BAKU: FM to voice discontent to Slovakia Re Participation in NK Hydr

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
March 7 2009

Azerbaijani FM to voice discontent to Slovakia if information about
its participation in construction of hydroelectric power station in
Nagorno Karabakh is confirmed

07 March 2009 [11:50] – Today.Az

"Our structure will continue collecting information about
participation of Slovakia in the construction of hydroelectric power
station in Nagorno Karabakh", said official representative of the
Azerbaijani FM Elkhan Polukhov, commenting on the statement of the
president of Armenian community of Slovakia Ashot Grigoryan who said
Slovakia will take part on the construction of two hydroelectric power
stations in self-declared Nagorno Karabakh.

The diplomat announced that in case this information is confirmed
Azerbaijan will voice its discontent to Slovakia.

According to Polukhov, "Azerbaijan and Slovakia has good and trustful
relations and this state recognizes the territorial integrity of our
country. I hope

Slovakia will not take steps, damaging the partner and trustful
relations with Azerbaijan".

/Regnum/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/50959.html

USD Cost 372.49 At Close Of Business On Armenian Stock Exchange

USD COST 372.49 AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON ARMENIAN STOCK EXCHANGE

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.03.2009 20:10 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Purchase and sale volume at NASDAQ OMX totaled USD
3,420,000 (AMD 372.11 per 1 USD). 1 US dollar price at the close
of business on the Armenian Stock Exchange amounted AMD 372.49,
CBA official web site reported.

Yesterday the dram-to-dollar exchange rate was fixed at AMD 305-310
to1USD and AMD 387 to 1 EURO.

The upsurge followed CB President Arthur Javadian’s statement on
cessation of control over the foreign currency market and return to
floating rate policy.

According to the Central Bank, the dollar exchange rate will fluctuate
from AMD 360 to 380 in 2009.

CSTO Foreign Ministers Summit Due In Yerevan In April

CSTO FOREIGN MINISTERS SUMMIT DUE IN YEREVAN IN APRIL

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.03.2009 13:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Currently in Yerevan on a working visit, Nikolai
Bordyuzha, Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization, is expected to brief on CSTO rapid reaction force
formation plans.

"The purpose of my visit is to report Armenian President Sargsyan
on the outcomes of our work," Bordyuzha said. "The Secretariat has
already organized draft projects regulating the status, activity,
legal system and conditions of RRF operation."

The CSTO Secretary General is also scheduled to meet with Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian to discuss details of the impending
CSTO Foreign Ministers summit due in Yerevan in April, the CSTO press
office reports.

ANKARA: Armenian lobby targets US lawmaker

Hürriyet, Turkey
Feb 28 2009

Armenian lobby targets US lawmaker

WASHINGTON – The two largest U.S. Armenian groups have condemned a
leading Democratic congresswoman for qualifying what they see as the
"Armenian genocide" as an "inter-communal war" and a "historic
dispute" between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

In a Wednesday letter to all her 434 colleagues in the House of
Representatives, lawmaker Eddie Bernice Johnson, representing the
Dallas area in Texas, opposed a planned resolution that urged the
United States to formally recognize 1915 incidents as "genocide".

Addressing the resolution’s sponsors in her letter, Johnson said: "I
respectfully ask for your careful consideration of the proposed
Armenian genocide resolution, a resolution that holds that the
inhumanity in the inter-communal war in 1915 was one-sided."

She added: "I am naturally troubled by the assertions in the
resolution, which would endorse one side of a historic dispute between
Armenia and Turkey, thus undermining today’s normalization process."

An eight-term lawmaker, Johnson said she was greatly encouraged by
progress in Turkish-Armenian relations, as evidenced by President
Abdullah Gul’s September visit to Armenia.

"With the number of challenges in the region critical to U.S. national
security — spanning from Russia, to Iraq, to Afghanistan, and Iran —
the United States cannot afford at this time to derail these hopeful
efforts. On the contrary, we should nurture and encourage them,"
Johnson said.

Johnson’s letter won the ire of the Armenian National Committee of
America, or ANCA, and the Armenian Assembly of America, or AAA.

"The congresswoman’s line of attack, long ago discredited by
historians and genocide scholars, is a particularly toxic form of
denial that seeks, without any basis in fact, to create parity between
perpetrator and victim," the ANCA said in its website.

US envoy: Turkey has unique role in Mideast peace

Associated Press Worldstream
February 26, 2009 Thursday 10:55 AM GMT

US envoy: Turkey has unique role in Mideast peace

By SELCAN HACAOGLU, Associated Press Writer

ANKARA Turkey

U.S. Middle East special envoy George Mitchell said Thursday that
predominantly Muslim Turkey’s friendship with Israel gives it a unique
opportunity to help achieve peace in the Middle East.

