Pakistan, Azerbaijan ask UN to implement resolutions on disputes

Xinhua, China
April 13 2005

Pakistan, Azerbaijan ask UN to implement resolutions on regional
disputes

Photo: Visiting President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev (L) and
Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz hold a joint press conference
in Islamabad, capital of Pakistan, on April 13, 2005. (Xinhua photo)

ISLAMABAD, April 13 (Xinhuanet) — Pakistani Prime Minister
Shaukat Aziz and visiting President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev here
Wednesday urged the United Nations to implement UN resolutions on
their regional disputes and agreed that the UN reforms should be
based on consensus.

Addressing a joint press conference, the two leaders expressed
support to each other on the issues of Kashmir and Nagorno-Karabakh
and called for implementing the UN resolutions on the twodisputes.

Kashmir is divided between Pakistan and India and both claim the
territory in its entirety. Azerbaijan has a territorial dispute with
Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Both issues should be resolved based on the norms and principles
of international law,” Aliyev said and lamented that the United
Nations could not implement its resolutions on both.

“If decisions adopted by international organizations are left on
papers and are not implemented, these decisions would not be
respected by the international community,” he added.

Aziz said he shared the views of the Azeri leader and said
Pakistan wanted a peaceful resolution of all disputes including the
issue of Kashmir and Nagorno-Karabakh.

“Effectiveness of the United Nations will only be felt if the
resolutions which have been passed are implemented,” he stressed.

On the UN reforms, Aziz said it should be conducted in a way
which is equitable, democratic and reflect the wishes of the majority
of the members through consensus rather than doing it in any other
way.

Earlier on Wednesday, Aziz and Aliyev held wide-ranging talks on
political, economic and regional and international issues of mutual
concern.

They also witnessed the signing of six agreements to promote
bilateral cooperation in the areas of culture, education, finance,
communication, information technology and aeronautics.

On Tuesday, Aliyev met his Pakistani counterpart Pervez Musharraf
and the two sides voiced a common stand on the UN Security Council
expansion. Pakistan has been advocating against creation of new
centers of privilege at the Security Council.

The two leaders also renewed a call for peaceful settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia. On the
Kashmir issue, Aliyev expressed his country’s support for Islamabad’s
efforts aimed at resolving the dispute with New Delhi for durable
peace and security in the region.

Aliyev arrived in Islamabad Tuesday on a two-day visit and he was
due to leave for home later on Wednesday. Enditem

BAKU: Agenda of the meeting of Azerbaijan and Armenia presidents

Today, Azerbaijan
April 13 2005

Agenda of the meeting of Azerbaijan and Armenia presidents determined

13 April 2005 [15:43] – Today.Az

The agenda of the meeting of the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia
has been determined. According to the information given to APA from
diplomatic sources, state leaders will have talks in Moscow and
Warsaw first of all for eliminating the results of the war.

The main topics for discussion will be the establishment of security
zone, mutual guarantees and the returning of the refugees back to
their homes. If compromise variants achieved on these problems, then
the sides will discuss the matter within the future status of Nagorno
Karabakh.

According to the source, the agenda of the meeting will be determined
once again during the talks of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of
Azerbaijan and Armenia to be held on 15 April in London.

It must be mentioned that, in his report yesterday president of
Armenia Robert Kocharyan stated that there was no any alternative for
the regulation of the conflict on the bases of mutual compromises.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/19011.html

ASSU ready for new era

Stanford Daily
April 13 2005

ASSU ready for new era

By Sal Umberto Bonaccorso
Staff Writer

Many senator-elects attended last night’s ASSU Undergraduate Senate
meeting to watch current ASSU Executive President Chioke
Borgelt-Mose, a junior, deliver her State of the Association speech,
during which she highlighted the accomplishments of the student
government over the past year. The meeting also focused on budget
modification and the allocation of general funding to student groups.
While Borgelt-Mose focused her remarks on past achievement, she also
offered suggestions for what next year’s administration.

`It goes without saying that the administration and rules committee
hs worked continuously through this year,’ Borgelt-Mose said. `I am
very impressed by the committee’s determination.’

She also commended the appropriations committee for its work with
student groups and funding requests, as well as the communications
committee.

`Improving communications is one of the hardest things for the ASSU
to do,’ Borgelt-Mose said. `Communication with the student body will
continue to be a lot stronger in the future.’

She also touched on the need to restructure and improve the
Nominations Commission, and encouraged the new Senate to continue the
dialogue on student housing and space with University administrators.

`You owe it to your fellow students and to the University as a whole
to continue to work for the betterment of the University,’
Borgelt-Mose said.

Elections Commissioner Troy Steinmetz, a sophomore, presented the
2005 ASSU election results to the Senate and voiced his satisfaction
with the absence of post-election problems.

`Thank you to everyone who voted,’ he said. `As of right now, I’m not
aware of any crises or impending controversies, which is great.’

Several bills concerning budget appropriations and modifications were
then brought before the Senate.

A representative from the Stanford Canoe and Kayak Team explained the
complications and costs of obtaining new equipment in response to the
appropriation committee’s recommendation that no money be allocated
to the team for new beginner boats.

The Senate decided to recommend $1,850 in funding to the team, and
all other bills were approved.

