey,
but so far, Ankara has "only considered a military operation to
solve this problem." He adds that while Kurds "would like to have an
independent Kurdish state," political realities in Iraq have prompted
Kurdish officials to embrace a federal government strategy to solving
Iraq’s sectarian problems.

Q: Turkey’s parliament has voted on a military plan to allow Turkish
soldiers to conduct cross-border raids against Kurdish rebels in
northern Iraq. How would the Kurdish government respond to such an
act of aggression and, in your view, what’s behind the latest tough
talk from Ankara?

FM Bakir: We believe the best way to solve this problem is through
political dialogue. We understand Turkey’s concerns and we are against
the killing of civilians, but there is no military solution for this
problem. It would be in the interests of both Turkey and the KRG
[Kurdistan Regional Government] for this question to be addressed
politically, and we believe there may now be an opportunity for a
political approach.

So far the Turkish government has only considered a military operation
to solve this problem. But history and experience have proven that you
cannot solve such a problem only through military means. We believe
there is a window of opportunity and the door is still open for an
alternative to a military solution.

Q: The Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK) has been described as a Kurdish
separatist group. As far as you can tell, what are the aims of the PKK,
and what is your government doing to reign in the separatists?

FM Bakir: In the last few years, the PKK has begun to change its
conduct and it now may be ready for a peaceful approach within
Turkey. Our understanding is that the PKK may be prepared to join the
political process in Turkey, and it is left to the Turkish government
to seize this opportunity for a potential political solution to this
problem. But as far as we are concerned in the Kurdistan Region of
Iraq, we agree on the principle of non-interference in the internal
affairs of Turkey, and we are not ready for the Iraqi Kurdistan region
to be used against Turkey or any of our neighbours. We do not provide
support to any group that wants to create problems for Turkey.

Q: The US Congress recently voted to label the Ottoman Turk killing of
Armenians in 1915 as genocide. The move has clearly angered Ankara,
and could leave the impression that lawmakers in Washington have in
some way turned their backs on the KRG. I was wondering what your
thoughts were on this.

FM Bakir: We do not want to be part of any friction between Turkey
and the United States. We are allies with the United States and we
are neighbours with Turkey – we want to enjoy good relations with
everyone. We did not want Ankara’s reaction to the House resolution
to negatively affect our Region, which is the only safe part of Iraq.

Any military action by Turkey would jeopardise our hard work to
cooperate with our Iraqi colleagues to build a more stable and
prosperous future for all of the Iraqi people.

Q: Shifting gears a bit, Kurdistan and Turkey have been in the news a
bit lately because of growing cross-border tensions. Less heralded,
however, are economic ties between your government and the Turkish
government. What is the status of these economic partnerships?

FM Bakir: Even before the fall of Saddam’s regime, we had encouraged
Turkish companies to come and do business in the Iraqi-Kurdistan
region. We had limited capacity internally and therefore wanted to
reach out to those Turkish companies who have had a good reputation
and good performance and invite them to be active in our Region.

After the fall of the regime, the main construction projects have
been granted to Turkish companies because we believe that both sides
can benefit from these kinds of commercial and business activities.

These ties are growing, not decreasing, and that is very good news.

We want this trend to continue.

Q: What sectors are you seeing the largest growth in?

FM Bakir: Mainly construction – Erbil International Airport,
Suleimaniah Airport, bridges, roads, public buildings – to name a few.

Q: You mentioned in your speech to the United Nations this week that
Kurdistan has experienced "an historic period of economic growth and
expansion." I wonder if you could detail what those expansions are,
and define this historic growth?

FM Bakir: If you go back to the history of the Kurdistan Region under
the dictatorial regime of Saddam Hussein, the infrastructure was
ruined and there was no attention given to the agricultural sector,
industrial, or service sectors. It was after the fall of the regime
that we got the opportunity to expand and institute economic and
investment policies to encourage growth. These policies have provided
an opportunity for the public sector, the private sector and people
who lived abroad to start small businesses. It’s in the housing,
tourism, agricultural and construction sectors, and others, that the
government is trying to build a stronger economic foundation for our
people and for our future. People have started to have hope for the
future and are working together for a better future.

Q: You also mentioned during your speech at the United Nations that
the Kurdistan Region serves as a model for the rest of Iraq. Could
you expand on that?

FM Bakir: Since 1991 we have been free from Saddam Hussein’s control.

