Iran,Armenia to set electricity line

Persian Journal, Iran
Nov 30 2004

Iran,Armenia to set electricity line

The Iran-Armenia electricity network with a capacity of 230 kw is due
to be inaugurated tomorrow.

Iranian Energy Minister Habibollah Bitaraf and his Armenian
counterpart, Armen Movsisian, will be attending the inaugural
ceremony.

“Electricity exchanges between the two countries will reach a total
of 450 megawatts through this project,” the managing director of the
Iranian SANIR Electricity Company said on Monday.

Alireza Kadkhodaei said that the project costs 8.4 million dollars.
He also announced that the two energy ministers are scheduled to sign
an agreement for construction of a third line of the the two
electricity network.

Meanwhile, Iran and Armenia on May 13 signed an agreement to
construct a 42-km gas pipeline between the Armenian cities of Megri
and Kajaran.

The project is to be inaugurated during an upcoming visit of Energy
Minister Bitaraf in Armenia.

The Iran-Armenia trade volume is expected to reach 10 billion dollars
in the next 20 years with implementation of the above-stated project.

Equatorial Guinea coup trial “grossly unfair”-Amnesty

Reuters AlertNet, UK
Nov 30 2004

Equatorial Guinea coup trial “grossly unfair”-Amnesty
30 Nov 2004 19:13:41 GMT

By Estelle Shirbon

MADRID, Nov 30 (Reuters) – Equatorial Guinea’s trial of 19 suspected
mercenaries accused of plotting a coup in the oil-rich African
country was “grossly unfair” and the court ignored allegations of
torture, Amnesty International said on Tuesday.

A court in the Equatorial Guinean capital Malabo last Friday
sentenced 11 foreigners it said were involved in an attempt to topple
President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo to jail terms ranging from 14
to 34 years.

Two Equatorial Guineans were sentenced to 16 months’ imprisonment.
Three other Equatorial Guineans and three South Africans were
acquitted.

“No evidence was presented in court to sustain the charges against
the accused other than their statements, which the defendants said
had been extracted under torture,” Amnesty said.

“However, defendants’ protestations to this effect were ignored by
the bench … No court can ignore allegations as serious as these,”
the human rights group said in a statement.

Authorities in Equatorial Guinea say the men on trial were an advance
party of mercenaries bent on killing Obiang and replacing him with
exiled opposition politician Severo Moto, who has denied any role in
the plot.

They say a web of foreign financiers hungry for a share of Equatorial
Guinea’s oil wealth backed the scheme.

The widely respected human rights group’s condemnation could
complicate any possible attempt by Equatorial Guinea to obtain the
extradition of the alleged financial backers of the plot.

They include Mark Thatcher, son of former British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, who faces trial in South Africa on charges he
helped finance the scheme. Thatcher denies any role.

DEFENDANTS’ RIGHTS VIOLATED-AMNESTY

Amnesty said the rights of the eight South Africans and six Armenians
on trial had been violated from the moment of their arrest on March
8.

“All defendants were held incommunicado, handcuffed and shackled 24
hours a day,” it said. “They did not receive an adequate diet, and
only rarely received medical treatment for the many ailments that
afflicted them in prison.”

The state prosecutor told the court during the trial that all the
suspects’ rights had been respected.

Those convicted will remain in the same jail where they have been
held so far, Malabo’s infamous Black Beach prison.

Amnesty said a question mark remained over the fate of Gerhard Merz,
a German also arrested on March 8 who died in Black Beach nine days
later. Authorities said he was killed by cerebral malaria but two
defendants in the trial told the court he died as a result of
torture.

Amnesty said the men did not see their defence lawyers until two days
before the start of the trial.

It also said the statements presented in court were in Spanish — a
language the defendants did not understand — and that the English
translation provided to the South African suspects missed out or
distorted vital pieces of information.

“Neither the verdict not the sentences were translated, and the
defendants left the court with no knowledge of their fate.”

The foreign suspects appeared in court with their wrists and ankles
chained together at all times, which Amnesty said was “cruel,
degrading and inhumane treatment”.

