Japan loans Armenia 150 million dollars to build gas turbine

Agence France Presse — English
March 29, 2005 Tuesday 9:57 PM GMT

Japan loans Armenia 150 million dollars to build gas turbine

YEREVAN March 30

Japan late Tuesday granted Armenia a 150.2 million dollar (116.2
million euro) credit for the construction of a gas turbine in a power
plant near the capital Yerevan, Armenian and Japanese officials said.

The 40-year loan was granted by Japan’s International Cooperation
Bank.

It includes a 10-year preferential period during which the interest
rate will not exceed 0.75 percent.

“Our power stations are physically aging, which makes the
construction of a new gas turbine highly significant,” Armenian
Energy Minister Armen Movsisian, who signed the deal with cooperation
bank official Kuniaki Ito, told reporters.

The power plant, located south of Yerevan, is to be completed in late
2008.

The impoverished former Soviet republic of Armenia has suffered from
severe energy shortages since the collapse of the Soviet Union in
1991.

Switzerland urges Turkey to ‘face the past’ on Armenian question

Agence France Presse — English
March 29, 2005 Tuesday 8:48 PM GMT

Switzerland urges Turkey to ‘face the past’ on Armenian question

ANKARA March 29

Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey on Tuesday urged Turkey to
carry out a detailed study of claims that millions of Armenians were
the victims of genocide under Ottoman rule during World War I.

“We think that it is essential that every country conduct an in-depth
historical research of its own past, especially when the question is
so painful,” Calmy-Rey told reporters after talks with her Turkish
counterpart Abdullah Gul.

The Swiss minister was speaking on the first day of an official visit
which was originally supposed to take place in 2003 but was cancelled
after the Swiss canton of Vaud qualified as genocide the 1915
massacres of Armenians.

Shortly afterwards, the lower house of the Swiss parliament also
followed suit — against the Bern government’s advice — and adopted
a similar resolution, unleashing an angry response from Ankara.

The allegations of genocide “are unacceptable claims by the (Armenian
diaspora) to continue its existence. Unfortunately, the diaspora
sometimes poisons our ties with other countries for its own benefit,”
Gul said.

“Other countries must not allow this,” he added.

Turkey categorically denies the Armenian allegations, but has
recently faced increasing calls for it to accept the killings of
Armenians as genocide.

In a counter-move, Turkey recently called for an unbiased study by
historians, urging Armenia to also open up its own archives.

Calmy-Rey hailed the offer as a “good idea” and said she had proposed
to Gul the inclusion of international experts in such a commission
for the credibility of the work.

The massacres of Armenians during World War I is one of the most
controversial episodes in Turkish history.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen were massacred in
orchestrated killings nine decades ago during the last years of the
Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of modern Turkey.

Turkey, on the other hand, argues that 300,000 Armenians and
thousands of Turks were killed in what was civil strife during World
War I when the Armenians rose up against their Ottoman rulers.

The Swiss minister said that she had come to Turkey in a bid to
deepen existing ties and that she would discuss prospects of
increased cooperation, especially in the economic field, during her
visit.

Calmy-Rey was scheduled to visit Turkey’s commercial capital Istanbul
and the medieval-walled city of Diyarbakir in the mainly Kurdish
southeast before leaving on Wednesday.

Soccer: Flynn Looks on the Bright Side

The Scotsman, UK
March 29 2005

Flynn Looks on the Bright Side

From Paul Walker, PA Sport, Vienna

Brian Flynn insisted there were plenty of positives for his Wales
Under-21 side to reflect on despite their unfortunate 2-0 defeat in
Austria last night.

The UEFA Under-21 Championship qualifier at Neusiedl Am See, some 40
miles from Vienna, was a torrid affair at times, poorly refereed by
Armenian Ararat Tchagharyan.

He missed two blatant penalties for fouls on exciting Oxford
youngster Craig Davies, but showed a red card to Craig Morgan for a
mid-air challenge that was mild in comparison with much of the rough
stuff being meted out by the hosts.

Roman Kienast scored early on and Jurgen Samuel near the end when
Wales were down to 10 men, but had it not been for a fine display
from Austrian keeper Ramazan Ozcan, the Welsh would surely have got
something the game.

Boss Flynn said: `There were lots of encouraging things, lots of
ability and another small step for us.

`But that is how it will be until the qualifiers for the 2008
European Championship start, then we will see how far we have climbed
up the ladder.

`But I certainly feel that we have managed a couple of rungs in these
last two games with Austria.

`There have been several plus points and several good personal
performances.’

And Flynn added: `Apart from the first 20 minutes when we didn’t
settle well, we did not have any problems and their second goal was
not a true reflection on the game.

`But when Craig Morgan was sent off we had to change things and it
was unfortunate we couldn’t get the goal we needed to really spark
us.’

Tough Wrexham defender Morgan will now miss the next three games
against England, Poland and Germany in the group.

He said: `I still don’t know what I got the red card for, it’s the
first time I have been sent off for Wales and the referee didn’t even
speak a word of English to be able to tell me what it was for.

`I jumped for the ball and we collided, that is about it. It was very
unfortunate because were were doing really well in the match at that
point.’

Lewis Price made an early error to gift Austria their first goal, and
Flynn said: `He came into the dressing room at the break and
apologised, but there were a few things going wrong in front of him
for the boy to get the chance in the first place.

Flynn added: `Sometimes in football you don’t get what you deserve
from a game and this was one of those occasions.

`We played better in this game than when we beat Austria at Merthyr
Tydfil last week, but we just couldn’t get the rewards for our
efforts.