The Kurdistan National Assembly, our regional parliament, opted for a
federal solution in 1992 in order to be part of a federal democratic
system in Iraq. We wanted to show the rest of the country that, when
given the opportunity, we are able to administer our own Region and
take care of our own affairs. We have agreed with the rest of the
leadership in Iraq to draft a constitution which states that Iraq is
a federal state, a democratic state, a state that lives in peace with
its own people and its neighbours. Therefore we wanted the stability,
security, and economic activities in Kurdistan to be seen as a gateway
to the rest of Iraq, so that the rest of Iraq could be doing the same
as Kurdistan. We believe that companies established here will move
south when the time is right; Kurdistan is a gateway to the rest of
the country.

Q: You mention the Iraqi constitution and the federal system of
government. Last month the US Senate approved a nonbinding resolution
that urged the furthering of this federal government strategy in
Iraq. But the legislation has been widely criticized by the Shiite
government in Baghdad, Sunni groups and, in fact, the US Embassy. I
wonder what your thoughts are on the resolution?

FM Bakir: We were surprised by that reaction to and criticism of the
nonbinding resolution. We understand what the resolution was asking
for, and it was exactly what is stated in the Iraqi Constitution:
the implementation a federal system in Iraq. After trying a strong
central government, which has proven a failure, the best solution
that we could see that would bring the diverse Iraqi groups together
within a unified country is a federal system of governance. We see
federalism as a solution and not a problem. Federalism means uniting
Iraq and not partitioning Iraq. It’s unfortunate that people have
misrepresented federalism as a problem.

The president of the Kurdistan region, Masoud Barzani, has called
for a conference for all the major Iraqi political parties and
groups to come to Kurdistan and discuss the most appropriate means
of putting a federal system in place that will have the best chance
to bring political stability and progress to Iraq. Again, this is an
example of the Kurdistan Regional Government acting proactively and
constructively to find the best solutions to the problems facing Iraq.

Q: Now there are also those, however, who suggest that Kurdistan’s
favouring of this system is tantamount to favoring separatism. That
seems to be the concern that Turkey has. What are your thoughts on
that characterisation of support for this strategy?

FM Bakir: It’s unfortunate, because we have contributed so positively
to the political progress in Iraq and have given the best that
we can. We have done our best in serving the Iraqi people. But
unfortunately, still that kind of accusation, and that kind of fear,
remains.

We have opted voluntarily to be part of a federal democratic system in
Iraq. So long as Iraq continues to be committed to the constitution, we
will remain part of Iraq. We know very well that it is in our interest
to be part of this country, and we have decided voluntarily to remain
so. We have contributed so much to Iraq, and expect that the rest
of Iraq can return that kind of goodwill and gesture from the KRG,
so that we build together a federal and democratic system that can
give us a situation that allows for power sharing and wealth sharing
within the same country, which is for all Iraqis. Basically, the
foreign, defence and monetary policies would be handled by the federal
government in Baghdad, and the rest would be left to the region.

Q: The oil and gas law passed by the parliament of Kurdistan has been
questioned by many, including the Iraqi oil minister. I wonder if you
could talk on the subject of legality, and how the oil and gas law,
as passed, benefits not just your Region but Iraq as a whole.

FM Bakir: Whatever we have done comes within the constitutional
rights that our Region enjoys. And more importantly, we talk about
revenue sharing. Whatever we do, only 17 percent will come to the KRG
area, while the rest, which is 83 percent, will go to the federal
government in Baghdad. So we are committed to our constitutional
rights, we are committed to the constitution. We are committed to
revenue sharing. But our people have high expectations – they need
services and better opportunities.

We cannot put our future on hold while the rest of the country
stabilises. Therefore we have an opportunity: Kurdistan can serve as
the gateway for investors to come [through] and be a launching pad
or a stepping-stone toward the rest of the country.

Q: As an Iraqi from the Kurdish region of Erbil, do you believe the
Kurdish region deserves its own independent state?

FM Bakir: Every Kurd would like to have an independent Kurdish state.

We are the largest nation in the world without a state. But we
understand the difficulties. We understand the circumstances and the
neighborhood we live in, and therefore there is a difference between
what one wishes to achieve and what can be achieved.

The leadership of the Kurdistan Region is wise enough and there is
enough political maturity in the Region for them to make calculations
that take into consideration all the factors. Therefore they have
opted for a federal, democratic, pluralistic system to be part of
Iraq because they know what’s in the interests of the people. During
the elections, there was a referendum – 97.5 percent of the people
voted for an independent state, but still the political leadership
tried its best to manage the expectations of the people and explain
to the people why it’s in the interests of the KRG to be part of Iraq
and to work within Iraq.

http://www.krg.org/articles/detail.asp?

