Kosovo Solution To Set Precedent For Whole World – Bagapsh

KOSOVO SOLUTION TO SET PRECEDENT FOR WHOLE WORLD – BAGAPSH

Interfax, Russia
March 28 2007

MOSCOW. March 28 (Interfax) – The solution to the Kosovo issue will
set a precedent for the former Georgian autonomies of Abkhazia and
South Ossetia and the world as a whole, Abkhaz President Sergei
Bagapsh told a news conference at the Interfax central office in
Moscow on Wednesday.

"It will not be only Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, South Ossetia and
Transdniestria. More countries will appear in about a year and a half
that will demand the same," he said.

March 28 Final Day Of Presenting Documents To CEC Of Armenia

MARCH 28 FINAL DAY OF PRESENTING DOCUMENTS TO CEC OF ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.03.2007 19:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ March 28 is the final day of presenting documents to
the Central Electoral Commission of Armenia necessary for registering
parties and candidates for participating in the parliamentarian
elections of May 12, 2007. Garegin Azaryan, Chairman of Central
Electoral Commission said currently only 10 of 28 political parties,
which handled applications for participating in parliamentarian
elections, have presented corresponding documents. He underlined
necessary documentation for registration have presented "National
Unity", "People’s Party of Armenia", "People’s Party", "Democratic
Party of Armenia", "Republican Party of Armenia", "Marxist Party of
Armenia", "’Hnchakyan’ Social-Democratic Party", "Democratic Way"
party, "New Times" party, and the Youth Party.

The CEC made a decision on giving corresponding certificates to
candidates running both on majority and proportional systems. Besides,
the CEC decided to reject the application for watchdog mission handled
by Union of Talented Women "Vortatunk", since goals and tasks in
the regulation of the organization lack issues concerning democracy
development and human rights protection, IA Regnum reports.

Armenian TV Channels Broadcast Live Late Premier’s Funeral

ARMENIAN TV CHANNELS BROADCAST LIVE LATE PREMIER’S FUNERAL

BBC Monitoring research in English
28 Mar 07

Armenian Public TV started a live broadcast from the funeral ceremony
of deceased Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan at 0657 gmt.

A presenter said over classical music that 28 March had been declared
the day of mourning in Armenia and read out the schedule of the
funeral. The burial will take place at 1500 local time (1000 gmt)
at the Komitas Pantheon where prominent Armenians are buried, the
presenter said.

A short video showed Margaryan’s coffin being taken from his home
and carried to the catafalque. It was followed by a live broadcast
from Yerevan’s Opera and Ballet Theatre where Margaryan’s body lies
in state. The presenter read excerpts from condolences offered by
world leaders.

Video showed people filing past the coffin; people crowded outside
the building; Cabinet members, other high-ranking officials standing
near the coffin.

The presenter said that delegations from over 10 countries, including
Canada, the USA, Lithuania, Georgia and Turkey, have arrived in
Armenia to attend the funeral. Turkey is represented by that country’s
ambassador to Georgia, the presenter said.

All other major Armenian TV channels are currently broadcasting live
from the Opera and Ballet Theatre.

Margaryan’s funeral was the first item on 0730 gmt news bulletin on
private Yerkir Media TV. Video showed the late prime minister’s coffin
being taken to the headquarters of the Republican Party of Armenia
of which Margaryan was the chairman. The presenter then read out the
schedule of the funeral and said that delegations from many countries
have arrived to attend the funeral. At 0734 gmt Yerkir Media TV started
a live broadcast from the Opera and Ballet Theatre without comments.

Andranik Margaryan died of heart attack on 25 March in Yerevan.