`I actually didn’t see what Morgan was sent off for but I’ve known
him for years and he is an honest boy. I will talk to him later about
it.’

CENN Daily Digest – March 29, 2005

CENN – March 29, 2005 Daily Digest

Table of Contents:

1.. US Wants Kazakh Oil To Be Exported Through BTC
2.. SOCAR To Rxport 4th Portion Of Baku-Supsa Oil in April
3.. U.S. Oil Company Withdraws from Offshore Azerbaijani Oil Field Project
4.. Forum of Environmental NGOs in St. Petersburg
5.. How Do You Solve A Transboundary Problem If You Don’t Talk To Your
Neighbor?
6.. Vacancy Announcement — National Coordinator for CEE Bankwatch Network
7.. Vacancy Announcement — Lawyer

1. US WANTS KAZAKH OIL TO BE EXPORTED THROUGH BTC

Source: State Telegraphic Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Azertag,
March 28, 2005

Ambassador of the United State to Kazakhstan Mr. John Ordway told a press
conference in Almaty his country supports the idea of exporting Kazakh oil
through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. He expressed hope the
negotiations on the issue would bring a positive result.

2. SOCAR to export 4th portion of Baku-Supsa oil in April

Source: AssA-Irada, March 26, 2005 2

The State Oil Company (SOCAR) will export this year’s fourth portion of
Azeri Light profit oil through the Baku-Supsa western pipeline in April.

The consignment totaling one million barrels (140,000 tons) will be loaded
to tanker from the Supsa port of Georgia in mid-April, SOCAR said.

The results of the tender to determine the purchaser of the consignment will
be announced early next month.

This is the 41st portion of the Azeri Light profit oil produced by SOCAR
from the Chirag field within the Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG) project.

British Glencore and Arcadia Petroleum, as well as Czech Unipetrol Refinery
companies, purchased oil consignments, one million barrels each, exported
via the western route in January-March.

SOCAR has not predicted yet the amount of oil to be exported through the
Baku-Supsa pipeline this year. The company exported a total of 7.2 million
tons of oil via the western route in 2004.

3. U.S. OIL COMPANY WITHDRAWS FROM OFFSHORE AZERBAIJANI OIL FIELD
PROJECT

Source: RFE/RL Newsletter, March 25, 2005

Officials of the U.S. Exxon Mobil energy firm announced on March 24, 2005
the company’s withdrawal from a project to develop the Zafar-Masal offshore
Caspian oil field after test drilling failed to discover any significant oil
deposits, Turan reported. The decision was announced following a meeting
with Azerbaijani State Oil Company (SOCAR) President Natik Aliev to
negotiate the terms of the financial penalty resulting from the withdrawal.
Exxon Mobil withdrew in 2002 from a second contract to develop the Oguz
field after similarly failing to find oil in commercially viable quantities
after drilling two trial wells (see “RFE/RL Newsline,” 6 June 2002).

4. FORUM OF ENVIRONMENTAL NGOS IN ST.PETERSBURG Press release
March 24, 2005 Forum of environmental NGOs was held on March 24, 2005, in
St.Petersburg. Over 50 ecoNGOs representatives gathered together for the
first time in the 3rd millennium. The Forum was organized by the working
group on the basis of the Public Centre for Environmental Information,
including the Centre for Environmental Initiatives, Children of the Baltic,
Transboundary Environmental Information Agency and partner NGOs. The
discussion at the Forum showed different levels and interests of
organisations, different approaches to cooperation between environmental
NGOs, and different views on principles of interaction with authorities. All
Forum participants showed great interest in strengthening cooperation
between ecoNGOs. The Public Centre for Environmental Information in
St.Petersburg was proposed as an informational and organisational resource
centre for further work on enhancement of such cooperation. The working
group will analyse NGO proposals and will organise the next meeting, to be
held two months later. For more information please contact: Alexander
Fedorov Olga SenovaCentre for
Environmental Initiatives Children of the
[email protected] [email protected]
5. HOW DO YOU SOLVE A TRANSBOUNDARY PROBLEM IF YOU DON’T TALK TO
YOUR NEIGHBOUR?

Source: IUCN, March 24, 2005

IUCN launched a new project to stimulate learning on transboundary water
management at the occasion of World Water Day 2005, yesterday. The project
is part of a broad-scale initiative, called International Waters: Learn
“Structured Learning”. Sponsored by the Global Environment Facility, the
structured learning initiative intends to enhance transboundary water
management through open dialogue and advanced communication. This initiative
allows managers and other practitioners of large-scale regional projects
which focus on aquifers, lakes, river basins, and large marine ecosystems to
share their experiences and learn from one another. As one of four thematic
project activity leaders of this initiative, the IUCN Global Marine
Programme is facilitating a four-year learning exercise around large marine
ecosystem (LME) projects, by stimulating and coordinating a series of
topic-based electronic and face-to-face discussions between regional
projects around the world.