Azerbaijan Demands Georgia Comply with Agreement Banning Transit to

AZERBAIJAN DEMANDS THAT GEORGIA COMPLY WITH THEIR AGREEMENT BANNING
RAILROAD TRANSIT TO THIRD COUNTRIES

TBILISI, NOVEMBER 30. ARMINFO. Azerbaijan demand that Georgia comply
with their summer agreement banning transit of railroad cargoes to
third countries. “Most probably the cargoes going to Georgia were
stopped in Azerbaijan because part of them is imported into Armenia,”
says Azeri Ambassador to Georgia Ramiz Gasanov.

“Imagine if we start supplying fuel into Abkhazia or South Ossetia. Is
it against Georgia’s national interests? I think yes it is,” says
Gasanov noting that Azerbaijan and Georgia have mutual understanding
of the problem.

Azeri customs commissioners are coming to Georgia today to discuss
what to do with each carriage stopped on Azeri border.

Georgian PM Zurab Zvania says he does not see any drama in the
situation. “We are working with the Azeri side and I am sure that
there will be no problems here,” he says.

To remind, Azerbaijan has sharply cut railroad transit of
Georgia-bound cargos. Some 889 carriages have been stalled in
Beyukiasik (3 km of Georgian border) in Nov alone. Meanwhile th
Georgian side makes no secret of its delivering cargoes from Central
Asia to Armenian border – but they say this is because Georgia is a
transit country.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Government to Consolidate Arable Lands

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT TO CONSOLIDATE ARABLE LANDS

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30. ARMINFO. 99% of Armenia’s arable lands are
highly desintegrated so the government is drafting a pilot program to
consolidate them and to improve their use schemes.

The chairman of the state property register committee Manuk Vardanyan
says that an interdepartment commission has been set up to implement
the program. Various methods will be tested during the program with
priority given to those accepted by specific communities and
farmers. Consolidation can be effected according to land type, cost,
type of use and melioration.

The key point of the program is to develop a state policy on effective
land use encouraging farmers with soft loans, equipment leasing, tax
concessions, guaranteed harvest purchase like in wine and tobacco
growing. The consolidation process has been underway in Armenia for
three years already. 5,100 h of land were bought in the country in
Jan-Sept 2004 with communal budget revenues totalling 1.8 bln AMD
(almost $3.5 mln).

FAO representative David Palmer says that a relevant information and
education base will be developed for the program this including
workshops and working conferences, training courses for farmers on how
to more effectively use land resources. The key objective of the
program is to reveal financially feasible and socially and
ecologically acceptable ways of land use efficiency raising.

The program will be carried out by the committee and FAO for two
years. Presently Armenia has 330,000 farms each owning an average of
1.3 h of arable land.

Georgia Includes Recovery of Tbilisi-Javakhk Hwy in Millennium Prgm

GEORGIAN GOVERNMENT INCLUDES RECOVERY OF TBILISI-JAVAKHK HIGHWAY IN
MILLENNIUM PROGRAM

TBILISI, NOVEMBER 30. ARMINFO. The Georgian Government has included
the recovery of the Tbilisi-Manglisi-Tsalka-Ninotsminda-Kartsakhi
highway in the Millennium program, says the chairman of Georgia’s
roadway department Roman Dallakishvili.

The project is to be launched in several months as soon as the
feasibility report is drafted. This project is very important for
mostly Armenia Javakheti region and consequently or Armenia, says
Dallakishvili. Additional talks are being held for restoring the 23 km
Ninotsminda-Armenian border road this project requiring $6 mln. The
total project will cost $105 mln. In fact the way from Akhalkalaki to
Tbilisi will be reduced by 90 km which will make it easier and cheaper
for the local population to take their argicultural produce to the
capital.

Russia Does Not Fulfill its Obligations as Strategic Partner of ROA

RUSSIA DOES NOT FULFILL ITS OBLIGATIONS AS STRATEGIC PARTNER OF
Armenia: ARMENIAN MP

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30. ARMINFO. Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
joining the statement of CIS signatories giving a negative assessment
of the OSCE’s activity and his congratulation to Victor Yanukovich on
his election to the post of Ukrainian President incites European
structures against Armenia, which in its turn, has a negative impact
on their position in discussion of Karabakh problem at these
structures. Head of the National Democratic Party, the member of the
Armenian delegation to PACE, Shavarsh Kocharyan made this statement at
a press-conference, Tuesday.