Mitchell’s remarks reflect the U.S. desire to see Turkey and Israel
maintain close relations despite a dispute between the two U.S. allies
after Turkey accused Israel of using excessive force in an offensive
against Hamas that took a heavy toll on Gaza’s civilians.

"As an important democratic nation with strong relations with Israel,
(Turkey) has a unique role to play and can have significant influence
on our efforts to promote comprehensive peace in the Middle East,"
Mitchell said after meeting Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkey has long been Israel’s closest ally in the Muslim world, and
has tried, along with Egypt and France, to mediate for peace in the
Middle East.

In January, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Erdogan
reprimanded Israeli President Shimon Peres over civilian casualties
during the Gaza war and walked out of a panel discussion.

This month, a senior Israeli general reportedly accused Turkey of
killing Armenians in 1915, and of oppressing Kurds and occupying
Cyprus. Turkey protested, and Israel’s military said the general’s
remarks did not reflect Israel’s official view.

"It is important for us now to look forward and to work together to
build a secure, prosperous future for all of the people of this
region," Mitchell said.

Turkey supports Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Western-backed
Fatah faction, but also advocates engagement with the militant group
Hamas, which has been shunned by Israel, the West and some Arab
nations. In 2007, Hamas took over the Gaza Strip in fighting that
drove out Fatah supporters.

Associated Press Writer Gulden Alp contributed to this report.

BEIRUT: Vote-Buying May Decide Outcome Of June Polls

VOTE-BUYING MAY DECIDE OUTCOME OF JUNE POLLS
By Michael Bluhm

Daily Star
Feb 26 2009
Lebanon

Undecided Christians set to become key swing voters in a tense
electoral battle

BEIRUT: Despite steps toward reconciliation between their regional
allies, Lebanon’s March 14 and March 8 camps remain bitterly divided,
with both camps believing they will prevail in June’s pivotal general
elections among decisive Christian swing voters in a tense campaign
that might well come down to vote-buying, analysts told The Daily
Star on Wednesday.

Foreign Minister Walid Moallem of Syria, which backs the March 8
coalition, arrived in Riyadh on Tuesday to visit March 14 ally King
Abdullah, in the latest sign of warming relations between the two
regional powers after years of antipathy following the February 2005
assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

However, Lebanon’s political antagonists seem unmoved by these displays
of growing regional dŽtente, said Walid Moubarak, director of the
Institute of Diplomacy and Conflict Transformation at the Lebanese
American University (LAU).

"What is taking place outside is having no impact on the inside,"
he said. "If things are moving positively outside, it doesn’t mean
that things would be moving positively inside."

On the contrary, a February 14 demonstration marking the fourth
anniversary of Hariri’s killing ended in the deaths of two men
in politically motivated violence, while Premier Fouad Siniora and
Speaker Nabih Berri have hurled escalating invectives at each other
in recent weeks over the budget for the Council of the South.

Conditioned by more than two years of hostility between the country’s
two major political blocs, almost all top politicians continue to feed
the extreme elements of their electoral bases, even though the election
will apparently be determined by Christian voters in the middle of the
political spectrum, Moubarak added. Because of the ingrained habit of
sectarian voting, only some 30-40 of Parliament’s 128 seats cannot
be called today for either the March 14 or March 8 blocs, with most
of the decisive districts lying in the Christian-majority regions of
Jbeil, Kesrouan, Metn and Zahle, said political analyst Simon Haddad.

With the electoral balance between the camps nearly even, the equally
ingrained local tradition of vote-buying might also play the crucial
role, said Amal Saad-Ghorayeb, who teaches political science at LAU
and wrote the 2002 book "Hizbullah: Politics and Religion."

"It really depends, unfortunately, on how much political money is
going to be thrown around," she said. "It’s a battle of vote-buying,
at the end of the day. You have an almost even divide – that’s why
the vote-buying issue becomes so significant."

Election-related money is also partly the root of the spat between
Berri and Siniora, with Berri hoping to shower some of the Council’s
funds on the South Lebanon constituency of his AMAL movement in the
run-up to the polls, Saad-Ghorayeb added.

"That institution has been used by Berri as a form of political
largess," she said, adding that Berri has a bona fide argument in
pushing for council funding on the basis of sectarian parity for Shiite
institutions. "On the other hand, I do think that [sectarian parity]
issue is a legitimate one."