6. Vacancy Announcement — National Coordinator for CEE Bankwatch
Network The Association “Green Alternative” Georgian Environmental watchdog
group is seeking National Coordinator for CEE Bankwatch Network. CEE
Bankwatch Network (Bankwatch), established in 1995, is an international
environmental organisation with member groups from Central and Eastern
Europe. Our mission is to prevent environmentally and socially harmful
impacts arising from international development finance, and to promote
alternative solutions and public participation. For further details, please
consult our website at: <; or
<;www.green alt.wanex.net The Coordinator will
be responsible for the implementation of the existing Bankwatch work plan in
Georgia as well as developing the new initiatives in frame of this position
within the Green Alternative and Bankwatch. National Coordinator will work
closely Regional Coordinator for Caucasus and correlate its activities with
other programs of Green Alternative/Bankwatch The ideal candidate should: ·
be an NGO campaigner with at least three years’ experience· have a
knowledge of environmental issues, especially related to energy, forestry
and transport,· have excellent communication skills in English (both
written and oral) and Georgian· have a basic knowledge of
International Financial Institutions· be ready to travel
extensively· be able to work under pressure and to meet deadlines.
Job Description: · Monitoring the activities of international
financial institutions (IFIs) e.g. World Bank, European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development International Monetary Fund,·
Investigating selected projects that receive funding from IFIs and ensuring
proper public participation and environmental and social standards;·
working with the media to increase awareness of IFI activity;·
communicating with IFIs on policy and project related issues;·
coordinating national and international campaigns within Green Alternative
and among Georgian NGOs;· communicating and reporting to the
international network on activities;· conducting research and
analysis on issues required during campaigning The national coordinator
position is FULL-TIME, is located at the Green Alternative office in
Tbilisi. We are seeking multi year cooperation. Interested candidates should
submit a letter of interest along with CV and letter of Intention no later
than April 25, 2005 to: Manana KochladzeRegional Coordinator for CaucasusCEE
Bankwatch NetworkE-mail: [email protected] Only short listed candidates will
be contacted Manana Kochladze Regional Coordinator for CaucasusCEE
Bankwatch NetworkVisiting address: Rustaveli avenue. 1. entrance I. floor
4Mailing address: Chavchavadze 62, Tbilisi, Georgia, 01062Tel: 99532 22 38
74, 99 04 72Fax:995 32 93 24 03E-mail: [email protected] 7.
Vacancy Announcement — Lawyer Human Rights Information and Documentation
Center (HRIDC)

Human Rights Information and Documentation Center (HRIDC) announces an
opening for the full-time position of Lawyer for its Tbilisi office.

Position title: Lawyer

Duties include:

a.. Legal consultations
b.. Preparation law-suits, etc
c.. Representation of clients at courts
d.. Preparation analytical reports

Requirements:

Law degree

– At least two years of work experience in the filed of Criminal,
Adminsitrative and Civil Law

– Knowledge of English and Russian Languages

– Ability and motivation to work independently as well as team member;

– Knowledge of MS office/internet applications.

Interested candidates should send their CV and Cover letter by
e-mail:[email protected]

Contact Information

Ucha Nanuashvili, Executive Director

89/24 Agmashenebeli Ave., 12th floor Tbilisi, 0102

995 (32) 951003

995 (32) 951003

[email protected]

*******************************************
CENN INFO
Caucasus Environmental NGO Network (CENN)

Tel: ++995 32 75 19 03/04
Fax: ++995 32 75 19 05
E-mail: [email protected]
URL:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.bankwatch.org/&gt
http://www.greenalt.wanex.net/&gt
www.bankwatch.org
www.bankwatch.org
www.cenn.org

National Archives Of Armenia to Publish Collections of Documents

NATIONAL ARCHIVES OF ARMENIA TO PUBLISH COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS ON
THE OCCASION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE’S 90TH ANNIVERSARY

YEREVAN, MARCH 29, NOYAN TAPAN. On the occasion of the 90th
anniversary of Armenian Genocide the National Archives of Armenia
(NAA) prepares for publication collections entitled “Tragedy of
Armenian Genocide with the Eyes of Eye-Witnesses” and “Losses
Sustained by Armenians during the Slaughter in the Ottoman Turkey.”
Noyan Tapan was informed about this by Amatuni Virabian, Director of
NAA. The first collection contains 188 documents representing the
chronology and the number of the victims of the slaughter committed by
Young Turks in Bitlis and Erzrum, as well as the names of the
Armenians who forcibly adopted Islam. And the second collection
contains about 500 documents. According to A.Virabian, it’s planned to
publish another collection, in which the names of the Genocide victims
will be mentioned. He said that such work has been done only in Spyurk
by now. According to A.Virabian, the documents on Genocide kept in the
Armenian Archives have always been open. But the NAA Director is
surprised that no foreign researcher has applied to the archives for
studying these documents by now. However, a letter was received from
Turkey lately, in which the addressee asked to send him the copies of
the documents regarding Genocide. Today 3 mln files – nearly 300 mln
documents, are kept in the NAA. About 12 thousand registered documents
concern the Genocide.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ASBAREZ Online [03-29-2005]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
03/29/2005
TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT <;HTTP://

1) Armenia Warns of Azeri War Preparations
2) Parliament Committee Hearing on Mountainous Karabagh
3) Longtime ARF Member Natalie Lazian Passes Away at 105
4) Arab Tribal Leaders Pay Tribute to Genocide Victims
5) Armenian among Kidnapped Journalist in Iraq
6) Oskanian Speaks at National Assembly Hearings on Karabagh