He said that both in the first and in the second case, Armenia’s
position is undoubtedly within the interests of Russia. Meanwhile,
Kocharyan said, Russia ignores the interests of the country in many
important issues for Armenia, often forgetting about the partner
relations between the two states. To prove the aforementioned, he said
that when discussing the Karabakh problem at PACE Political Committee,
the Russian delegation left the session hall. Besides, Shavarsh
Kocharyan said that Russia did not take into account the interests of
Armenia when signing a contract on sale of arms to
Azerbaijan. Besides, it sales arms to Azerbaijan for the same price as
to CSTO member-states. Russia leaves vulnerable Armenia’s interests
when discussing the prospects of construction of Russia-Georgia-Turkey
and Russia-Azerbaijan-Iran railways as in case of implementation of
these projects, opening of Kars-Gyumri-Akhalkalaki railway will be
endangered, Kocharyan said.

He said that in such situation, Armenia must not hope for the
assistance of its strategic partner, but to try to enlist support of
European structures through development of democracy and increase of
its international image. Meanwhile, he said that development of
democratic principles is practically ruled out under the current
authorities in Armenia.

Chirac Has Signed Decree Awarding Armenian Speaker Legion of Honor

FRANCE’S PRESIDENT HAS ALREADY SIGNED DECREE ON AWARDING SPEAKER OF ARMENIAN
PARLIAMENT WITH ORDER OF LEGION OF HONOUR

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30. ARMINFO. Deputy chairman of the party “Orinats
Yerkir”, Head of the commission for defence, national security and
internal affairs of Armenian parliament Mher Shahgeldian took part in
the Paris congress of the ruling party in France “Unity for democracy”
on Nov 28.

Mher Shahgeldian informed in the press conference at the National
Assembly of Armenia, within the framework of the visit he had met with
representatives of political circles of European, as well as with the
chairman of the Senate of France. According to the Armenian MP, during
the meetings the participants have mainly discussed issues of the
development of democratic systems in Armenia. He also informed that
as a result of the meetings the participants had reached an agreement
on implementation of programs for strengthening of the legislative
field in Armenia by a number of European funds. Mher Shahgeldian also
informed that the president of France has already signed a decree on
awarding Speaker of Armenian parliament Arthur Baghdasarian with the
order of the Legion of Honor for the contribution to the deepening of
Armenian-French relations.

Armenian Delegation to NATO Comments on Nonparticipation in Seminar

HEAD OF ARMENIAN DELEGATION TO NATO PA MHER SHAHGELDYAN COMMENTS ON
NONPARTICIPATION OF ARMENIA IN ROSE-ROTH SEMINAR

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30. ARMINFO. The response of NATO PA to the letter
of Armenian Parliamentary Speaker on the necessity of security
provision to Armenian MPs at NATO seminar Rose-Roth in Baku was
received a little later. As a result, the Armenian delegation had no
time to attend the event. Head of the Armenian Parliamentary
Commission for Defense, National Security and Internal Affairs, Head
of Armenian delegation to NATO PA Mher Shahgeldyan told ARMINFO,
Tuesday.

He said that the Armenian delegation could not leave for Baku without
guarantees of NATO PA and Azerbaijani Parliament in the light of the
recent events when Armenian officers were not allowed to NATO military
exercises in BAKU, as well as the incident with expulsion of a
Bulgarian journalist Armenian by origin from Baku, and the statement
by Azerbaijani Parliamentary Speaker that participation of Armenians
in the seminar Rose-Roth would not be desirable. Meanwhile, the
Azerbaijani Parliamentary Speaker even did not respond to the above
letter of his Armenian counterpart.

It should be noted NATO PA Secretary General Simon Lann stated that
the Armenian MPs were provided with security guarantees for their
participation in Rose Roth seminar in Baku. He said that
representatives of the Armenian delegation called up from Moscow a day
before the seminar and informed that it will not participate in the
event.

