United States opens its largest diplomatic mission in the world inAr

United States opens its largest diplomatic mission in the world in Armenia

The NewsAhead Agency for future world news | Tuesday, 22 March 2005
30 Mar 2005**.

YEREVAN. 30 Mar 2005** (Estimated date) The new United States embassy
plans to open the largest US diplomatic in the world in Armenia,
a demonstration of Washington’s growing strategic interest in the
largely Christian country and in the Caucusus in general.

The Caucasus Region is important to world energy markets as a transit
area for oil and natural gas exports from the Caspian Sea to Europe.

US officials explain that the reason for building such as large embassy
is the number of US projects in Armenia, but most see the ambitious
building as matching Washington’s big goals in the region. These
include securing oil supplies from the Caspian and augmenting the US
military toehold on the Western shore to project US influence across
the entire region.

The United States has provided more some US $1.5 billion in economic
assistance to Armenia since independence. Yerevan dispatched 46
Armenian non-combat servicemen to the US led coalition in Iraq on Jan
18. The symbolic presence, despite overwhelming domestic opposition,
has been interpreted as Armenia’s thanks for US largesse. Others
explain the troop deployment as a geopolitical necessity – a means of
keeping US neutral in Armenia’s long-running dispute with Azerbaijan
over Nagorno-Karabakh, a former part of Soviet Azerbaijan that is
now controlled by ethnic Armenians.

The new US embassy compound, built of native stone, overlooks scenic
Lake Yerevan and has a sweeping view of Mount Ararat, neighboring
Turkey’s tallest peak and the rumored resting place of Noah’s
Ark. Sophisticated security measures have been installed to protect
the complex from potential physical, biological and technological
assaults. The embassy will also have its own energy and water supply.

The US is averse to privatization of Georgian gas pipelines

Agency WPS
The Russian Oil and Gas Report (Russia)
March 21, 2005, Monday

THE US IS AVERSE TO PRIVATIZATION OF GEORGIAN GAS PIPELINES

The US, which is attentively watching the actions of Tbilisi, is
trying to prevent Gazprom from acquisition of control over the
Georgian trunk gas pipelines. Georgian State Minister Kakha
Bendukidze, supporter of privatization, is convinced that thus
Americans wish to get rid of a potential competitor.

In February 2005, President of Georgia Mikhail Saakashvili announced
that the country might sell its pipeline system and was negotiating
on this with Gazprom. Now Gazprom uses the Georgian pipelines
belonging to the state for gas transit to Turkey and Armenia.
Throughput capacity of the pipelines is about 7-8 billion cubic
meters of gas per year. The pipes are seriously worn out and their
repair requires investment of $200 million within the next five
years. The current gas flow via Georgia is 50% less than the gas flow
during the Soviet times.

On March 17, American Ambassador to Georgia Richard Miles announced
that Georgian privatization “should not create problems for strategic
interests and security of the country.” According to Miles, the
system of Georgian trunk gas pipelines should remain in state
ownership because a private owner would become a monopoly by
definition. In response ideologist of the Georgian privatization,
State Minister for Economic and Structural Reforms Kakha Bendukidze,
said that in reality Miles was concerned not about security of
Georgia but about possible growth of competition on the part of
Gazprom. According to Bendukidze, Americans undertook lobbying of
interests of investors of the South Caucasian gas pipeline being
built from the Azerbaijani Shah Deniz field to Turkey, reserves of
the offshore Shah Deniz field in the Caspian Sea amount to 1 trillion
cubic meters of natural gas and 300 million cubic meters of gas
condensate. Participants of the project worth $3.2 billion are
British BP (25.5%), Norwegian Statoil (25.5%), Azerbaijani SOCAR
(10%), LUKAgip belonging to LUKoil (10%), Iranian NICO (10%) and
Turkish TPAO (9%).