1) Armenia Warns of Azeri War Preparations

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said on Tuesday that
Azerbaijan may be preparing for another war in Mountainous Karabagh, and
revealed that Azeri troops have moved closer to Armenian positions along the
heavily militarized frontline in recent weeks. He said the Armenian government
has already alerted international mediators about what it sees as a
possibility
of renewed fighting.
“They have been bringing their trenches closer to ours and more casualties
are
suffered as a result,” Oskanian told reporters. “We just don’t see the
rationale for that and are starting to think that maybe they want to torpedo
negotiations; maybe they have serious intentions to start military actions.”
The remarks are the starkest yet warning about a resumption of the Karabagh
war voiced by a senior Armenian official since the signing of the May 1994
ceasefire agreement. They follow recent deadly skirmishes reported along the
line of contact northeast of Karabagh, with each side blaming the other for
truce violations.
“The Armenian army is ready to give an adequate response to any Azerbaijani
offensive,” Oskanian said. He added that Armenia has conveyed its concerns to
the United States, Russia, and France that jointly co-chair the Minsk Group of
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Azeri leaders regularly threaten to take by force Karabagh and territories
surrounding, if the long-running peace talks remain deadlocked. “The people of
Azerbaijan will never put up with the loss of their lands,” President Ilham
Aliyev repeated over the weekend. “The people will liberate their native lands
at all costs.”
Addressing a congress of the governing Yeni Azerbaycan party, Aliyev at the
same time claimed that recent trends in the peace process bode well for
Azerbaijan, pointing to recent meetings between Oskanian and Azeri Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov.
Oskanian and Mammadyarov were due to continue their talks in Prague on March
2. They were cancelled due to Oskanian’s illness. Mammadyarov was quoted by
the
Azerbaijani media this week as saying that the meeting will take place at the
end of April.
But Oskanian insisted that no new dates have been set yet. He also indicated
that a possible meeting in May between Armenian and Azeri presidents would be
far more important. “We believe that quite a lot of work has been done by the
ministers and it is time for the presidents to step in,” he said.

2) Parliament Committee Hearing on Mountainous Karabagh

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–Armenian parliament’s foreign relations committee on Tuesday
began two-day hearings on the Karabagh conflict. Senior government officials
and representatives of political groups in the National Assembly will review
possible resolutions.
“Common ground is on the horizon,” Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian told the
hearings. “But at the same time we are still far apart in our positions.”
Oskanian and other speakers were unanimous in ruling out Karabagh’s return to
Azeri rule under any circumstances. Opinion only differed on whether the
Armenian-populated enclave should be independent or formally become part of
Armenia.
ARF faction’s Armen Rustamian, who chairs the committee and is presiding over
the hearings, called for the creation of an interagency body that would
coordinate Armenia’s Karabagh policy. He also urged Armenia to formalize its
close political, economic, and military links with Mountainous Karabagh
Republic (MKR).

3) Longtime ARF Member Natalie Lazian Passes Away at 105

ATHENS–ARF member Natalie Lazian passed away in Athens on March 24 at the age
of 105. A woman loved and respected by all, Lazian, along with her husband ARF
Bureau member Gabriel Lazian, traveled from country to country, finally
settling in Athens where they carried on their nationalistic work.
Born in Izmir of Greek ancestry, Natalie Lazian became acquainted with
Armenians, embraced our struggles, and faithfully followed her husband.
Serving
the Armenian Cause, her travels were risky–going from Izmir to Batumi, from
Batumi to Yerevan, Alexandropol, Alaverdi, Porchalou, Tbilisi, back to Izmir,
then Greece, Egypt, Lebanon, and finally, Athens. After learning to speak
Armenian fluently, the couple established the “Nor Or” newspaper in Athens
from
1932-40.
Funeral services for Natalie Lazian took place on March 25, at the Nea Smirni
Cemetery. She is survived by her son, Aidan, who currently resides in Athens.

4) Arab Tribal Leaders Pay Tribute to Genocide Victims

YEREVAN (Combined Sources)–A delegation of 12 Arab tribal leaders,
accompanied
by National Assembly’s Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) faction and the
ARF Armenia Supreme Body members, visited the Dzidzernagapert Memorial on
Tuesday to pay tribute to the victims of the Armenian genocide.
Praying for the victims’ souls, the delegation members stressed that the
reality of the Genocide cannot be denied, noting that it is proven by numerous
documents.
The influential tribal leaders, some of whom reside in Saudi Arabia, Jordan,
Iraq, and Qatar, are in Armenia to take part in the events commemorating the
90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, to pay tribute to the Genocide
victims, and remind the world of the unpunished vicious crime. The trip has
been organized by the Armenian community of Aleppo.
Leader of the Tal tribe, Mohamed Elfarif, said the Arabs gave shelter to
Armenians who were deported by the Turkish government to the desert and were
condemned to death. Commenting that some Armenian girls even married young
Arab
men, Elfarif said, `Now we have the same blood,’ adding that he had heard such
stories from his grandparents.
He said they wish to see Armenia in its historic borders, and expressed that
the viewpoint of the tribes does not differ from the viewpoint of the Arab
people as a whole.
Armenian chief consul in Aleppo Armen Melkonian said, `The visit of such
people who are considered rather influential in their country will promote the
establishment of friendlier relations between our countries.’
According to another leader of a Syrian tribe, Noaf Alpashiri, 100 families
are currently living in their tribe who are the descendants of Armenians who
survived the Turkish massacre.
The delegation arrived in Yerevan on Monday, accompanied by
representatives of
the Armenian Church’s Beria Prelacy.
Armenian National Assembly’s ARF faction secretary Hrair Karapetian and ARF
Bureau’s Political Affairs Office director Giro Manoyan greeted the guests at
Yerevan’s Zvartnotz airport.
Their hospitable ancestors gave refuge to the fragments of Armenians who
miraculously survived in the Genocide; today, many of those Armenians and
their
heirs still live side-to-side with the friendly Arab people and enjoy equal
rights.
The leaders of the tribes met with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian and
Yerevan mayor Yervand Zakharian. They are also scheduled to meet with Prime
Minister Andranik Margarian, parliamentary factions, and Defense Minister
Serge
Sargsian.