UW Concert Honors Famed Violinist And Teacher Manoogian

UW CONCERT HONORS FAMED VIOLINIST AND TEACHER MANOOGIAN
By Gayle Worland

Wisconsin State Journal, WI
Oct 29 2007

Vartan Manoogian was a violinist who left his mark throughout the
world. Born in Baghdad of Armenian parents, he enrolled at the Paris
Conservatory at age 16 and earned his masters at the Juilliard
School before developing a broad reputation in Europe, in part
as the concertmaster of L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande. At one
point in his career, he was sent by the U.S. State Department on a
performance tour of nine South American countries. But for the better
part of 27 years, Manoogian also planted his luggage in Madison and
opened his violin case in the teaching studios of the UW School of
Music. From 1980 until his July 12 death in Spain from pneumonia,
Manoogian, 71, taught hundreds of students, setting them off on
their own international lives in performance and academics. On
Thursday, Manoogian will be remembered, aptly, with music. A free
public concert at 7:30 p.m. in Mills Hall is expected to draw fans,
friends, faculty and former students. One, Manuel Guillen will be
the featured soloist in the world premiere of "Concierto Americano,"
written by renowned Spanish composer Zulema de la Cruz. De la Cruz
has woven themes from Armenian folk songs into the second movement
of her concerto as a salute to the late violinist’s heritage. Both
the piece and soloist were booked for Mills Hall last spring, but
the performance has since been dedicated to Manoogian. "He was an
outstanding musician, and he passed this on to his students," says
James Smith, who will conduct the 25-student Philomusica string
ensemble for the concert. "The violin was his musical voice. His
inner musicianship spoke through the violin." Manoogian’s son Avedis,
a Minneapolis-based pianist, also will join Guillen in a performance
of Debussy’s "Sonata for Violin and Piano." Other former students
are expected to join the Philomusica in the concert’s final piece,
Dvorak’s "Serenade for Strings in E Major." Guillen, who performs on
a 1767 T. Carcassi violin, studied with Manoogian at UW-Madison and
today is concertmaster/conductor of Camerata of Madrid and violin
professor at Madrid’s Royal Superior Conservatory of Music. Composer
de la Cruz is professor of electroacoustic composition at the Royal
Superior Conservatory of Music in Madrid, where she is director
of the conservatory’s computer music laboratory. Manoogian, also
artistic director of the Madeline Island Music Camp near Bayfield,
was known for non-traditional collaborations; in 1997 he performed
the finale of the Mendelssohn violin concerto with the Varsity Band
directed by Michael Leckrone at the "Farewell to the Field House"
concert. At the time of his death, he was in the process of creating
a multi-track recording of Henk Bading’s "Trio-Cosmos," comprised of
16 suites for three violins. Manoogian’s wife of 40 years, Brigitte,
still lives in Madison. His "international stature" helped draw top
students to the university, says Janet Jensen, associate director of
the School of Music. "He was very direct and incisive," she says, but
always "put students first. That was part of his artistry," she says.

That, "and his love of the violin."

