BAKU: Barring Armenians from NATO event to isolate Azerbaijan – aide

Barring Armenians from NATO event to isolate Azerbaijan – aide

ANS TV, Baku
2 Oct 04

[Presenter Leyla Hasanova] Hampering Armenian MPs’ presence at the
Baku-hosted Rose-Roth seminar of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly in
November is tantamount to isolating Azerbaijan from cooperation with
international organizations, the head of the Azerbaijani Presidential
Executive Staff, Ramiz Mehdiyev, has said.

[Mehdiyev, speaking to journalists] We should recall that several
Armenian officers had planned to attend a NATO event in Azerbaijan
[Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercises in September]. As for our
[changing tack], frankly speaking, Mr President’s attitude to this was
negative from the very beginning because their visit here would not be
the right move. Why? Because even if these officers are not involved
in Azerbaijan’s troubles, others are.

On the other hand, Azerbaijan cannot be isolated from the world. We
have to participate in events conducted by international organizations.
It would also be incorrect to hamper the activities of international
organizations in Azerbaijan because this would willy-nilly form a
negative image for Azerbaijan. For this reason, we regard the
activities of international organizations in Azerbaijan as normal. It
is possible that representatives of Armenia might attend these
events. But they attend these events in Azerbaijan as members of
international organizations.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian premier asks Russia to help open border with Turkey

Armenian premier asks Russia to help open border with Turkey

A1+ web site
3 Oct 04

1 October: Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan today received
Russian Federation Council Speaker Sergey Mironov.

Speaking about Armenia’s involvement in regional transport and
economic programmes, Markaryan said that Armenia was expecting some
help from Russian deputies, particularly, in the opening of the
Armenian-Turkish border, the Tbilisi-Gyumri-Kars railway and other
important problems.

Markaryan spoke about the number one measures which, in Armenia’s
opinion, could help develop economic cooperation between the two
countries in the future.

Passage omitted: Reported details

EU a fragile hope for Istanbul’s Christian communities

EU a fragile hope for Istanbul’s Christian communities

Agence France Presse
October 3, 2004 Sunday

BY Nicolas Cheviron

ISTANBUL

Andrea is a “Rum”, Tarin is Armenian, Giovanni a Levantine. For
centuries, their communities served as bridges between Europe and the
Ottoman Empire whose successor, Turkey, is now seeking full membership
in the European Union.

All three are Christian and favor the mainly Muslim country’s entry
into the EU and see in it a fragile hope for their disappearing
cultures.

Andrea Rombopoulos single-handedly produces Iho, one of two
Greek-language dailies to still appear in Turkey.

He claims 80 percent of Istanbul’s “Rums” — Romans, as Greeks of
Turkish nationality are called here, in reference to the Eastern Roman
Empire from which they descended — read his paper. That makes about
1,600 people.

Rombopoulos believes Turkey’s membership in the European bloc will end
all the problems his community faces in trying to defend its rights.

“We have about 60 foundations that run our schools and our churches,”
he explained. “But for the past 37 years, the (Turkish) state has
forbidden any elections to renew their management — has sometimes
seized their property — and prevented them from functioning
properly.”

Turkish membership in the EU, he believes, will be the best guarantee
for the future of his dwindling community.

In the editorial offices of his newspaper, in a 19th century townhouse
built by the great Zarifi “Rum” banking dynasty that is witness to the
past grandeur and current decline of Istanbul’s Greeks, Rombopoulos
laments: “We are on the verge of extinction.”

The EU, he explained, can mean salvation. “When Turkey enters the EU,
foreign firms will invest in Turkey and they will need staff who know
how to trade with the Turks,” he said. “The Greeks are in the best
position to do that.

“If new (Greek) families settle in Istanbul, then maybe we can save
our culture.”

Tarin Karakasli, who works for the Armenian daily Agos, agrees.

“Turkey joining the EU means normalizing relations with Armenia,” she
said. “For people like us, who live in the shadow of their ancestors,
this will be like a drop of cool water through a parched throat … we
could even speak of a cultural renaissance.”

She is a fervent supporter of Turkey’s rapid accession to the European
bloc — contrary to most of the Armenian diaspora, which says Turkey
should be kept out of the EU until it admits that the 1915 massacre of
hundreds of thousand of Armenians was an act of genocide.

“My newspaper believes that only a fully democratic country can
question its past,” she said. “As things stand, Turkey can neither
confirm nor deny something it does not really know about — something
that has been kept under wraps like a terrible taboo.”

