BAKU: Russia Likes To Be A Mediator On Karabakh Issue – Swedish Rese

RUSSIA LIKES TO BE A MEDIATOR ON KARABAKH ISSUE – SWEDISH RESEARCHER

news.az
May 19 2010
Azerbaijan

Ingmar Oldberg News.Az interviews Ingmar Oldberg, senior research
associate at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs.

They say that the West already lost the fight with Russia over CIS area
(Ukraine, Moldova Kirgizia and Georgia in particular). How would you
comment on this opinion?

Russia has always had more influence in those countries than the "West"
for historical, economic and other reasons , even though "Western"
influence has grown since the 1990s. But those countries are now
sovereign and no pawns in a new great game. It is up to them where
they turn for help, whether they are democratic or (most often) not.

And what about Azerbaijan? Do you expect increase in Russian activity
here?

Russia is of course extremely interested in Azerbaijan and its energy
resources, and will try its best to get more control over them, or
rather their transport to the European customers. But Russia of course,
as you all know, has to balance its relations with Azerbaijan against
those with Armenia, which Russia has a military alliance, including
mutual assistance. If Azerbaijan gets more involved with the "West"
(Turkey) Russia will probably strengthen relations with Armenia and
be less inclined to support Azerbaijan concerning N-Karabakh. Russia
likes to be a mediator on the NK issue, officially friendly with both
sides, currying favors from both.

Moscow says that it CIS countries to decide to be a member of EU and
NATO or not. Do you think that Russia might agree with membership of
Azerbaijan or even Georgia in NATO?

As I’ve already answered, CIS counties decide each for itself, and
cannot as a collective have a veto on what the others decide for
themselves. The CSTO (Collective security treaty) is another matter.

Even if NATO membership for Azerbaijan and Georgia are very remote
possibilities, Russia will do everything to stop it. Only if Russia
itself would join NATO, it would have to allow the others to do so.

Do you think that Russia may use the "Georgian scenario" in Karabakh,
other conflict zone in the South Caucasus?

The Georgian case with S Ossetia and Abkhazia is special, since both
these regions border on Russia and contain many Russians whom Russia
wants to "protect". The S Ossetians are related to N Ossetians, who
want to remain part of Russia. Russia has no reason to intervene in NK
since it is already de facto incorporated into and by Armenia. There is
no analogy with Kosovo, since the Serbs there are a small minority, and
Albania did nothing to support its kin in Kosovo against Serbia in 1999
and before. It was NATO that intervened to save the Albanians in Kosovo

Russia and Turkey has been developing a close collaboration, especially
during the last 2 years. What is your opinion, may this collaboration
be fruitful for the stability in the South Caucasus region?

Hard to tell. If the collaboration does not harm other states’
interests it is fine, for instance with regard to developing nuclear
power in Turkey with Russian help. But some of this collaboration
has been about pipelines, and the plan to build a South Stream gas
pipeline across Turkish waters in the Black Sea has a thrust against
the EU Nabucco pipeline plans and against Ukraine, which wants gas
transit across its territory to continue. But the South Stream plan
is now threatened by stagnating world prices on gas.

Reps. McCollum, Pallone, Schiff, And Walz Urge Secretary Clinton To

REPS. MCCOLLUM, PALLONE, SCHIFF, AND WALZ URGE SECRETARY CLINTON TO ASSIST IRAQI ARMENIAN CHRISTIAN REFUGEES

Congressional Documents and Publications
May 18, 2010

Washington, DC – Representatives Betty McCollum (MN-04), Frank Pallone
(NJ-06), Adam Schiff (CA-29), and Tim Walz (MN-01) spearheaded a
letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, urging action to ensure
the well-being of Iraqi Armenian Christian refugees in Jordan and
Syria. The letter, which 16 other Members of Congress have signed,
urgently requests U.S. assistance to help resettle Iraqi Armenian
Christian refugees to Armenia. Additional resources from the United
States will allow Armenia to reach more Iraqi Armenian Christians
with essential resources as well as the opportunity to begin a new
life in a safe and secure environment.

