Natural Gas from Iran to Enter Armenia from March 19

Natural Gas from Iran to Enter Armenia from March 19

Arminfo
2007-03-16 11:44:00

Natural gas from Iran by Iran-Armenia gas line will enter Armenia
started March 19, Director General of "High-Voltage Power transmission
Lines" state CJSC Sahak Abramyan told ArmInfo. The Company is a
Customer of the gas line construction.

According to S. Abramyan, the first 40-km section of the gas line from
Meghri to Kajaran has already been built. A solemn ceremony will be
held in view of the Iranian gas entry the Republic. The two countries’
Presidents and the Government members will take part in the ceremony ,
the Director General said. Armenia will be able to receive to 450 mln
cub m of gas a year by this gas line section till 2008. Further, the
volumes of the Iranian gas supplies may grow to 2,3 bln cub m a year
with the increase of the gas line’s throughput capacity from Kajaran
to Ararat.

As the RA Energy Minister Armen Movsisian told ArmInfo earlier, during
the solemn ceremony of opening the gas line, Armenia and Iran intended
to sign an interstate agreement on construction of a boundary PTL on
Araks river, as well to discuss another energy projects.

To note, the total length of Iran-Armenia gas line makes up 141
km. For construction of the first section, the Iranian side has given
a credit of $28,2 mln with an interest rate of Libor+2 and with the
repayment term within 5 years since the gas line commissioning.
Armenia will pay off for gas by electric energy supplies on the basis
of 3 kWh per 1 cub m of natural gas. It is assumed that the right for
the gas line operation will be given to "ArmRosgazprom"
Armenian-Russian CJSC that presently carries out the works to increase
the throughput capacity of this gas line.

The US has no intention to locate radar in the Caucasus

The US has no intention to locate radar in the Caucasus

ArmRadio.am
16.03.2007 17:17

The US Government has taken no decision connected with anti-missile
defense in the Caucasus region and does not negotiate on the issue
with any of the countries of the region.

Commenting on the information of Azeri media that during the visit of
the Head of the US Missile Defense Agency Henry Obering to Azerbaijan
and Georgia in April an attempt will be made to get the support of the
leadership of these countries to the installation of an air defense
radar, RA Embassy in Armenia told Armenpress that the US has no
program of locating a radar in the Caucasus.

Let us remind that Obering had also declared that the United States
has not applied to any country for locating radar except for Czech
Republic and Poland.

Vartan Oskanian And Nikolay Bordyuzha Discuss Situation In CSTO Resp

VARTAN OSKANIAN AND NIKOLAY BORDYUZHA DISCUSS SITUATION IN CSTO RESPONSIBILITY ZONE

Noyan Tapan
Mar 15 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 15, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian on March 15 received the Secretary General of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Nikolay Bordyuzha.

During the meeting, the sides discussed the situation in the CSTO
responsibility zone, as well as a number of CSTO activities-related
issues, which include prospects of the organization’s further
development and the preparatory work for next sittings of the CSTO
regulatory bodies.

According to the RA MFA Press and Information Department, the
interlocutors pointed out the efficient cooperation between the
Armenian side and the CSTO Secretariat. They expressed satisfaction
over cooperation with member states in various international
organizations.

Author Argues That Armenian Genocide Happened

AUTHOR ARGUES THAT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE HAPPENED
By Jonathan Q. Macmillan
Contributing Writer

Harvard Crimson, MA
March 15 2007

Taner Akcam, a Turkish professor at the University of Minnesota, said
yesterday in a speech at Harvard what many Turks have refused to say:
"There was an Armenian genocide."

Akcam’s evening lecture-which was co-sponsored by the Harvard
Armenian Society, the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian studies,
and other groups-drew an audience of over three hundred to the Center
for Government and International Studies last night.

Akcam, who was sentenced by a Turkish Court in the 1970s to nearly
nine years in prison for his writing but escaped after one year to
political asylum in Germany, used last night’s opportunity to present
recent research that he claims shows that the Armenian genocide was
a real and deliberate act by Turkish leaders during World War I.

Akcam, whose book’s title-"A Shameful Act"-comes from a description
of the alleged genocide by Turkey’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
cited a number of documents, many from the official Ottoman Archives,
that he said explicitly described a systematic plan on the part of
Turkey’s ruling party. One document stated, "What we are talking
about is the elimination of the Armenians."

