German Chancellor Repeats Turkey Not Suitable For Full EU Membership

GERMAN CHANCELLOR REPEATS TURKEY NOT SUITABLE FOR FULL EU MEMBERSHIP

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
30.03.2010 12:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ German Chancellor Angela Merkel has repeated her
belief that Turkey is not suitable for full EU membership, on the
first day of an official Turkish visit.

She said Turkey should not view her offer of a "privileged partnership"
– rather than full membership – negatively.

Turkey, which began negotiations to become a member in 2005, has
dismissed that offer as an insult.

There were also disagreements over Iran, Cyprus and educating Turkish
children in Germany in Turkish.

Germany is Turkey’s biggest trading partner, its biggest foreign
investor, its biggest source of tourist revenue, and nearly three
million Turks live in Germany.

For two countries with such deep-rooted historical and economic ties,
Germany and Turkey struggled to find a common voice during Mrs.

Merkel’s visit. On every important issue, Chancellor Merkel and
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan seemed to be at odds with
each other.

After months of avoiding the subject, Chancellor Merkel chose
this moment to revive her idea of offering Turkey what she calls a
privileged partnership with the EU, rather than full membership. Mrs.

Merkel has stressed that she does see integration as possible in up
to 28 of the 35 so-called chapters of EU law with which Turkey has
to comply before it can become a full member of the union.

Speaking at a joint press conference in Ankara, she said that the rules
of the game have changed since 2005. "The (accession) negotiations are
an open-ended process. We should now pursue this open-ended process,"
she said.

Mr. Erdogan said nothing – but has in the past expressed his outrage
over what he calls "shifting the goalposts".

The German proposal has been firmly rejected by the Turkish government
as a breach of the terms agreed when membership negotiations began
five years ago.

"Such a thing as privileged partnership does not exist," said Egemen
Bagis, Turkey’s Minister for European Affairs.

"So we do not take that option seriously because there is no legal
foundation of it. At times I feel insulted for being offered something
which does not exist."

Turkey’s sometimes fraught relationship with the European Union will
not be helped by this visit.

On Iran, Mrs. Merkel wants Turkish support for international sanctions,
which Mr. Erdogan argues are counter-productive and hypocritical.

Turkey has recently strengthened its relations with Iran and opposes
the tougher sanctions threatened by Western governments.

"We are of the view that sanctions is not a healthy path and… that
the best route is diplomacy," Mr. Erdogan said at the joint news
conference.

The two leaders also disagreed about Cyprus, with the German chancellor
calling for the issue of Turkey’s refusal to recognize the government
on the divided island to be resolved quickly, BBC reported.

Czech Republic And Armenia Start To Cooperate To Reduce Obsolete Pes

CZECH REPUBLIC AND ARMENIA START TO COOPERATE TO REDUCE OBSOLETE PESTICIDES DANGER
Sona Hakobyan

"Radiolur"
30.03.2010 17:30

Czech non-profit organization Arnika and Armenian Women for Health and
Healthy Environment (AWHHE) have launched a new project to help the
rural communities to implement sustainable agriculture and eliminate
the danger of chemical pollution in Ararat and Armavir regions.

The project is focused on finding of technical solutions to eliminate
several hot spots contamination by obsolete toxic pesticides caused by
their improper management and storage, including so-called persistent
organic pollutions (POPs). It will also help Armenia to implement
international Stockholm convention.

Arnika will bring its expert skills regarding the real danger of
pesticides stored in selected hot spots or being still used, and
experience with cleaning up similar burdens in the Czech Republic.

"It is necessary not only to clean-up contaminated sites, but also
to deal with the contamination responsibility, not to allow new risk
to the public health and the environment," says Jindrich Petrlik,
executive director of Toxics and Waste program of Arnika.

"Chemical contamination can debase the quality of water, soil, and
other environmental compartments. This vicious cycle of dependency
can be broken by raising awareness and promoting alternatives," says
Lilik Simonyan, expert of the AWHHE on toxic chemicals. Due to lack of
relevant information, citizens are not able to organize and fight for
their rights, which should also be addressed by the project activities.

TBILISI: Georgian Parliament May Recognise Circassian "Genocide"

GEORGIAN PARLIAMENT MAY RECOGNISE CIRCASSIAN "GENOCIDE"

Georgian Times
; newsid=21038
March 29 2010
Georgia

The Georgian Parliament will be asked to recognise the genocide
of the Circassian (‘Cherkess’) people committed by Russia in the
19th century. A document to this effect was adopted at a conference
held by the Jamestown Foundation in Tbilisi on March 21 and entitled
"Continuing Crime: Circassians and the Peoples of the North Caucasus
Past and Future."