Defending Author’s Rights in Armenia

DEFENDING AUTHOR’S RIGHTS IN ARMENIA

Azg/arm
30 Nov 04

All over the civilized world such terms as copyright and author’s
rights do not sound strange to peoples’ ears. Huge organizations and
companies as well as individuals label their products, create logos
and register them. In order to keep the field of author’s rights
defending under control the NGO of Armenian Author was created.

President of the NGO Sona Vardanian said that the author rights
defending in Armenia dates back to 1933 when Haydramkom, the Armenian
offshoot of the Committee of South Caucasus’ Playwrights and Composers
was created,and that very year the writers and composers were paid for
their author’s rights.The Republic of Armenia passed the law on
“Author’s Rights and Contiguous Rights” only in 2000. Today the
Armenian Author NGO counts 1120 authors among them composers, film
directors, translators, playwrights, sculptors and painters. Having
registered at the NGO they entrust the organization with the right to
use the works. Mrs. Vardanian said that the author has power over all
the rights (for instance, hire the work out, translate it or
broadcast) but one – performing the work in public. Armenian Author is
watching that the authors are accurately paid any time their works are
used by others. A law regulating the size of the royalties was adopted
in 1999. According to the minimal payment fees, the author of a 2-act
play should receive 11 percent and the director 4 percent of the
income. Royalties for a deceased author’s works are paid 50 more years
after his death, but the signature of the author remains under the
work forever.

Mrs. Vardanian thinks that people are reluctant to pay for the
authorâ=80=99s rights. “For instance, a restaurant has to pay only
10.000 AMD annually forcertain author’s songs but they don’t want to
pay even this much”, Sona Vardanian said. Among the wide range of
author’s rights violation Mrs. Vardanian mentioned that latter-day
companies organizing concerts and refusing to pay the authors. They
have to turn to justice seldom. Armenian Author, being memberof Bern
Convention that includes 158 states, supervises the rights of foreign
authors as well.

By Gohar Gevorgian

AI: Eq. Guinea: Trial of alleged coup plotters seriously flawed

Amnesty International
Nov 30 2004

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

Public Statement

AI Index: AFR 24/017/2004 (Public)
News Service No: 308
30 November 2004

Equatorial Guinea: Trial of alleged coup plotters seriously flawed

Eleven foreign nationals and nine Equatorial Guineans were sentenced
to lengthy prison terms and hefty fines in Equatorial Guinea after a
grossly unfair trial ending on 26 November 2004. They were convicted
of (an attempt to commit) crimes against the Head of the State and
against the government. The Equatorial Guineans were tried in
absentia. The lawyers of the foreign defendants have lodged an appeal
to the Supreme Court against the convictions.

Neither the verdict nor the sentences were translated, and the
defendants left court with no knowledge of their fate.

An Amnesty International delegation observed the trial from its
commencement on 23 August 2004, and, in view of serious procedural
flaws and the admission of confessions allegedly extracted under
torture, and deemed it to be unfair.

Nineteen people, including five Equatorial Guineans, six Armenians
and eight South Africans were charged with crimes against the Head of
State; crimes against the government; crimes against the peace and
independence of Equatorial Guinea; possession and storage of arms and
ammunition; treason; possession of explosives; and terrorism, for
which the prosecution had demanded the death penalty for South
African Nick du Toit and prison sentences ranging from 26 to 86 years
for his co-defendants.

No evidence was presented in court to sustain the charges against the
accused other than their statements, which the defendants said had
been extracted under torture. However, defendants’ protestations to
this effect were ignored by the bench. No court can ignore
allegations as serious as these. They are sufficient grounds for a
trial to be suspended and an investigation to be instituted. The
statements were presented in Spanish and without adequate translation
into languages of the defendants, none of whom spoke Spanish. On at
least two occasions when the defence counsel attempted to raise the
issue of torture it was ruled inadmissible by the bench.