ertainment/index.php?ntid=253864&ntpid=1

http://www.madison.com/wsj/home/ent

Analysis: A Second Mideast Refugee Crisis

ANALYSIS: A SECOND MIDEAST REFUGEE CRISIS
By Claude Salhani

United Press International
Oct 29 2007

VICTORIA, British Columbia, Oct. 29 (UPI) — Ten percent of Iraq’s
population has been turned into refugees, almost half in their own
country, a direct result of the U.S.-led invasion and subsequent
occupation of the country in March 2003, creating the second-largest
refugee problem in the Middle East. Only the Palestinian refugee
crisis, with close to 5 million displaced Palestinians scattered around
the Middle East and beyond, tops the Iraqi refugee crisis. But these
numbers might change very suddenly, catapulting the Iraqi refugee
crisis to the top of the list. Threats of potential incursions into
northern Iraq by the Turkish military in hot pursuit of members of
the PKK, the Kurdish Workers Party, may yet create a new wave of
Iraqi refugees. This time the bulk of the refugees fleeing will be
from Kurdish-controlled areas, which until now have enjoyed relative
calm and prosperity. The Kurdish problem complicates an already thorny
issue, placing additional stress on Turkish-U.S. relations. Washington
can ill-afford to lose the support of either the Kurds in northern
Iraq or that of the Turkish government across the border. Both play
a vital role in supporting the U.S. war effort in Iraq, and Turkey
allows the U.S. Air Force the use of its air bases as forward-operating
bases in the wars in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Losing access to those
bases would set the U.S. military back considerably; it would instead
have to rely on bases as far away as Germany. By that same token,
Turkey, too, is a strong ally of the United States in the fight
against terrorism. But Ankara remains adamant in its fight against
Kurdish separatists and the outlawed PKK. In trying to appease both
Turkey and the Kurds, Washington seems to find itself caught between,
excuse the pun, Iraq and a hard place. If Washington stands with the
Kurds, it risks upsetting Ankara, with whom relations are already
thinly stretched by recent attempts by the U.S. Congress to pass a
non-binding resolution declaring the mass killing of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks 90 years ago a genocide. Regardless of what happens
next, the problem of Iraq’s refugees is not about to go away anytime
soon. After the end of major combat operations, violence in Iraq
continued to claim lives as the war took a different turn, plunging
into an undeclared civil war with unprecedented sectarian killings
and counter-killings, pushing hundreds of thousands of civilians to
flee. The arrival of a million refugees in Syria and another million in
Jordan is placing unprecedented strain on the host countries, taxing
their housing markets and their public health and education systems
to the breaking point, forcing officials to reassess their open-doors
policy. If until now Iraq’s neighbors have shown compassion toward
their fellow Arabs by opening their borders along with their arms,
that policy is starting to change. While no official figure exists,
the United Nations estimates the number of Iraqis who have escaped
their country as a result of armed violence at around 2.6 million
since the start of the war. Some 2 million Iraqis have fled to Jordan,
Syria, Lebanon and other countries in the region. Yemen, Iran and
Turkey have also seen increased flows of Iraqi refugees. Another 1.8
million have become "internal displaced personnel" — refugees in
their own country. Those are people who have run away from their homes
to seek safer refuge in other parts of the country and within their
own communities after suffering sectarian violence, receiving death
threats or having one or more members of their families killed. But
as the numbers continue to grow, Iraqi refugees are beginning to feel
they are reaching the point where they have overstayed their welcome.

Syria and Jordan, the two main reception centers for Iraqi refugees
until now, are starting to request that future refugees obtain
visas first. And when visas are issued for three or six months,
Iraqis are forced to travel back to Iraq in order to renew them — an
expensive, not to mention dangerous, undertaking in a war zone. For
the Lebanese who face an already serious crisis with Palestinian
refugees, the previously opened door to Iraqi refugees is rapidly
closing. In Lebanon, which hosts about 50,000 Iraqis, refugees are
increasingly arrested if found to be in the country illegally. Some
find themselves imprisoned and forced to choose between imprisonment
or deportation. The cry from many Iraqis is that while the Arab
neighbors are closing the doors on immigration, the United States,
which bears a certain degree of moral responsibility, has kept its
doors to Iraqi immigration pretty tightly shut. Since the start of the
war, the United States has only admitted 700 Iraqis. More recently,
the United States announced it would consider for resettlement up to
7,000 Iraqi refugees referred to it by UNHCR. The peace conference
President Bush hopes to hold in Annapolis, Md., next month should
address, in part, the question of Palestinian refugees.

But as Iraqis continue to trickle out of their homeland by the
thousands, who is looking out for their interests before the question
of Iraqi refugees turns into another refugee crisis on a scale equal
to that of the Palestinians?

(Claude Salhani is editor of the Middle East Times)

Former Armenian president Ter-Petrosian seeking comeback

Associated Press Worldstream
October 26, 2007 Friday 7:42 PM GMT

Former Armenian president Ter-Petrosian seeking comeback

Longtime Armenian leader Levon Ter-Petrosian said Friday that he will
run for president in elections early next year, seeking to return to
office a decade after he was forced out.

Ter-Petrosian, who was president of the former Soviet republic from
1991-1998, announced his candidacy at an opposition rally that drew
more than 10,000 people to a square in central Yerevan.

He denounced the current leadership, under President Robert
Kocharian, as a corruption-ridden "kleptocratic regime."

Ter-Petrosian was elected president in October 1991, in the final
months before Armenia gained independence in the Soviet collapse. He
was re-elected in a flawed 1996 vote opponents accused him of
rigging, and was forced to resign in a power struggle in February
1998.

The presidential vote is to be held in February or March, but the
specific date has not been set.

Kocharian is barred from seeking a third straight term, while Prime
Minister Serge Sarkisian would be favored to win if he runs, which is
widely expected.