Primate Galstanian leaves for Spiritual Retreat in Quebec City

Mon, Mar 26 2007

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Canada
615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont-Quebec H2V 3H2
Contact: Deacon Hagop Arslanian,
Tel: 514-276-9479
Fax: 514-276-9960
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Primate Galstanian leaves for Spiritual Retreat in Quebec City

His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian left for Quebec City, on Sunday
March 25, 2007 to spend a week in prayer and contemplation at a Jesuit
monastery. Our Primate left Montreal following the celebration of the
Divine Liturgy and presiding over the Annual General Assembly of Saint
Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Cathedral of Montreal. He will be
returning on Saturday March 31, 2007=2E

Primate Galstanian chose to have a "silent moment," to rediscover the
divinity that exists at the center of our lives, and to contemplate the
mission of our Church in Canada, as we prepare to mark and relive the most
significant days and events of Christ’s earthly life. Lord’s entry to
Jerusalem-Palm Sunday, the Holy Week, the Last Supper, Crucifixion, and
the Victorious Resurrection represent this most inspiring and blessed
season. In his book, A Place for God, author Timothy K. Jones, suggests
participating in a retreat so we may "recollect a scattered life and focus
on the one who calls and seeks and invites us to communion."

"Through prayer that gives up self, we seek to open ourselves up before
God, and to hear anew the call "Come unto me!" We seek to recognize and
respond afresh to God’s presence in our lives and in our world. We seek to
place our needs, our fears, our failures, our hopes, our very lives in
God’s hands, again. We seek by abandoning ourselves in Jesus’ death to
recognize again, whom God is, to allow His transforming grace to work in
us once more and to come to worship Him on Easter Sunday."

May our Primate observe a prayerful week of reflection and meditation=2E
26 Mar 2007 by Press Office
Read More ..=2E

©2004 Diocese of the Armenian Church of Canada. All rights reserved=2E
powered by: Technologies Lunasoft

http://www.armenianchurch.ca/

Russia: Putin conveys condolences over Armenia premier’s death

RIA Novosti, Russia
March 25 2007

Putin conveys condolences over Armenia premier’s death
17:50 | 25/ 03/ 2007

MOSCOW, March 25 (RIA Novosti) – President of Russia Vladimir Putin
has conveyed his condolences over the death of Armenian Prime
Minister Andranik Markaryan, the Kremlin press office said Sunday.

Markaryan, aged 56, died Sunday morning of heart attack.

Markaryan was Armenia’s prime minister from May 2000.

In 1997, he was elected chairman of the Republican Party, which came
to head the ruling coalition in Armenia in 2003.

Two election manuals to be presented

Two election manuals to be presented

Armradio.am
23.03.2007 11:00

On March 26 two election publications: `Guide for Precinct Election
Commission Members’ and `Manual on Election Legislation and
Administration’, which will be presented in Yerevan.

The publications have been prepared by Democracy NGO in co-operation
with the Central Electoral Commission with financial support from the
OSCE Office in Yerevan and the Italian Government.

The manuals aim at raising public awareness and educating the
electoral process participants about the election legislation and its
practical application.

Ambassador Vladimir Pryakhin, Head of the OSCE Office in Yerevan, Mr.
Garegin Azaryan, Chairman of the Central Electoral Commission, a
representative from the Italian Embassy and one of the authors
Mr. Hrair Tovmasyan will present the publications.

In coming 5 years volume of mortgage crediting will hit $1.5 bln

In coming 5 years the volume of mortgage crediting in Armenia will
amount to $1.5bln: CB President

Arminfo
2007-03-23 16:55:00

In the coming 3-5 years the volume of mortgage crediting in Armenia
will amount to $1.5bln, the president of the Central Bank of Armeia
Tigran Sargsyan said during the first annual meeting of the
Association of Mortgage Participants of Armenia today.

As of today this index exceeds 25bln AMD. However, this market has
huge development potential. The above index will ensure stable
economic growth in the country.

According to the Agency of Rating Marketing Information (ArmInfo), in
2006 the volume of mortgage crediting in Armenia totalled $72mln
($65mln were issued by commercial banks). 18 banks and 2 credit
organizations issue mortgage credits in Armenia. The interest ranges
within 12%-16%, the maximum repayment period – 10 year, the prepayment
– 30%.

Professor shares Holocaust experiences

The Ranger, TX
March 23 2007

Professor shares Holocaust experiences
By Ryan Johnston

The entire nation of Germany took part in discriminating against
minorities during the Holocaust, especially Jews, who were considered
inferior and unworthy of living, a Holocaust survivor said March 6 at
the Methodist Student Center.

Dr. William Samelson, professor emeritus in the foreign languages
department, lectured on his experience during and after the Holocaust
in a session titled "Anti-Judaism, Political Racism and Final
Solution."