Turkey did not acknowledge the genocide in the years immediately
following World War I because it was concerned that such
acknowledgement would imperil its territorial claims, Akcam said. But
he added that this should no longer be a concern for the Turkish
government.

"The question of territory should be considered closed and resolved,
and the question of responsibility and human rights abuses should be
considered unresolved," Akcam said.

The government of Turkey to this day acknowledges no wrongdoing.

Timur Soylemez, a counselor at the Turkish Embassy in Washington, wrote
in an e-mailed statement before Akcam’s speech that the allegations
of genocide "have never been historically or legally substantiated
beyond reasonable doubt."

"As the facts stand today, the events of 1915 fail to meet the
definition of genocide as established by international law," he wrote.

Soylemez declined to be interviewed by phone.

But Akcam said that the term "genocide" is "a distraction."

"The fundamental issue is not the definition of a term," he said.

"What needs to be reemphasized is the need for moral condemnation of
an act."

James R. Russell, the Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at
Harvard, noted in a phone interview yesterday that most scholars agree
that the Turkish government’s claims of innocence are "demonstrably
untrue."

"The extermination of the Armenians was pre-arranged," Russell said
yesterday morning. "It took place not only in the war zone; it took
place all across Anatolia, and the people who were systematically
murdered were virtually in all cases not connected to the war."

Harvard Armenian Society co-president Nina K. Kouyoumdjian ’08 said
before last night’s event that she hoped events like Akcam’s lecture
would raise awareness and prevent history from repeating itself.

"It’s not as if Armenians want the land back or anything," she said.

"We want to prevent events like this from happening to another group
of people."

spx?ref=517714

http://www.thecrimson.com/article.a

Armenian Foreign Minister Speaks At UN Human Rights Council

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER SPEAKS AT UN HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

Yerkir
15.03.2007 13:38

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian made a
speech on March 13 at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Below is the text of the speech.

Mr. President of the Council,
Madame High Commissioner,

In this first year of this new Council, together with the human rights
community, we have been refining the processes that will empower
this body in order for it to meet our shared high expectations. The
expectations of this Council were high at the outset. They would have
remained high, even if the world were not embroiled in destructive
explosive conflicts. It is no surprise that at the heart of most of
those conflicts, lies an absence of a respect for basic human rights.

Our collective responsibility is to those individuals and groups,
those millions represented through their governments here, as well
as to those whose voices remain muted. They are not interested in
our debates, they know little about the nuance and the detail, but
our seriousness and sincerity will be judged either by their trust
and confidence or by their cynicism and disdain.

With this realization, the strengths of the Commission on Human Rights
drove the need for an even more powerful body. The limitations of that
Commission compelled the creation of a more effective structure with
broader reach. The Universal Periodic Review process, if it lives up
to its name, holds the promise of the impartiality and inclusiveness
we seek and require, in order for the process to transform itself
from a means to an end – from a way of investigating the human rights
environment to enabling an environment where there are human rights.

Our objective is a world where the rights of individuals and groups
are respected, where each neighborhood and each community, each city
and country, each region and continent, are safe havens for all who
live or travel there.

Religion does tear people apart, as do economic disparities, language
and ideology. But the frustrating and fascinating contradiction is
that faith has also bound people together, prosperity has been a
common goal, language and ideology have been shared.

Mr.President, this universal truism is also true in our region.

Unfortunately, the human rights record in our whole region during
the past fifteen years is nothing to be envied; it is a case study in
how human rights abuses lead to conflict and how conflicts heighten
human rights abuses.

>>From pogroms to ethnic cleansing, from destruction of spiritual
markers to vilification of ethnic groups, we have lived through the
worst that man can do to man. It is no wonder that the region has been
mired in conflict since the first days of independence. As we search
for ways to build a peace atop this pain and destruction, however,
it is clear that solutions can only be found through the genuine and
universal acceptance and application of basic, fundamental individual
and collective human rights. There is the formula for peace: The
violation of human rights brought us to this quagmire; the respect
for human rights will get us out.

Indeed it is an entangled web of human rights abuses of varied scope,
nature and depth that has brought our region to this situation. First,
there is the total disrespect of the cultural values of other
people. When a government intentionally plans and executes the
destruction of centuries-old monuments of profound cultural, artistic
and religious significance, that government has violated the spirits of
the dead and the trust of the living. Five thousand Armenian monuments
have been destroyed by the Azerbaijani government in the region of
Nakhichevan in the past few years, simply to eliminate the trace of
a whole nation from that territory.

