Venice Commision – 71st plenary session

Venice Commission examines democratic control of security services and
video surveillance during its 71st plenary session

Strasbourg, 29.05.2007 – The Council of Europe’s European Commission for
Democracy through Law (the "Venice Commission") will be meeting in
Venice on 1 and 2 June (Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista).

On the session agenda are the examination of a number of important legal
texts from different countries and the adoption of several opinions. The
Commission will, for example, adopt a report on the democratic control
of security services in Council of Europe member States that was
prepared at the request of the Committee of Ministers. Another important
point concerns the study on the video surveillance by private operators
in the public and private spheres and by public authorities in the
private sphere.

Other points submitted for adoption:
* the draft opinion on the draft Constitution of Montenegro;
* the draft opinion on early elections in Ukraine;
* the draft joint opinion of the Venice Commission and OSCE/ODIHR on the
latest amendments to the electoral code of Armenia.

The Commission will also endorse the opinion on the draft law on the
People’s advocate of Kosovo.

The Commission will further examine with a view to adoption, the draft
opinion on the draft Law on the parliamentary opposition in Ukraine, as
well as the draft opinion on the law on amendments to certain laws
concerning the status of Deputies of the Verkhovna Rada of the
Autonomous Republic of Crimea and of Local Councils of Ukraine
(introducing an "imperative mandate").

In May 2007, Morocco became a new member State of the Venice Commission.

All the adopted texts are public and will be available on the
Commission’s website:

Press contact on the spot:
Roberto Tumbarello, Council of Europe press correspondent in Italy
Mobile: +39 335 69 38 216, [email protected]

Press Release
Council of Europe Press Division
Ref: 349a07
Tel: +33 (0)3 88 41 25 60
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A political organisation set up in 1949, the Council of Europe works to
promote democracy and human rights continent-wide. It also develops
common responses to social, cultural and legal challenges in its 47
member states.

www.venice.coe.int.
www.coe.int/press

First Republic laid basis for development of our new state system

PanARMENIAN.Net

First Republic laid basis for development of our new state system,
Kocharian said
28.05.2007 13:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Robert Kocharian congratulated
the Armenian people on the Day of the First Republic, the RA leader’s
press office said.

`Dear compatriots, I congratulate you on the Day of Republic. In May
1918 the heroic struggle and victories of our nation resulted in
formation of the Republic of Armenia. After a century-long break the
Armenian independent state system was restored. Despite its short
life, that republic laid a firm basis for legal, economic, scientific
and cultural development of our new state system. May 28 is one of the
brightest pages of our latest history, the foundation of present-day
Armenia.

Congratulating you on this solemn day I wish our people could follow
the way that started May 28, since this way symbolizes the immortal
values of national independence and freedom,’ the President’s message
says.

Today President Kocharian attended the memorial of Sardarapat to lay a
wreath in commemoration of the heroes of the Sardarapat struggle that
took place May 26, 1918. RA NA Speaker Tigran Torosian, Prime Minister
Serge Sargsyan, Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II, NKR President
Arkady Ghukasian, ministers and diplomats were also present at the
solemn ceremony.

Photographer recommends going into the field ‘only if you have to’

MyWestTexas.com, TX
May 27 2007

Photographer recommends going into the field ‘only if you have to’

Georgia Temple<br>Arts & Entertainment Editor
Midland Reporter-Telegram
05/27/2007

New Mexico photographer Craig Varjabedian traces his passion for what
has become his home to a chance meeting when he was a teenager.

"My love for this landscape began through a chance meeting with the
photographer Ansel Adams," Varjabedian says in his book, "Four and
Twenty Photographs: Stories from Behind the Lens," published by the
University of New Mexico Press. "We met when I was a teenager, and
later I attended one of his workshops in California.

"Adams urged me to travel through New Mexico, which I did while in my
20s. Like most 20-year-olds, I was having an adventure, meeting new
people, exploring and often sleeping in my car to save money.

"I remember that I parked my car one night on the Santa Fe plaza.
Waking early, I watched the light from the sun rise behind the Sangre
de Cristo Mountains, illuminating the pre-dawn sky. Transfixed by the
richness and clarity of the light, I fell in love with New Mexico."

An exhibition of the "Four and Twenty Photographs" as well as copies
of his book will be at the Museum of the Southwest, 1705 W. Missouri
Ave., June 1 to July 31. The book includes text by writer Robin Jones
of Santa Fe and an afterword by Jay Packer, M.D. Varjabedian will be
at the Museum of the Southwest for the opening reception and book
signing at 6 p.m. Friday.