According to a recent press release from the U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), Iraqi refugees, both inside and outside of
the country, are facing deteriorating conditions while international
concern is slowly declining. The attacks on Iraqi Christian refugees,
in particular, are a constant source of insecurity. UNHCR works to
protect and relocate refuges, while helping them restart their lives
in safer areas. Two years ago, UNHCR-Armenia helped several large
groups of refugees resettle in Armenia.

The Armenian government already made a generous commitment to UNHCR.

This includes the offer of all Iraqi Armenian refugees the opportunity
for citizenship, participation in UNHCR’s Iraqi resettlement program,
and resources to help refugees rebuild their lives. Armenia has
effectively delivered on these commitments over the past two years.

"It is in the interest of the U.S. that Iraqi Armenian Christian
refugees be provided the opportunity to start a new life in safety
and peace," said Representative McCollum, who traveled to Syria and
met with Iraqi refugees in 2006. "The Armenian government’s offer
to receive refugees is very generous, and I believe the U.S. should
provide the humanitarian support necessary to ensure their successful
relocation and integration into Armenian society."

"Life for these refugees is difficult and the assistance provided
by UNHCR provides relief that is critical to these families," said
Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06). "With the commitment of the
government of Armenia and the success that past funds have yielded in
settling refugees in Armenia it is important for us to continue and
increase the funds being allocated to Armenia. I urge our continued
financial support and continued involvement in this pursuit."

"Conditions for Iraqi Armenian Christian refugees are becoming
increasingly desperate at the same time that international support for
the vulnerable population is dwindling," said Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA).

"We urge the Obama Administration to commit additional funds to UNHCR
to sustain the momentum we have built to help these refugees resettle
and rebuild their lives in Armenia, providing a cost-effective and
regional solution for families who might otherwise seek resettlement
within our borders."

Museum Of Tolerance Special Report / Emotional Games

MUSEUM OF TOLERANCE SPECIAL REPORT / EMOTIONAL GAMES
By Natasha Mozgovaya

Ha’aretz
e/museum-of-tolerance-special-report/museum-of-tol erance-special-report-emotional-games-1.290970
May 18 2010
Israel

The Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles may be gimmicky, filled with
celebrity cameos and interactive displays, but many visitors walk
away feeling truly affected.

LOS ANGELES â~H’ Upon entering the exhibition devoted to hatred and
prejudice at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, the visitor
is asked to choose between two doors. One is marked "Prejudiced"
and the other is marked "Unprejudiced."

But when you go to the door marked "Unprejudiced," you find it is
locked and the inscription that lights up asks you to think, then
go through the other door. When the Dalai Lama planned to visit the
museum, staff members recall, his representatives were uncomfortable
with the fact that he would have to walk through the door marked
"Prejudiced." The Dalai Lama himself, however, did not hesitate for
a moment.

At a museum devoted to clarifying the individual’s personal
responsibility in the most palpable way possible, officials take pride
in the fact that they cause "everyone to feel equally uncomfortable."

Only thus does a person begin to ask himself the hard questions and
understand, among other things, the ordinary person’s responsibility
for horrors around the world.

The discomfort stems mainly from the very direct emotional
manipulations of the visitor, including a set replicating the entrance
to a death camp in the Holocaust exhibit, as well as the selection
process at the camps, when the visitor is again asked to choose
between two entrances, one for the "able-bodied" and the other for
"children and others."

A guide explains to a group of 10th-graders from a local school that
if you were directed through the second door, you were sent straight
to your death. In the end it turns out that both doors lead to the
same spare concrete hall where recordings of Holocaust survivors’
testimonies are played, accompanied by pictures from the period.

The effect worked, and only three adolescents dared to walk through
the door for children and others. A few more peered in suspiciously.

At the beginning of the exhibition, visitors receive a magnetic
card with the picture of a child, whom they are able to read about,
learning about where he or she was born and grew up. Only at the end
of their tour do the students find out the fate of "their" child.

