BAKU: Ruling Party Thanks US Rep For Support on Massacre Issue

Azeri ruling party thanks US congressman for support on massacre issue

Turan news agency
23 Feb 05

BAKU

The ruling New Azerbaijan Party has sent an address to the UN, the
OSCE, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe [PACE] and
the US Congress on the occasion of the 13th anniversary of the
genocide of Azerbaijanis in the Nagornyy Karabakh town of Xocali on 26
February 1992.

The address contained “factual evidence” of the Armenian occupiers’
genocide against the civilian population of Xocali, the party said in
its press release. The move was taken as part of the campaign aimed at
securing the world community’s recognition of the genocide and ethnic
cleansing committed by the Armenians in Karabakh.

At the same time, the New Azerbaijan Party has sent a letter of
appreciation to US Congressman Dan Burton who has called on the
Congress to recognize the Xocali genocide.

Genocide is Unsuitable For The Sons of Noble Turkish Nation

“GENOCIDE IS UNSUITABLE FOR THE SONS OF NOBLE TURKISH NATION”

Azg/arm
24 Feb 05

The 90th anniversary of the unfortunate Anglo-French operation in the
Dardanelles to take Constantinople over is marked this year. Despite
the fact that the Allied Powers first conquered the Dardanelles and
later on Istanbul after the Mudras Armistice in October of 1918,
Turkey organized official celebration on occasion of the anniversary.

This year’s celebrations included an exhibition at the Hall of Honor
of Mejlis entitled “The Dardanelles Battle in Retrospect of 90 Years”.
The British ambassador to Turkey honored the exhibition with his presence.

Byulent Ar?nc, chairman of Mejlis, made a speech opening the
exhibition. He emphasized the importance of celebrating Dardanelle
Battle’s 90th anniversary then touched on the Armenian Genocide
saying: “Armenians dream of marking the anniversary of an event that
they characterize as “genocide”. We set off against their groundless
claims the greatest truth, which is the Dardanelles. The sons of noble
Turkish nation who shared the last drop of water with the enemy
solders could never perpetuate a genocide”.

By Hakob Chakrian

The Rape Of Nij Church’s Armenian Identity

THE RAPE OF NIJ CHURCH’S ARMENIAN IDENTITY

Azg/arm
24 Feb 05

A daily Azg reader responded to Feb. 23 article by Agence France
Presse titled “Christian Minority in Azerbaijan Gets Rid of Armenian
Eyesore” posted in our website and dealing with the Udi minority of
Azerbaijan who destroys Armenian monuments of the country in order not
to be likened to Azerbaijan’s enemy – the Armenians. Below we present
the reader’s letter to Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise’s director
whose company undertook restoration of Armenian church in village of
Nij.

Dear Mr. Alf Henry Rasmussen,

I would like to express my deepest condemns regarding the cultural
vandalism against the Armenian church in Nij which was being restored
by Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise. This act of Azerbaijan’s
infamous policy of cultural genocide against the Armenian heritage is
indirectly and, I hope, unwillingly sponsored by the Norwegian
government.

As Agence France Presse reports, during the reconstruction, the
Armenian identity of the church has been eliminated.

As far as Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise is the sponsor of the
reconstruction, it should have prohibited cultural vandalism against
the Armenian heritage while completing the mission.

Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise has indirectly supported cultural
genocide against the Armenian heritage in present-day Azerbaijan
before too. The Research on Armenian Architecture (RAA) had warned
about the ridiculousnessof this reconstruction in Azerbaijan before
the Armenian inscriptions were wiped off. Particularly speaking of
Sourb Asdvadzadzin of Kish, RAA had expressed its deep concern
regarding the fact that the Norwegian scholars have commenced
collaboration with their Azerbaijani colleagues since 2000 aiming at
the restoration of the Armenian St. Yeghishe (also known as Sourb
Asdvadzadzin, i.e. Holy Virgin) Church of Kish Village. Being unaware
of the historical past of the region in general, and the history of
the village in particular, and without further investigation into the
historical sources, the Norwegians take for granted the false theories
of the Azerbaijani scholars and keep alleging that the church is a
monument of Christian Albanian culture, i.e. it was created by the
Christian ancestors of the present-day Azerbaijani people
().

As your website
announces,
the church in Kish functioning as a museum (now) after being
reconstructed by your organization.