Second, there is the violation of the right of people to
self-determination.

In the waning days of the USSR, the people of Nagorno Karabakh opted
for self-determination. The Azerbaijani authorities decided to attack
their own citizens to suppress those calls. And by doing so, they
lost the political and moral right to govern people they considered
their own citizens.

Third, there are the negative consequences of the double denialism of
the Turkish government. The denial of the right of their own people
to freely discuss and debate their common past with Armenians, and
the denial to both Armenians and Turks to forge a common future, by
keeping borders closed. Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian journalist
who fell victim to an assassin’s bullet, was the embodiment of both
Turkishness and Armenianness. Hrant Dink had two missions in his life
– to break all taboos within his own society, Turkish society, and
to forge a dialog between Turks and Armenians to reach understanding
and reconciliation.

Indeed, that’s exactly what we want today. There needs to be an open
society within Turkey so that their people can, without the fear of
persecution, freely debate the past, and there has to be an open border
between us so that our two peoples can interact and engage. Only in
this way can we transcend our differences and reconcile.

Now, Mr. President, a word about our own commitment to human rights
and democracy. In this, our 16th year of independence, our people will
be going to the polls to elect a parliament whose powers the people
chose to enhance, to invest them with broad authorities for social
and economic advances. The task of our next government is clear:
to stay the course and more aggressively promote human rights,
alleviate poverty and build effective governing institutions, to
enable our society to embrace democracy individually and collectively.

But the cruelties inherent in the process of massive economic
readjustment that we have been undergoing have led to a sense of
powerlessness on the part of ordinary citizens. As a consequence, they
are cynical about the value of expressing their voice. This means we
must work harder to strengthen democratic institutions and processes,
including elections, because they are not just ends. They are also
means to creating the necessary political and economic environment
which lead to distributed growth and dignified development.

Finally Mr. President, this Council and each of us, its members,
have a responsibility to promote the human rights we hold so dear in
the world, in our regions and in our own societies. There is nothing
new in this formula. Our challenge is to commit to it and make it work.

Thank you.

AAA: Senators Durbin and Coburn Introduce Genocide Accountablity Act

Armenian Assembly of America
1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
March 15, 2007
CONTACT: Karoon Panosyan
E-mail: [email protected]

SENATORS DURBIN AND COBURN INTRODUCE GENOCIDE ACCOUNTABLITY ACT

Washington, DC – Senators Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Tom Coburn (R-OK),
to address a gap in current law that hinders prosecution, introduced
today, the Genocide Accountability Act, a bipartisan legislation that
would make a non-U.S. national who commits genocide outside of the
United States also accountable under U.S. law.

Under current law, genocide is only a crime if it is committed within
the United States or by a U.S. national outside of the country.
Conversely, laws regarding torture, material support for terrorism,
terrorism financing, hostage taking and other federal crimes allow for
extraterritorial jurisdiction for crimes committed outside of the United
States by non-U.S. nationals. This gap in the law was discussed at the
Human Rights Subcommittee’s "Genocide and the Rule of Law" hearing held
early last month, to which the Armenian Assembly of America also
submitted testimony.

The Genocide Accountability Act, which is the first piece of legislation
produced by the Human Rights Subcommittee, would allow non-U.S.
nationals who have entered the United States to be prosecuted for
genocide committed outside the country. This closes a legal loophole
preventing the U.S. Justice Department from punishing perpetrators of
genocide who find safe haven in the United States.

In a letter to Senators Durbin and Coburn, Executive Director Bryan
Ardouny commended their efforts and expressed the Armenian Assembly’s
continuing support of legislation that strengthens the U.S. commitment
to fighting and stopping genocide.

"This extraterritorial jurisdiction upholds the spirit of the
international Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide and positively aligns the United States in defense of the
principle of humanity as invoked in the expression of ‘crimes against
humanity,’ " Ardouny wrote.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness of
Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

###

NR#2007-036

Editor’s Note: Below is the full text of the Genocide Accountability
Act.

A Bill to amend section 1091 of title 18, United States Code, to allow
the prosecution of genocide in appropriate circumstances.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the "Genocide Accountability Act of 2007".