Several wording changes were made to the Senate’s by-laws to
accommodate the recently passed Measure A – which combined the
programming and community funds into a single general fees fund – and
the new election invalidation procedure.

The Senate also passed a bill to make April 24 the official
commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide in
1915. Before the vote, several senators said they were worried that
the issue was too political to be voted upon by the Senate.

FM says Genocide recognition is a security issue for Armenia

Armenian FM says Genocide recognition is a security issue for Armenia

13.04.2005 14:24

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – The recognition of the Armenian Genocide is a
security issue for Armenia, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
told a news conference on Wednesday.

We have a country as our neighbor that not only denies it had
attempted to destroy a whole nation but also accuses us; we cannot
have a considerable feeling of security with such a neighbor, Oskanian
went on saying, adding that Turkey, in addition, is openly backing
Azerbaijan in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

Oskanian also mentioned that in a situation when Turkey is trying to
join the European Union, a body that is based on the human rights,
Armenia should step up its work towards the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Greens Conference Discusses Armenian Issue

Zaman, Turkey
April 13 2005

Greens Conference Discusses Armenian Issue

A conference titled “The Future of the Past: Armenians in Turkey” and
organized by the Greens Group in the European Parliament (EP) has
called for the Armenian-Turkish conflict not to be handled like a
football match.

While the conference passed in a mature atmosphere though without
much attention from EP members much, there was a short moment of
tension when Greek Cypriot deputy Marios Matsakis’s alleged that
Turks had committed genocide in Cyprus. It was striking that no
academics had been invited to defend the Turkish thesis though Taner
Akcam of the University of Minnesota claimed that so-called genocide
had occurred. EP deputy Cem Ozdemir, of Turkish origin, said it was
impossible tocall representatives of all positions and that the
Armenian Diaspora had also protested that there was no one to arguing
the Armenian thesis. One of the three attendants, Zaman writer Etyen
Mahcupyan criticized both Turkey’s and Armenia’s approach to the
controversy and said that the two parties are similar in their
manners. Mahcupyan commented: “It would be easier for the Diaspora if
there were no Armenians left in Turkey, but Armenians in Turkey live
intermingled with Turks and perceive the issue at a more humanitarian
level.”

Mahcupyan emphasized on an expected gesture from Turkey regarding the
Armenian issue depends on gestures that the European Union could
make. Armenians should give up their insistence on the so-called
genocide and Turkey should accept it, he added. General Coordinator
of the Agos newspaper Hirant Dink, meanwhile, said that Europe should
play its part. Noting that relations between Armenian and Turkish
people were consumed by Europe, Dink argued that the EU should offer
an incentive by ascribing Armenia an EU perspective.

‘Don’t listen to Mahcupyan and Dink’

The European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy urged in a
letter sent to all EP deputies before the conference that Mahcupyan’s
and Dink’s statements should be approached cautiously because
Armenians were under pressure in Turkey. The Federation claimed that
one million Armenians currently live in Turkey, but that a majority
of them were converted to Islam by force.

Meanwhile Mahcupyan criticized remarks on the Armenian issue from
Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk saying that such “provocations” are not
beneficial. “I used to discuss these issues with 80 or 100 people
each week before Pamuk’s statement, many of whom were from the
Justice and Development Party (AKP). After his statement, these
people began to listen to me less. We should be careful of scoring
such own-goals.”

BAKU: Aliyev meets with PM of Pakistan

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
April 13 2005

PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV MEETS WITH PRIME MINISTER OF PAKISTAN
[April 13, 2005, 15:36:12]

President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev met in private with Prime
Minister of Pakistan Shaukat Aziz on April 13. The Premier said he
was pleased to see President Ilham Aliyev in Pakistan, noting there
were favorable conditions for expanding economic ties between the two
countries. He stressed the importance of organizing reciprocal visits
at various levels.

Noting that Azerbaijan is closely cooperating with many countries,
and is involved in the large-scale international projects, President
Ilham Aliyev said there were very promising prospects for his
country’s all-round cooperation with Pakistan, as well.

The Azerbaijani leader updated Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on
political, economic and legal reforms being implemented in
Azerbaijan, as well as on the serious difficulties the country has to
face with because of the Armenian aggression. He expressed gratitude
to the Pakistani government and Premier Shaukat personally for the
support of the fair position of Azerbaijan in international
organizations.

President Ilham Aliyev and Premier Shaukat Aziz underlined the
importance of the documents to be signed in the course of this visit,
and exchanged views on a number of other issues of mutual interest.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Prisoners risk starving in Equiatorial Guinea jail, says Amnesty

Reuters, UK
April 13 2005

Prisoners risk starving in Eq. Guinea jail, says Amnesty

Wed April 13, 2005 2:58 PM GMT+02:00
By Estelle Shirbon

MADRID (Reuters) – At least 70 prisoners risk starving to death in an
Equatorial Guinea prison, where rations have been cut from a daily
cup of rice to almost nothing, Amnesty International said on
Thursday.

The human rights group said those most at risk included six Armenians
and five South Africans convicted last year, in a trial Amnesty
described as “grossly unfair”, of plotting a coup in the tiny,
oil-rich West African country.

“Unless immediate action is taken, many of those detained at Black
Beach prison will die,” said Kolawole Olaniyan, director of Amnesty’s
Africa Programme, in a statement.