The visit to the darkened Holocaust exhibition lasts more than an
hour. At the museum, which declares that 90 percent of its five
million visitors since 1993 have been non-Jews, they start with the
assumption that the visitors know nothing about the Holocaust.

The guide asks the students, many of whom are children of
Spanish-speaking immigrants, how many Jews were killed in the
Holocaust.

"Six million," replies a chorus of voices.

"And who else apart from Jews were killed?"

"Poles?" one girl replies.

The guide explains that among the 15 million people who were murdered
in the Holocaust were also handicapped people, gays, communists, Roma
and many others. "Remember," she says, "it could happen anywhere,
even in my city and yours. History has a tendency to repeat itself."

The story of the Warsaw Ghetto is screened against a set constructed
to look like ruins, and in a chilling three-dimensional model of
Auschwitz, a spotlight roams over the prisoners’ barracks as in the
background a pillar of thick smoke rises from a crematorium.

Following that, the students go to the computer stations, where they
can find out what happened to "their" child. The exhibition ends in
a recreation of Simon Wiesenthal’s office, where a film describes
his activities, and explains that the world-famous Nazi hunter was
seeking justice, not revenge.

Afterwards, only five raise their hands when the guide asks whether
the child survived.

"It doesn’t say whether my child survived," says Abigail, a teen with
a bright purple streak in her hair. "It says they don’t know what
happened to him. We learn about the Holocaust in school but this has
been very powerful. For me the hardest thing was the part where they
told how the Nazis threw babies out the window."

Among the emotional responses in the visitors book, one can also
read those of students who noted, "I had fun!" "Cool, dude!" and also
"They are beasts just like me."

"The majority of the young people are overwhelmed by the experience,"
says Rabbi Marvin Hier, who founded the Simon Wiesenthal Center, which
runs the museum. "But we don’t censor anything, we like people to
put out what their real feelings are. In this museum were people who
actually wrote: ‘We didn’t kill enough Jews.’ We left it in the book
so people should see there are still people like this in the world.

Some of them come with prejudiced feelings, and you cannot replace
these feelings in three hours. They take it with them as part of
their baggage."

Interactive tolerance

Hier says he believes interactive means are needed to attract an
audience. He quickly realized the error of displaying only pictures
from the Holocaust â~H’ the students walked by them quickly, barely
looking at them. They weren’t strong enough to attract the young
people of today.

"You can’t make the use of technology a sin. That would be ridiculous,
it is 2010," he says.

For a relatively small building, the museum tries to cover a long
list of issues â~H’ from the civil rights struggle in America
and women’s suffrage though the "genocide board" covering horrors
throughout history. The Armenian community has protested that their
genocide should also be highlighted more prominently in the exhibit,
but museum director Liebe Geft states that, "the Armenian genocide
appears on the genocide board, and in our films, even if this isn’t
a popular perception and not what the State Department says."

Global issues are presented in the "Millennium Machine," as visitors
sit in groups facing tables with built-in video monitors to watch
films about child labor in the developing world, child pornography
and so on. The visitors respond to issues posed in the films by
pressing buttons.

The survey of issues is comprehensive, but one could ask whether
too many topics are thrown at the visitor too quickly. Some museum
exhibitions have been taken down, such as the "Whisper Gallery," where
voices hissed various racist curses. Geft says people didn’t want to
take in things passively, they wanted to be challenged and involved.

Now, in the "Point of View Diner" exhibition, which focuses on local
issues, a large screen shows visitors films with scenes of extortion
in school, domestic violence, drunk driving and the like. Some say
the massive interactivity simplifies the message, but in light of
the visitors’ responses, there is no doubt the format works.

Serious researchers might complain that the Museum of Tolerance is
too gimmicky, but teachers, who see how engaged their students are,
are very enthusiastic about it.

The museum has also become a major institution for tolerance training
for professionals, including police officers and FBI agents. It keeps
close tabs on feedback to improve the programs. Geft says she always
tells the employees that if they are taking the professionals’ most
precious asset â~H’ time â~H’ it has to be meaningful.