SEC. 2. GENOCIDE.

Section 1091 of title 18, United States Code, is amended by striking
subsection (d) and inserting the following:

"(d) REQUIRED CIRCUMSTANCE FOR OFFENSES.- The circumstance referred to
in subsections (a) and (c) is that-

"(1) the offense is committed in whole or in part within the United
States;

"(2) the alleged offender is a national of the United States (as that
term is defined in section 101 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1101));

"(3) the alleged offender is an alien lawfully admitted for permanent
residence in the United States (as that term is defined in section 101
of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1101));

"(4) the alleged offender is a stateless person whose habitual residence
is in the United States; or

"(5) after the conduct required for the offense occurs, the alleged
offender is brought into, or found in, the United States, even if that
conduct occurred outside the United States." .

www.armenianassembly.org

Due To Wrong Policy Of Ra Authorities Nkr Turned From Conflict Objec

DUE TO WRONG POLICY OF RA AUTHORITIES NKR TURNED FROM CONFLICT OBJECT – DISPUTABLE TERRITORY, ALTERNATIVE MEMBERS SAY

Noyan Tapan
Mar 14 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 14, NOYAN TAPAN. "Dozens of pro-Azerbaijani and no
pro-Armenian documents adopted over the past years by international
instances are the evidence of the fact that RA President Robert
Kocharian and his co-thinkers have sold Karabakh for retaining
their own power." Nikol Pashinian, founder-member of Alternative
public-political initiative, editor of Haykakan Zhamanak daily,
stated this at the March 14 press conference. In his words, the fact
that the U.S. State Department in its annual report characterised
Nagorno Karabakh as Azerbaijani area occupied by Armenia means
that there is a danger of moving the Nagorno Karabakh problem to
UN agenda. Reminding that RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian named
the above mentioned formulation as a "misprint," N. Pashinian named
"misprints" the authorities, due to the incompetent policy of which
the essence of Nagorno Karabakh problem was misrepresented in almost
all reports of international community. So, in his words, we should
get rid of the the current regime of "skinheads" as soon as possible.

"Those saying that we must not speak about the Nagorno Karabakh
problem in the preelectoral period understand nothing in politics," the
Haykakan Zhamanak’s editor said. As he affirmed, on the threshold of
the elections all parties should present their own views on settlement
of Nagorno Karabakh conflict for the people to choose the variant
most acceptable for it.

Another member of Alternative, former Yerevan Mayor Vahagn Khachatrian
said that it is the wrong policy of the current authorities that
resulted in a situation when NKR turned from the conflict subject
into the conflict object, disputable territory.

The Talks Were Slow To Move, Despite The Existing Groundwork: Armeni

THE TALKS WERE SLOW TO MOVE, DESPITE THE EXISTING GROUNDWORK: ARMENIAN FM

Arminfo
2007-03-14 19:28:00

Armenia’s Foreign Minister, Vartan Oskanian, concluded a regular
meeting of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs, together with the
Azerbaijani FM, in Geneva, reports the press service of the Foreign
Ministry of Armenia.

This meeting followed a recent visit to the region by French co-chair
Bernard Fassier, who, on behalf of the other two co-chairs Yuri
Merzlyakov of Russia, and Matthew Bryza of the US, attempted to
ascertain the positions of the two presidents, in the run-up to this
meeting of foreign ministers.

Minister Oskanian said, "The talks were slow to move, despite the
existing groundwork, as attempt was made to discuss second-layer
details pertaining to the principles in the document. Although there
is clearer understanding of each other’s positions, one thing is
evident that there are deep differences.

We believe that there can still be enough progress to warrant a
meeting of the presidents, and for that reason we agreed to another
meeting in April."

The Minister explained that Armenia remains committed to the principles
in the document that is being negotiated. Although there are many
secondary issues outstanding still, the principles contained in the
document address the fundamental issues with the right trade-offs,
that could lead to a lasting resolution.

ANKARA: French Businessmen Want Mediterranean Union

FRENCH BUSINESSMEN WANT MEDITERRANEAN UNION

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 13 2007

During a visit to Turkey, Assembly of French Chambers of Commerce
and Industry (ACFCI) President Jean Francois Bernardin said Turkey
and France should make initiatives to establish a Mediterranean
Union, saying that cultivating a stronger Mediterranean identity,
in coordination with the EU would expand the region economically
and culturally.