5) Armenian among Kidnapped Journalist in Iraq

BUCHAREST (Combined Sources)–Three Romanian journalists kidnapped in Baghdad,
among them Romanian Armenian Ovidiu Ohanesian, managed to send desperate text
messages to relatives and colleagues just before disappearing on Monday, as
they became the latest foreigners to be abducted in Iraq.
“We’re kidnapped. This is not a joke. Help!!!!,” one of the three, Prima TV
reporter Marie Jeanne Ion, managed to message her mother from her mobile
phone,
her mother Magdalena Ion told Realitatea TV on Tuesday.
“Don’t kill us, we are from a poor country and we have no money,” Ion was
quoted as saying.
Ion’s cameraman Sorin Miscoci and journalist Ovidiu Ohanesian of the Romania
Libera daily newspaper, all on a short reporting trip to Iraq, were also
missing, authorities said.
President Traian Basescu said both local and foreign secret services had been
alerted and he chaired a meeting of a crisis committee set up to handle the
situation.
“We have alerted all the secret services and the foreign intelligence
services
of our allies to solve the case,” Basescu told the Romanian TVR1 television
after the three journalists were snatched on Monday night.
“President Traian Basescu assures Romanians that Romania has the will and the
capacity to defend its citizens,” his spokeswoman Adriana Saftoiu said.
The three were seized while Basescu was on a whistle-stop visit to
Afghanistan
and Iraq, where staunch US ally Romania has sent 800 troops to join the US-led
force.
Like other east European countries grateful to Washington for its support in
shedding communism, Romania is a faithful US ally that has unwaveringly
supported the war in Iraq, providing logistical support and troops.
Amid wide political consensus, it joined NATO in 2004 and is eager to host
permanent US military bases on its Black Sea coast.
The kidnappings appeared to cause no immediate political backlash for
Romania’s role in Iraq, with officials saying they suspected the motives were
financial rather than political.
“I would like to believe that only economic reasons triggered their
situation.
I don’t want to believe that their kidnapping was politically motivated,” said
Simona Marinescu, an adviser to the Romanian embassy in Baghdad.
More than 150 foreigners have been seized in Iraq over the past year. Most
have been freed after negotiations or payment of ransom, but about a third
have
been killed. Many more Iraqis have been abducted, often for ransom.
The news editor of Prima TV, Dan Dumitru, said Ion managed a quick call to
her
newsroom before disappearing and that he had heard her desperately pleading
with her kidnappers.
“I heard Arabic, English, and Romanian words shouted,” he said. “I heard her
imploring the attackers not to kidnap them because they come from a poor
country which won’t be able to pay the ransom.”
Her mother appealed to authorities not to rush into rescue operations before
hearing out the abductors.
“Please don’t send special troops to look for them,” Magdalena Ion said. “We
must wait and see what the kidnappers want.”
Prime Minister Calin Tariceanu told reporters: “We will make every effort so
that the three journalists return home safely.”
Journalists at Romania Libera had a difficult time believing their colleague
had been kidnapped since there was no demand from the kidnappers.
“We cannot say we are absolutely positive he was kidnapped. We have tried to
contact our colleague and we will continue to try,” said fellow journalist
Cornel Popa.
The disappearance of the three Romanians is just the latest kidnapping
incident involving journalists in Iraq.
Earlier this month Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena was freed after the
intervention of the Italian secret service, after nearly four weeks as a
captive.
But Nicola Calipari, the international operations chief of Italy’s military
intelligence service who masterminded her release, was shot and killed by US
troops at a checkpoint as Sgrena was being driven to Baghdad airport.
In January Liberation correspondent Florence Aubenas and her translator,
Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi, were snatched outside a Baghdad hotel and are still
missing.
And Christian Chesnot, a freelance journalist kidnapped in Iraq while working
for Radio France International and Georges Malbrunot, Le Figaro’s Iraq
correspondent, were released just before Christmas, after more than four
months
in captivity.

6) Oskanian Speaks at National Assembly Hearings on Karabagh

YEREVAN (Yerkir)–Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian on Tuesday made a statement
at the Armenian National Assembly’s Foreign Relations Committee hearings on
resolving the Mountainous Karabagh conflict. Below is an excerpt of his
statement:

`I welcome this opportunity to discuss aloud and together the history,
development, present situation, and future prospects for the resolution of the
Nagorno Karabakh issue. I believe that such joint, public explorations are
useful and should facilitate a healthy civic debate on premises and prospects,
always with the purpose clearly in mind: that what we seek is a peaceful,
lasting resolution to this conflict.
I’ve looked at the agenda of these two days–the topics and speakers are
diversified and reflect varying political perspectives and political forces.
Such a diversified spectrum will provide us with a better picture of the range
of opinions in our republic on this issue.
I will try to be as open as possible, to present not just Armenia’s position,
but also our take on those international situations and events which may
affect
the Nagorno Karabakh process, our perception of the adversary’s views, and
also
the evolution and dynamics of the resolution process.
Really, we must understand the dynamics and evolution of the process if we
are
to understand our situation today and the choices before us.
Let me break down the NK process into stages during which both the format and
nature of the negotiations evolved, as did the content of the discussions.
This most recent phase became a conflict, when, in 1988, Azerbaijan used
force
to respond to peaceful demonstrations and demands, thus resulting in military
activities. During those early years, there were various incongruent,
uncoordinated, random, impulsive efforts at mediation from within the former
soviet space. These efforts did not turn into a coherent process, however, and
no documents were produced.
In 1992, the resolution process became internationalized. The Conference for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, of which both Armenia and Azerbaijan were
members, took a decision to resolve the issue of Nagorno Karabakh’s status
through a conference in Minsk. As a result, the CSCE Minsk process was born,
with the participation of Nagorno Karabakh.
The Russian Federation continued to remain engaged, often competing with the
Minsk Group. At the same time, the conflict itself extended beyond the borders
of Nagorno Karabakh, when as a result of Azerbaijan’s aggression, Armenian
forces were compelled to bring certain territories under Armenian control, for
the purpose of assuring Nagorno Karabakh’s security. By May 1994, there was a
mutually agreed upon ceasefire, and therefore, a halt to military activities.
As military activities ceased, the OSCE, at a Summit in Budapest, harmonized
the various negotiation tracks. They created the Minsk Group co-chairs
structure, formalized the negotiation process, and put an end to competition
among the various mediators. Thus the end of militarization coincided with the
creation of a mechanism for serious negotiations.
This cycle of negotiations that has now gone on for over a decade, can be
divided into 4 stages: the first stage began with the OSCE Budapest Summit and
ended with the OSCE Lisbon Summit; the second stage covered the post-Lisbon
period through the change of presidential administration in Armenia; the third
stage stretched to the death of Father Aliyev; and the fourth stage is the one
we’re in now, that started with the change of administration in Azerbaijan.
Despite Azerbaijan’s engagement, and the efforts of the sides to search
for an
acceptable resolution of the issue, Azerbaijan continues to attempt to
simultaneously introduce the Nagorno Karabakh issue in those international
forums which continue to abide by a traditional, conservative approach to the
issues of territorial integrity and self-determination.
Their answer to claims of self-determination is simply greater human rights
and certain economic benefits. This approach ignores a great many factors
including the role of history in shaping of one’s identity and destiny.
Today, everyone recognizes that these principles cannot be universally
applied, that there are places in the world where more acceptable solutions
can
and are being found, and states–new and old– continue to live in new
relationships to each other. In our time, we have witnessed East Timor’s
independence through referendum, we witnessed the signing of an agreement in
Sudan putting an end to a decades-old conflict on the basis of the notion of
referendum to be held in one portion of the country in six years.
We are all following serious deliberations about the possibility of a
referendum to determine Kosovo’s status. Among the political, legal, academic
experts working in and around those places, there is a growing awareness of
the
possibility and reality of recognizing the right of self-determination in
certain circumstances.
In all cases, one must judge existing self-determination struggles each on
its
own merits, each in terms of its own historical, legal circumstances, as well
as the realities on the ground.
As such, we can divide today’s self-determination conflicts into four types
determined by the combination of degree of control the state exercises over
its
entire territory (including the territory occupied by those striving for
self-determination) and the degree of self-determination achieved by them.
Quebec, for example, falls in Category I. In this case, the territorial
integrity of Canada is preserved, while the province of Quebec has voted to
remain part of Canada; that is, they have exercised their right to
self-determination.
The overwhelming majority of today’s secessionists fall in Category II, where
the movements struggle without any degree of self-determination and the state
continues to fully control the territory under question. The Kurdish people’s
struggle in Turkey falls into this second category.
Those in Category III are the borderline cases where the state is not able to
control those desiring self-determination, while they themselves are not
strong
enough to maintain control over their territory with any certainty of
permanence, and the outcome can go either way.
Today, Nagorno Karabakh falls in a completely different, fourth, category.
Azerbaijan has no control whatsoever over those territories, as Nagorno
Karabakh has enjoyed, for the last 15 years, all the attributes of complete
sovereignty. In this case, to attempt to win over the people of Nagorno
Karabakh by enticing them with human rights and economic advantages in
order to
attempt to return them to Azerbaijani jurisdiction, is a simply senseless
exercise.
Azerbaijan’s new authorities are having a hard time coming to terms with
these
indisputable realities. Clear-cut, categoric changes are obvious in their
approach to negotiations and the search for a resolution. Worse, and more
worrisome, there are new myths and premises –public and official–on which
their positions are being constructed.
First, they have convinced themselves that the essence of the issue is the
issue of their territories. When this conflict began, there were no
territories
outside Nagorno Karabakh under Armenian control.
Those territories came under Armenian control because not only was there not
an agreement on Nagorno Karabakh’s status, but also because Azerbaijan saw the
solution in cleansing Nagorno Karabakh of all Armenians. Therefore, the
solution today necessarily revolves around the determination of Nagorno
Karabakh’s status, and continued control over those territories guaranteeing
the security of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.
Second, they want to believe that if they do not receive their maximum
demands
through negotiations, they can always resort to military solutions. It is
obvious that it has not been possible nor will it be possible to conclusively
resolve this issue militarily. In order for a successful military solution,
arms and munitions are not sufficient against the people of Nagorno Karabakh
who are defending their own homes and hearth. Azerbaijan must succeed in
ethnically cleansing Nagorno Karabakh of all Armenians.
Under today’s circumstances, that is simply not possible. This has been
proven
impossible in Serbia, for example, where the former authorities nearly
succeeded in their efforts at ethnic cleansing using military might. But
today,
they are standing trial for their crimes, and the right of the people of
Kosovo
to self-determination is on the table.
Third, Azerbaijan thinks that time is on their side. Of course, the obvious
reason for this is their confidence in future oil revenues to enhance their
military capacity.
This is the greatest deception, because time is not guaranteed to work in
favor of any one side. Further, international tendencies today are moving
towards reinforcing the right to self-determination. The longer that Nagorno
Karabakh maintains its de-facto independence, it will be that much harder to
reverse the wheel of history.
Fourth, they think that an isolated Armenia will be economically unable to
sustain its positions, and will sooner or later agree to serious concessions.
This is in itself a faulty assumption, because it is the people of Nagorno
Karabakh who must first agree to concessions.
Additionally, a people who lived through the deprivations and hardships of
the
last decade and a half have demonstrated that they can do so again if it is
life and liberty that is at stake. On the contrary, both in Armenia and
Nagorno
Karabakh, the societies have gone past survival, and are recording economic
growth.
Finally, Azerbaijan has convinced itself that by presenting Armenia as
aggressor, it will become possible through resolutions in international
organizations to force Armenians to capitulate. However, Armenians have
succeeded in consistently demonstrating that Azerbaijan is a victim of its own
aggression and that today’s situation is a consequence of that aggression.
If those territories must be returned to assure Nagorno Karabakh’s security
and future, that is possible. If those territories must be kept in order to
assure Nagorno Karabakh’s security and future, that, too, is possible. The
purpose is security and self-determination and not territories.
To conclude, the point is the solution will not be found through military
action, it will not be found through the creation of documents and resolutions
in international forums, nor can there be a solution imposed on the sides from
the outside. The only way to a solution is to demonstrate political will, to
sit and discuss openly and honestly, by embracing realistic positions.
Armenia remains faithful to its initial premises that there cannot be a
vertical link between Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh, that it must have a
geographic link with Armenia, and that the security of the people of Nagorno
Karabakh must be assured.
Today, for us, the basis of the resolution, is the affirmation of the
right of
the people of Nagorno Karabakh to self-determination and the international
recognition of that right.
Azerbaijan’s simply accepting this fact, and its formalization in an
agreement,
will make possible the start of a resolution of the matter, and the
elimination
of the consequences of the conflict.