The content of the museum planned for Jerusalem still remains to be
determined. It will not include a Holocaust exhibit, in keeping with
the agreement with Yad Vashem. Beyond the permanent exhibitions,
the museum in Los Angeles also presents temporary shows, including
one dedicated to the victims of the poison gas attacks by Iraq on
the Kurds of Halabja, in 1988, and a photo exhibit about the Israeli
delegation’s work in Haiti.

One exhibit, targeting Los Angeles’ huge Hispanic community, describes
California’s segregation of Hispanics until the 1940s.

Star turns

Hier takes me to one of the upper floors in the museum, where there is
an exhibition devoted to the childhood stories of several prominent
American cultural personalities. The tour begins with a pile of
suitcases in various sizes and colors and a monologue by actor Billy
Crystal on a screen.

Crystal spent three years working on the project, says Hier, and
it provided him with inspiration for his autobiographical one-man
Broadway hit "700 Sundays." The exhibit features nine personalities,
including a Muslim, a Jew, an Italian and an African-American.

"In Hollywood they know how to reconstruct things," says Hier. Each
room addresses a different issue. Because the downstairs exhibitions
are so disturbing, elementary schools prefer to bring the children
to these exhibits.

The museum has reconstructed in detail the general store owned by poet
Maya Angelou’s grandparents, who raised her after her parents abandoned
her. One of the store windows serves as a screen for a film about
Angelou’s childhood made especially for the museum, notes Hier proudly.

Then visitors enter a reconstruction of Dodgers manager and legendary
baseball player Joe Torre’s living room. He tells his story of a
childhood in New York filled with domestic violence.

Billy Crystal’s room is also scrupulously reconstructed, including
the crooked floor where they had to tie down the sofa so it wouldn’t
slide. Musician Carlos Santana brought not only his story to the
museum but also his first guitars.

The celebrities featured in the exhibition, which ends with Oprah
Winfrey calling upon young people to make something of their lives,
often bring their own guests to the museum. Visitors are also invited
to participate in a project to find their family’s roots.

Hier says the Israeli Museum of Tolerance will have a similar
exhibition, with the same methodology and appraoch, but that Israeli
experts will be consulted about the content.

He expresses amazement that people want to know what will be inside
the museum even before construction has begun, and suggests this is
like asking Amos Oz what will be in his next book.

"This is absurd," he says, adding that they will get the answer in
three years, and refusing enter debates at this point.

He says many Israeli teachers and Education Minister Gideon Sa’ar
visited the museum in Los Angeles and found it hard to leave. Even if
the Israeli museum does not have an exhibition about the Holocaust, it
will have another historical section, and when they tell a historical
story it will be reconstructed, the way they did with the Shoah in
Los Angeles.

"In [an earlier] exhibit … we called Yigal Amir a terrorist,"
he says. "We don’t mince words.

It is not an ideological museum. It opposes fanaticism. Mutual
respect and social responsibility â~H’ these are the two pillars of
the Museum of Tolerance that we teach. Those who don’t like it can
go somewhere else."

So will the Palestinians be represented there?

"Will the whole museum be about the Palestinian people? Absolutely
not. Without any apologies to anybody. Look in here â~H’ is this a
museum totally on the African-American civil rights movement? No. Does
it include things about African-Americans? Yes. Latinos? Yes. But
it’s not predominantly about it."

The Museum of Tolerance will deal with contemporary issues, he says.

If the "set" takes you back in time, he suggests, in movie parlance,
that’s only a prologue to the social laboratory concerned with the
issues of today’s world.

"Israeli teacher, philosophers and historians should tell us: ‘These
are our biggest issues, now use your know-how to get the message
across,’" says Heir.