After the government-planned annihilation of tens of thousands of
Armenian stone-crosses in Jugha, Nakhijevan (situated in present-day
Azerbaijan), Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise should have realized
the danger of reconstructing Albanian Christian monuments in
Azerbaijan.

I hope Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise will try its best to correct
its mistakes: the Armenian inscriptions should be put back, otherwise
be kept in a safe place, until the Azerbaijani society stops rewriting
the history. The pictures of the Armenian inscriptions (before and
after being scrapped off)should be publicized. The reality for the
church of Kish has to be published and Norwegian Humanitarian
Enterprise should stop its cultural reconstruction plans in a country
that wants to eliminate every single trait of the Armenian heritage in
its territory.

Sincerely, Simon Maghakyan, Phi Theta Kappa International Honor
Society; President of Sigma Phi Chapter Littleton, Colorado, USA

http://www.raa.am/
http://www.nhe-az.org/eng/Galleries/church/image003.html

BAKU: Azeri president off to Italy

Azeri president off to Italy

Lider TV, Baku
24 Feb 05

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev is off to Italy for an official
visit at the invitation of his Italian opposite number Carlo Azeglio
Ciampi.

During the visit, Aliyev will have negotiations with the Italian
president and other officials. A meeting in the residence of Pope John
Paul II in Vatican is also scheduled.

At his meetings with Italian officials, Aliyev will discuss expanding
relations between the two countries. The Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict
over Nagornyy Karabakh is also on the agenda.

[Video showed Head of the Presidential Administration Ramiz Mehdiyev
and Prime Minister Artur Rasizada seeing Aliyev off at Baku’s Bina
airport]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Kocharyan, ruling coalition discuss election bill, const changes

Armenian leader, ruling coalition discuss election bill, constitutional
changes

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
23 Feb 05

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has met members of the council of
the [ruling] political coalition. The meeting discussed the process of
settling issues on the agenda of the National Assembly. The meeting
also touched on the draft law on elections and constitutional
amendments.

Armenian Finance Ministry official charged with embezzlement

Armenian Finance Ministry official charged with embezzlement

Noyan Tapan news agency
23 Feb 05

YEREVAN

The chief of a department of the Armenian Ministry of Finance and
Economy, Leva Shainyan, is being charged under Part 3 of Article 179
(Misappropriation and embezzlement) and Part 3 of Article 325 (Forgery
of documents) of the Armenian Criminal Code. An arrest warrant has
been issued for him.

Shainyan is being charged in connection with the case on grand theft
from the Audit Khorurdatu [Audit Advise] and Audit Khorurd Service
[Audit Advise Service] companies by means of forgery, which is being
investigated by the investigations department of the
Prosecutor-General’s Office, the press service of the
Prosecutor-General’s Office reports.

Armenian minister vows to secure independence of legal system

Armenian minister vows to secure independence of legal system

Arminfo
23 Feb 05

YEREVAN

We have the political will to create the necessary conditions for
securing the independence of the Armenian legal system, Justice
Minister David Arutyunyan told today’s ceremony to open a complex of
new offices for the Court of Appeal for criminal and military cases,
the Court of Appeal for civil cases and the Economic Court.

However, the independence of courts should not be turned into
irresponsibility, he said. Armenian judges should work hard enough on
this issue. In the past, Armenia did not manage to maintain the
genuine independence of the legal system, which could inspire
confidence in society. “This is temporary,” the minister said. At the
same time, he said that public opinion polls and the statistical data
of the country showed that progress was being made in the legal
system. The same progress has also been mentioned by international
structures.

Such an opinion was expressed by the consulting service for foreign
investment in 2004. Arutyunyan said that serious threats endanger the
system at this stage. This is proved by the experience of eastern
European and the CIS countries.

[Passage omitted: Arutyunyan cites Russia’s example]