This was the first of four lectures in a series at the center, "The
Holocaust: Let Us Remember!"

"Nobody knows how they were convinced on how we were at the bottom of
the ladder," he said.

"They believed racial purity existed."

He was born and reared in Poland until age 11 when he was captured by
Nazis and taken to Buchenwald concentration camp where he spent 3 1/2
years.

He was liberated by the U.S. Army in 1945 and emigrated to the United
States in 1948. He and his brother are the only survivors from his
family.

He also has written books on the Holocaust including, "Warning and
Hope: The Nazi Murder of European Jewry" and his memoir titled, "One
Bridge to Life."

Samelson told the group Hitler thought a "super-race" was composed of
blond, blue-eyed, 6-foot-tall men. The Nazis used measurements in the
skull, nose and cheeks to determine the superior from the inferior.

He recalled that he still has a textbook from high school that shows
how they made the measurements to determine superiority.

"Genocide is political racism," he said.

On the topic of genocide and how it started, he said that in 1913,
Turkey decided Armenians were inferior. More than 1 million people
were killed, including women and babies. Columns of 50 to 60 people
were brought into the streets and shot with machine guns.

During World War II, more than 52 million noncombatants were killed,
he said. More than 6 million of those were Jewish, and more than 1
million were children.

He recalled that propaganda films and photographs of people being
brought to gas chambers and killed were shown to prominent figures in
the Nazi party.

"These people were clapping during the films," he said. "They thought
they were doing away with the vermin. What do we do with vermin? We
kill them."

After his years in the concentration camp, he said he distrusted
society and that his tutor brought him to think otherwise.

"She injected that you cannot live with hate," he said. "That hate is
not a good reason for survival, but that love is."

Following his studies, he decided that he wanted to teach German
language and literature.

"There was a lot of beauty in German culture," he said. "All of that
was banished by Hitler."

The center will take students to the Holocaust Library at the Jewish
Community Center, 12500 N.W. Military Hwy., from 3 p.m.-5 p.m March
29 and Samelson will lead a seder meal at 6 p.m. April 3 at the
Methodist Student Center.

rage/paper1010/news/2007/03/23/News/Professor.Shar es.Holocaust.Experiences-2787792.shtml

http://media.www.theranger.org/media/sto

Opening of Moscow Palace incarnation of coop b/w Armenia & Russia

Arka News Agency, Armenia
March 24 2007

OPENING OF MOSCOW PALACE "MATERIAL" INCARNATION OF COOPERATION
BETWEEN ARMENIA AND RUSSIA

YEREVAN, March 23. /ARKA/. The opening of Moscow Palace is the
"material" incarnation of cooperation implemented between Armenia and
Russia, said Moscow’s Mayor Yuri Lujkov in Yerevan.
"The project is demonstration of new principles of cooperation
established on post-soviet territory as well as between Armenia and
Russia. And these principles should have material incarnation," he
said.
In his turn, Mayor of Yerevan Yervand Zakharyan pointed out that the
construction of the Palace "is the main component of the document
about the cooperation between the municipalities of the two capitals
and it will contribute to deepening the relations in social life and
cultural sphere."
Moscow Palace in Yerevan is built in the centre of Armenia’s capital
not far from Russia’s Embassy in Armenia, across the street from
Yerevan Municipality.
The foundation of Moscow’s Cultural-business centre was laid in
October, 2005 in the presence of Lujkov. The architect of the
building is Levon Vardanyan.
The investment cost of the Centre makes $10mln. The project is fully
financed by Moscow’s Government. L.M. -0–

Iran-Armenia Gas Pipeline: Far More Than Meets The Eye

IRAN-ARMENIA GAS PIPELINE: FAR MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE
By Vladimir Socor

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
March 21 2007

On March 19 Presidents Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran and Robert Kocharian
of Armenia inaugurated the operations of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline
(Armenpress, IRNA, March 19, 20). Although the project’s scope is
modest in terms of volume and market potential, its commissioning
reflects two incipient trends of Eurasia-wide and potentially global
impact, in some ways as their harbinger: First, Gazprom’s looming
deficit of gas; and, second, Russia-Iran relations in the context of
the proposed "cartel for gas."