In this way, he says, it will be different from Yad Vashem and the
Israel Museum, because it will be dealing with issues that appear
on the front page of Haaretz, the New York Times and the Wall Street
Journal.

http://www.haaretz.com/magazin

Minnesota Representatives Call For Armenian Refugee Relocation

MINNESOTA REPRESENTATIVES CALL FOR ARMENIAN REFUGEE RELOCATION
By Andy Birkey

Minnesota Independent
walz-mccollum-armenian-refugee-relocation
May 18 2010

Tim Walz and Betty McCollum are asking Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton to commit funds for the relocation of Iraqi Armenians — who,
as Christians, face persecution — back to Armenia. The lawmakers
say that Armenia has taken significant steps to welcome the refugees,
including offering land and citizenship.

"It is in the interest of the U.S. that Iraqi Armenian Christian
refugees be provided the opportunity to start a new life in safety
and peace," said McCollum in a press release on Tuesday. "The Armenian
government’s offer to receive refugees is very generous, and I believe
the U.S. should provide the humanitarian support necessary to ensure
their successful relocation and integration into Armenian society."

While not a signatory on the letter, Rep. Collin Peterson has joined
Walz and McCollum in supporting the effort.

Here’s the full text of the letter:

May 14, 2010

The Honorable Hillary Rodham Clinton Secretary of State U.S. Department
of State 2201 C Street NW Washington, DC 20520

Dear Secretary Clinton:

We are writing to urge the Obama Administration to make a commitment of
funds to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to assist in
the resettlement of Iraqi Armenian Christian refugees from Syria and
Jordan to Armenia. It is our understanding that the State Department
is in the process of formulating the Administration’s response in
support of UNHCR’s 2010 Global Appeal for Iraq. We feel strongly that
it is essential that an initial and specific U.S.

commitment is made to meeting the needs of Iraqi Armenian Christian
refugees.

According to a March 30, 2010 UNHCR press release, conditions for Iraqi
refugees both inside and outside of Iraq are becoming increasingly
desperate at the very time that international concern appears to be
fading. "The dwindling media interest in Iraqi refugees," the UNHCR
says, "is not matched by a decline in the scale of the problem."

With a planned U.S. troop withdrawal by the end of 2011, dwindling
international support for Iraqi refugees, and the campaign of violence
against Iraqi Christians continuing unabated, the U.S. must fulfill
its obligation to this vulnerable population.

As you know, the State Department’s 2008 allocation of $1 million
to UNHCR Armenia has enabled more than one thousand Iraqi refugees
to begin to rebuild their lives via resettlement in Armenia. It has
been a cost-effective and regional solution for a group that might
otherwise seek resettlement in the United States.

UNHCR’s "Regional Response Plan for Iraqi Refugees" released in
January 2010 identifies hundreds of Iraqi Armenian Christian refugees
registered with UNHCR in Jordan. The number of refugees in Syria,
the primary asylum destination for Armenian Christians fleeing Iraq,
is known to be significantly larger. Of the more than two million
refugees who have fled Iraq, only a small portion, less then 20
percent, have been registered by UNHCR thus far. Since hopes for
successful repatriation and reintegration in Iraq have failed to
materialize it is certain that the need for resettlement of Iraqi
Armenian refugees will persist for the foreseeable future.

It is our understanding that the Government of Armenia has made a
formal commitment to U.N. High Commissioner Antonio Guterres to:
offer all Iraqi Armenian refugees a track to citizenship; formally
participate in UNHCR’s Iraqi resettlement program; and make land and
facilities available for refugees from Iraq to rebuild their lives.

Armenia has, in fact, delivered on these promises substantially over
the last two years.

The U.S. commitment of additional funds to UNHCR will allow UNHCR in
Armenia to extend its assistance to Iraqi Armenian Christians while
allowing for an accelerated resettlement of additional refugees from
Syria and Jordan to Armenia.

Again, we urge the Obama Administration to sustain the momentum of
what UNHCR, the United States, and Armenia have already accomplished
on behalf of Iraqi Armenian Christian refugees.

Sincerely,

Betty McCollum Frank Pallone, Jr.