Amnesty said prison conditions had worsened drastically in the past
six weeks, with authorities providing food only sporadically and
preventing any visits by relatives, lawyers or consular officials.

Equatorial Guinea, a former Spanish colony, said the allegations were
untrue and accused Amnesty of seeking to tarnish its image.

“Prisoners in Equatorial Guinea are not going hungry. We have assured
their basic rights,” Second Deputy Prime Minister Ricardo Mangue
Obama Nfube, whose portfolio includes human rights, told Reuters by
telephone.

Amnesty said prisoners depended for survival on food handed to guards
by their families, meaning that detainees with no relatives living
nearby faced a greater risk of starvation.

As well as the foreigners, this puts Equatorial Guinean prisoners
from the country’s mainland in danger as Black Beach is in Malabo,
the capital, which is located on a volcanic island in the Gulf of
Guinea.

Equatorial Guinea has been ruled since 1979 by President Teodoro
Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, who seized power in a coup. It is the
third-biggest oil producer in sub-Saharan Africa after Nigeria and
Angola.

Many foreign critics say Obiang and his allies have pocketed much of
the country’s recently acquired oil wealth, and human rights groups
say abuses are rife, charges Obiang dismisses.

Equatorial Guinea briefly came under the international spotlight last
year when it put on trial 19 suspected mercenaries accused of
plotting to topple Obiang.

Amnesty said the Armenians and South Africans jailed at Black Beach
for their part in the plot had their wrists and ankles chained
together at all times, and all the prisoners were confined to their
cells 24 hours a day.

The rights group also said four Nigerians have been held in Black
Beach for several months without charge or trial and without the
Nigerian embassy being notified.

Antelias: Episcopal consecration in Antelias

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

ORDINATION AND ANOINTING OF BISHOPS IN ANTELIAS

His Holiness Aram I ordained and anointed V. Rev. Khoren Doghramdjian,
prelate of the Diocese of Greece and V. Rev. Shahan Sarkisian, prelate of
the Diocese of Aleppo, as bishops on April 9 and 10.

On the evening of Saturday April 9, the vowing ceremony of the new bishops
was held in St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral. Certificates from the
Dioceses of Greece and Aleppo, proposing that the primates be appointed as
bishops, were read during the service, by V. Rev. Krikor Chiftjian the
Master of Ceremonies.

The two primates declared their faithfulness to the creed of the Orthodox
Church. Then they read their vows and publicly announced their loyalty to
the Catholicosate of Cilicia, His Holiness Aram I and their readiness to
serve the Armenian Church and people.

On Sunday April 10 the anointing service was held. The service was conducted
by His Holiness Aram I. Bishops Kegham Khatcherian and Nareg Alemezian
joined His Holiness.

His Holiness anointed Bishop Khoren and Bishop Shahan with the Holy Chrism
and handed them the staff and Ring of bishops. After anointing the bishops,
His Holiness gave a special sermon, during which he stressed that the newly
anointed bishops will become servants of the Cathilcosate’s mission. His
Holiness emphasized the importance of keeping the vow to remain loyal to the
traditions of the Armenian Church and the principle of the Catholicosate of
Cilicia.

“The reason and the aim of the existence of our Holy See and your existence
are only to serve this people. Your worthiness, greatness, glory and pride
are in this service,” His Holiness said, adding: “The Armenian Church, with
all its hierarchal Sees exists as one entity for our people. And you are
called to be the servants of that unity through your dedication and
devotion.”

Members of the Cilician brotherhood, clergy guests and a large number of
faithful from Aleppo, Greece and Lebanon congratulated the bishops after the
service.

##

View picture here:

*****

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Pictures83.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