Armenia offers “preferential” railway tariffs to Azerbaijan, Turkey

Armenia offers “preferential” railway tariffs to Azerbaijan, Turkey

Regnum, Moscow
22 Feb 05

Armenian Transport and Communications Minister Andranik Manukyan has
said that Armenia is ready to introduce preferential railway transit
tariffs to Azerbaijan and Turkey should the railway blockade of
Armenia from Georgia and Turkey be lifted. In an interview with the
Russian news agency Regnum, he said that there is no need to build an
expensive stretch of railway connecting Georgia and Turkey when there
is a fully operational link via Armenia. Although the launch of the
train ferry service between the port of Kavkaz in Russia and the
Georgian port of Poti will allow Armenia avoid expensive detour via
the Ukrainian port of Ilichevsk, Armenia will not be able to meet its
needs for cargo turnover with Russia until the Abkhaz section of the
Transcaucasus railway is restored, he added. Manukyan also said that
knowing that political factors change quickly, Armenia is building a
new highway connecting it with Iran and repaired the critical parts of
its railway. The following is excerpt from unattributed interview with
Armenian Transport and Communications Minister Andranik Manukyan as
carried by Regnum news agency web site on 22 February headlined
“Armenia is ready to introduce preferential transit tariffs for
Azerbaijan and Turkey: interview of Armenian Transport and
Communications Minister Andranik Manukyan with the Regnum news
agency”; subheadings have been inserted editorially:

Strategic location

[Journalist] Minister, as is known, Armenia has officially joined the
North-South international transport corridor (ITC). What prospects
does the participation in the ITC open for the republic?

[Manukyan] I will only add that Armenia is also a member country of
TRACECA [Transport Corridor Europe-Caucasus-Asia], the West-East
communication project.

Armenia’s desire to join the North-South ITC was voiced by me in St
Petersburg in 2002, at the meeting of the transport ministers of
Armenia, India, Iran and Russia. Our application was accepted, and in
October 2004, my Russian colleague Igor Levitin congratulated us on
our official accession to the ITC. The main goal of the project is
transportation of cargo from the Baltic states across Russia and the
Caspian Sea towards Iran, and thence via Afghanistan to India. To
service this route, the Transcaucasus railway can be used if the
Abkhaz section [in Georgia] is unblocked.

Upgrades to transport infrastructure

Naturally, we should prepare for this in advance: Armenia has invested
huge sums in bringing the routes of international importance back into
order. It is now possible to say with certainty that the main roads in
Armenia meet the international standards. The most dangerous sections
of the railway, with total length of 70 km, have been repaired with
assistance from the World Bank. If in the past average speed of a
train on the Gyumri-Ayrum section was 25 km per hour, now the
technical condition of the railway allows the trains to travel at
55-60 km per hour.

On the other hand, it is known that speed is the most important factor
of profitability. The same World Bank has elaborated the programme for
the development of the transport system of our country, which will
cost 40m dollars, of which 16m dollars will be spent on development of
the railway system. An independent audit company has already drawn up
a business plan for the development of the system and renewal of the
entire carriage park. I want to note that the state will fund the
programme as well.

Of course, Armenia’s involvement in the North-South ITC is crucially
important to our country, so we eagerly take part in all measures that
are organized within the framework of the project. I am absolutely
certain that time will come when political problems will be resolved
and this corridor will be operated at its full capacity. The same can
be said about the TRACECA programme. In any case, Armenia occupies an
advantageous position as it is located at the crossing of these roads
– both from north to south and from west to east. My goal as the
transport minister is to keep our main roads ready, so that when
issues of political nature are resolved, we do not have to do all this
in an emergency mode.

The second main highway Megri (on the border of Armenia with
Iran)-Kapan, which we plan to build, is also directly related with the
North-South ITC. This project is of immense strategic importance to
Armenia. At present, these two towns are connected with just one road
which traverses the Kadzharan mountain pass. In Soviet times it was of
local importance, that is to say, it could not be used by heavy hauler
lorries with more than 30-tonne capacity. After the aggravation of the
political situation in the region, the road via Naxcivan [Azerbaijani
exclave] was closed and Armenia was forced to invest huge sums in the
Megri-Kapan highway, which in some areas goes up to the heights of
over 2,400 m (above the sea level). Nonetheless, the road remains
hardly passable in the winter. With the length of 74 km and average
acclivity of 12-14 degrees, average speed of travel for heavy haulers
does not exceed 30-35 km per hour.

Perhaps you know the story of the project for building the Kadzharan
tunnel. Why we decided not to proceed with this undertaking and
instead to opt for building the new road Megri-Kapan…[ellipsis as
published]. I want to note that the alternative to the tunnel was
studied and elaborated on instructions by the country’s
president. When we build the second road, we will effectively ensure
the second access point to Iran, hence the strategic importance of
this project. According to preliminary estimates, building the tunnel
on the old road would cost about 45m dollars, although I think that
expenses would reach at least 60m dollars.