Adam Schiff Tim Walz Raúl M. Grijalva Charles A. Gonzalez

http://minnesotaindependent.com/59024/

Turkish Premier Arrives In Baku

TURKISH PREMIER ARRIVES IN BAKU

Interfax
May 17 2010
Russia

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrived in Baku on Monday
morning, a source at the Turkish embassy in Baku told Interfax.

Turkish media said earlier that Erdogan would discuss bilateral
relations, settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute and the opening
of the Turkish-Armenian border.

The sides will sign an agreement on selling Azerbaijani natural gas
to Turkey.

Erdogan will also attend the unveiling of a monument to Turkey’s
founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

New Nanostructures Study Findings Have Been Reported From Yerevan St

NEW NANOSTRUCTURES STUDY FINDINGS HAVE BEEN REPORTED FROM YEREVAN STATE UNIVERSITY

Nanotechnology Business Journal
May 17, 2010

According to a study from Yerevan, Armenia, "We consider the
effects of hydrostatic pressure and temperature on the binding
energy and photoionization cross section of hydrogen-like impurity in
Poschl-Teller quantum well. The ground state energy and the impurity
wave function are calculated using the variational method."

"The binding energy dependencies on the width of the quantum well,
the hydrostatic pressure, the impurity position and the temperature
are reported. The dependencies of the photoionization cross section on
incident photon energy for two different polarizations of the light,
different values of hydrostatic pressure and temperature have been also
considered. The results show that the binding energy is an increasing
(decreasing) function of the hydrostatic pressure (temperature) and
that the binding energy can increase or decrease depending not only
on the values of the confining potential parameters, but also on the
impurity position. In the case of the photoionization cross section,
the results show that by changing the polarization of the light, the
behavior of the photoionization cross section dependence on photon
energy changes dramatically," wrote M.G.

Barseghyan and colleagues, Yerevan State University.

The researchers concluded: "Associated with the increasing (decreasing)
of the binding energy with the hydrostatic pressure (temperature)
there is a redshift (blueshift) of the photoionization cross section
as a function of the energy of the incident photon."

Barseghyan and colleagues published the results of their research in
Physica E – Low – Dimensional Systems & Nanostructures (Simultaneous
effects of hydrostatic pressure and temperature on donor binding
energy and photoionization cross section in Poschl-Teller quantum
well. Physica E – Low – Dimensional Systems & Nanostructures,
2010;42(5):1618-1622).

For additional information, contact M.G. Barseghyan, Yerevan State
University, Dept. of Solid State Physics, Al Manookian 1, Yerevan
0025, Armenia.

Ernest Vardanyan’s Mother Sent Letter To G8 Leaders

ERNEST VARDANYAN’S MOTHER SENT LETTER TO G8 LEADERS

Tert.am
18:10 17.05.10

Tamara Shaghoyan, the mother of the Armenian-national journalist Ernest
Vardanyan working in the Moldovan breakaway region of Transnistria,
has sent a letter to the leader of G8 states, asking to take steps
for his release.

"Ernest Vardanyan’s arrest organized by the Transnistrian authorities
was based on trumped-up charges of ‘espionage and high treason’. Being
an independent journalist Ernest Vardanyan could not have known a
military, state or other secrets kept by the law; he did not work
in state bodies," writes she, adding that her son had recently been
involved in the sraff list of the United Nations and waiting for his
appointment at the UN Washington headquarter.

In her letter addressed to the leaders of Russia, US, France, Germany,
Great Britain, Japan, Italy and Canada Shaghoyan says her son is the
hostage of the Transnistrian authorities.

Ernest Vardanyan was arrested near his home in Tiraspol on April 7
allegedly by the Transnistrian state secrete services. He is accused
of high treason and according to Article 271 of the Transnistrian
Criminal Code he can face 12-20 years in prison if found guilty.

Matevos Saroyan Comes Third In Ankara Wrestling Championship

MATEVOS SAROYAN COMES THIRD IN ANKARA WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP

ARMENPRESS
MAY 17, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS: Armenian freestyle wrestler Matevos
Saroyan (50kg weight category) achieved a bronze medal in the World
Junior Wrestling Championship held in Ankara. Lyova Vardanyan, Armenian
state coach of wrestling, told Armenpress that Matevos Saroyan is
one of the most talented young freestyle wrestlers of Armenia.