as i see it

Sunday, April 10, 2005
*******************************
SUNDAY SERMON
*******************************
It seems to me, the only way to convince the Turks to change their tune about the Genocide is to make them an offer they can’t refuse by holding a gun to their heads. But since Americans are not willing to do that, and in view of the fact that we are in no position to threaten or blackmail them, I suggest the following maneuver out of this impasse.
*
We say to them: We know you are lying and we also know you too know you are lying, but we understand. After all, political thinkers and leaders from Plato to Machiavelli, and from Hitler to Leo Strauss agree that sometimes it is necessary to lie in the interests of the nation. We understand that and we want you to understand too that we cannot simply say, let bygones be bygones.
We therefore have the following proposal: Let us for the time being postpone the resolution of our differences and cooperate in all other matters whenever cooperation is to our mutual interests. We have nothing to lose but our feud.
May we remind you that if the Ottoman Empire lasted six centuries it’s because our best brains served in its administration, our boys shed their blood in its defense, and our girls gave birth to members of its political, diplomatic, and military elites.
Let us therefore declare a moratorium on name-calling. Perhaps in time we may be able to erode our differences and to reach a settlement that will be to our mutual advantage.
Let us adopt the British motto “We have neither enemies nor friends, only interests.” But if the British model is alien to our natures, let us refer to the examples contained in the Old Testament which the Koran paraphrases.
We have there two sets of brothers, one of which (Cain and Abel) ends in tragedy for both, and the other (Joseph and his brothers) in forgiveness and consensus.
It is up to you to decide which sets of brothers we adopt as our role models. And while we are reflecting on this choice, let us ask, which course of action would be more pleasing to your “merciful and compassionate” Allah and to our Lord Jesus Christ, who shed his blood for our sins and taught us to love our enemies.
*
Oremus!
#
Monday, April 11, 2005
********************************
An Australian philosopher on the radio this morning: “Judging by our newspapers, we don’t like to think
And I reflect: Judging by our weeklies, we love to think, but only about Turks.
*
When one of our weeklies advertises or reviews a book, the chances are it will be about the massacres.
*
Whenever I read still another reference to the massacres, my hatred of Turks is enhanced; so is my image of myself as a perennial victim, and my view of the world as a cynical place populated by swindlers who care much more about money and power and less about principles, ideals, and truth.
*
The more we think about the moral failures of the world, the less time is left to reflect on our own. Hence, the tendency of some of us to believe they are la crème de la crème.
*
Philosophy in Greek means literally love of wisdom. But if I were to define philosophy today, I would say it consists in an attempt to introduce sanity in an insane world.
*
The irresistible charm of money and power: Imagine if you can a Jacqueline Kennedy or a Maria Callas falling in love and marrying an unemployed and slum-dwelling Onassis.
*
An Armenian clings to what he was taught as a child the way a drowning man is said to cling to anything, including a snake.
*
Chauvinism: When a damaged ego brags, all I hear is the rattle of bones.
*
To say we did nothing wrong is to condemn ourselves to learn nothing from our blunders. To say we did nothing right means to have a better chance to rise from the ashes.
*
A reader once wasted a thousand words to explain that I had nothing to say.
*
Julian Barnes (b. 1946), English writer: “The greatest patriotism is to tell your country when it is behaving dishonorably, foolishly, viciously.”
*
Samuel Beckett (1906-1989), Irish playwright and novelist: “There’s man all over for you, blaming on his boots the fault of his feet.”
#
Tuesday, April 12, 2005
*********************************
Unhappy is the nation whose martyrs outnumber its heroes.
*
Our generation is lost. We grew up with too much hatred and we cannot imagine a world without it. Our task is now to educate the next generation to think in terms not of hatred but of interests.
*
One of my critics agreed with me today. I must be on the wrong path.
*
There is a familiar type of Armenian who thinks he is settling a score with Turks whenever he insults a fellow Armenian or slices a watermelon.
*
Maya Angelou (b. 1928), U.S. poet: “Life is a bitch. You’ve got to go out and kick ass.”
*
Jean Anouilh (1910-1987), French playwright: “Every man thinks God is on his side. The rich and powerful know He is.”
*
To be dehumanized also means allowing newspaper headlines and propaganda to shape your identity.
*
Sometimes the death of a nation is so gradual that it may easily be confused with survival.
*
It is a thankless task to inform readers that they are not as good as they think they are and that their so-called wisdom is nothing but a byproduct of blind spots, prejudices, limitations, fallacies, and misconceptions.
*
To speak of reality to individuals who live in a dream world means being the bearer of bad tidings.
*
We don’t need political leaders. We need public servants. Did we ever have them?
#
Wednesday, April 13, 2005
*******************************
One reason I don’t trust those in power is that, whenever I had the power (an extremely rare occurrence that may have happened once or twice in my life), I behaved as ruthlessly as a Turk. I consider myself a more or less harmless person but I shiver to think what would happen if some day I acquired the power of, say, a sultan or a Talaat.
*
There are many Armenians who would like to say what I have been saying but they keep their peace because they don’t relish the prospect of being verbally abused by their fellow Armenians.
*
To have a more balanced view of ourselves, we must also see as others see us, and by others, I don’t just mean friends but adversaries. An Armenian who believes only in the judgment of Armenophiles is no different from a Turk who believes only in Turcophiles.
*
When I wrote what they expected to read, they called me a genius. When I wrote what must be said, I acquired the status of a non-person. When they called me a genius, I was not flattered; and as a non-person today I am more than ever aware of my personhood.
*
It is better to fail in a moral enterprise than to succeed in an immoral one.
*
Progress: For a number of years I worked for philistines; now, I am only insulted by them.
#

Eurasia Daily Monitor – 04/06/2005

The Jamestown Foundation
Wednesday, April 6, 2005 — Volume 2, Issue 67
EURASIA DAILY MONITOR

IN THIS ISSUE:
*FBI closes investigation of Georgian prime minister’s death
*CIS leader insists Russian troops not involved in Kyrgyz uprising
*Niyazov nixes new Russian ambassador as relations cool further
*Is Moscow organizing an anti-GUAM alliance?

—————————————————————————-

MANY QUESTIONS ABOUT ZHVANIA’S DEATH STILL UNANSWERED

The mysterious death of Georgia’s Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania
continues to worry many Georgians because the investigation has yet to
fully clarify the circumstances. Zhvania was found dead on February 3
at the home of Raul Usupov, who was about to become deputy governor of
Shida Kartli region (see EDM, February 3).