The alleged Circassian genocide ostensibly happened during the
Russo-Circassian War, conducted in Circassia (present day Russia’s
Krasnodar Krai, republics of Adygea and Karachay-Cherkessia),
the northwestern part of the Caucasus. The war ended in 1864 with
annexation of these lands to the Russian Empire. During the 1860s much
of the Circassian population was expelled from their lands. Historians
site figures as large as 500,000 and greater. A large fraction of
them died in transit.This expulsion and other actions of the Russian
military has given rise to a movement for international recognition
of the alleged genocide.

Nugzar Tsiklauri, Chairman of the Georgian Parliament’s Committee on
Relations with the Diaspora, said that the document contains request
for the Parliament of Georgia to recognise the genocide of the
Circassian people by the Russian Empire, though it is not currently
recognised by any state. It is difficult at this point to talk about
whether MPs will support the appeal, however, he said.

Tsiklauri also said that Moscow might be irritated by this appeal
but it can also get upset over anything, including even the March 20
rugby match, which resulted in a Georgian victory.

The appeal will be officially delivered to the legislature at the end
of May. The Georgian Parliament is likely to recognize the genocide
because it can use the issue as a political weapon against Russia, said
journalist Fatima Tlisova, one of the leaders of the Circassian lobby.

Additionally, the move may elevate Georgia’s standing in the region.

"The fact that the Circassians have decided to have close relations
with the Georgian Parliament opens up a new perspective for us,"
Tsiklauri said. "Georgia can now become the regional centre which will
influence the processes developing in the North and South Caucasus,"

The appeal on the part of Circassians is not surprising and relies
on many similar precedents. "Such requests are numerous worldwide,"
said Mamuka Areshidze, Director of the Caucasus Institute of Strategic
Studies. "Armenia’s activity has provoked responses and the Parliaments
of France, Sweden and America have adopted resolutions about the
genocide of Armenians. Why is it not possible to do the same for the
Circassian people?"

Areshidze said that it will be salutary if Georgia stretches out a
hand to the Circassian people and attempts to discuss their tragedy
at a high political level. He also said that this will be unpleasant
for Russia and "no one in Moscow will be surprised."

However he said that official Tbilisi must not be led by emotion when
discussing this issue. In 1992-1993 Circassian people fought against
Georgians with the Russians and the Abkhaz separatists. During the
August war in 2008 Circassians also held support actions in favour
of Russia in front of Georgian Embassies worldwide.

Areshidze said that the Circassians thought that by showing this
support they would persuade Russia to agree to recognise the genocide
and not hold the Olympics in Sochi. However, "they did not gain
anything from these rallies," the expert said.

Iad Iugar, head of the Circassian Cultural Institute of New York, said
during the conference that currently the aims of Circassian movement
are to form their own State, to obtain recognition of the genocide and
prevent the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics taking place. The participants
of the conference said that the Olympic Charter directly prohibits
holding the Olympics in places where large numbers of people have been
killed and accordingly it is unacceptable to hold the games in Sochi.

According to Areshidze those Circassians attending the conference
in Tbilisi favoured Abkhazia’s independence from Georgia. "I think
the reason for this is that we have not had any contact with the
Circassian nation for a long time and no steps have been made towards
the North Caucasus peoples," he said. "In this period Russia has been
conducting an information war against Georgia."

Circassians’ support for Abkhazia notwithstanding, the de-facto
independent republic have not recognized the fact of genocide even
though Abkhazians are a kindred people of the Circassians.

Representatives of Circassian diasporas from different countries,
except Turkey, attended the conference. The Circassian diaspora in
Turkey refrained from attending the conference because it was afraid
of spoiling relations with Russia, said Glen Howard, President of
the Jamestown Foundation and one of its organisers.

http://www.geotimes.ge/index.php?m=home&amp

Turkish Premier Again Threatened To Deport Armenians

TURKISH PREMIER AGAIN THREATENED TO DEPORT ARMENIANS

news.am
March 29 2010
Armenia

Shortly before the German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s current visit
to Ankara, Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave an interview to
German "Der Spiegel" newspaper.