She believes that the democratization process accompanying membership
talks will free the Turkish mindset — and allow the country’s
45,000-strong Armenian community to finally cast off the yoke of the
past.

The grandson of a Neapolitan cook who emigrated to Istanbul in
mid-19th century on his father’s side, and of an Italian family long
established in the Greek islands on his mother’s, Giovanni
Scognamillo, 75, is a Levantine — a Roman Catholic born on Turkish
soil, although the term can also apply to Protestants.

Scognamillo, a well-know figure in the Istanbul intelligentsia, has
been a bookdealer, a decorator, a bank employee, a filmmaker, a
journalist, an author and a historian.

He believes the extinction of his community — a few hundred souls, he
said, in Istanbul and Izmir, on the Aegean coast — is inevitable.

“Mine is the last generation of Levantines,” he said, without a trace
of nostalgia. “The young now go live abroad.”

He is all for Turkey joining the EU, but he does not have much hope
for the Levantine community.

“That there will be a rush of Turks into EU countries, I do not doubt
for a moment,” he said. “But a rush of Levantines into Turkey — I
don’t think so.

“Anyway,” he joked, “once Turkey is part of the EU, at least I won’t
have to queue for my residence permit every five years.”

Armenian NPP to be connected to power network on Monday

Armenian NPP to be connected to power network on Monday

TASS
October 3, 2004 Sunday

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

The Armenian nuclear power plant will be connected to the national
power network on Monday, October 4, after 65 days of repairs.

The power plant was stopped in the small hours of July 31 for the
longest repairs it ever had, Armenian NPP General Director Gagik
Markosyan said.

He said the Russian Research Institute for Nuclear Power Plants and
the Czech-based Skoda Company unloaded spent nuclear fuel and examined
the reactor’s metal hull. InterRAO UES, the managing company,
purchased and delivered 100 fresh fuel assemblies with the total cost
of $12 million.

The replacement of the NPP head computer was the most important part
of the repairs. $1 million from the assistance program of the
U.S. Department of Energy was spent on that operation. Eur550,000 from
the TACIS program went to replace 37 oil switches. That was done to
upgrade the power plant safety, Markosyan said.

The Armenian NPP was commissioned in 1979. It was halted in 1989
following a devastating earthquake. Russian specialists helped to
restart the power plant’s second unit in 1996.

Last year the Armenian NPP supplied 38% of national electricity. A
Russian-Armenian intergovernmental agreement made InterRAO-UES, a
subsidiary of the Unified Energy Systems of Russia (UES), the managing
company of the Armenian NPP.

Meanwhile, the European Union insists on closure of the Armenian NPP,
which is 40 kilometers west of Yerevan. The Armenian authorities say
that is possible only if the country gets alternative sources of
electricity.

PACE session to center on terrorism and developments in Chechnya

PACE session to center on terrorism and developments in Chechnya

TASS
October 3, 2004 Sunday

By Yuri Ulyanovsky

STRASBOURG

Struggle against terrorism is put into the section “urgent debate” of
the agenda of the PACE autumn session.

The discussion of the political and humanitarian situation as well as
the state of human rights in the Chechen Republic figure as the second
item on the agenda of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe, which will be held on October 4-8 in Strasbourg.

The key reporter on this issue will be human right commissioner of the
Council of Europe Alvaro Gil-Robles who made a trip to Chechnya in
September where he participated in a scientific conference on human
rights in the republic.

The session will also examine problems of the changing climate in the
world within the Kyoto Protocol and the development of the world
economy. Speakers on this topic will include executive director of the
UN Environment Programme (UNEP) Klaus Toepfer, director-general of the
World Trade Organisation Supachai Panitchpak and deputy
secretary-general of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development Berglind Asgeirsdottir.

The session will also discuss operation of democratic institutions in
Serbia and Montenegro as well as in Azerbaijan, observance by Armenia
of taken obligations and participation of women in elections.

Invited speakers to the session include Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, president of the Pan-African parliament Gertrude
Mongella and Monaco Crown Prince Albert whose speech will be a
preliminary to the ceremony of admitting the principality to the
Council of Europe.

Itar-Tass Russia, CIS news summary for Saturday, October 2 – 2

Itar-Tass Russia, CIS news summary for Saturday, October 2 – 2

TASS
October 3, 2004 Sunday

MOSCOW

Russian President Vladimir Putin had a telephone talk with Tajik
leader Emomali Rakhmonov on Saturday to discuss practical issues
related to the planned visit by the Russian president to Tajikistan
and a summit of the Central Asian Cooperation Organisation, the
Russian presidential press service said.