Roman Gotseridze, chair of the financial budget committee of the
Georgian parliament and opponent of sale of the Georgian pipelines to
Gazprom, is convinced that in any case “we should not privatize the
pipelines until the energy security of the country is insured.”
Gotseridze explains that acquisition of the gas pipelines by Russia
may strengthen dependence of Georgia on Russian fuel. Thus, when
Gazprom buys the pipelines it will be able to prevent access of
Azerbaijani gas (the Shah Deniz project makes such provisions) to
Georgia. Gotseridze also explains that from the commercial standpoint
the worn out Georgian gas pipelines cannot be interesting for
Gazprom, which means that the company wants to buy them for purposes
different from business. Along with this, adds Gotseridze, such deal
will guarantee gas supplies to “Russia’s strategic partner Armenia.”
According to him, the parliament does not support the privatization
and only Bendukidze advocates it in the government.

Lev Snykov from Sovlink Securities states that the US tries to hinder
expansion of Gazprom in Georgia proceeding from political reasons.
The expert concludes that for the US Georgia is a transit route for
Caspian fuel that is why the US is not interested in broadening of
Gazprom’s presence in Georgia.

Gazprom started negotiations on a possibility to privatize Georgian
trunk gas pipelines back in 2003 with the government of Eduard
Shevardnadze. At that time member of the Executive Board of Gazprom
Mikhail Axelrod said that the company was interested in acquisition
of the Georgian trunk gas pipelines to export gas to Turkey and
Armenia through them. On March 17, a spokesperson for Gazprom
confirmed that his company was still interested in acquisition of the
Georgian gas pipelines.

Source: Vedomosti, March 18, 2005

TBILISI: Georgia frees Russian peacekeepers

Georgia frees Russian peacekeepers

Rustavi-2 TV, Tbilisi
21 Mar 05

Four Russian military personnel arrested today by the Georgian
rapid-reaction battalion in the village of Ganmukhuri have been handed
over to the head of the 304th observation post in the [Georgian-Abkhaz]
conflict zone.

The peacekeepers sent four armoured vehicles and 30 servicemen
to Ganmukhuri to collect the arrested men, who included an ethnic
Armenian, Kabardian and Russian. The fourth man had no identity papers.

According to Georgian law-enforcement officials, the Russian personnel
were drunk at the time of their arrest.

Turkish Rights Group Says Abuses Still Widespread

Reuters via Metro Toronto, Canada
March 18 2005

Turkish Rights Group Says Abuses Still Widespread

Friday, March 18, 2005 1:49:44 PM ET

ANKARA (Reuters) – Human rights abuses including torture and curbs on
freedom of expression remained widespread in Turkey in 2004 despite a
flurry of EU-inspired reforms, a leading Turkish rights group said on
Friday.

In its annual report, the Ankara-based Human Rights Association (IHD)
also complained of what it called a trend toward nationalism and
intolerance in Turkey since it won a date last December to open EU
entry talks later this year. “Prime Minister ‘zero tolerance’ for
torture and Deputy Prime Minister (Abdullah) Gul’s claim that ‘Turkey
has done its homework to join the European Union’ have not been
realised,” it said.

“Torture is still very widespread, the right to life still cannot be
guaranteed and (freedom of) thought continues to be criminalised and
punished,” it said.

It recorded 1,040 reported cases of torture and maltreatment in 2004,
police detention centers being the most common place for such
practices. This compared with 1,202 reported cases in 2003 and 876
cases in 2002.

Rights activists say the figures can be misleading because in the
past victims of torture were more afraid to come forward or were less
aware of the legal situation than is now the case.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive body, has urged Turkey to
fully implement its human rights reforms and to swiftly punish
officials found guilty of rights violations.

The report complained of a trend toward intolerance since the EU set
October for the opening of EU entry talks.

That EU decision marked a diplomatic victory for Turkey, but some
Turks resent conditions that came with the date and believe their
country is treated more harshly than other candidates.

As an example of increased intolerance, the IHD cited death threats
and court cases opened against best-selling novelist Orhan Pamuk
after he backed Armenian claims that their people suffered “genocide”
at Ottoman Turkish hands in 1915-23.

In the area of freedom of expression, the IHD reported the opening of
467 court cases against people for expressing ideas deemed unlawful
by state prosecutors in 2004, down from 1,706 cases the previous
year.

Authorities also banned nine different publications — including
books, magazines and newspapers — and halted 12 radio and television
broadcasts. It did not say why they were banned.