Asked about Armenian Genocide, Erdogan replied: "The genocide is off
the question."

The source says that numerous Armenians were killed and deported
during the World War I in the Ottoman Turkey."

Referring to President Obama’s campaign pledge to Armenians, Turkish
premier said: "If last year Obama said the word &’genocide’, it would
be a mistake. That word cannot be true just because the President said
it. As for the Armenian Genocide, adopted by the U.S House Committee
on Foreign Affairs, it all was induced by the pressure from Armenian
Diaspora."

Besides, Erdogan interlineary again threatened to deport illegal
Armenians from Turkey. "We appeal to Armenian Diaspora in each country,
that defends it – there are Armenians in our country that are Turkish
citizens, but also illegals. To date, we were turning a blind eye to
this, but if Armenian Diaspora carries on, we will take measures."

BAKU: Turkish Foreign Ministry: Erdogan’s Visit To US Remains Undeci

TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTRY: ERDOGAN’S VISIT TO US REMAINS UNDECIDED

Today
4898.html
March 29 2010
Azerbaijan

According to the Foreign Ministry of Turkey, Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to the U.S. is still undecided.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s visit to the U.S. has been
postponed after The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign
Affairs adopted the resolution recognizing the so-called "Armenian
genocide" by 23 votes in favor and 22 against at a meeting on March 4.

The Committee on Foreign Relations of the Swedish Parliament recognized
the so-called "Armenian genocide" March 11.

Ankara recalled its ambassadors to these countries to protest
resolutions on the so-called "Armenian genocide" adopted by the U.S.

http://www.today.az/news/turkey/6

Armenian Ministry Of Health Develops Draft Law On Quality Increase O

ARMENIAN MINISTRY OF HEALTH DEVELOPS DRAFT LAW ON QUALITY INCREASE OF MEDICAMENTS IN THE MARKET

ARKA
March 29, 2010
Yerevan

YEREVAN, March 29. /ARKA/. Armenian Ministry of Health develops
draft law targeted at the quality increase of medicaments in the
local market, said Ara Babloyan, Chairman of Standing Committee of
National Assembly on Health Issues on Monday.

"Development of such a draft law approves that currently there are
problems in Armenia related to overdue medicaments, their quality
and prices, territorial and financial availability. There are also
a number of violations in this sphere", he said.

During the development of draft law the Ministry of Health does not
aim to toughen the punishments envisaged by legislation but prevention
of low quality and overdue medicaments.

Current legislation prohibits circulation of overdue medicaments in
the local market. The new draft law toughens the order of control on
the quality of medicaments.

The draft law will be submitted to the Parliament till the end of
the year for discussion.

The volume of overdue medicaments and medicaments due to destruction
in Armenia is about 200-300 tons.

Only 14% or 445 names of all medicaments in the Armenian market are
produced in Armenia and 22% or 718 names of medicaments are imported
from NIS countries, the remaining 64% – from other countries.

During 10 months of 2009 the volume of import of medicaments to
Armenia was $60.38 million versus $83.93 million in 2008.

Postanjyan’s Supplementary Appeal Against Police Chief To Be Heard I

POSTANJYAN’S SUPPLEMENTARY APPEAL AGAINST POLICE CHIEF TO BE HEARD IN YEREVAN COURT TODAY

Tert.am
12:54 29.03.10

At 3 pm today, Yerevan’s Court of First Instance of Center and
Nork-Marash Communities is expected to continue hearings onHeritage
Party parliamentary faction member Zaruhi Postanjyan’s appeal against
RA Police Yerevan Department Chief Nerses Nazaryan over neglect of
his duties.

Earlier, Postanjyan’s lawyer, Vahe Grigoryan, in a March 17 court
session, had provided the court with Postanjyan’s supplementary
appeal that asked for Nerses Nazaryan’s Feb. 26, 2010 decision
(to send materials to the corresponding bodies) to be void and to
oblige Nazaryan to follow the requirement set by Article 181 Section
1 of the RA Code of Criminal Procedures (to make decisions on filing
criminal cases).

The Court had postponed the previous session upon the request of
Nazaryan’s lawyer so that they could have time to study the demands
of Postanjyan’s additional claim.

Armavia Launches Flights To Israel

ARMAVIA LAUNCHES FLIGHTS TO ISRAEL

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
29.03.2010 11:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Extending the geography of its flights, Armavia
Air Company presented Yerevan-Tel-Aviv-Yerevan flight on March 28.