SOFIA – Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov will chair a meeting of
the anti-terror commission in two-weeks’ time to evaluate the
implementation of the president’s decree on enhanced anti-terror
measures, a government official said. Responding to a question about
possible changes in the government structure, government chief of
staff Sergei Naryshkin told journalists on Saturday, “The role of the
staff matches relevant powers and functions.”

KIEV – The European Union plans to urge Ukrainian politicians to hold
free and democratic presidential elections in October. EU High
Representative for Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana
had a telephone conversation with presidential candidate Viktor
Yushchenko on Saturday, during which they discussed “numerous
violations in the course of the election campaign” and expressed
concern about its coverage in Ukrainian mass media, Yushchenko’s
election headquarters said.

BORISOV – President Alexander Lukashenko urged the Belarussian
military to develop peacekeeping skills. At the same time, he said
there was no question of their participation in peacekeeping missions
at the moment. Speaking at the Shchit Otechestva-2004 (Fatherland’s
Shield) military exercise on Saturday, Lukashenko said, “We were
invited and are invited to any region to carry out peacekeeping
missions. But I am not going to make any decision on the participation
of Belarussians in peacekeeping operations for the time being.”

KURSK – The heads of border-lying regions from Belarus, Russia and
Ukraine ended their meeting in Kursk on Saturday. The leaders of 15
border-lying regions from the three countries, ambassadors and
officials from border guard agencies attended the meeting. The agenda
included a variety of cooperation issues. The participants paid
special attention to a draft agreement between the Ukrainian and
Russian governments on the border crossing rules for residents of
border-lying regions.

YEREVAN – Russian Federation Council Chairman Sergei Mironov and
Armenian parliament head Artur Bagdasaryan opened the Russian-Armenian
regional cooperati on centre in a ceremony in Yerevan on Saturday. The
objective of the centre is promoting development of cooperation
between Russian and Armenian regions.

YEREVAN – To consolidate ties in the CIS it is necessary first of all
to implement the existing agreements, Russian Federation Council
Chairman Sergei Mironov said when answering questions of Yerevan
University students. Mironov heads the Council of the CIS
Inter-Parliamentary Assembly. The CIS authority in the world is
sharply higher at present, he noted.

TBILISI – Georgia’s law-enforcement agencies began an operation in the
Pankisi Gorge and the adjacent area on Saturday to spot and detain
suspicious persons. “Participating in the operation are special forces
of the Interior Ministry and the Security Ministry, and some of the
Defence Ministry’s units and equipment that are used for patrolling on
the ground and in the air,” Security Minister Vano Merabishvili said.

SUKHUMI – The situation in Abkhazia remains stable as the
independence-seeking region is getting ready for the presidential
elections where for the first time several candidates will compete for
the top post. Deputy head of the Abkhazian State Security Service Yuri
Ashuba told Itar-Tass on Saturday that the appearance of all five
candidates on local television on Friday when they urged the
population to exercise restraint and calm contributed to stability.

MOSCOW – Moscow, Tbilisi and SOFIA – Russian specialists will assist
in repair and modernisation of the Russian military hardware that is
in service in the Bulgarian army at present, Bulgarian Economy
Minister Lidia Shuleva said on Saturday after the meeting of the
intergovernmental commission on Russian-Bulgarian cooperation, that
was held in Sofia.

KURSK – Russian Ambassador to Ukraine Viktor Chernomyrdin complained
that the economic potential of the two countries is tapped very
slowly. Speaking at the 16th meeting of the heads of border-lying
regions from Belarus, Russia and Ukraine in Kursk on Saturday,
Chernomyrdin said, “The development of the economic space of Russia
and Ukraine is estimated at 16 billion U.S. dollars on the Russian
side, while in the past it exceeded 70 billion U.S. dollars, and the
border-lying Russian regions have practically not used the economic
potential of the Kharkov region.”

MOSCOW – Russia plans to start exploring Mars’s satellite Phobos in
2009, the director of the Institute of Space Research, Lev Zelyony,
said. “This is the only national project of Solar system planetary
exploration,” he said on Saturday. “The project envisages the
construction of an interplanetary craft capable of flying to Mars,
landing on Phobos, taking samples of its soil and bringing them back
to Earth,” Zelyony said.