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Turkey’s new penal code strikes a liberal note

Financial Times, UK
March 30 2005

Turkey’s new penal code strikes a liberal note
By Vincent Boland
Published: March 30 2005 03:00 |

Turkey’s new penal code,a cornerstone of the government’s drive
toward European Union membership, comes into force tomorrow, aiming
to introduce a more liberal and less punitive criminal justice
system.

The revised code, replacing one dating from the 1920s, gives greater
recognition to the rights of individuals. Human rights groups say it
contains many progressive measures, including stiffer penalties for
torture and abuses of civil and human rights, and more protection for
women and children.

But the new code also illustrates the difficulties this
rigidly-governed country faces in balancing individual rights against
the protection of the state.

The code includes terms of imprisonment for “insulting” the state and
its institutions, which human rights groups say are inappropriate for
a country seeking to become a liberal democracy acceptable to other
EU states.

Burak Bekdil, a newspaper columnist, quipped recently: “Soon, under
the new penal code, it will be an offence to call a bald man a bald
man.”

Among the issues that could land journalists in jail, should a
prosecutor take exception to something they write, are any calls for
the withdrawal of Turkish troops from Cyprus or support for claims of
the genocide of Armenians.

Already, Turkey’s press council and Amnesty International have called
for some articles in the new code to be revised, fearing they
represent a threat to press freedom.

In addition, the code will face a stiff test of its credibility,
since much depends on how it is implemented by the courts and how the
police, perhaps the most incorrigible and politicised arm of the
bureaucracy, modifies its behaviour in accordance with the new rules.

The process of revising the old penal code demonstrated how haphazard
Turkey’s reform process can be.

When the revisions were being debated last summer, the government
found itself engulfed in a row following a proposal from Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, the prime minister, to make adultery a criminal offence,
deflecting public attention from other measures in the code.

The government also often ordered changes without consulting civil
rights and other interest groups. The entire package was then rushed
for approval by parliament in time to meet a December 17 deadline
imposed by the EU.

Those flaws were highlighted last week by Amnesty International,
which said EU pressure led to “insufficient consultation with members
of civil society” and “may have contributed to the continuing
problems in the law.”

Nevertheless, constitutional scholars say the revised code is a good
first building block for a modern system of criminal justice.

Ergun Ozbudun, a professor of constitutional law at Bilkent
University, says the new code, and a series of amendments to the
constitution in the past few years, including the formal abolition of
the death penalty, have created a more progressive legal climate that
substantially meets European Union standards.

“The penal code is our basic criminal law, and having a more liberal
law is a step in the right direction,” he says.

Diplomats agree, but add that the important issue after the revised
code comes into force will be how it is implemented.

Ensuring the implementation of a variety of reforms already approved
by parliament is proving difficult, and is a particular focus of
scrutiny by the EU and civil and human rights groups.

The sight of police officers beating women demonstrators at a rally
in Istanbul this month, almost under the eyes of a visiting Brussels
delegation, has also cast the spotlight on how the revised penal code
will reform policing and the public perception of the police.

Mustafa Aydin, an academic at Ankara University, says many of the
reforms Turkey has undertaken or plans to undertake, such as changes
to the penal code, affect the police.

He fears there may be resentment among officers about how these
reforms restrict their traditional ways of working, such as the
frequent use of force against demonstrators.

Mr Aydin says that only a firm commitment from the top levels of
government to impose changes on how police operate will ensure
change.