According to Mikhail Baghdassarov, the company President, the regular
flight will allow promoting contacts between the two countries and
will rather ease Armenian citizens’ trips to Israel. At the same
time, Mikhail Baghdassarov expressed hope that Armenia’s cultural
and historical spots will be of keen interest for Israelis.

Edgar Karapetyan, the company’s Commercial Director, noted that the
flights will be conducted twice a week, on Thursdays and Sundays,
by A320 and A319 aircrafts. The tickets will cost 350 euros in
both directions. The flight will last up to 2 hours, which will
significantly save passengers’ time, as previously they had to fly
from Tbilisi.

Armavia’s first plane left Yerevan for Tel-Aviv with more than 60
passengers on board, the Company’s press office reported.

Armavia Company is Armenia’s national air carrier, which fully complies
with the international requirements of IATA. Currently, Armavia
conducts over 340 flights per month to 35 destinations in 20 countries.

Gas Cartel to Materialize

Gas Cartel to Materialize

en.fondsk.ruEnergy of the Future
27.03.2010
Igor TOMBERG

Algeria, the country to host the Gas-Exporting Countries Forum on
April 19, 2010, started sounding out the international reaction to the
plan to convert the so-far consultative group into a gas analog of the
OPEC oil cartel. Algerian Minister of Energy and Mines Chakib Khelil
called for gas export cuts to put a floor under the declining natural
gas prices.

The media cited extensively Khelil’s March 18 statement at the OPEC
session in Vienna that the amount of natural gas on offer globally
should be reduced to restore the balance between supply and demand. As
the host of the coming forum, Algeria is in charge of the agenda
which, based on the assessment of the current state of the gas market,
it plans to center around the task of tightening the coordination
between gas-exporting countries. The forum’s permanent members are
Iran, Bolivia, Algeria, Russia, Qatar, Egypt, Venezuela, Nigeria,
Libya, Equatorial Guinea, and Trinidad and Tobago.

There may, however, be quite different approaches to coordination.
Judging by Khelil’s statement, the forum is supposed to introduce gas
export quotas to exert upward pressure on gas prices. This, however,
is exactly the cartel practice meeting with resolute opposition from
gas buyers.

At the moment the gas market is in such condition that even Algeria,
the country traditionally more cautious than others about hurting
buyers’ interests, is forced to push for export caps. Clearly, the
measures would mainly affect LNG suppliers. The US breakthrough in the
sphere of untraditional types of natural gas production, in the
development of shale gas deposits in particular, combined with the
global economic downturn and the LNG supply surge caused an oversupply
of gas on the US market – one of the world’s largest – and practically
sealed it off for suppliers. LNG suppliers who eyed the US market and
invested heavily in upgrading gas liquefaction and transit capacities
were hit most by the situation. In Asia Pacific alone, the LNG
capacities to come online in the short term total 34 bn cu m. As for
Europe, the launch of Qatargas-2 and Ras Laffan-3 plants in the Middle
East with the total output of about 40 bn cu m also left its market
oversupplied. According to Wood Mackenzie estimates, the European gas
market capacity in 2010-2012 (excluding long-term contracts ant
take-or-pay schemes) will be somewhere at 70 bn cu m, while the supply
will likely reach 140 bn cu m of pipeline gas and LNG.

The International Energy Agency says at present the LNG supply exceeds
demand by 30%. The LNG volumes that could not be fed to the US
promptly found their way to the European and Asian spot markets,
causing a price collapse – the spot market gas prices at the moment
are a factor of 2.5 lower than at the peak of demand in 2008. The
forecast by the Financial Times is that by the summer the spot prices
will sink to $110 per thousand cu m – a record-low over eight years.
In the meantime Russia, for example, is earning $230-250 per thousand
cu m selling gas in accord with long-term contracts. Not surprisingly,
buyers are minimizing the amounts of gas taken in their framework due
to the availability of much cheaper gas and pushing suppliers to
renegotiate the contract clauses like take-or-pay which guarantee
sellers certain sale volumes.

