Gazprom submits proposals for Armenia-Iran pipe construction

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
March 30, 2005

Gazprom submits proposals for Armenia-Iran pipe construction

YEREVAN, Mar 30 (Prime-Tass) — Russian natural gas monopoly Gazprom
has submitted its proposals for participating in the construction of
the second stretch of the Armenia-Iran gas pipeline, Armenia’s Energy
Minister Armen Movsisyan told reporters Wednesday.

The proposals on the construction of the Kadzharan-Ararat stretch
were submitted by Gazprom’s Deputy Chairman Alexander Ryazanov during
his visit to Armenia last week, Movsisyan said.

Construction of the Armenia-Iran pipeline is expected to be completed
by January 2007. A 41-kilometer stretch of the pipeline runs across
Armenian territory.

ArmRosgazprom is building the pipeline. Gazprom and the Armenian
government each hold 45% stakes in ArmRosgazprom, while Russian
independent gas producer Itera holds a 10% stake.

OSCE head to travel from Armenia to Kyrgyzstan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 30, 2005 Wednesday

OSCE head to travel from Armenia to Kyrgyzstan

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN, March 30

The head of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE), Slovenian Foreign Minister Dimitrij Rupel will travel to
Kyrgyzstan on Wednesday evening.

He said in Yerevan that the OSCE had business to attend to in this
Central Asian country.

Initially it was planned that the visit to Armenia would last till
Friday, but the trip to Kyrgyzstan changed the schedule.

Rupel’s talks and discussions in Yerevan focused on Nagorno-Karabakh.
“The OSCE believed and believes that a political settlement is the
only correct way” to resolve the conflict, he said.

In his view, “It is necessary to stop ceasefire breaches in the
conflict zone”.

He warned against aggressive rhetoric. “We must foster dialogue and
confidence-building measures,” Rupel added.

He said Slovenia was ready to assist the conflicting sides in
achieving an agreement and even provide a venue for talks and
meetings.

Minister comes out for existence of two Armenian states

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 30, 2005 Wednesday

Minister comes out for existence of two Armenian states

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

Armenian Defense Minister, Secretary of the National Security Council
Serzh Sarkisyan came out for the “one Armenian people, two Armenian
states” concept envisioning the existence of two countries – Armenia
and Nagorno Karabakh.

Sarkisyan, speaking at a parliamentary hearing Wednesday over the
settlement of the Karabakh conflict, said it is strategically
advantageous to raise the issue of membership in international
organizations of the two fraternal states – Armenia and Nagorno
Karabakh – and their active cooperation.

“As a principled compromise on settling the conflict, we consider the
fact that Armenia has not yet officially recognized Nagorno Karabakh
as independent state,” the defense minister emphasized.

In his view, it shows Yerevan’s good will with the view of
contributing to the peaceful settlement processes which the OSCE
Minsk group is helping to promote.

Sarkisyan noted that concessions at the talks can be made on the
condition that Azerbaijan gives the guarantee of non-resumption of
war, which should be confirmed by influential international
organizations and separate states.

Russian Pop Star Cancels Concert In Armenia After Youth Protests

Agence France Presse — English
March 30, 2005 Wednesday 9:58 PM GMT

Russian pop star cancels concert in Armenia after youth groups
protests

MOSCOW

Russian pop singer Filipp Kirkorov late Wednesday cancelled a planned
concert in Armenia’s capital Yerevan after some 30 Armenian youth and
student groups voiced outrage at they claimed was his pro-Turkish,
anti-Armenian attitude.

“If they do not want to see and hear me in Yerevan, then this will
not happen,” Kirkorov told the ITAR-TASS news agency.

Armenian youth and student groups last week made public a protest
letter in which they accused Kirkorov of being anti-Armenian and
pro-Turkish, and of having publicly insulted an Armenian reporter,
slighting her background.

They claimed his planned April 8 concert in Yerevan would be
“immoral” if held on the eve of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
massacre of 1915 which Turkey still refuses to consider a genocide.

The letter’s signatories warned that they planned to meet Kirkorov at
the airport with slogans and eggs in hand.

ANCA: EX-IM Expands Support for Armenia

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
March 30, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

EX-IM EXPANDS SUPPORT FOR ARMENIA

— ANCA Welcomes Move to Broaden U.S.-Armenia Commercial
Opportunities

WASHINGTON, DC – In a move welcomed by Armenian Americans and the
growing number of U.S. firms doing business with Armenia, the
Export-Import Bank of the United States (Ex-Im Bank) announced last
week the expansion of its loan guarantee, export credit insurance,
and direct loan programs in Armenia.