Several of the images are in color. Most are in black and white.

"The majority of work that I do is in black and white — 22 of the
images at the museum will be in black and white," Varjabedian said in
a telephone interview with the Reporter-Telegram. "The thing that
fascinates me about black and white is it’s different from what we
see. And in a lot of ways it abstracts what we see. The artist sort
of forces us to take a look at something in a way that we are not
used to seeing it."

The 24 images in the exhibition and book were selected by
Varjabedian, who earned a bachelor’s degree in photography from the
University of Michigan and a master’s degree in photography from
Rochester Institute of Technology. His teachers include, among
others, Phil Davis at the University of Michigan and photographer
Paul Caponigro.

"I feel that land and people form relationships, and when I take a
photograph, I’m forming a relationship, both with the subject of my
picture — be it tree, cloud, building or person — and the
environment around the subject," said Varjabedian, who is the
director of the New Mexico Photography Field School, Santa Fe.
"Nowadays when I photograph, I feel I’m creating a homage to the
West, its land and its people. The light and sky are spectacular, but
the people who live here also affirm the strength, endurance and
magic of this place."

Varjabedian was born in Windsor, Ontario, Canada in 1957. His family
moved to the United states in 1970. His first serious camera was a
TLR Yashica MAT 124G, that he purchased at K-Mart.

"My family heritage is Armenian," he said. "(His wife) Kathy can
trace her family back to the early Pilgrims. We live in New Mexico,
surrounded by a diverse community, learning much from the past about
how to live in the present and plan for the future."

He once considered entering the medical field.

"At one point in my life I had considered becoming a physician and
found the need to photograph became so much greater," Varjabedian
said. "One of my answers to people who come to me and ask, ‘Do you
think I ought to be a photographer?’ is ‘Only if you have to. If
you’re going at it for fame and money, it’s a fickle field to go
into.’

"I compare it to becoming a rock star. The way it all seems to work
is outside of any control we could have on it. There are people out
there who are really incredible shooters, and nobody ever hears of
them. Somebody else receives a huge amount of press and fame whose
work I simply don’t get. I think the whole thing is fickle."

Money wasn’t what drew Varjabedian into the field.

"I was just sort of seriously called to it, I think," he said. "When
I tried to take detours along the way, life sort of said, ‘No. You’re
not supposed to do that.’"

So he didn’t.

newsid=18393050&BRD=2288&PAG=461&dept_ id=541499&rfi=6

http://www.mywesttexas.com/site/news.cfm?

BAKU: Spokesman Says Armenian, Azeri Presidents To Discuss Karabakh

SPOKESMAN SAYS ARMENIAN, AZERI PRESIDENTS TO DISCUSS KARABAKH IN JUNE

ANS TV, Baku
25 May 07

The spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, Xazar Ibrahim,
has said Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev will meet his Armenian
counterpart Robert Kocharyan in St Petersburg in June to discuss a
settlement to the long-standing Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

In his interview with the "Point of View" programme on Azerbaijan’s
private ANS TV, he commented on the latest visit to the region by
the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen and their talks with the Azerbaijani
authorities, but refused to give any details of the negotiations.

He also said that Azerbaijan is in favour of a stage-by-stage
settlement to the conflict, i.e. Armenia should first withdraw
from the seven districts surrounding Nagornyy Karabakh, Azerbaijani
refugees should return to their homes and then the status of Nagornyy
Karabakh should be determined on the basis of Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity.

Xazar Ibrahim denied reports that a referendum will be held in Nagornyy
Karabakh to determine its status, saying that no referendum can be
held in a breakaway region.

BAKU: Azerbaijani National Security Ministry Searches Gundalik Azerb

AZERBAIJANI NATIONAL SECURITY MINISTRY SEARCHES GUNDALIK AZERBAIJAN AND REALNIY AZERBAIJAN NEWSPAPERS EDITORIAL OFFICES

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
May 22 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / Trend corr. K.Zarbaliyeva / The National Security
Ministry of Azerbaijan (NSM) searched the editorial offices of the
newspapers Gundalik Azerbaijan and Realniy Azerbaijan.

Arif Babayev, the National Security Minister, stated that a criminal
case had been filed at the Central Investigation Department of NSM
with regards to the editors of the newspapers in compliance with
Article 214 (terror threat) of the Criminal Code.