Azerbaijan Says Still Working With Turkey On Gas Deal

UPDATE 1-AZERBAIJAN SAYS STILL WORKING WITH TURKEY ON GAS DEAL
Afet Mehtiyeva

Reuters
May 17 2010

BAKU, May 17 (Reuters) – Azerbaijan said on Monday it was still
working with Turkey on the technical details of a long-awaited gas
supply deal that could unlock Azeri gas reserves for the West.

The two sides were expected to sign the agreement on Monday, during
a visit by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan. He said it could
be signed when Azeri President Ilham Aliyev visits Turkey, without
specifying when.

"We discussed all issues related to gas transit with Turkey last
month. Technical work for signing these documents is ongoing," Aliyev
said after meeting Erdogan.

The deal on gas supply and transit, two years in the making, could
help unlock Azeri gas reserves for the West — in particular the
troubled 7.9 billion euro ($9.74 billion) Nabucco project — and
eventually trim Europe’s energy dependence on Russia.

Negotiations have been complicated by political tensions between
the Muslim allies over a bid by Turkey and Christian Armenia —
Azerbaijan’s enemy in the conflict over rebel Nagorno-Karabakh —
to bury a century of hostility and mend ties.

The rapprochement collapsed last month.

Precise details of the gas deal are unknown but it is expected to at
least resolve pricing differences over 6 billion cubic metres of gas
Azerbaijan currently sells to Turkey.

Analysts say it could trigger commercial talks on volumes from the
second phase of production at Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz deposit in the
Caspian Sea, operated by BP (BP.L) and Statoil (STL.OL) and due to
come online by 2017.

Azerbaijan says it has agreed in principle on volumes Turkey would
receive from Shah Deniz II, which will produce an additional 16 billion
cubic metres per year on top of the current 9-10 bcm from Shah Deniz I.

Turkey has requested 6-7 bcm of gas from the second phase.

That would free up volumes of gas to flow to Nabucco, albeit at
a fraction of Russian current gas exports of 150 bcm. The Nabucco
project would nevertheless mark an important step toward cutting
dependence on Moscow, which supplies a quarter of the EU’s gas imports.

Nabucco aims to transport up to 31 bcm of gas annually from the Caspian
region to an Austrian hub via Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey and Hungary.

But it faces competition from Russia’s South Stream project, which
is due to start construction in 2012. Nabucco has been hit by delays
and problems in pinning down supplies. (Writing by Thomas Grove and
Matt Robinson; Editing by Sue Thomas).

Armenian NA Summons Its Fourth Day Sessions In The Session Hall Of T

ARMENIAN NA SUMMONS ITS FOURTH DAY SESSIONS IN THE SESSION HALL OF THE ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT

ARMENPRESS
MAY 17, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS: Armenian National Assembly summoned today
its fourth day sessions in the session hall of the Armenian government
as reconstruction of the NA session hall is in process. It will open
the doors in September and will be oval.

Armenian National Assembly Chairman Hovik Abrahamyan said that
14 legislative initiatives have been included in the agenda which
have been approved by the standing committees and 20 international
agreements. Hovik Abrahamyan first of all put for voting the bill
on making changes in the law on "Psychology" which was unanimously
approved in the second reading. In the first reading bills on making
changes and additions in the law "About Administrative Violations",
changes in the Criminal Code. With the suggestion of the NA chairman
discussion of a number of legislative initiatives was postponed to
15 days.

Speaking about continuing the works in the government session hall,
NA member Tigran Torosyan noted that it does not matter for him where
he works. "The worker will work in worse conditions as well," he said.

Another member of parliament Victor Dallakyan complained of the
conditions of the government session hall and expressed opinion that
they may have negative impact on the law-making activity of the NA.

Head of the Armenian Republican party’s faction Galust Sahakyan agreed
that the working conditions in this hall are inconvenient.