Specialists from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),
included in the inquiry at the request of the Georgian government,
held a news conference April 1 to announce their findings. Bryan
Paarmaan, representing the FBI, and Giorgi Janashia, deputy
prosecutor-general of Georgia, told journalists that there was no
evidence indicating that Zhvania was murdered. Instead, Zhvania and
Usupov died of carbon monoxide poisoning due to an improperly
installed gas heater. Toxicology reports indicated that blood levels
of carboxihemoglobin were 72% for Zhvania and 74% for Usupov.

Independent Georgian forensic experts immediately questioned this
conclusion. Maia Nikoleishvili said that Georgian investigators
initially reported carboxihemoglobin blood levels at 60.9% for Zhvania
and 73% for Usupov. She explained that the percentages should not be
recorded as an odd number in this specific case, a blunder that the
FBI specialists corrected. She also said that it is not difficult to
fake poisoning by carbon monoxide. Nikoleishvili said she will not
reveal her conclusions about the case because, “Life in this country
becomes increasingly dangerous.”

However, relatives and close confidants of both men refuse to stay
quiet. State Minister for Euro-Atlantic Integration Issues Giorgi
Baramidze, who is spearheading an independent investigation into
Zhvania’s death, said, “None of the versions should be ruled out.”
Baramidze added, “Zhvania’s closest friends know much detailed
information regarding Zurab.”

On April 4, Zhvania’s family broke their silence and expressed their
distrust of the FBI’s conclusion and the formal investigation in
general. Goga Zhvania, Zurab’s brother, said that Zhvania’s relatives
have many questions for the investigators. “We have refrained from
any comments until now because information was still being
collected. But now, after publicizing the FBI conclusion, we can
afford to make some comments,” he said.

Goga Zhvania doubts that the FBI’s investigation accurately recreated
the death scene. “It’s still a question whether they [Zhvania and
Usupov] died in that apartment.” He referred to the findings of the
national forensics bureau, which did not detect fresh fingerprints
from either Zhvania or Usupov in the apartment. He said that his
brother had a specific manner of smoking and that none of the
cigarette stubs found in the room fit that pattern. According to Goga
Zhvania, the cigarette stubs were collected from the trash, not an
ashtray, which he finds troubling.

Goga Zhvania recalled that his brother was quite sensitive to the
smell of natural gas and frequently ventilated rooms. Therefore, he
said, it seemed unlikely that Zurab had not opened a single window in
the ill-fated apartment. Goga did admit that his brother had several
confidentially rented apartments where he usually held private
meetings with various politicians. The apartments, according to him,
changed about every two months. The apartment where Zhvania died had
been rented by one his bodyguards.

Goga Zhvania said his brother had many enemies and there had been
information about plots against him, although he did not take them
seriously. He said that Zurab was terribly careless with his personal
security. He suggested that rival clan interests might have been
behind the prime minister’s death.

He confirmed that the Zhvania family is conducting an independent
investigation while waiting for the final report from the Prosecutors’
Office. He further denied allegations that authorities had installed a
guard at Zurab’s grave to hinder the possible exhumation of the corpse
for an independent forensic examination. “We don’t want to hamper the
investigation, but if it drags on we will tell much because we know
pretty much,” he stressed. Meanwhile, Goga Zhvania condemned “some
officials” for disseminating, as he said, “dirty gossip” about Zurab.
He also denied media allegations that Zhvania’s family plans to leave
Georgia.

“They have merely removed him,” Elene Tevdoradze, another close ally
of Zhvania from parliament, told Imedi-TV. Tevdoradze said that the
recently published findings of FBI have not changed her initial view
about the cause of Zhvania’s death. Tevdoradze alleged that Minister
of Interior Vano Merabishvili was strongly urged to immediately label
Zhvania’s death an accident, without any investigation. “When he
[Merabishvili] made this statement he was in shock. I know this
because I talked to him,” Tevdoradze claimed. Analysts argue that only
a top-level official could order Merabishvili to make such a
statement.

Georgian top officials remain tight-lipped about Zhvania’s
death. Meanwhile, members of Zhvania’s team are finding more
difficulties. Against the backdrop of the rekindled passions
surrounding Zhvania’s death, no one has noticed that the Armstrong
Holding Company has lost its contract for privatization of Georgian
Ocean Steam Navigation. The company, which Zhvania reportedly actively
advocated, turned out to be insolvent. Some analysts tend to link
Zhvania’s death both with ongoing controversial privatization process
and political motives.

(TV-202, March 28; Inter-Press, Kavkasia Press, TV-Rustavi-2, Regnum,
April 1; Khvalindeli Dge, Civil Georgia, Resonance, April 2;
TV-Rustavi-2, TV-Imedi, Resonance, 24 Hours, April 4; Vesti.ru, April
5)

–Zaal Anjaparidze

RUSSIA PLAYS PEACE ADVOCATE IN KYRGYZ “REGIME CHANGE”

Russia’s military presence in Central Asia has come into focus again
through its participation in the Rubezh 2005 military exercises
involving participants from the Commonwealth of Independent
States. Although in itself there is nothing unusual about this
exercise, the involvement of Russian air force units deployed at Kant
airbase in Kyrgyzstan has drawn denials from senior Russian military
personnel about the existence of any plan or potential role to curb
the recent Kyrgyz revolution.