It is unprecedented for Russia to yield a part of the gas market in
a former Soviet country to a supplier from outside Gazprom’s sphere
of influence. This policy choice to de-monopolize is almost certainly
not a willing choice. It seems to reflect calculations that Gazprom
may soon be unable to meet all of its supply commitments to internal
and external markets from the stagnant production in Russia.

Thus, it may make sense for Gazprom to plan a partial retrenchment
from some of its markets, if three prerequisites exist: non-lucrative
supply contracts (low-priced gas in a small market), strong Russian
influence in that country irrespective of gas dependency, and an
alternative supplier that cannot impinge on Russian interests in that
country or farther afield.

All those prerequisites exist in Armenia. In such a situation, Russia
could share that country’s market with a third country, such as Iran,
whose gas export policies it hopes — with some justification —
to be able to control in the short and medium term.

In a generally little-noted though momentous event (see EDM, March
6), Gazprom declined to present its overdue prognosis for gas output
beyond 2010 during the Russian cabinet of ministers’ March 2 session.

Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov had to urge in front of television
cameras, "The situation should not be over-dramatized." That same day,
Russia’s Chamber of Accounts criticized Gazprom for under-investing
in exploration, field development, and infrastructure maintenance
in Russia while over-investing in acquisitions unrelated to
production. This public turn of events seems indirectly to confirm
the forecasts made last year by Vladimir Milov, Alan Riley, and David
Clark that Gazprom faces a gap between its production and its supply
commitments post-2010.

Iran’s entry in Armenia as a gas supplier courtesy of Russia seems
also to be a harbinger of that trend. It also sheds light on Moscow’s
view of possible coordination of gas export policies with those of
Iran. The government in Tehran has not abandoned its hopes to achieve
a transit route for its gas into the South Caucasus and farther into
European Union territory, with Armenia as the first way station on
that possible route. Moscow, however, strongly opposes such a prospect.

Thus, Gazprom took major precautionary measures against an expansion
of Iran’s role and indeed against any independent Iranian gas-export
policy in Armenia or beyond. It imposed from the outset on Yerevan
— against Tehran’s will — to reduce the Iran-Armenia pipeline’s
diameter from the originally designed 1,420 millimeters (the size of
major gas export pipelines) to 700 millimeters. This measure precludes
any transit of Iranian gas to third countries through this pipeline,
confining Iran to the Armenian market.

Moreover, Kocharian agreed with Russian President Vladimir Putin
last year to hand the new pipeline’s section on Armenian territory
over to Gazprom via the ArmRosGaz company, in which Gazprom and
its offshoot Itera hold a combined 68% interest. Controlling the
pipeline and distribution network within the country, Moscow can
exercise all but discretionary control over the access of gas from
a third-country supplier — a situation that Moscow seeks to achieve
in certain European countries as well.

By blocking the access of Iranian gas to Europe, the Kremlin
demonstrates its unwillingness to share European markets with Iran
through a "gas cartel" or in any other form. However, Moscow is
signaling almost as clearly that it seeks joint-venture cooperation
to develop Iran’s vast, untapped gas fields and direct their output
toward Asian markets, away from Europe where Gazprom seeks to cement
its own preserve. This strategy can only succeed if Russia retains
its present monopoly on the transit and marketing of Turkmen, Kazakh,
and Uzbek gas.

Almost certainly, "Iranian" gas to be supplied to Armenia will actually
originate in Turkmenistan for the time being. Iran imports small
volumes of Turkmen gas to supply the northern part of the country,
which is distant from Iran’s main fields. The Iran-Armenia pipeline
runs for 101 kilometers in Iran from Tabriz to the Armenian border and
for another 41 kilometers in Armenia from the border town of Meghri to
Kajaran. The next planned section, to be built by 2008-2009, should
run for another 100 kilometers toward central Armenia, there to link
up with the existing distribution network, controlled by Gazprom as
well (Mediamax, Noyan Tapan, IRNA, March 19-21; see EDM, November 3,
7, 2006)

Armenia consumes approximately 1.5 billion cubic meters of gas
annually. Iran is to supply some 400 million cubic meters annually in
the first stage of the project and up to 2.3 billion cubic meters in
the second stage, at which time Armenia’s consumption may well have
increased, even as Gazprom’s ability to meet customer requirements
is likely to have declined.