The pre-election "mudslinging" between Berri and Siniora over the
controversy, which has scuttled Cabinet ratification of the 2009
state budget, is tarnishing the standing of both leaders in moderate
voters’ eyes, with Siniora opening himself to accusations of being
little more than an anti-Shiite Sunni politician, said Oussama Safa,
executive director of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies.

"It’s damaging for both," he said, adding that the contretemps might
represent the "final divorce" between the two long-time rivals. "Now
it’s personal and getting deeper and deeper and more complicated."

In addition to putting the brakes on the 2009 budget, the dispute also
has serious potential constitutional consequences – if the country’s
prime minister and speaker cannot work together, President Michel
Sleiman could find himself confronted by two sets of nominees for all
high offices, such as the perpetually unfilled Constitutional Council,
said Moubarak.

As for Sleiman, he has mostly kept himself mostly above the electoral
fray – he has quashed persistent rumors that he would back a candidate
list unaligned with either major camp, knowing that such a list,
likely filled by Christian candidates, would position him as the
main competition for Change and Reform Bloc leader MP Michel Aoun,
the popular Christian politician and Sleiman’s former commanding
officer in the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), Saad-Ghorayeb said.

"That’s not a role he wants to play," she said, adding that Sleiman,
who spent his career in the LAF, has yet to build any sort of voter
constituency. "It would have detracted from his legitimacy as a popular
president. Michel Sleiman has played a very positive role in this."

Meanwhile, Sleiman ally and Metn political boss MP Michel Murr kicked
off the dance of forming electoral coalitions this month, announcing
he would team up with the March 14 Forces’ Phalange Party of former
President Amin Gemayel. Given the background of clashes between
Murr and Aoun in recent months, Murr’s electoral maneuvering stems
primarily from concern for his own continued presence in Parliament
and his son’s ministerial post, rather than as an omen of imminent
March 14 victory, the analysts said.

Murr "knows that if Aoun wins this time, [Murr] wouldn’t have any
role," Haddad said. However, If Murr can lure the area’s Armenians
into siding with his coalition, the results could play a meaningful
factor in the June poll’s outcome, the analysts added. The March 14
strategists also appear to be counting on using the UN Special Tribunal
for Lebanon as a tool to garner electoral support, arguing that only
voting for them will protect the process of bringing Hariri’s killers
to justice, Safa said. However, March 14 has long tied its support
for the tribunal to anti-Syrian rhetoric, and with Syria’s improving
relations with the US and France, as well as with Saudi Arabia,
the potency of the tribunal as a campaign issue might be waning,
Saad-Ghorayeb said.

"All these developments have attenuated any kind of impact the tribunal
could have had in the past," she said.

In addition, the tribunal and its principles have little relevance to
the more immediate concerns that will likely influence voters at the
polls, said Haddad. March 14 would do better to focus instead on the
more prosaic and effective matters of forming advantageous electoral
coalitions, such as in Tripoli, where Sunni support appears less than
monolithic for parliamentary majority leader MP Saad Hariri’s Future
Movement, he added.

Although the elections are too close to call, the analysts
were unanimous in saying they feared more violence as the vote
approaches. The two deaths on February 14 stemmed directly from the
electoral fever, and the situation throughout the country remains
volatile, they said.

February 14 "has brought the ugly truth to the surface," Safa
said. "These incidents are happening on almost a daily basis. This
is the reality – people are highly mobilized."

Azerbaijani Journalist Harassed By Security Agents

AZERBAIJANI JOURNALIST HARASSED BY SECURITY AGENTS

CPJ Press Freedom Online
st-harassed-by-security-agents.php
Feb 24 2009
NY

New York, February 24, 2009–A journalist who went to interview the
minister of the Ministry of National Security (MNB) in Azerbaijan’s
Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic on February 20 was blindfolded and
interrogated for hours, according to local news reports. The Committee
to Project Journalists called today for an immediate investigation
into the incident by the central Azerbaijani government.

Security service agents intimidated and harassed Idrak Abbasov,
a reporter with the independent newspaper Zerkalo and a researcher
with the Baku-based Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety
(IRFS), while he was in Nakhchivan to study regional press freedom
conditions. Agents blindfolded him, took his identity papers, camera,
video camera, reporter’s notebook, and cell phone, and interrogated
him for two hours about the reasons for his trip, according to local
news reports and CPJ sources. An unidentified officer demanded that
Abbasov reveal the names of his colleagues in the region, cursed at
him, and accused him of spying for Armenia, the journalist told CPJ.