“We welcome this contribution by EXIM to the expansion of U.S.-
Armenia commercial relations,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram
Hamparian. “We appreciate the role of the Bank in fostering an
environment of greater bilateral economic cooperation and look
forward to the new job-creation opportunities that this expansion
will make possible.”

The policy change to its “cover policy arrangements” includes new
support for short and medium term programs in Armenian public
sector. These changes, effective as of today, were based on risk
rating changes made by the U.S. Interagency Country Risk Assessment
System. Short term deals typically last up to one year, while
medium term transactions last between one and seven years.

Ex-Im Bank, the official export credit agency of the United States,
is in its 71st year of helping finance the sale of U.S. exports,
primarily to emerging markets throughout the world, by providing
loan guarantees, export credit insurance and direct loans. In
fiscal year 2004, Ex-Im Bank authorized financing to support $17.8
billion of U.S. exports worldwide. For further information on Ex-
Im Bank programs in Armenia, visit Ex-Im Bank’s web site at

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.anca.org
www.exim.gov.

ANCA Seeks Adoption of Darfur Accountability Act of 2005

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
March 30, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA SEEKS ADOPTION OF DARFUR ACCOUNTABILITY ACT

— Launches New ANCA WebFax Campaign in support of
Decisive U.S. Action to Stop Genocide in Sudan

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
has joined the growing coalition seeking decisive U.S. action to
stop the ongoing Genocide in Darfur, Sudan.

In an action alert circulated to more than 50,000 activists in
every U.S. state, the ANCA called on Armenian Americans to work for
the adoption of Congressional resolutions in favor of the
appointment of a Presidential Special envoy to Sudan and the
imposition of sanctions against the Sudanese Government.

Known as the Darfur Accountability Act of 2005 (S.495), the
measure, introduced on March 2nd by Senators Jon Corzine (D-NJ) and
Sam Brownback (R-KS), calls for a new UN security Council
resolution with sanctions, an extension of the current arms embargo
to cover the Government of Sudan, and as well as the freezing of
assets of those responsible for genocide and war crimes in Darfur.
The Special Presidential Envoy for Sudan would work with all
parties and the international community to stop the genocide in
Darfur and help craft a comprehensive peace plan.

The ANCA WebFax letter reminds legislators that, “The international
community watched as Turkey massacred over 1.5 million Armenian
civilians and drove hundreds of thousands more into the desert to
die during World War I. After this first genocide of the 20th
Century, the nations of the world pledged to prevent such
atrocities in the future. And yet, over 6 million Jews and
millions of others were exterminated by the Nazis during World War
II. The world community again vowed to stop future atrocities,
proclaiming, ‘Never again.’ And yet again, over 1.7 million
Cambodians were killed under Pol Pot’s repressive regime in the
1970’s, and less than 20 years later after that, 800,000 Tutsi
civilians were slaughtered in Rwanda in 1994. I urge you to take
action to end this cycle and move us to finally realize the call –
‘Never Again.'”

Joining Senators Corzine and Brownback in cosponsoring the Darfur
Accountability Act in the Senate are Evan Bayh (D-IN), Barbara
Boxer (D-CA), Tom Coburn (R-OK), Norm Coleman (R-MN), Susan Collins
(R-ME), Mark Dayton (D-MD), Mike DeWine (R-OH), Christopher Dodd
(D-CT), Richard Durbin (D-IL), Russell Feingold (D-WI), John Kerry
(D-MA), Herb Kohl (D-WI), Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Frank Lautenberg
(D-NJ), Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Joseph Lieberman (D-CT), Patty Murray
(D-WA), Benjamin Nelson (R-NE), and Jim Talent (R-MO).

Similar legislation was introduced in the House on March 17th by
New Jersey Democrat Donald Payne and have 11 cosponsors including
Representatives Michael Capuano (D-MA), John Conyers (D-MI), Tom
Lantos (D-CA), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Gregory Meeks (D-CA), Joseph
Pitts (R-PA), Charles Rangel (D-NY), Bobby Rush (D-IL), Thomas
Tancredo (R-CO), and Bennie Thompson (D-MS).

Following the introduction of the Darfur Accountability Act,
Illinois Senator Richard Durbin spoke in the support of the
measure, citing a state’s inherent responsibility to stop genocide:
“‘Genocide’ is a word this is rarely used in human history,”
explained Sen. Durbin. “There have been genocides against the
Armenian people and the Jewish people during the Holocaust, perhaps
in Pol Pot’s times in Cambodia, and other times we can point to.
Rarely do we use the word. It is a word that is freighted with
responsibility. You cannot just say there is genocide in some part
of the world and isn’t that a shame. We signed a genocide treaty
that said once we detect a genocide, we go to international
organizations – the United States does – and demand action. So
using the word “genocide,” as the Bush administration has done, is
a good thing because it prods us to do something, but it is a
challenge that we must meet on something this timely and
important.”