The exercise, held April 2-6 in neighboring Tajikistan, witnessed the
use of most Russian personnel at Kant as well as Su-24 bombers, Su-25
attack planes, and Su-27 fighters. Nonetheless, the continued presence
of Russian military personnel in Kyrgyzstan gives Moscow a clear stake
in the future of the country while keenly avoiding any appearance of
meddling in Kyrgyz internal affairs.

Vladimir Mikhailov, Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Air Force,
pointed to the importance of the Kant airbase in holding the
long-planned military exercises. In addition to the anti-terrorist
elements of the exercise, the participants also carried out a command
staff exercise of the CIS Unified Air Defense System. According to
Mikhailov, such preparedness remains an essential part of the Russian
military presence in Kyrgyzstan. Yet doubts remain over the role of
the Russian base during the recent revolution and in its mixed signals
since.

Nikolai Bordyuzha, secretary-general of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO), issued a strenuous denial of any possible Russian
military involvement at any stage in the crisis. He categorically
ruled out considering the use of force in order to protect the Akayev
regime. “I personally approached [President Askar] Akayev and asked
him to grant permission for my arrival there in order to assess the
situation and work out some proposals for the CSTO as regards to
putting political pressure on the situation in Kyrgyzstan.” Akayev
apparently refused, in what has been regarded by his Russian
counterparts as a failure to appreciate the serious nature of the
crisis.

Moreover, Bordyuzha denied that any Russian military aviation
transited through the airbase during the crisis, either to increase
numerical strength at the base or evacuate key Kyrgyz
officials. Reports that indicated a theoretical risk to the base as
marchers moved towards Kant on March 25-26 were a misunderstanding,
owing to the intention of the people to reach industrial facilities in
Kant rather than target the Russian base.

Bordyuzha evidently wants to dispel any suggestion that the Russian
military presence in Kyrgyzstan may ignite Russian military
involvement in the internal politics of that country. His view,
reflecting that of many within Russian political and security circles,
presents an impression of a benevolent Russia advocating peace in the
midst of political turmoil.

These and other statements emerging from Moscow suggest a cautious
handling of the change of power in Bishkek, a restraint singularly
lacking in previous examples of such turmoil in the former Soviet
Union. One key distinction is the lack of any credible evidence of an
“anti-Russian” element in the political opposition in
Kyrgyzstan. Moscow’s policy is also influenced by the fear that the
anarchy that followed the political collapse of Akayev’s regime may
denote an even more unstable situation; the potential risk of clan
divisions and trouble in Osh region spreading to neighboring
Uzbekistan, combined with the activities of Hizb-ut-Tahrir and other
Islamic elements. remain concerns for the Kremlin. Russia therefore
appears intent on taking the position of peace advocate, eschewing any
appearance of favoring any party or being presented as an external
power vying for its own interests. Bordyuzha, in this sense at least,
wanted to reassure his Kyrgyz associates that regardless of the
descent into the abyss, Russia cannot afford to become militarily
involved in separating conflicting parties in an internal Kyrgyz
dispute.

The continuation of instability and uncertainty over Bakiyev’s ability
to stabilize the country may justify Moscow’s stance. Three
commissions are being formed in order to investigate the causes of the
March 24 events in Kyrgyzstan. One parliamentary commission comprised
of Omurbek Tekebayev, Dzhantoro Satybaldiyev, Tashkul Kereksizov,
Temir Sariyev, Sadyr Dzhaparov, Kadyrdzhan Batyrov, and Duyshon
Chotonov has been set up to examine the events.

As the Kyrgyz authorities themselves show difficulties in coming to
terms with the regime change, Bakiyev merely offers parliamentary
commissions and various investigations into the mechanics of
revolution, while addressing some concerns of the protesters such as
the nature of corruption in local appointments under the old
regime. The coordination council of Kyrgyz law-enforcement agencies
has decided to reinforce the Ministry of Internal Affairs
investigative group by providing additional investigators from the
Drug Control Agency, Customs Service, and Financial Police. These
investigations are grappling with same issue, namely how mass riots
spread so quickly and how the various security agencies handled the
crisis.

Moscow fears that the disorder following the collapse of the Akayev
regime may spread throughout Central Asia. Already overstretched by
its military commitment in Chechnya, the Kremlin cannot face the
prospect of an unstable Central Asia, with limited resources available
to reduce the risk of further trouble. The specter of Kyrgyzstan as an
island of instability rather than democracy is driving Moscow’s
cautious approach.

(Moskovsky komsomolets, March 26; Interfax, April 1; Kyrgyz Television
First Channel, April 2; RTR Russia TV, April 3; Kabar News Agency,
April 3)

–Roger N. McDermott

RUSSIA PURSUES TURKMEN RICHES, WITH MIXED RESULTS

Russia has been courting Turkmenistan’s authoritarian regime in an
apparent attempt to secure its energy interests in the gas-rich
Central Asian state. However, the pursuit has been dealt a number of
setbacks recently.

In the wake of regime change in Kyrgyzstan, Russian President Vladimir
Putin and his Turkmen counterpart, Saparmurat Niyazov, held telephone
consultations on March 30, reportedly discussing bilateral energy
issues and “regional” problems. Officially, events in Kyrgyzstan were
not discussed, as the two leaders focused on economic issues. Yet
despite Russian efforts to achieve a measure of detente between Russia
and Turkmenistan, Niyazov remains defiant.