Other items presented as evidence included commercial contracts and
lists of telephone numbers called by some of the defendants in
February 2004, shortly before they were arrested. The prosecution
failed to show how these items constituted proof of any of the
charges. About half a dozen weapons produced in court were not found
in the possession of any of the accused but were presented in court
as examples of what the prosecution claimed the defendants intended
to buy in Zimbabwe.
Throughout the trial, and without any hindrance from the judges, the
foreign defendants were referred to as “mercenaries” or “dogs of
war”. They were brought to court and were crossed-examined handcuffed
and shackled. This constituted cruel, degrading and inhumane
treatment.
A total of 15 foreign nationals had been arrested on 8 March 2004 in
Malabo. Their arrest followed the arrest of 70 people, mainly South
Africans, in Zimbabwe the day before. Gerhardt Merz, a German
national, died in custody in Black Beach prison in Malabo nine days
later. The authorities claimed that he died of cerebral malaria but
two of the defendants insisted in court that he had died in front of
them as a result of torture. The five Equatorial Guineans were
arrested subsequently.

The organization is deeply concerned that, from the time of their
arrest in March 2004, the fundamental rights of the accused were
routinely violated. In the particular case of Nick du Toit, the
alleged leader of the “mercenaries” in the Equatorial Guinean capital
of Malabo, the authorities regularly exposed him to the international
media and to interrogation by foreign lawyers and security officers.
As a consequence, his rights to remain silent, and to the presumption
of innocence until proven guilty, were severely curtailed. All
defendants were held incommunicado, handcuffed and shackled 24 hours
a day. They did not receive an adequate diet, and only rarely
received medical treatment for the many ailments that afflicted them
in prison. These conditions, together with the minimal access by
family members permitted while in Equatorial Guinea, had a negative
impact on the physical and mental health of the defendants.

At the request of the prosecution the trial was adjourned
indefinitely at the end of August, ostensibly in the light of
emerging evidence deemed vital to the case. However, when the trial
resumed in November, no new evidence was presented in court. Instead,
new names were added to the list of accused, including that of Severo
Moto, a political opponent exiled in Madrid, eight members of his
“government in exile” who were tried in absentia, and several British
and South African businessmen.

Amnesty International welcomes the fact that the court did not impose
the death penalty. It also welcomes the acquittal of three Equatorial
Guinean and three South African defendants. Although the accused
received shorter custodial sentences than those sought by the
prosecution,
Nick du Toit was sentenced to a total of 34 years in prison while his
South African co-defendants were given 17 years’ prison sentences. Of
the Armenian co-defendants one received a 24-years prison term and
the remaining six received 14-years terms. In contrast, two
Equatorial Guineans for whom the prosecution had asked for prison
terms of 62 and 42 years respectively, each received a prison
sentence of 16 months and one day for imprudencia temeraria (reckless
behaviour). Severo Moto was sentenced to 63 years’ imprisonment while
the members of his government were each given prison terms of 52
years.

Amnesty International is concerned about the following unfair
procedures prior to the trial:

the defendants were arrested without a warrant, and were not promptly
informed of the charges against them in a language that they
understood, as prescribed by law;
they did not have access to their defence lawyers until two days
before the start of the trial. In addition, the defence did not have
sufficient time to prepare the defence. Furthermore, they were not
served with the prosecution’s evidence against their clients;
all the accused stated in court that their statements were taken not
by the juez de instruccion (investigating judge) as prescribed by
Equatorial Guinean law, but by the Attorney General, who was
prosecuting the case in court and who, under the law, has no legal
role in the interrogation stage of the proceedings;
the defendants were required to sign statements in Spanish without
the assistance of qualified interpreters. The initial statements of
the South Africans were translated by one of the Equatorial Guinean
co-defendants who, according to his own statement in court, also
provided evidence against them. In court, interpretation for the
South African defendants was performed by the Attorney General’s
official interpreter, which begs the question of his independence and
impartiality. Amnesty International delegates observed that vital
pieces of information, such as defendants’ statements about torture,
were not translated, while others were distorted;
one South African of Angolan origin spoke only Portuguese. The court
was not aware of this crucial fact and there was no official
interpreter for him. This raises serious concerns regarding the
circumstances in which he signed his statement.

Amnesty International calls for the allegations of torture and
misconduct by the prosecution authorities to be investigated as a
matter of urgency, and for those suspected of involvement in either
or both of these allegations to be brought to justice.

The organization urges the authorities to remove immediately the
handcuffs and shackles of these prisoners. They should also grant
them immediate access to their lawyers and families, and provide them
with adequate food and medical treatment.