Shahvalad Chobanoglu, the editor-in-chief of the Gundalik Azerbaijan
newspaper, reported to correspondents that a search was being carried
out by ten people at the decision of the Yasamal District Court.

The editors of several newspapers, human rights activists and
journalists gathered in front of the editorial office.

Fatullayev, charged with offending the Hojaly people in his newspaper
article ‘Karabakh Diary’ was detained at an appeal brought by Tatiana
Chaladzeh, the manager of the Centre for Protection of Refugees and
Displaced Persons, and was sentenced to two years and six months in
prison at the decision of the Yasamal District Court.

The editor-in-chief contends that the article displayed the opinion
of the interlocutor.

In compliance with the decision of the Yasamal District Court,
Fatullayev will have to pay an AZN 20,000 fine.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Pavillion At Moscow Tourism Fair

AZERBAIJANI PAVILLION AT MOSCOW TOURISM FAIR

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
May 18 2007

Russia, Moscow, Òrend corr R. Aghayev / Azerbaijani was present with
a pavilion at the 7th Moscow international tourism fair on 18 May.

The half an hour presentation ceremony was organized by the
Coordinating Council of Azerbaijani Youth (CCAY), including slides
depicting the country, different stands, and dance performances.

It was the director of the socio-political department of the Executive
Administration of Azerbaijani President, Fuad Akhundov who presented,
voicing gratitude to the CCAY for organizing the event.

" Azerbaijan is a rich country always attractive to tourists for
its various climate zones, national cuisine, music, historical and
cultural traditions, monuments," Akhundov said.

Akhundov informed the attendees of Azerbaijan’s history, people, and
their tolerance for different nationalities, peoples, and religions.

According to Akhundov, despite the Armenian occupation of
Nagorno-Karabakh and seven nearby regions, the economy of the
country is still rapidly developing. "We call on all of you to visit
Azerbaijan. Come and you will see it for yourselves," Fuad Akhundov
concluded.

–Boundary_(ID_sVUOw3NkPyszKO dkS3p9aw)–

Azerbaijan: Poachers Out of Control

A1+

Azerbaijan: Poachers Out of Control
[03:05 pm] 19 May, 2007

Use of explosives devastating rare Caspian fish
stocks. When a south wind blows from the Caspian Sea
towards the coastal village of Hovsan, 32 kilometres
east of the Azerbaijani capital Baku, hundreds of dead
fish are washed ashore.

The fish are the victims of illegal poachers and
indiscriminate methods of killing their prey that are
threatening stocks of sturgeon, an endangered species
and the most precious resource of the Caspian.

In spring, all kinds of fish swim for shallow waters
in order to spawn caviar in warmer waters. Here they
fall prey to illegal explosives used by the poachers.

Along the shoreline you can meet amateur fishermen
with rods but also men who are evidently poachers
getting ready to lay explosive charges.

The ordinary fishermen say that for the last ten years
poachers have been catching fish on this spot, mostly
unhindered and using dynamite or home-made explosives
made of fertilizers. They go out fishing in motorboats
either early in the morning or late at night.

Fishing is one of the most lucrative businesses in
modern-day Azerbaijan. On the black market, a kilo of
fresh sturgeon can be bought for 10 manats (12 US
dollars) while a kilo of black caviar costs around 120
manats (140 dollars). Overseas, these prices can be
dozens of times higher.

International alarm about a steep decline in sturgeon
stocks prompted the international agency the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species, CITES, to halt exports of Beluga caviar from
the Caspian Sea in 2006.

CITES lifted the ban in 2007, prompting objections
from many environmentalists. One of them, Dr Ellen
Pikitch, co-founder of the organisation Caviar Emptor,
which monitors the caviar trade, called the decision a
`death sentence’, maintaining that the Beluga Sturgeon
has lost more than 90 per cent of its population in
recent years.

The Caspian Fish Company has a monopoly over most
fishing in the Azerbaijani sector of the sea, but it
appears powerless to rein in the poachers.

One of the poachers, who asked not to be named, told
IWPR that one explosive charge is capable of causing
an underground shock wave 15-20 metres in radius,
which throws most of the dead fish to the surface.

`The big heavy fish stay down below,’ he said. `We get
these fish out of the depths with the help of divers.’
Others said it was rare to use divers and that most of
the big dead fish come ashore within two or three
days, creating a horrible pile of carcases on the
beach.

This is a crowded shoreline, home also to a number of
summer houses for wealthy Baku residents, a special
fishermen’s zone, a bathing beach and 10-km-long
oil-and-gas terminal, built in Soviet times 55 years
ago.