BAKU: Prez Admin Chief: Wrong to Prevent Armenian Deputies Coming

CHIEF OF PRESIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATION CONSIDERS WRONG TO PREVENT ARMENIAN
DEPUTIES COMING BAKU

ANS
2004-10-02

It would not be right to prevent visit of Armenian deputies to
Bakusays chief of Presidential Administration Ramiz Mehdiyev regarding
participation of Armenians at NATO seminar on November 26-28 in
Baku. Ramiz Mehdiyev said ahead of this all national protest against
visit of Armenian military men here within NATO Partnership for Peace
Program should not like that non-military Armenians also to be banned
coming here. Azerbaijan can not isolate itself form the world. We must
take part in the events of international organizations. It is not
right to prevent activity of such organizations in Azerbaijan. It may
form negative image of Azerbaijan. Armenian deputies may come to Baku
but their visit is being realized within international organizations.

Touching reforms in internal policy Ramiz Mehdiyev said government
carries on struggling against corruption. But we don’t want to make
turmoil around such measures.However dismissal of some of executive
powers as well as recent replacements is notconnected with
anti-corruption struggle. Chief of Presidential Administration said
personnel reforms had no any serious reasons. I have told that there
are many people whose potential exhausted or sick. We are very
grateful for their merits. We have replaced them. In other cases an
executive power does much in one region and we want other regions also
enjoy his experience and dedication. As to reforms in cabinet of
ministers Mr. Mehdiyev said it was authority of President and he would
determine number of posts for vice-premier. Regarding recent law
breaks and arrests at state commission on students admission Ramiz
Mehdiyev said government was not going to change test exam
system. Testing system has given much to education field of
Azerbaijan. Maybe some people dislike thissystem but tit doesn’t mean
we should abandon it. Mahir Mammadli

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Belarus, Russia to Buttress Joint Armed Force: Lukashenko

BELARUS, RUSSIA TO BUTTRESS JOINT ARMED FORCE: LUKASHENKO

October 3
RIA Novosti

BORISOV, BELARUS, October 3 (RIA Novosti) – Belarus and Russia are
determined to strengthen their joint armed contingent, President
Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus said to the media, yesterday, during a
Motherland Shield 2004 military exercise, underway in his country.

“Not only Belarus but Russia-at last-has come up with very impressive
initiatives to build up the Belarussian-Russian joint contingent,” he
said. That will concern all aspects of the effort-from building up all
arms and services to updating arsenals. “Blueprints are already
available.”

The Belarussian Army will make the contingent kernel, to be reinforced
by Russians in case of a conflict. The Belarussian Army is
battle-ready and “at an extremely high level”, reassured the
President.

As for his country’s contribution to the Collective Security Treaty
Organisation, which includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia and Tajikistan, Mr. Lukashenko had the following to say:

“First, some people are out to make a good thing out of Belarus or
Russia. We are showing them all that we are not all on our own.” Then,
Belarus has it for top priority to preserve its unity with Russia,
that is to base on the joint contingent.

“We have been invited to join the Collective Security Treaty
Organisation, and we are honestly coping with our duties on it. We are
Organisation members. That’s what matters. We have an organisation
which other countries, presently outside it, may join if necessary.”

President Lukashenko deems it necessary for Belarus and Russia to
revive the military-industrial complex of the Soviet years.

“That will be a much easier job if Russia consents to it. If not, we
shall have to update many things singlehanded,” he remarked.

“Belarus is to finish modernising the arsenals of all its military
units, big and small, within the next five years,” added the
President.

With that aim in view, Belarus has established a Military-Industrial
Committee, which subordinates all military-oriented industrial
companies. “We have by now learned to update everything, be it
helicopters, planes or armoured vehicles, and it costs us less than
buying new arsenals.”

As for a structural Belarussian army reform, it is as good as finished
now, said the President.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ASA: Oct. 12, Dr. R.Krikorian

Press Release
Armenian Students Association
October 2, 2004
Contact: Armenian Students’ Association
E-mail: [email protected]

History, Memory and the End of Soviet Rule in Armenia
A lecture by
Dr. Robert Owen Krikorian

Historical memory played an important role in undermining Soviet rule in
Armenia. During the final years of the Soviet Union, history was a tool for
mobilizing the resources of the Armenian nation in its struggle against
Soviet central authorities as well as Azerbaijan. A major shift in thinking
occurred in February 1988, when Armenians in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait
were subjected to a pogrom. This event shattered the tacit social contract
between the Soviet state and the Armenian people, whereby loyalty was
exchanged for the physical inviolability of the Armenian nation. Based on
fieldwork in Soviet Armenia from 1988 to 1991, as well as subsequent
archival research, Dr. Krikorian’s study demonstrates how the deconstruction
of Soviet history in Armenia contributed to the delegitimization and
ultimate overthrow of Soviet rule.