Notably, on March 12, Turkmen authorities expelled RIA-Novosti
reporter Viktor Panov, who was handcuffed, brought to the Ashgabat
airport, and put a plane bound for Russia. As Panov reportedly had
dual citizenship in Turkmenistan, his expulsion, allegedly on
espionage charges, came as a blow to Moscow’s attempts to maintain a
semblance of mutual understanding with Ashgabat.

Moreover, in late March Niyazov reportedly refused to accept Ramazan
Abdulatipov, a member of the Federation Council, as Russia’s new
ambassador to Ashgabat. In a gesture described by Russian media
outlets as a “slap in Moscow’s face,” Niyazov insisted on a career
Russian diplomat for Ashgabat, while Abdulatipov, an experienced
politician and former cabinet minister, reportedly will be re-assigned
as ambassador to Tajikistan.

Until recently, Russia had repeatedly voiced concern over alleged
discrimination against ethnic Russians in Turkmenistan. Around 100,000
Russian-speakers were believed to hold dual citizenship in
Turkmenistan. In April 2003, Turkmenistan revoked a dual-citizenship
agreement signed in 1993 and residents who hold both Turkmen and
Russian citizenship were given two months to choose one or the other.

It is widely believed that Moscow agreed to cancel the dual
citizenship agreement in exchange for a major gas deal. In April 2003,
Niyazov traveled to Moscow and signed a framework agreement on gas
cooperation as well as a 25-year contract on gas supplies to
Russia. Niyazov pledged to supply up to 100 billion cubic meters of
gas to Russia from 2010 onward or a total of 2 trillion cubic meters
over 25 years. Russia would pay Turkmenistan $44 per 1,000 cubic
meters, 50% in barter and 50% in cash. Niyazov claimed that the deal
would bring Turkmenistan $200 billion and $300 billion to Russia.

Last December, Turkmenistan halted gas supplies to Russia. Niyazov
reportedly explained the move by “Turkmenistan’s national interests.”
Ashgabat reportedly demanded $60 per 1,000 cubic meters. In early
January, Turkmenistan announced that gas supplies to Russia had
resumed, but reportedly failed to deliver. On February 11, the Russian
Foreign Ministry had to dismiss media allegations that Turkmenistan
had declared a “gas war” on Russia. In February 2005, Gazprom CEO
Alexei Miller traveled to Ashgabat twice, but a bilateral gas deal
remains elusive (see EDM, January 12, February 11).

On March 30, Putin reportedly informed Niyazov that Miller is due in
Ashgabat April 13-15 to hold yet another round of talks. It remains to
be seen whether Russia and Turkmenistan will manage to solve their
unprecedented price dispute.

The Russian natural gas monopoly Gazprom needs Turkmen gas to make up
for the shortages created by its export commitments to Ukraine and its
West European customers. Gazprom’s annual shortfall in supplying the
Russian domestic market has been estimated at 30-40 billion cubic
meters. Therefore, the oil and gas pipeline game seems to have an
immediate importance for Moscow, while other aspects of the Caspian
settlement appear to be less time-sensitive.

As a part of its drive to control the Caspian hydrocarbon riches,
Russia has also suggested creating a group of Central Asian natural
gas producers, presumably around the nexus of its gas pipelines
leading to Western European markets. However, this grouping remains a
daring vision rather than a realistic plan (see EDM, March 24).

By clinching the deal to buy virtually all of Turkmenistan’s gas,
Moscow hoped to outmaneuver the trans-Afghan pipeline plan. Facing
Russia’s reluctance to review the gas deal, the Foreign Ministry of
Turkmenistan has reiterated that the construction of a $3.3 billion
gas pipeline to Pakistan and India via Afghanistan is due to start in
2006.

Turkmenistan is the largest natural-gas producer in Central Asia. Its
hydrocarbon reserves are estimated at more than 80 billion barrels
(some 11 billion tons) of crude and 5.5 trillion cubic meters of
gas. Turkmenistan plans to attract up to $26 billion worth of foreign
investment in its oil and gas sector by 2020.

Turkmenistan has pledged to sign a major deal with a consortium of
Russian oil and gas companies to develop offshore oil fields in
Turkmen sector of the Caspian Sea “in the near future.” The Russian
oil consortium Zarit — which includes state-owned firms Rosneft and
Zarubezhneft and gas trader Itera — hoped to sign a production
sharing agreement (PSA). The 25-year agreement would involve four oil-
and gas-rich blocs in the southern part of the Caspian shelf near the
Iranian border.

Zarit was registered in May 2002 in Moscow as a joint venture between
Rosneft, Itera’s subsidiary Gazkhiminvest (each controls 37% of
Zarit), and Zarubezhneft, which holds the remaining 26% stake. The
consortium aims to attract Turkmen state-owned Turkmenneft and
Turkmenneftegaz, as well as Iranian firms, to take part in the
project. In December 2003, the Turkmen government put off signing the
PSA, while no reasons for delay were disclosed. Itera had pledged to
start drilling at the offshore blocks in 2004, but the deal has yet to
materialize.

Russia has had significant expectations connected with future energy
ties with Turkmenistan. So far, these high hopes are yet to be
realized, while Turkmen authoritarian leader Niyazov seemingly makes
it clear that Moscow should not expect any concessions from him.