[Passage omitted on technical details]

I have already noted that the new highway will fit very well into the
North-South ITC, but we will build it with money from the Armenian
budget. In other words, we are making preparations. What remains to be
done is that international structures that are interested in full
utilization of communications assist in the integration of our main
roads into transit routes.

[Journalist] Is the deadline set for the beginning of the
implementation of this project?

[Manukyan] The tender has already been announced and is under way. The
construction will start on 1 April, and it is expected to be put into
operation in 2006.

Need to resume railway service to Turkey

[Journalist] What is the state of the Armenian railway at present?

[Manukyan] In 2004, we transported 2.7m tonnes of cargo using the
Armenian railways, employing 20-30 per cent of the carriage park. If
the Kars-Gyumri section and the Abkhaz section of the Transcaucasus
railway are reopened and Armenia, using its transit potential, ensures
delivery of cargo to Turkey and Russia, the total cargo turnover will
reach 10-20m tonnes. Even in this case, after the modernization under
the World Bank programme, our carriage park will be able to handle the
task.

I would like to underscore once again that at present our railway,
from the border with Georgia in the north and to the border with
Naxcivan in the south, is in good repair. If, as the European
Commission wants, Azerbaijan agrees to use these trunk railways, they
can be used both as part of TRACECA and as a component of the
North-South ITC. This will noticeably cut expenses on transportation
of the cargo.

[Journalist] A few days ago, the co-chairman of the Turkish-Armenian
Business Development Council, Kaan Soyak, said in Yerevan that if the
settlement of political problems between Turkey and Armenia is dragged
out, the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi railway might become the reality. In
the conditions of the continuing blockade of Armenia by Turkey, to
what extent does the Armenian side calculate the possibility of
ensuring an alternative railway service to Iran?

[Manukyan] We have never been, and never will be, sitting on our
hands, allowing Armenia to be outstripped. To date, we have submitted
two programmes to international organizations. These are Vardenis
(Armenia) – Jolfa (Iran) and Yeraskh (Armenia) – Jolfa sections. Of
course, these are very expensive, but potentially undoubtedly
profitable programmes. I think that solutions shall be found. By
connecting our railway system with the Iranian one, we will gain
access to the markets of the Middle East and Asia. The Iranian side is
ready for this too.

As for the Kars-Akhalkalaki railway…[ellipsis as
published]. Currently it is talked about both in Turkey and in
Georgia. But when the Kars-Gyumri (Armenia) -Tbilisi railway already
exists, when there is the terminal on the Armenian-Turkish border for
preparing the train for switching to a different width of the railway
track, building a new 150-kilometre section is absolutely
unreasonable, first and foremost, from the economic point of view. The
initiators of this talk say that building the 150-kilometre section
will require 250-300m dollars, but the terrain in that area is such
that this sum will not be enough to build 150 km of the railway.

In addition, why should so much money be invested, for what purpose?
Here we are dealing with an attempt to put political pressure on
Armenia, to isolate it from access to transport hubs. A sensible
person should realize that it does not make sense to look for an
alternative to the Kars-Gyumri-Tbilisi trunk railway, which is ready
for operation. Besides, Armenia does not stipulate any preconditions,
we also say that we will provide preferential transit tariffs should
this service be put into operation. Factors of a purely political
nature hinder the adoption of an economically sound plan, but politics
is liable to changes. We will see…[ellipsis as published]. But I
repeat, we do not sit on our hands and have no intention to.

Mutual benefits of lifting the blockade

[Journalist] But is the Armenian economy ready for the opening of the
Armenian-Turkish border?

[Manukyan] Of course, our economy is ready. Many people say that we
will be subjected to economic expansion by Turkey. But economic
expansion is out of the question. These sorts of statements are made
by people who have no idea about the economy and business, and they
are profoundly wrong. Moreover, their statements are damaging to our
economy. If the borders are opened, trade relations with Turkey will
be normalized: Armenia has an appropriate legal framework for
this. Trade will be conducive to the development of both countries.

Recently even a Turkish businessman said in Yerevan that turnover
between Armenia and Turkey in the conditions of closed borders amounts
to 120m dollars annually, but I am certain that this sum is much
larger. In most cases, goods from Turkey arrive in Georgia and are
then sent to Armenia as Georgian goods. So, there is legal and
illegal turnover of goods between Armenia and Turkey, and according to
my assessment, turnover between Armenia and Turkey is greater than
that between Armenia and other countries.