Before he was released, a security officer urged the journalist to
leave the region immediately and deleted all the pictures from his
camera, he said. His documents and equipment were returned. As a
result of his treatment, Abbasov was hospitalized with stress-induced
heart problems on Saturday in Baku; he remains in the hospital today,
IRFS Director Emin Huseynov told CPJ.

"We condemn the Nakhchivan state security services for luring a
journalist to their headquarters with the promise of an interview only
to blindfold and interrogate him," CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program
Coordinator Nina Ognianova said. "We call on the Azerbaijani central
authorities to investigate this incident and punish those responsible."

Abbasov told CPJ that the MNB had responded to his organization’s
request for a meeting and invited him to come to its offices on
February 20 at noon. When Abbasov showed up–along with an IRFS
colleague–MNB officers called him in alone. "Since our earlier
meetings with different government officials in Nakhchivan were held
in a friendly manner, I thought there’s no reason to be afraid of
going to the MNB alone," Abbasov told CPJ. "It appears I was mistaken."

http://cpj.org/2009/02/azerbaijani-journali

Censorship Most Common Journalists Rights Violation In 2008

CENSORSHIP MOST COMMON JOURNALISTS RIGHTS VIOLATION IN 2008

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.02.2009 16:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Freedom of Speech Protection Committee head Ashot
Melikyan and expert Mesrop Harutyunyan presented an annual report on
violations of journalists’ rights in 2008 in Armenia.

Mesrop Harutyunyan drew parallels between 2003 and 2008, as these
were the years of presidential elections in Armenia.

According to the report, 25 instances of violations were registered
in 2003 and the number grew to 48 in 2008. The experts divided
the offences into several categories, the first category including
physical assaults, the second – pressure, the third – violation of
the right to receive and disseminate the information.

The authors specified that censorship was among the most common of
journalists’ rights violations in 2008.

If previously the censorship was camouflaged, in 2008 during
government-opposition conflicts, open censure, though illegal, was
imposed upon the journalists.

Harutyunyan called on the government to create favorable conditions
for journalists and secure freedom of speech.

Three Price Increases At Once

Three price increases at once

A1+
[07:10 pm] 24 February, 2009

On February 27 the Public Services Regulatory Commission will discuss
the prices for gas, water and electricity all at once. The "Electric
Networks of Armenia", "ArmWaterSewerage" and "ArmRusGazard" companies
are offering to raise prices starting from April 1.

The "Electric Networks of Armenia" CJSC offers 30 drams for 1 kw/hour
during the day and 20 drams for 1 kw/hour at night.

"ArmRusGazard" offers the Public Services Regulatory Commission 99
drams for one cubic meter of gas instead of the existing 84 drams.

"ArmWaterSewerage" offers 168.98 drams for one cubic meter of drinking
water instead of the 115.65 drams. The company offers 28.35 drams for
one cubic meter of sewerage instead of the 24.35 drams. The increase
of prices makes up 40.9%. "ArmWaterSewerage" validates the offers
taking into account the amount of subsidy given by the RA state budget,
which makes up 863.36 million drams compared to the existing 1366.49
million drams.

During an interview with "A1+" Head of the Consumers’ Union Abgar
Yeghoyan said that residents will have to save their money wisely if
prices go up. For example, this means not using too much light.

According to him, the rise of prices will not lead to a social
outbreak.

"We are rather resistant and restricted, but it will hit citizens hard,
especially during the current financial crisis."

Premier WB Programs To Mitigate Global Crisis Effects In Armenia

PREMIER WB PROGRAMS TO MITIGATE GLOBAL CRISIS EFFECTS IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Feb 23, 2009

TSAKHKADZOR, February 23. /ARKA/. The programs to be implemented by
Armenia together with the World Bank concern all sectors, Armenian
Premier Tigran Sargsyan said at the briefing within the sixth
"Bridge-2009" international economic forum Saturday.

Prompt implementation of these programs will mitigate negative impact
of the global financial economic crisis, he said.

The target of the $525mln worth WB programs is formation of
infrastructures and educational reforms in particular, the Premier
said in answering the question of ARKA Agency.

The World Bank intends to extend a $525mln worth loan to Armenia for
implementation of new programs, technical assistance and consulting
services for four years.

The Premier also pointed out the productive cooperation with the
Asian Development Bank (ADB), particularly in terms of the North-South
motor road construction.

Under the rural road construction program, the ADB allocated a $30.6mln
worth loan to Armenia for construction of rural roads and an additional
loan of $17.3mln.

Sargsyan also said the EBRD will be attaching particular importance
to crediting of small and medium businesses, share contribution and
support to private sector.