On Tuesday, October 12th, 2004, The Armenian Students’ Association is proud
to present Dr. R. Krikorian of George Washington University to discuss the
role of history and Soviet rule in Armenia. Join the ASA in welcoming Dr.
Krikorian at the Grolier Club, 47 East 60th Street, New York, NY 10022 at
7:30 P.M. Admission to this event is FREE for all. The lecture will be
followed by a wine and cheese reception.

Robert Owen Krikorian earned a Ph.D. in History and Eurasian Studies at
Harvard University, where he was an associate of the Davis Center for
Russian and Eurasian Studies. He has worked with a wide range of
organizations, including Medecins sans Frontieres and USAID’s Office of
Foreign Disaster Assistance (USAID-OFDA), and continues to serve as an
Armenian-language interpreter for the State Department’s Office of Language
Services. In addition to his training in history, Dr. Krikorian has an MA in
political science from George Washington University and is currently a
Professorial Lecturer at GWU’s Elliott School of International Affairs,
where he teaches courses on the modern history and politics of Transcaucasia
and Eurasia.

Dr. Krikorian is widely published on the modern history and politics of
Eurasia including the co-authored book, Armenia: At the Crossroads
(Routledge, 1999). His articles and reviews have appeared in journals such
as the International Journal of Middle East Studies, the Middle East Studies
Association Bulletin, the Center for Iranian Research and Analysis Bulletin,
Analysis of Current Events, the Annual of the Society for the Study of
Caucasia, and the Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies.

The ASA is a nationwide membership organization that promotes Armenian
culture and education by providing Armenian communities with social,
academic, and educational events. All funds raised by the regional branches
contribute to the ASA’s invaluable scholarship fund for Armenian students
studying in the United States. Donations are welcome and appreciated.

To learn more about ASA activities please visit us at

www.asainc.org
www.asainc.org

Azerbaijan, Georgia reinforce links

Azerbaijan, Georgia reinforce links
By Christina Tashkevich

03/10/2004 22:58
The Messenger

An Azerbaijani governmental delegation including the country’s foreign
and education ministers continues its visit to Georgia.

The Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Elmar Mamedyarov, already met with
President Mikheil Saakashvili, Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania and the
Foreign Minister Salome Zurabishvili. Meanwhile the Minister of
Education Misir Mardanov brought humanitarian aid with him to
distribute to Azeri schools in Georgia. The Azeri schools in Marneuli
and Bolnisi regions will receive textbooks and computers as a gift
from the Azerbaijani government.

Georgia’s Minister of Education Kakha Lomaia has traveled to Georgian
schools in Azerbaijan in similar programs to deliver text books and
supplies.

Azerbaijan’s senior Islamic clergyman, Sheikh-ul-Islam Allakhshukur
Pashazade is also in the delegation and is participating in an
international religious conference in Tbilisi. Meanwhile, Pashazade
invited the Georgian Patriarch Ilia II to visit Azerbaijan in the near
future.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Minister and the Georgian Prime Minister Zurab
Zhvania discussed the future construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum
gas pipeline during their meeting on Tuesday.

The construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum gas pipeline will begin
only after the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline is constructed
sometime in 2005.

According to Mamedyarov, they discussed other issues of bilateral
relations as well, including economic issues of cooperation. “We have
very good, useful and intensive exchange of opinions,” said the Azeri
foreign minister.

The Azeri media reports that the development of transport
communications between the two countries was also discussed at the
meeting.

Meanwhile, speaking at the Tuesday briefing Mamedyarov said, “There
are no problems in the relations of Azerbaijan and Georgia. There are
only issues which are being decided on in constructive ways.” He added
that both countries have common interests both “on the regional and
international level.”

Talking about Georgia’s possible role as a mediator in resolving the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the foreign minister said, “Baku will only
welcome it if the Georgian side will show this initiative.”

During his visit to celebrate the ‘Contract of the Century’ on
September 20, Zurab Zhvania met with Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliev,
who expressed strong support for Georgia. President Aliev said, “A
successful Azerbaijan means a successful Georgia. And the welfare of
Georgia means the welfare of Azerbaijan.”

The Azeri president also declared that Baku supports Tbilisi in its
fight against “aggressive separatism” and recognizes the territorial
integrity of Georgia.