–Sergei Blagov

SECESSIONIST LEADERS HOLD “MINISTERIAL” TALKS, PREPARE “SUMMIT”

The self-styled “ministers of foreign affairs” of Transnistria and
Abkhazia, Valery Litskay and Sergei Shamba, along with South Ossetia’s
“permanent representative” to Russia, Dmitry Medoev, held a tripartite
meeting and talks with Russian officials on April 3-4 in Moscow. On
March 30, Transnistria’s “president” Igor Smirnov and “state security
minister” Vladimir Antyufeyev had also held talks with officials in
Moscow. The April 3-4 conclave was the third of its kind in Moscow
this year, and it prepared for a meeting of the secessionist
“presidents,” tentatively scheduled for the second half of April in
Sukhumi.

Concurrently with the Moscow meeting of his proteges, Russian
President Vladimir Putin scheduled a meeting on April 2 in Sochi with
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and the Abkhaz and South
Ossetian “presidents,” Sergei Bagapsh and Eduard Kokoiti. “The format
is reminiscent of a summons to Communist Party Central Committee
Secretaries of Soviet republics,” Saakashvili commented in turning
down Putin’s invitation (Rustavi-2 TV, April 3).

In an affront to the European Union, the secessionist conclaves in
Moscow were timed to overlap with the EU-Russia Partnership Council
ministerial session, held on April 1 in Luxembourg, preparatory to the
EU-Russia summit. The Luxembourg session included discussion of the
“frozen conflicts,” which the EU intends henceforth to place on the
agenda of the EU-Russia dialogue. In that context, the Moscow meetings
appeared designed to flaunt the ongoing creation and continuing
consolidation of faits accomplis by Russia.

The Moscow meeting participants unanimously called for continuation of
Russia’s “special role” as provider of peacekeeping troops, diplomatic
mediator, and guarantor of any political resolution to the frozen
conflicts. Shamba and Medoev called for continuing the preparations
for a meeting with Saakashvili to be held in Sochi under Putin’s
auspices.

Regarding the 1999 OSCE Istanbul Commitments on Russian troop
withdrawal, Litskay served notice that Transnistria “does not
recognize the Istanbul Commitments, they are not ours.” While
conceding that those are Russia’s commitments, Litskay echoed Moscow’s
position that they are not binding and carry no deadline. He
reaffirmed Tiraspol’s known, “categorical opposition” to evacuation of
Russian arsenals from Transnistria, pending disbursement of
“compensation” to Tiraspol — a position that serves Moscow as an
excuse for not evacuating those arsenals, which in turn provide an
excuse for retaining the Russian troops to guard the arsenals. Litskay
was using arguments that the OSCE itself had handed to Moscow and
Tiraspol in the last three years.

Shamba asserted during this conference — as he had during the
previous one in March — Abkhazia’s claim of sovereign control over
“its territorial waters.” From Tbilisi, Georgia’s Border Guard
Department responded immediately that the claim was illegal and that
unchecked shipping bound for Sukhumi could be presumed to carry
contraband, possibly including drugs, arms, or gunmen.

Shamba and Medoev spoke of a “possible military alliance among the
unrecognized republics,” based on their experience in 2005, “which
demonstrated that we can dispatch armed detachments . . .. We count on
assistance from the fraternal North Caucasus peoples, as well as from
our allies Abkhazia and Transnistria.” They appeared emboldened by the
successful June 2005 operation, seen but condoned by the OSCE, when
some 2,000 volunteers from Transnistria, Kuban, and Abkhazia crossed
Russia’s territory to fight against Georgia in South Ossetia.

The Conference of “ministers of foreign affairs” of Transnistria,
Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Karabakh — a forum created in 2000, and
largely inactive since then — is expected to be raised to the
“presidential” level at the upcoming Sukhumi meeting. That meeting is
further expected to add some substance to a 1994 agreement on mutual
assistance among those four parties, including military assistance in
the event of conflict.

The Sukhumi meeting’s timing is planned to coincide with the GUAM
countries’ summit scheduled to be held in Chisinau on April 22. Moscow
continues irrationally to regard the GUAM group as a threat to
Russia’s interests, and the pro-Russian enclaves as a means to offset
that presumed threat. Some policy planners in Moscow propose stepping
up support for the secessionist enclaves as a form of pressure on the
GUAM member countries.

Thus an analysis by the Regnum agency — said to belong to Modest
Kolerov, recently appointed as the Kremlin’s coordinator for relations
with Russia’s “compatriots” and citizens beyond Russia’s borders —
argues: “The series of visits by Saakashvili in Kyiv and Chisinau, by
[Moldovan President Vladimir] Voronin in Kyiv, seek to lay the
groundwork for an economic blockade of the unrecognized republics and
for internationalization of peacekeeping contingents . . . In view of
the growing threat from the Georgia-Ukraine-Moldova group, which
focuses on undermining Russia’s influence in Russia’s own vicinity,
Russia is in a position to utilize the instrument of the
self-determining states.”

(Interfax, April 3, 4; Lenta.ru, April 4; Regnum, March 28; see EDM,
January 28, March 18)

–Vladimir Socor

—————————————————————————-
The Eurasia Daily Monitor, a publication of the Jamestown Foundation,
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