The escalation of Congressional efforts regarding the Darfur
Genocide coincides with an expanded Sudanese government effort to
deny its role in the ongoing tragedy. In a March 22nd front page
Washington Post article, Sudan’s First Vice-President Ali Uthman
Muhammad Taha argued that, “his government had received an unfair
share of the blame for the war in Darfur.” The Washington Post
article, which presented highlights from an interview with the
First Vice-President continued: “We do understand and appreciate
people having sympathy with the victims of Darfur,” said Taha, 57,
who called the situation a ‘sad chapter’ in Sudan’s history. But he
added: “This was not genocide, but an unfortunate internal
conflict… that has nothing to do with ethnic cleansing. We urge
people to see the difference between the innocents caught in the
middle and the rebels who are escalating their claims to gain
sympathy.”

“Genocide denial – of past atrocities or ongoing massacres – only
serves to encourage perpetrators – emboldening them with the
knowledge that their crimes can be committed with impunity,” said
Hamparian. “As Armenian Americans, we are reminded by the Sudanese
government’s efforts to blame the victims – like its hollow claims
of self-defense – of the Turkish government’s campaign – now in its
ninth decade, to escape responsibility for the Armenian Genocide.”

Express your support for the Darfur Genocide Accountability Act of
2005 by sending a free ANCA WebFax to Congress from the ANCA
website Additional information about the Darfur
Genocide can be found at:

Africa Action

Save Darfur

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.savedarfur.org
www.anca.org
www.anca.org.
www.africaaction.org

Kwasniewski, Aliyev on cooperation, Caspian Sea oil

PAP Polish Press Agency
PAP News Wire
March 30, 2005 Wednesday

Kwasniewski, Aliyev on cooperation, Caspian Sea oil

Warsaw, March 30

Poland is very interested in big projects
concerning the transmission of crude oil and gas from the Caspian Sea
region to Europe which have been presented by Azerbaijan to the
EU, said President Aleksander Kwasniewski on Wednesday
following talks with Azeri president Ilham Aliyev.

We discussed the possibility of including in the projects
the Odessa-Brody-Gdansk stretch, Kwasniewski told a news
conference.

President Aliyev, on the two-day official visit to Poland
said talks on including Poland in the project were underway. He
stressed that Azerbaijan had always supported the extension of
Odessa-Brody-Gdansk pipeline.

Kwasniewski added he had discussed the stepping up of the
pipeline construction with Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko and
that in his opinion Ukraine seemed to be interested in joining
the project.

The Polish president said Poland supported Azeri efforts to
establish closer cooperation with the EU, NATO and WTO and was ready
to share its experience in this field.

During the visit three agreements between both governments
were signed: on economic cooperation, on cooperation and mutual
assistance in customs issues and on cooperation in defence. According
to Kwasniewski also agreements on cooperation between SMEs and
labour markets as well as letters of intent on cooperation in
agriculture and education will be signed.

According to the Polish president a peaceful solution to
Azeri-Armenian conflict about Nagorno-Karabakh was feasible but, as
the president stressed, the decision hinged on Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Asked about Poland’s official stand in case of Azeri democratic
revolution gathering momentum Kwasniewski said Poland persistently
supported democracy, civil society, democratic institutions and the
freedom of mass media.

The Azeri president said he was satisfied with the level of
bilateral relations. He explained that he updated his Polish
counterpart on negotiations with Armenia.

After the meeting of the two presidents Defence Minister
Jerzy Szmajdzinski conveyed to his Azeri counterpart Safar Abiyev
archival materials confirming the presence of Azeri officers in the
Polish armed forces in the period between the two world wars.

The Azeri president received deputy Senate Speaker Jolanta
Danielak, who stressed smooth development and intensification of the
political dialogue.

President Aliyev said his country was in the process of
making investor-friendly laws and expected an increased number of
Polish investments.