Russian Vedomosty daily quoted Russia’s Deputy Energy Minister A.
Yanovsky as saying that the Algerian export cuts proposal did not
resonate with Moscow since Russia’s gas export is based on long-term
contracts. The statement could be the result of miscalculation – the
tendency to minimize the amounts of gas consumed in accord with the
take-or-pay scheme and to switch to the spot market can eventually
compel sellers to agree to lower minimal contracted deliveries. The
evolution would affect both pipeline gas sellers and LNG suppliers.
Last year the latter already had to start offering their clients
previously unthinkable perks like flexibility in delivery volumes or
joint ownership of LNG projects. The pricing situation also leaves LNG
suppliers with a lot to worry about – by October, 2009 the JCC (Japan
Cleared Cargo) LNG price was 14% below the parity price based on
comparing the gas and oil specific heat capacities.

The pipeline gas business fares no better. Gazprom had to serially
waive fines for taking less than the contracted amounts and, worse
than that, found itself drawn into undesirable negotiations over
easing the requirements set by the already existing contracts. The
Russian energy giant is forced to sacrifice revenues and guarantees to
maximally preserve sales volumes. The contraction of gas demand echoed
with an over 50% reduction of the revenues generated by the Russian
gas export to Europe.

Evidently, conditions will continue to deteriorate, and the market
will be increasingly dominated by buyers. The theme was discussed on
March 22 in the Institute of World Economy and International Relations
of the Russian Academy of Science during the presentation of a report
jointly compiled by the World Energy Markets Research Center of the
Energy Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Science and Wood
Mackenzie. The study entitled The New Era For the Russian Gas Sector:
In Search of Balance described the volatilities Russia’s gas industry
is likely to be confronted with till 2030. The unchecked accumulation
of LNG facilities will be driving ever more intense competition
between LNG and pipeline gas and between various suppliers over
markets. The study contained no mentioning of orchestrated gas offer
reduction, but the ideas and forecasts in it seem to reinforce the
case for it. Chaotic proliferation of LNG facilities and injection of
gas volumes that markets are unprepared to accommodate – with no
underlying philosophy whatsoever – are the key causes of the current
price collapses and future uncertainties.

Chances to safeguard the interests of suppliers with the help of
long-term contracts and take-or-pay arrangements of any kind are slim.
Nor should anyone expect the schemes to be instrumental in keeping
market shares or sustaining sales volumes. The entrenched egoism in
the ranks of gas suppliers has already given serious advantages to
buyers, and Khelil’s call for coordination among gas-exporting
countries is by all means timely. Hopefully, the call will be heard at
the Gas-exporting Countries Forum in Algeria.

There are indications that Moscow’s position is drifting towards that
of Algeria. Russian Prime Minister V. Putin said during the meeting
with Prime Minister of Qatar Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani on March 23
that as the world’s two major energy suppliers Russia and Qatar should
coordinate their activities on the gas market. The coordination on the
European market between Russia, Algeria, and Qatar (the trio Iran,
Venezuela, and Oman will definitely join) should open new horizons in
stabilizing the European gas market, perhaps at the cost of a
temporary reduction of gas offer.

Experts in Europe are also becoming aware of the benefits of
regulation and coordination on the gas market which is growing
unacceptably volatile. Jonathan Stern, analyst at the Oxford Institute
for Energy Studies, says: `I don’t think we are at that stage [of a
gas cartel] yet. But if prices fall further, we may find ourselves in
a different situation by the middle of this year. Cartels work when
producers are in dire straights.’

Igor Tomberg is the Director of the Energy and Transportation Studies
Center of the Institute for Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of
Science and Professor of the Moscow Institute of International
Relations of the Russian Foreign Ministry.

Shahan Kandaharian: You need to create a single information field

Shahan Kandaharian: You need to create a single information field for
Armenia-Diaspora

28.03.2010 15:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During her visit to Lebanon, RA Minister of Diaspora
Hranush Hakobyan, accompanied by the Ambassador of Armenia in Lebanon
Ashot Kocharian and the Embassy staff visited the editorial office of
the Armenian newspaper Azdak in Beirut.

The meeting with the Editor-in-Chief of Azdak newspaper Shahan
Kandaharian was also attended by former director of Azdak Ervand
Pambukian and head of the Pyunik foundation Gabriel Jemperjian.

As Shahan Kandaharian told PanARMENIAN.Net, Minister of Diaspora
highly estimated the mission of the newspaper in preservation of the
Armenian language, culture and traditions and strengthening
Armenia-Diaspora relations. "We came to the conclusion that it is
necessary to create a single information field for Armenia and
Diaspora. Programs aimed to unite all media operating in Armenia and
Diaspora are on the agenda, " Shahan Kandaharian said.