AAA: Rep. Langevin: “Critically Important” to Recognize The Genocide

Armenian Assembly of America
122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
March 18, 2005
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
Email: [email protected]

REP. LANGEVIN SAYS IT’S “CRITICALLY IMPORTANT” FOR U.S. TO RECOGNIZE
THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Washington, DC – Representative James Langevin (D-RI), a well-known
champion of Armenian issues, is urging President Bush to follow the
example of other leading U.S. public officials and formally recognize
the Armenian Genocide in his statement of remembrance next month.

Langevin, in a statement issued yesterday to Congress, urged Bush to
properly label the atrocities as U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans
so candidly did during his meetings with Armenian-Americans throughout
the U.S. last month. During those public exchanges, Evans declared
that “the Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the twentieth
century.”

“By employing this term, the Ambassador is building on previously made
statements by Presidents Regan and Bush, as well as the repeated
declarations of numerous world-renowned scholars,” Langevin said. “In
effect, Evans has done nothing more than succinctly name the
conclusions enunciated by those before him.”

Langevin, a member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues,
noted that Evans’ remarks correspond with the signed statements of
over 120 renowned Holocaust and Genocide scholars on the
“incontestable fact of the Armenian Genocide,” and that of the
International Center for Transitional Justice on the use of the term
Armenian Genocide, which states that: “The Events, viewed
collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as
well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would be
justified in continuing to so describe them.”

Langevin also said that the ability of Armenians to survive in the
face of repression is a testament to their will to survive.
“Therefore, it is critically important that the United States speak
with one voice in condemning the horrors committed against the
Armenians,” he concluded.

In other news, Langevin this week signed his support to a
congressional letter to President Bush, asking that he acknowledge
this crime against humanity. The letter, initiated by Armenian Caucus
Co-Chairmen Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ),
currently has the backing of 75 Members of the House of
Representatives.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership
organization.

###

NR#2005-030

Photograph available on the Assembly Web site at the following link:

Caption: Congressman James R. Langevin (D-RI)

Editor’s Note: Attached is the full text of Congressman Langevin’s
remarks to Members of the House of Representatives.

The Honorable James R. Langevin
Statement on Recognizing the Armenian Genocide
March 17, 2005

Mr. Speaker, I rise today to commend U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John
Evans for properly labeling the atrocities committed by the Ottoman
Empire against the Armenians as genocide and to urge the President to
follow his example and accurately characterize this crime against
humanity in his commemorative statement next month.

Ambassador Evans recently completed his first U.S. visit to major
Armenian-American communities to share his initial impressions of
Armenia and our programs there. During his public exchanges with
Armenian-American communities throughout the United States late last
month, Ambassador Evans declared that “the Armenian Genocide was the
first genocide of the twentieth century.”

By employing this term, the Ambassador is building on previous
statements by Presidents Reagan and Bush, as well as the repeated
declarations of numerous world-renowned scholars. In effect, Evans
has done nothing more than succinctly name the conclusions enunciated
by those before him.

In 1981, President Reagan issued a presidential proclamation that said
in part: “like the genocide of the Armenians before it, and the
genocide of the Cambodians which followed it – and like too many other
persecutions of too many other people – the lessons of the Holocaust
must never be forgotten…” President Bush, himself, has invoked the
textbook definition of genocide in his preceding April 24th statements
by using the expressions “annihilation” and “forced exile and murder”
to characterize this example of man’s inhumanity to man.

Furthermore, Evans’ remarks correspond with the signed statement in
2000 by one hundred and twenty-six Genocide and Holocaust scholars
affirming that the World War I Armenian Genocide is an incontestable
historical fact and accordingly urging the governments of Western
democracies to likewise recognize it as such. The petitioners, among
whom is Nobel Laureate for Peace Elie Wiesel, also asked the Western
Democracies to urge the Government and Parliament of Turkey to finally
come to terms with a dark chapter of Ottoman-Turkish history and to
recognize the Armenian Genocide.

The Ambassador’s declarations also conform to the summary conclusions
of the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) when it
facilitated an independent legal study on the applicability of the
1948 Genocide Convention to events that occurred during the early
twentieth century. The ICTJ report stated that “the Events, viewed
collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as
well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would be
justified in continuing to so describe them.”