A local resident, who also declined to be named, said
he had seen how the oil terminal, which extends into
the sea, has also been damaged by the poachers’
explosions and that it was now on the verge of
collapse.

A spokesman for the Azerbaijani oil company SOCAR
declined to confirm this information to IWPR. He said
the terminal was well guarded and it was impossible
for strangers and especially for poachers to gain
access to its territory.

The amateur fisherman are also unhappy about the
poachers in their midst.

`Fishing is a recreation for us,’ said 45-year-old
Rizvan Makhmudov. `And when your line doesn’t catch
anything all the recreation has gone.’

Makhmudov said he catches fewer and fewer fish and
that the poachers are fishing stocks to the point of
extinction in full view of witnesses.

`Four or five people in motor boats drive up to Gum
island where the amateur fisherman are fishing
legally,’ he said. `One of them chooses a place where
there are a lot of fish, then the boat moves towards
that spot at low speed. Then they light the wicks of
specially prepared explosives in bottles and throw
them in the water.’

Makhmudov said that the blasts killed not just fish,
but also other marine life, such as seals.

Another amateur fisherman, 42-year-old Aydin Bairamov,
said that he had seen illegal poaching take place in
these parts since Soviet times. He said that a number
of influential people who had summer houses here were
now trying to fight the problem on their own
initiative.

One of these is a retired general, Rasul Rasumov, who
is a former head of Azerbaijan’s Police Academy – and
also a keen fisherman. He tries to stop poachers
wherever he can.

But the efforts of individuals are no substitute for
an official clampdown on poaching.

Ehsan Zahidov, a spokesman for Azerbaijan’s interior
ministry, told IWPR his ministry did not play the
leading role in fighting poachers and it was the job
of the department for protection of biological
resources in the environment ministry – although he
added the police were ready to take part in joint
operations if required.

Gulshan Huseinova, press spokesman for the environment
ministry, dismissed the charge that poachers were
operating freely and said her ministry monitored the
situation closely.

`Because of strong winds we haven’t been able recently
to carry out raids in the open sea,’ she said. `In the
Neftchali and Salian regions our officers are
constantly observing the situation. The information
you are talking about has not been proved.’

Environmentalists are especially worried about the way
poachers target fish just as they are spawning.

The area around the Shirvan canal that runs into the
sea in the Salian region is another favourite fishing
ground – and magnet for poachers. During the spawning
season, different kinds of fish head from the sea for
fresh water here. `If of course the nets of the
poachers don’t stop them from reproducing,’ said
47-year-old Jahangir Mirzoyev.

Locals say the number of sturgeon here has fallen
sharply. Ten km up the canal there are plenty of nets
belonging to poachers. One of the men casting a net
said that he paid a monthly bribe to officials to
allow them to continue his trade.

`If it keeps on like this our grandchildren won’t know
about these different kinds of fish,’ said Mirzoyev
bitterly.

An environmental expert Telman Zeinalov, head of the
non-governmental organisation the National Centre for
Ecological Forecasting, said that by acting during the
spawning season and using explosives, the poachers
were destroying whole varieties of fish.

`There is plenty of evidence of poaching and I have no
doubts that the poachers are being protected by senior
officials,’ he said.

By Sabuhi Nasirli in Hovsan and Neftchala (CRS No. 392
17-May-07) Sabuhi Nasirli is a correspondent for
Zerkalo newspaper in Baku.

This article is a product of IWPR’s Cross Caucasus
Journalism Network, supported by the European Union.
The article is republished from IWPR’s Caucasus
Reporting Servic

ANKARA: Turkish Nobel Laureate ‘Returns Home’ To Accept Doctoral Awa

TURKISH NOBEL LAUREATE ‘RETURNS HOME’ TO ACCEPT DOCTORAL AWARD
Andrew Finkel Ýstanbul

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 15 2007

Orhan Pamuk, Turkey’s lone Nobel laureate and a man more feted abroad
than in his own country, returned to his native Ýstanbul to be awarded
an honorary doctorate yesterday in that city’s Bosphorus University.

"To be honored in your own home is a source of enormous pride. I
am so very happy," Pamuk told an audience, who rose to give him a
standing ovation.

In accepting the award Pamuk emphasized the importance of intellectual
freedom, or what he called the "space to be curious," and the
freedom to sometimes be irresponsible. He praised the Bosphorus
University’s defense of academic liberties in the intellectual life
of the nation. "No honorary doctorate from any other institution,
anywhere else in the world, could mean this much," he said.