ACFCI members and a press delegation attended workshops with the
Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges’ (TOBB) Foreign
Economic Affairs Council (DEÝK) and press members in Ýstanbul. TOBB
President Rifat Hisarcýklýoðlu said during the meeting’s dinner
that their concerns are not only domestic problems but also the
developments in World Chambers Federation, Union of Islamic Country
Chambers and the relations with neighbor countries. He said they signed
a forum with Israel and Palestine that would provide jobs for 10,000
Palestinians. Hisarcýklýoðlu emphasized that Turkey has an orderly
market economy and expects support from the ACFCI to familiarize
Turkey in France. He also said they were ready to cooperate in
training projects.

DEÝK President Rona Yýrcalý said France was Turkey’s fifth-biggest
trading partner. He added that relations would develop by private
sector investments and underlined the 75 percent decrease in French
foreign direct investments to Turkey. He also invited the French
businesmen to the Istanbul summit of the World Chambers Federation,
which will be held July 2 to 6.

Bernardin said during his address to the gathering that the Marseilles
Chamber of Commerce had been established in order to learn about the
eastern Mediterranean and Ottomans in history, pointing out that the
region had still kept its importance. Bernardin said that problems
stemmed from mutual misunderstanding.

He said Turkey was improving very rapidly and that trade made nations
come together because commercial firms always act more quickly
than official bodies. Bernardin reiterated that 2009 was declared
France’s Year of Turkey and that special projects should be prepared
for the event.

He said in response to a question about his recent book "J’aime
la France… mais je suis en colère" (I love you France but I am
offended), which was published last week and suggested that France
had been deteriorating for the last 30 years, that politician had
made incorrect decisions.

He pointed out in his book that the 1973 oil crisis was a breaking
point for France and it could not adapt to the change, which caused
unemployment. He pointed out that a parliament can not write history
— in reference to France’s lower house passing a bill that would
criminalzie denial of an Armenian genocide — and they should look
to the future, not the past. "If those in power judge history, it
might turn out as rigid as this," he said.

–Boundary_(ID_pydPGat4N7NEHf/1dJ8ufw)–

The Rally Participants Of "Alternative" To Surpass 50 Thousand

THE RALLY PARTICIPANTS OF "ALTERNATIVE" TO SURPASS 50 THOUSAND

A1+
[08:38 pm] 09 March, 2007

On March 9 the "Alternative" Public-Political Initiative held its
recurrent rally opposite the Matenadaran.

"The Republic of Armenia will survive due to one person and I am that
person", Nikol Pashinyan, leader of the "Alternative" announced. He
called on everybody to be guided by this motto. Nikol Pashinyan claims
they will have 50 thousand people assembled near the Matenadaran during
the next rally provided each participant brings 50 people with him.

"Robert Kocharyan, go away! We demand your resignation", shouted the
rally initiators and participants.

The participants claim they have been in a nightmare and the on-going
rallies helped them to restore the belief and become sobber.

"We are ready to do our utmost and to combat against the deeply-rooted
injustice and ignorance reigning in the country", says Lusia Gevorgyan,
one of the participants.

Vahagn Khachatryan maintains that today the television only shows the
interior rows OYP and CRU to make the impression that the opposition
is not deprived of airtime broadcast.

But he is convinced tht the expression of freedom and speech can
be restored only via impeachement which is to be realised with the
participation of the opposition and RA residents.

Suren Surenyants, member of the "Hanrapetutyun" Party’s board, dwelt
on "some reperesentatives of the opposition who have become tools in
the hands of Robert Kocharyan and Serge Sargsyan".

"The key to victory lies in our hope and belief. Let’s turn Armenia
into a cathedral of belief. Long live to the Armenian citizens",
says Suren Surenyants.

Petros Makeyan, leader of the "Democratic Fatherland", added
that the so-called Karabakh clan involves the very Kocharyan and
Sargsyan who have nothing to do with the public and rely on certain
stratum of society. These oligarchs become NA deputies and form the
government. "That’s why we urge them to quit as soon as possible".

Aghasy Enqyan maintains that after the power handover their next step
will be the abolition of dual citizenship.

"The quicker the power is shifted, the faster we shall be able to
prevent the obstacles and secure the stability in the country.

To note, the Alternative will hold its next rally on March 16, at
5:00 p.m.