The Armenian people’s ability to survive in the face of the repression
carried out against them stands as a monument to their endurance and
will to live. Therefore, it is critically important that the United
States speak with one voice in condemning the horrors committed
against the Armenians. Only by working to preserve the truth about
the Armenian Genocide can we hope to spare future generations from the
horrors of the past.

In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I join the Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs,
Representatives Frank Pallone and Joe Knollenberg, in applauding the
statements of Ambassador Evans and others, and in urging the President
to reaffirm the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide.

-30-

http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2005-030/2005-030-1.jpg
www.armenianassembly.org

FM Addresses UN Commission on Human Rights, Addresses Genocide

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

FM Oskanian Addresses UN Commission on Human Rights
Addresses Genocide and Karabakh¹s Self-Determination

Minister Vartan Oskanian addressed the 61st session of the UN Human Rights
Commission in Geneva today. This is the first year of Armenia¹s second term
on the 53-member Commission.

The minister explained that Armenia¹s membership in this Commission is not
simply an organizational matter. He said that membership is ³as much a
product of our sense of responsibility as of our deep, immediate daily
awareness that individual human rights, the basic human rights of a society,
and individual and collective security are all inextricably, inarguably,
expressly interconnected.² For Armenians, he said ³the human rights
principle, the concept of man¹s inalienable rights touches a raw nerve. We
spent the greatest part of the last century under a regime that endured
solely because of the absence of human rights. Immediately prior to that
period, we had the dubious honor of being the century¹s first victims of
genocide. At the end of the century, we were still fighting to secure the
rights of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.²

Then the Minister focused on Genocide and the issue of Nagorno Karabakh
self-determination.

On Genocide, he explained that for Armenians, ³As a minority, living in the
Ottoman Empire, their call for the application of the lofty principles of
liberty, equality and fraternity, led to their death sentence. Today, their
survivors, living within and outside the Republic of Armenia expect that the
world¹s avowal of the universality of those same noble principles will lead
to recognition that Genocide was committed against Armenians.²

Referring to recent calls by the Turkish leadership for a historical debate,
the Minister reiterated Armenia¹s readiness for dialogue.

³Let¹s not confuse the two kinds of dialogue,² he said. ³One is a debate
about history. The other is a political discussion. Periodic calls by
various Turkish administrations for historical debate simply delay the
process of reconciling with the truth.²

On the struggle of the people of Nagorno Karabakh for self-determination,
the Minister remarked, ³Ironically, Mr. Chairman, even as societies have
learned to support the victims of domestic violence, we have not yet
graduated to offering the same support to victims of international or
government violence. At best, the world watches silently as the victims
attempt to defend themselves, and if somehow, against great odds, they
succeed, then the world quickly pulls back, as the state loudly cries foul
and claims sovereignty and territorial integrity.
³Just as the perpetrator of domestic violence loses the moral right to
custody, so then, does a government that commits and promotes violence
against its own citizens lose its rights. It is in such instances that the
notion of self-determination is significant and legitimate.²

The Minister concluded his remarks with, ³Mr. Chairman, for us, defense and
protection of human rights is not an abstract principle. It is the
difference between survival and annihilation. We believe it is the same for
many in the world. Yet, our individual and collective tendency is to ignore
or neglect problems for which we have no immediate answer or prospect for
solution. This is even more true in situations which defy belief, surpass
common norms, and shake our very assumptions and values. For these very
reasons, in our ever-shrinking world, what is required is resolve on the
part of the committed in order to expand the engagement of those still
hesitant.²

On the margins of the Commission¹s annual meeting, the Minister met with
Dimitri Rupel, Slovenia¹s Foreign Minister and Chairman-in-Office of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. He also met with the
Foreign Minister of Finland, Laila Freivalds. He also met with the President
of the ICRC, Jacob Kellenberger, and Sergei Orjonikidse, Director General of
the Geneval office of the United Nations.

Below is the full text of the Minister¹s statement.

Mr. Chairman,

This is a special year for multilateral diplomacy as we celebrate the 60th
anniversary of the United Nations. This is also a critical year as we
contemplate the reforms necessary to bring this institution, the UN, in line
with the various evolutions and revolutions that the world has seen in this
past 60 years. The UN is the place where we have built security institutions
and structures on the foundations of human freedom and economic access.
Here, we both take from and give to a more interdependent world. With the
future in mind, this is place where we will eventually look to find ways to
avoid threats as we broaden and enlarge human rights and civil liberties.