“We take saboteurs in by the dozen”

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 30, 2005, Wednesday

“WE TAKE SABOTEURS IN BY THE DOZENS”

SOURCE: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kurier, No 10, March 23 – 29, 2005, p. 2

by Andrei Moskovsky

HARRY SAMANBA, CHAIRMAN OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY COMMITTEE OF THE
PARLIAMENT OF ABKHAZIA, ON THE GEORGIAN-ABKHAZIAN CONFLICT

Georgian secret services moved the gang of Chechen field commander
Ruslan Gelayev from the Panki Gorge of Georgia to the Kodor Gorge in
Abkhazia in late summer 2001. Abkhazian troops repelled the attack.
Some terrorists were wiped out, others taken prisoner. Here is an
interview with Harry Samanba, Chairman of the National Security
Committee of the parliament of Abkhazia who fought the Chechens in
the Kodor Gorge then as second-in-command of the Northern Army Group
of the Abkhazian Defense Ministry.

Question: Pressure applied to Abkhazia greatly increased with the
triumph of the Revolution of Roses in Georgia. Military experts even
assumed that it was a propagandistic campaign against Abkhazia,
usually a predecessor of outright hostilities. What does Abkhazian
society think of the possibility of renewal of the conflict with
Georgia?

Harry Samanba: The end of the war in Abkhazia in September 1993 gave
us a respite, a month long or so. After that Georgia renewed pressure
and has not eased off even now. Tbilisi openly admits that it plans
to re-conquer our territory. The Georgian military is training with
the help from American and NATO instructors. The new battalions of
the Georgian army are drilled in American tactics. Yes, we do have
this information.

Certain personnel changes await the Abkhazian security structures. A
recent meeting of the Political Council of the Amtsakhara Movement
resolved for example to make an emphasis on the men who held actual
posts of importance during the war.

Question: Georgian secret services dealing with Abkhazia are
extremely active nowadays. Among other things, they “run” the so
called guerrillas operating in the Gal district.

Harry Samanba: We know. As for the guerrillas from the so called
Forest Brothers and other units, they were under Georgian secret
services’ total control once. In the past, however, they were
financed via structures of the so called “Autonomous Republic of
Abkhazia in exile”. These days, they are officially sponsored by
Tbilisi.

Question: Tbilisi is contemplating various scenarios of the use of
force as a solution to the problem of Abkhazia.

Harry Samanba: Georgian secret services and the military had a lot of
plans to conquer Abkhazia after 1993. Key objects and targets are to
be overrun from the coast where a force is to be landed. These days,
the Georgians chart their plans with help from the Americans. Their
objective is clear: conquest of Abkhazia from the sea and by land.
The Kodor Gorge remains a danger because of the Georgians in it. On
the other hand, attacks backed by armored vehicles from this
direction are impossible. Mountains are not the best terrain for
tanks, artillery pieces, and battle infantry vehicles, you know.
Georgia deployed battalions of mountaineers in Kodori. All locals
there are armed to the last man. They know the paths, they are
experts in mountainous warfare. At the same time, the Svans do not
want to fight. We hope that our relations with Svanetia will develop
normally.

Another plan the Georgians came up with stipulates annexation of the
Gal and Ochamchira districts as geographically the closest to
Georgia. Secret services of Georgia never abandon attempts to drive a
wedge between western and eastern Abkhazia. They even tried these
methods during the election. In fact, the use of these dirty tricks
dates back to the Soviet era. No wonder the Georgians set up Georgian
settlements between Abkhazian villages in the hope to assimilate
residents of the Ochamchira and Gudauta areas. They failed. Tbilisi
cannot understand that the Abkhazian are consolidated now, that they
have never been so consolidated. Yes, there were plans in Yeltsin’s
era to divide Abkhazia along the Gumista, and even Moscow accepted
these plans once. The river was supposed to provide a natural buffer
between the warring sides, and the capital, Sukhumi, was to be a zone
open for everyone including peacekeepers. The plan failed. And
annexation of two districts looks all the more absurd now.

Question: What forms and methods do foreign intelligence services
prefer?

Harry Samanba: Provocations, that’s the only word that leaps to mind
when I try to appraise their actions in Abkhazia. They tried to drive
a wedge between the Abkhazians and Armenians once. It’s the latest
election that showed all futility of these provocations. By the way,
the brigade I commanded in the war included an Armenian battalion.
They are good fighters. We do not have any problems with the Armenian
diaspora nowadays.

Question: What is the numerical strength of the Georgian forces
concentrated in the conflict area and in the vicinity?

Harry Samba: Our estimates put its numerical strength at over 10,000
men. Their quality and prowess is a different matter. Underestimating
them will be a mistake. Tbilisi became elated and euphoric with the
overthrow of Aslan Abashidze in Adjaria, and this euphoria has not
worn off even now. Perhaps, the death of Zhvania will bring some
changes, but we expect everything from these revenge-mongers. They
may feign an attack on South Ossetia, for example, and try to
accomplish something in Abkhazia in the meantime. We should face it.
It is Abkhazia that Tbilisi is particularly mad at. Myself as an
officer, I expect aggression any moment.