I have already said that if the border is opened, we will be ready to
provide preferential tariffs for our transport infrastructure to
Azerbaijan and Turkey, and this is a transit route for them. The issue
of regional transport communications should finally be
resolved. Transport is the foundation of a country’s development, it
is a business which should be viewed in isolation from
politics. However, some countries unfortunately use it for political
purposes.

Georgia-Russia train ferry

[Journalist] Thanks to your efforts, as well as effort of your
colleagues in Georgia and Russia, the idea of launching the seaport of
Kavkaz is drawing to near to the logical conclusion. At which stage is
the project today? And when will the ferry start to operate at full
capacity between the seaport of Kavkaz and Poti (Georgia)?

[Manukyan] The agreement on launching the train ferry service between
the seaport of Kavkaz and Poti has been reached by the presidents of
Georgia, Russia and Armenia. [Passage omitted: details of talks]

It is noted in the agreement that the ferry should operate for two
months from the moment of signing the agreement, in other words, we
have time till 10 March. According to the preliminary agreement, the
first ferry was to leave on 10 February, but later we had to review
this deadline and to extend it to 28 February. The first ferry will
carry 24 carriages, and the cargo for it has already been prepared.

As for the importance of the ferry, it is hard to overestimate
it…[ellipsis as published]. This is a direct railway link with
Russia. In the past, we used to travel to Poti, then bore huge
expenses on taking the cargo to the Ukrainian port of Ilichevsk, and
only from there we would proceed to Russia. If in 2001, expenses for
taking one carriage to Ilichevsk amounted to 900 dollars, now they
have reached 2,100 dollars. This is connected with the fact that the
Ukrainian company Ukrferry is a monopolist and is reviewing its
tariffs almost on a daily basis.

With the launch of the ferry service between the port of Kavkaz and
Poti, there will be competition, and we will be sending the cargo that
are bound for Russia to the port of Kavkaz, we will also be able to
ship to Europe via the same route – it is cheaper. As for Ilichevsk,
the cargo bound for Ukraine will go there. Given the fact that Georgia
also does not have a railway link with Russia in the conditions of
disuse of the Abkhaz railway and sends its cargo via Azerbaijan,
covering some 720 km of extra distance and paying for transit, the
port of Kavkaz is an economically profitable project both for Armenia
and Georgia.

Reopening of Abkhaz railway would benefit all

[Journalist] Can one say that with the launch of the port of Kavkaz,
the need for railway service between Armenia and Russia will be fully
satisfied, or the restoration of service via Abkhazia remains a
priority?

[Manukyan] It is possible to say that the link between Armenia and
Russia has to some extent been ensured. Of course, it will only be
possible to talk about full-fledged link after the Abkhaz section of
the Transcaucasus railway is put into operation. With participation of
the heads of railway departments of the three countries, appropriate
working groups have been created, which we intend to join into a
single commercial body.

Incidentally, you must probably know that at present this railway is
used from Moscow to Sukhumi. There is a problem: the bridge over the
River Enguri is dilapidated, and now the assessment of the cost of
repairing it is under way. On the Georgian side the railway is also
in normal condition. Of course, there is also a political aspect of
the issue – the Georgian side talks about the need for return of the
refugees to Gali [District]. Let us see how the events will unfold
after the [last presidential] election in Abkhazia. Perhaps the sides
will reach certain agreements on this issue. This will be beneficial
for all the countries of the region, including Georgia, which
currently has to resort to transit via Azerbaijan.

[Passage omitted: about mobile communications]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

WB Considers Financing Project on Geothermal Energy in Armenia

WORLD BANK EXPERTS CONSIDER POSSIBILITY TO FINANCE PROJECT ON
DISCOVERY OF GEOTHERMAL ENERGY IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 23. ARMINFO. Armenian Government appealed to the
World Bank for financing the works on exposure of geothermal energy in
the Syunik region, chief of the fuel-energy resources department of
Armenia’s Energy Ministry, candidate of technical sciences Andranik
Aghabalyan told ARMINFO.

He said that the WB experts will prepare a project report this spring
and evaluate the works expediency. In case of positive conclusion a
borehole will be drilled in the Syunik region. It is planned to
discover a conditioned steam for production of energy and then to
construct the first geothermal electric power-station in Armenia.