It is noteworthy that the Commission on Human Rights is the only
non-principal UN body which has been mentioned in the High Level Panel
Report and for which far-reaching reforms have been recommended for this
commission. That is because I believe all of today¹s biggest challenges
affect and are affected by the absence of or adherence to human rights. This
makes the nature of the report very important. How and with what instruments
and mechanisms those rights are to be protected is the concern addressed by
the report and by each of us. Everyone in the international community need
to become engaged as we contemplate that report.

The international community¹s increased focus on shared responsibility for
promoting human rights and freedoms at the national level requires open and
enhanced international co-operation. To justify the need to make new
decisions about old problems, do we need to constantly remind ourselves that
our world is not the same as it was 60 years ago, or even 15 years ago?
Then, local human rights abridgements were local or domestic tragedies.
Today, such abridgements are the first step toward international
catastrophes. Hiding behind national sovereignty in order to avoid
responsibility for to provide protection to human rights, today, risks
proliferation of injustice, insecurity, misery and conflict,
internationally.

Mr. Chairman,
Armenia¹s membership in the Commission on Human Rights is as much a function
of our sense of responsibility as of our deep sense of belief and conviction
that the basic human rights of a society, and individual and collective
security are all inextricably, inarguably, expressly interconnected. For
Armenians, the human rights principle, the concept of man¹s inalienable
rights touches a raw nerve. We lived the greatest part of the last century
under a regime that endured solely because of the absence of human rights,
civil liberties and freedoms. Immediately prior to that period, we had the
dubious honor of being the century¹s first victims of genocide. At the end
of that century and today still, we were still fighting to secure the rights
of self-determination of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.

Let me reflect on each of these.

After living, as I said, under an ideologically different helmet only
fourteen years ago, our domestic experience has been difficult and sometimes
bumpy. We have learned to believe less in snap changes, we have our reasons
to be sceptical of revolutions, we know that smooth public relations do not
last as long as decent human relations. Therefore, as last year, so next
year, we will continue to build on our successes, through evolutionary,
incremental ways: poverty reduction, protecting the rights of conscientious
objectors and religious sects, reforming the judicial system, strengthening
political diversity and free expression, protecting and promoting the rights
of women and children, fighting human traffickers.

As for Genocide, Mr. Chairman, it is the ultimate manifestation of the
violation of human rights. This year marks the 90th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide. Two-thirds of the Armenian population perished between
1915 and 1918. As a minority, living in the Ottoman Empire, their call for
the application of the lofty principles of liberty, equality and fraternity,
led to their death sentence. Today, their survivors, living within and
outside the Republic of Armenia expect that the world¹s avowal of the
universality of those same noble principles will lead to recognition that
Genocide was committed against Armenians.

Ninety years after the event, we still live with the memory of suffering
unrelieved by strong condemnation and unequivocal recognition. In this we
are not alone. The catharsis that victims deserve and societies require in
order to heal and move forward together, obliges me to appeal to the
international community to call things by their name, to remove the veil of
obfuscation, of double standards, of political expediency.

Very recently, at the highest levels, the Turkish leadership called for a
historical debate. They suggested that historians from Turkey and Armenia go
thru archives and sort out this issue. My immediate response that Armenia
would not participate in a historical debate was interpreted as rejection of
dialogue.

Let¹s not confuse the two kinds of dialogue. One is a debate about history.
The other is a political discussion. Periodic calls by various Turkish
administrations for historical debate simply delay the process of
reconciling with the truth. The facts are clear. The historical record is
clear. We know well what happened to our forebears. Even in the first days
of the Turkish Republic, the local Turkish authorities who had actually
carried out the genocidal acts were tried and found guilty by their own
Turkish courts. The Turks themselves, for their own reasons, put aside that
historical record and moved away from that honest, dignified approach to one
of denial and rejection. Turkey owes the world¹s generation that recognition
so we move forward.

Mr. Chairman,

This slice of our history is even more reason for the international
community to denounce genocide, once and for always, as a political tool. We
commend the Secretary General¹s 5-point action plan, we believe in
strengthening the capacity and mandate of his Advisor on Genocide, and we
believe that governments who commit Genocide must be persecuted and
prosecuted the governments who commit genocide.