But Georgia has other problems as well. Its leaders desperately want
membership in the European Union and NATO and that has its time
limits. Had it been possible to conquer Abkhazia inside of a week,
Tbilisi would not have hesitated. But that’s a sheer impossibility,
and everyone in Georgia knows it.

So, time is not on Georgia’s side. I talked to representatives of the
authorities of Georgia in Germany; I met with Khaindrava and deputies
of the parliament of Georgia. That’s what I noticed: young men
considered democrats are dangerous because unlike us, they have not
seen wars. They may prove stupid enough to launch an invasion. It is
whoever has never fought in a war that usually aspires for a
blitzkrieg.

Question: Explosions regularly rocked Sukhumi and other cities barely
years ago – thanks to saboteurs sent in by your restive neighbor…

Harry Samanba: They were taken in by the dozens. There was the so
called Six-Day War in the Gal district several years ago, when we
were fighting extremists. Georgian saboteurs had tried to destabilize
the situation in other districts of Abkhazia before that. There were
9 of them in the Gal district, and 5 remained there forever.

I repeat: we are ready for everything. Whenever needed, I’d say that
we will draft 20,000 fighters. They are reservists with combat
experience. That’s our advantage. But we have a new generation in
Abkhazia now, and Georgia itself is keeping us honed – it was so in
1998, it was so in the Kodor Gorge in 2001. We are not permitted the
luxury of relaxing or taking it easy.

Translated by A. Ignatkin

Investigation ordered into banning of Turkish author’s books

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
March 30, 2005, Wednesday

Investigation ordered into banning of Turkish author’s books

Ankara

The Interior Ministry has launched an investigation into the banning
from sale of one of Turkey’s best known authors in the southwest of
the country, the Anadolu news agency reported Wednesday.

Turkish newspapers on Wednesday were full of fury at the decision to
ban works of Orhan Pamuk from shops and libraries in the Isparta
district of Sutculer.

A sub-governor ordered the ban on February 15 after Pamuk had
reportedly told a Swedish magazine that 30,000 Kurds had been killed
in fighting between security forces and the Kurdish Workers’ Party in
the 1980s and 90s and that one million Armenians had been killed by
Turks during the World War I, both extremely sensitive topics in
Turkey.

It was Pamuk’s comments to the magazine and not the content of his
books that were the reason behind the ban, Radikal newspaper on
Wednesday said.

“Barbarism in Isparta”, read the main headline in Radikal, which said
the governor of Isparta had the ban overturned on Tuesday.

Pamuk’s books include “My Name is Red” and “Snow”, which the New York
Times named one of the top 10 books for 2004. dpa cw ms

Bagapsh against opening of additional UN offices in Abkhazia

RIA Novosti, Russia
March 30, 2005

BAGAPSH AGAINST OPENING OF ADDITIONAL UN OFFICES IN ABKHAZIA

SUKHUMI, March 30 (RIA Novosti’s Ruslan Tarba) – One UN human rights
office is sufficient in Abkhazia (self-proclaimed republic in
Georgia), Abkhaz President Sergei Bagapsh told journalists on
Wednesday.

According to him, “our country is small and we do not need UN offices
in every village.”
The UN human rights office is open in Sukhumi and this is enough to
control the human rights observation in the republic, he noted.

The Abkhaz leadership is ready to discuss with the Georgian side
nothing but mutually beneficial economic projects on the basis of
Sochi agreements.

The Sochi agreements signed in March 2002 imply the restoration of
railway traffic via Abkhazia, Georgia and Armenia, the restoration
and development of the Inguri hydroelectric power plant and the
return of Georgian refugees to Abkhazia’s Galsky district.

“Other issues are out of the question,” Bagapsh said.

“The political status of the Republic of Abkhazia is not to be
discussed,” he emphasized. Sergei Bagapsh met with journalists ahead
of the Georgian-Abkhaz meeting in Geneva scheduled for April 7-8. A
group of friends of the UN Secretary General will attend the meeting.
According to Bagapsh, no talks will be held and no documents will be
signed in Geneva.

Speaking about the return of Georgian refugees, the president said
they could return only to the Galsky district. “People who fought
against our country cannot and will not live here,” he stressed.

The armed conflict in the 1990s broke out in the early 1990s when
Georgia deprived Abkhazia of the autonomous status and used tough
punitive measures against the republic, which declared independence
in response. The CIS peacekeeping forces consisting of Russian
servicemen were deployed in the Abkhaz-Georgia conflict zone in June
1994.