Aghabalyan noted that “Armenergo” CJSC ordered to conduct nearly
$50.000 geophysical and geochemical researches last year the Gyumri
Scientific Research Institute of geophysical and engineering
seismology. The most perspective plot and the spot for drilling of the
first borehole were fixed as a result.

Armenia’s Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan informed journalists earlier
that the program on using of geothermal energy for power purposes
should be elaborated and confirmed by the end of 2005. -r-

World’s First Anti-Smoking Treaty Becomes Law

World’s First Anti-Smoking Treaty Becomes Law

MANILA, Philippines, Feb. 24 /Xinhua-PRNewswire/ — The world’s first
tobacco control treaty, the World Health Organization Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC), becomes binding
international law on Sunday, 27 February 2005. One of the most
rapidly embraced UN treaties of all time, the WHO FCTC is aimed at
improving global health by reducing tobacco consumption, currently the
cause of premature death for nearly 5 million people every year.

”The devastation caused by the tobacco pandemic dwarfs SARS and the
recent tsunami. Every year, five million people die from
tobacco-related diseases. In the Western Pacific Region alone, 3000
people die each day from tobacco use,” stated Dr Shigeru Omi, Director
of WHO’s Western Pacific Region. “Now we have the global tools to
fight a global problem. It’s time for all countries to join the
battle.”

The WHO FCTC is intended to control what has become the second biggest
killer of our time. Tobacco consumption is the single leading
preventable cause of death. It will prematurely end the lives of 10
million people a year by 2020 if current trends are not reversed.
Tobacco is the only legal product that causes the death of one half of
its regular users. This means that of the current 1.3 billion smokers
worldwide, 650 million people will die prematurely due to tobacco.

Convention provisions set international standards on tobacco price and
tax increases, tobacco advertising and sponsorship, labelling, illicit
trade and second-hand smoke.

The WHO FCTC was unanimously adopted by the Fifty-sixth World Health
Assembly in May 2003, following almost three years of negotiations.
During the year that followed, while it was open for signature, 167
countries and the European Community signed, and 23 countries became
contracting parties.

On 30 November 2004, the 40th country ratified the convention,
triggering a 90-day countdown for its entry into force. As of 23
February 2005, a total of 57 countries had ratified the convention.

In the Western Pacific Region, 13 countries have ratified the
convention. They are Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Cook Islands,
Fiji, Japan, the Marshall Islands, Mongolia, Nauru, New Zealand,
Palau, Singapore, Solomon Islands and Viet Nam. Fiji was the first
Western Pacific country to ratify, on 3 October 2003.

Notes to editors:

The 40 contracting parties to the WHO FCTC as of 30 November 2004 were
Armenia, Australia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei Darussalam, Canada,
Cook Islands, Fiji, France, Ghana, Hungary, Iceland, India, Japan,
Jordan, Kenya, Madagascar, Maldives, Malta, Mauritius, Mexico,
Mongolia, Myanmar, Nauru, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Palau,
Panama, Peru, Qatar, San Marino, Seychelles, Singapore, Slovakia,
Solomon Islands, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago and Uruguay.

The treaty continues from now on to be open for ratification,
acceptance or approval for those countries that have signed, and is
open for accession for those that have not. There is no deadline for
countries to become contracting parties. Any state that becomes a
contracting party will be bound by the treaty 90 days following the
deposit of its instrument of ratification (or equivalent) in the
United Nations headquarters in New York.

The body that will govern the WHO FCTC is the Conference of the
Parties (COP). The first session of the COP will take place within a
year from the date of entry into force, as specified in the
convention. The first session has tentatively been scheduled for
February 2006. The COP is expected to determine further procedural and
technical issues relating to its future development.

For current status and full text of the WHO FCTC, please visit:
_
()
. For further information, please contact: Burke Fishburn, Tobacco
Free Initiative, WHO WPRO Tel: +63-2-528-9894 Email:
[email protected] All WHO press releases, fact sheets and
features, as well as other information can be obtained at
_
() .

SOURCE World Health Organization

02/24/2005 02:27 ET

http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20040610/CNTH001LOGO
http://www.who.int/tobacco/areas/framework/signing_ceremony/countrylist/en_
http://www.who.int/tobacco/areas/framework/signing_ceremony/countrylist/en
http://www.wpro.who.int/tobacco/en_
http://www.wpro.who.int/tobacco/en