Inability to continue down this path means we have failed structurally and
institutionally. It also means we have failed to make the difficult policy
choices because of short-term political costs, even though we know well that
there will be long-term human and international consequences. A financially
bankrupt government is turned over to international organizations until it
reforms and renounces its wrongs. Can we tolerate any less of a government
which is morally bankrupt? Do we want successive generations to believe that
genocide is inevitable in each generation, on each continent? Can we allow
governments to commit such massive violence against their own people? How
can we explain why a report on Threats Challenges and Change must consider
genocide a threat, even at the beginning of the 21st century?

Finally, the third human rights issue is that of the self-determination of
the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh.

Ironically, Mr. Chairman, even as societies have learned to support the
victims of domestic violence, we have not yet graduated to offering the same
support to victims of international or government violence. At best, the
world watches silently as the victims attempt to defend themselves, and if
somehow, against great odds, they succeed, then the world quickly pulls
back, as the state loudly cries foul and claims sovereignty and territorial
integrity.

Just as the perpetrator of domestic violence loses the moral right to
custody, so does a government that commits and promotes violence against its
own citizens lose its rights. It is in such instances that the notion of
self-determination is significant and legitimate.

This is exactly what happened to the people of Nagorno Karabakh during the
days of the collapse of the USSR when they opted, peacefully, for
self-determination. The government of Azerbaijan immediately not only
rejected the peaceful dialogue but resorted immediately to forceful
suppression of those aspirations. Azerbaijan continued to militarily
respond. At one point, the people of Nagorno Karabakh were on the verge of
annihilation had there not been the last minute mobilization and their
determination to fight for their lives, homes and their homeland. Today the
government of Azerbaijan has lost the moral right to even suggest providing
for their security and their future, let alone to talk of custody of the
people of Nagorno Karabakh.

Mr. Chairman, for us, defense and protection of human rights is not an
abstract principle. It is the difference between survival and annihilation.
We believe it is the same for many in the world. Yet, our individual and
collective tendency is to ignore or neglect problems for which we have no
immediate answer or prospect for solution. This is even more true in
situations which defy belief, surpass common norms, and shake our very
assumptions and values. For these very reasons, in our ever-shrinking world,
what is required is resolve on the part of the committed in order to expand
the engagement of those still hesitant.

END

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am

US Embassy to Armenia grants 8 vehicles to Armenian border guards

ArmenPress
March 14 2005

US EMBASSY TO ARMENIA GRANTS EIGHT VEHICLES TO ARMENIAN BORDER GUARDS

YEREVAN, MARCH 14, ARMENPRESS: “The Armenian Government has taken
on the challenge of securing its borders, and the U.S. Embassy is
proud to help with this important effort,” U.S. Deputy Chief of
Mission Anthony F. Godfrey said today at an official ceremony to mark
the U.S. Embassy’s (EXBS) Export Control and Related Border Security
Assistance Program grant of eight vehicles to the Armenia’s National
Security Service Border Guards. The vehicles include 3 NIVA’s, 2
LADA’s and 3 Specialized All-Terrain Vehicles (ATV’s) for off-road
patrolling. Border Guard Troop Commander Vjacheslav Voskanian also
participated in the ceremony at Border Guard Headquarters.
“EXBS is one of the most important assistance programs the U.S.
Embassy is involved in,” DCM Godfrey told journalists at the event,
“Stopping the proliferation of biological and chemical weapons
through proper boarder controls is very important to all countries,
and we are glad to see that Armenia has made it a high priority.”
Asked about assistance levels for this type of program in 2005,
DCM Godfrey responded, “This is not the first border and customs
grant we have undertaken, and it is certainly not the last. We have a
budget of $1.3 million for this year, which will go toward both
equipment transfer and training.”
The Export Control and Related Border Security Assistance Program,
administered by the Department of State and the U.S. Homeland
Security Agency, has been operating in Armenia since 2000. The
Program operates in more than 45 countries, and is designed to
strengthen and secure borders by providing the latest in interdiction
equipment, and by developing the enforcement skills of both the
Border Guards and Customs Service in the fight against worldwide
terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, and chemical and biological
warfare.
The EXBS Program for Armenia continues to conduct formal training
seminars both locally and in the United States in order to provide
Border Guards and Customs Inspectors with the advanced techniques of
investigation necessary to identify sophisticated nuclear, chemical
and biological weapons.
Over the last several years the EXBS Assistance Program has
equipped the Border Guards and Customs Services of Armenia with
various types of inspection and detection equipment: a
radio-communication system, several types of border sensors, metal
detectors, vehicles, computer equipment, cargo truck scales, and
X-ray units. Last year, the EXBS Assistance Program initiated several
construction projects to upgrade the Border Guards Port of Entry
checkpoint facility at Bagratashen, Border Guards barracks at the
Gogavan Port of Entry, and both Border Guard and Customs training
facilities in Yerevan.