“Turkish police are bullies, but they could easily be bullied
themselves if someone slammed his fist on the table and started
ordering them about,” he says.

Armenia should join Europe without conflicts – speaker

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
March 29, 2005 Tuesday 9:02 AM Eastern Time

Armenia should join Europe without conflicts – speaker

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

Armenian parliament speaker Artur Bagdasaryan said the country
“should join the family of European states without conflicts.” He
made the statement as he opened a parliamentary hearing on Tuesday
over the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

“The Karabakh conflict should be settled on the basis of mutual
compromises, the safety of Nagorno Karabakh being the main issue,”
Bagdasaryan said.

The problem should have such a solution as to ensure dignity of our
people and free self-determination of Karabakh residents on the basis
of the principles of international law,” the speaker said underlining
that political speculations in this issue will avail nothing.

Taking part in the hearing was Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanyan who said there can be no military solution of the Nagorno
Karabakh problem.

“The Karabakh conflict cannot be settled under coercion, by a third
state or by adopting a document by an international organization,”
Oskanyan emphasized.

Armenia’s main approach envisions the right for Karabakh Armenians
for self-determination and its international acknowledgement, the
minister noted.

A settlement – including the elimination of consequences of military
actions, i.e. the liberation of the occupied territories – is only
possible if Azerbaijan recognizes this right which then should be
officially committed to record.

A new meeting between the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan –
Robert Kocharyan and Ilkham Aliyev – will take place in May,
according to the minister.

Boxing: Darchinyan Unstoppable says Fenech

Seconds Out
March 29 2005

Darchinyan Unstoppable says Fenech

IBF/IBO champion Vic Darchinyan

Paul Upham
Contributing Editor

After IBF flyweight world champion Vic Darchinyan’s win over IBO
champion Mzukisi Sikali by 8th round TKO on Sunday night in Sydney,
his trainer Jeff Fenech says that the improving “Raging Bull” will be
unstoppable once he learns to fight for the full three minutes of
each round.

“When he learns to do what I want him to do, that is punch for three
minutes, nobody can beat him,” said Fenech. “He stops and starts and
I don’t want him to get hit and he doesn’t need to get hit because of
his power. We have to do everything perfect in our preparation.”

29 year-old Darchinyan 23-0 (18), making the first defence of his IBF
title after he had stopped long-reigning former champion Irene
Pacheco last December, was simply too powerful for the experienced 33
year-old South African 29-6-2 (17). The only negative for the
Armenian born Australian citizen was his obvious tiredness from
rounds four to six.

Watching amongst the live audience at ringside, undisputed world
junior welterweight champion Kostya Tszyu feels that Darchinyan is
not training properly. “Vic needs to train harder,” he said. “He
needs to work harder and smarter in the gym and be able to fight for
twelve rounds.”

Co-trainer Billy Hussein felt that Darchinyan went out too fast early
looking for a spectacular knockout. “Vic trains hard, but because he
threw a lot of hard punches, you expect him to get tired,” he said.
“By about the 6th round, he got his second breath. Usually, he starts
slow, but with the excitement of fighting at home, he is trying to
impress his fans.”

Commentating for television, Team Fenech team-mate Hussein Hussein
who established his own reputation amongst the flyweight division
elite against Mexican Jorge Arce one week earlier in the USA, felt
that Darchinyan’s power was too much for Sikali.

“I was impressed with Vic, his power, strength and his speed,” he
said. “I knew as the rounds progressed, his power was going to wear
Sikali out. He was taking too many clean punches. He stood there
trading punches and you don’t do that with Vic Darchinyan. He punches
like a middleweight.”

Can Darchinyan be considered the best flyweight in the world yet? “I
think he has to beat WBC champion Pongsaklek Wonjongkam or WBA
champion Lorenzo Parra first,” said Hussein.

Fenech, the three-time world champion, has no doubt that Darchinyan
will prove to be the undisputed world champion. “We have two belts,
but there is a couple more to go yet,” he said. “Vic can beat
Wonjongkam and Parra. But he has to get in better condition in his
sparring. What he did here was what he does in the gym. I want him to
punch continuously and when he does that, nobody will beat him.”

Was Fenech happy with Darchinyan’s first world title defence?

“No,” he replied with a smile. “Because I know he is better than
that. I’m never happy with him because I just know he is so much
better.”

There has been talk of a match-up in Japan next, but Darchinyan
doesn’t care where he fights, he just wants to fight the best. “I
want the WBA champion Lorenzo Parra,” he said. “He is rated No.1 by
Ring Magazine and I only want to fight the best and I want to win the
WBA title.”

Photo: ;cs=15931

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.secondsout.com/World/news.cfm?ccs=225&amp

Bazeyan: Azerbaijan Is Not In A State To Make Demands

AZERBAIJAN IS NOT IN THE STATE TO MAKE DEMANDS: ARMENIAN POLITICIAN

YEREVAN, MARCH 29. ARMINFO. “There are no cases in history when anyone
initiates war, losses it and tries to get something through peaceful
negotiations, and all this through blackmail and threats with new war,
which is silly,” Chairman of the Political Council of the opposition
party Republic Albert Bazeyan says during parliamentary hearings on
Karabakh.

Bazeyan says that Azerbaijan draws the attention of international
community to the consequences of the conflict and not to the reasons
that were driven into the depth but not solved. He says that no
positive progress has been fixed in the course of the negotiations
since 1994, the only agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan is still
Bishkek cease-fire treaty signed by Karabakh representative as well.