Pamuk smiled bashfully as he was helped into his doctoral gown and made
his address at an excited clip. "I didn’t sleep at all last night in
anticipation," he confessed. Just over 40 years previously he had sat
in the same hall as a high school student taking an English placement
exam for Robert Academy (today’s Robert College), which then shared
the university campus. He described the delights of roaming the open
stacks of the school library and being allowed the freedom to slip into
"a secret life."

In her presentation of the award Rector Ayþe Soysal was at pains
to describe the democratic process through which the doctorate was
proposed by the Turkish Literature Department, passed by the Faculty
of Humanities and then approved by the university senate. "In other
universities such awards are very much the prerogative of the rector’s
office alone," one faculty member later explained.

"There has always been a special relationship between Orhan Pamuk
and this university," explained Jale Parla, professor of literature
and former Bosphorus faculty member. Pamuk’s first Dostoyevsky-style
dynastic saga, "Cevdet Bey and his Sons," won immediate critical
acclaim, but his subsequent post-modern experiments "The White
Castle" and "The Black Book" were greeted not so much with hostility,
but uncomprehending silence. It was Nuket Esen, now head of the
university’s Turkish literature department, along with figures like
Professor Parla who signposted to the world that Pamuk was leading
the Turkish novel and language in new directions.

More recently Pamuk found himself less in uncharted than murky waters
after unguarded remarks to a Swiss journalist calling attention to
what he described as the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic’s
cruel treatment of its Armenian and Kurdish populations. A court case
in December 2005 for "insulting Turkishness" was attended by crowds of
ultra-nationalists, who branded him a traitor. Major newspapers (some
of whose columnists were present at yesterday’s ceremony) suggested
he had criticized Turkey’s past simply to ingratiate himself with
the Nobel Committee.

Security at the award ceremony was tight, but unobtrusive. "The adverse
reaction from the sort of groups who dislike Orhan Pamuk was far less
than we were expecting," one senior administrator said.

University authorities, yesterday, were eager to emphasize the
non-political nature of their award, although several faculty members
privately expressed their pleasure in rewarding a creative talent who
spoke his mind. Pamuk did not disappoint them in his brief acceptance
speech. "A society which is not free has no future," he said.

–Boundary_(ID_2z2vgdNex2xl2NwkCdgteg)–

Russian Spaceman Yuri Baturin’s Photo Exhibition Opens at YSU

RUSSIAN SPACEMAN YURI BATURIN’S PHOTO EXHIBITION OPENS AT YSU

YEREVAN, MAY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The series of events organized on the
initiative of the OSCE Yerevan Office and Yerevan State University
started with Russian spaceman, professor Yuri Baturin’s photo
exhibition and film entitled "Short meeting with the earth" held on
May 14 at the YSU.

Head of the OSCE Yerevan Office, Ambassador Vladimir Pryakhin, YSU
Rector Aram Simonian and representative of RA Ministry of Foreign
Affairs Armen Bayburdian mentioned in their speech Yuri Baturin’s
great contribution in the sphere of cosmonautics.

"It is a great honour for me that first spectators of my photos and
film in Armenia are the professors’ and lecturers’ staff and students
of the YSU," Yuri Baturin mentioned.

He will deliver a lecture on the theme "Research of the Cosmos and
Modern Problems of International Relations" to YSU students on May 15.

U.S. positive about Armenia’s election

PanARMENIAN.Net

U.S. positive about Armenia’s election
14.05.2007 14:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `We welcomed the Armenian parliamentary elections
and congratulate the Armenian people on a more successful poll than
previous elections. We share the satisfaction of international
observers that the election infrastructure, both legal and technical,
has been greatly improved. We are proud that our partnership with
government and non-government structures in Armenia has supported
these improvements,’ says a statement issued by the U.S. Embassy in
Armenia on May 12 parliamentary election.

`We value highly the work of the many election officials who were
dedicated to completing their work with integrity.

We note ODIHR Ambassador Frlec’s comment that this election is not
over.

Our judgment so far is that this election was an improvement toward
international standards.

Part of the election process is a careful consideration of all issues
raised in connection with the election, including several serious
allegations of fraud or intimidation which may have affected the
outcome of some of the races.

We hope for aggressive investigation of allegations of electoral
wrongdoing and subsequent prosecutions, should they be warranted,’ the
statement says.