Sugar refinary in Sevan to double output

ArmenPress
March 14 2005

SUGAR REFINERY IN SEVAN TO DOUBLE OUTPUT

SEVAN, MARCH 14, ARMENPRESS: A sugar-refinery in the town of Sevan
plans to increase the daily output of sugar to 25 tons by the end of
this year. Refinery’s director Armen Arakelian told Armenpress it
produces now around 12 tons of sugar daily. In 2003 its daily output
was only 5 tons.
However, its output meets only 4 percent of domestic demand. For
the time being the plant imports raw material, but it hopes that
farmers in the province would shift to growing sugar-beet soon. The
plant began working in 2003 and employs now 83 people.

ANKARA: German Embassy In Ankara: Documents In German ArchivesPertai

Turkish Press
March 11 2005

German Embassy In Ankara: Documents In German Archives Pertaining To
Armenians Are Completely Open To Everybody
Published: 3/11/2005

ANKARA – German Embassy in Ankara said on Thursday that the documents
in German archives pertaining to Armenians were completely open
to everybody.

The Embassy issued a statement and said, “all German official documents
belonging to the period before 1945 are open to researches without
any restrictions.”

Emphasizing that this was particularly valid for the documents of
German Foreign Ministry Political Archives Department, the statement
said the documents had a particular importance as there had been
intensive diplomatic and military relations between Germany and the
Ottoman Empire being allies at those times and due to facilities to
acquire information were well.

The statement said the files pertaining to the issue were open to
everybody in Political Archives in Berlin.

The statement said all of those files were given to Armenia as
microfiche in 1998, and that Turkey took a copy of it.

Council of Europe: Does Italy have freedom of the press? Opinion o

Council of Europe: Does Italy have freedom of the press?
Opinion of the Venice Commission to be discussed on Saturday

Venice, 11 March 2005 – Does media pluralism exist in Italy? The
Venice Commission has been asked by the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe to give an opinion on this question in the light of
the Gasparri Law (consolidated legislation on television
broadcasting) and the Frattini Law (conflicts of interests). This
reveals the Parliamentary Assembly’s fear that Italy, an “old”
democracy, may be violating a freedom, the freedom of expression,
crucially important if a society is to call itself “democratic”. The
subject will be raised during the 62nd plenary session of the
Commission which will take place at the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni
Evangelista from 11 to 12 March. The Commission – chaired by Antonio
La Pergola and composed of 50 distinguished independent legal experts
from different European countries who are totally impartial – is to
state whether the two laws lately passed by the Italian Parliament
meet Council of Europe standards and the criteria laid down by the
European Court of Human Rights.

In January a delegation of the Commission headed by its Secretary
Gianni Buquicchio spent two days in Roma consulting the categories
directly concerned and institutional and political figures, and
looking into the technical aspects of the two laws and their
implications for freedom of the press in Italy.

The Venice Commission’s delegates, MM Tuori (Finland), Helgesen
(Norway), Grabenwarter (Austria) and Paczolay (Hungary) met
Government and Parliament representatives, spokesmen for the majority
and the opposition, communication watchdogs and members of the
“Commissione di Vigilanza” (supervisory committee) for the Rai
broadcasting authority, the leadership of the journalist’s
association and representatives of the Press Federation.

During the 62nd plenary session, the Venice Commission will also
consider the possible need for constitutional reform in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, the proposed constitutional reform in Georgia, and the
provisions governing religious freedom in Serbia and Montenegro and

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