Red Crystal Becomes Additional Protective Emblem

RED CRYSTAL BECOMES ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE EMBLEM

Yerevan, January 15. ArmInfo. The International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC) and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies (IFRC) welcome the entry into force on 14 January
2007 of the Third Protocol additional to the Geneva Conventions of
1949. The Third Protocol introduces a protective emblem called the
red crystal alongside the red cross and red crescent emblems.

The adoption of the red crystal reaffirms the determination of the
International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement to consolidate its
universality and thereby to enhance its strength and credibility. By
offering new possibilities for protection and identification to
National Societies and States that wish to use the red crystal, the
Third Protocol exemplifies the Movement’s commitment to neutral and
independent humanitarian action. Ultimately, the goal is to improve
protection for all those who need it, be they beneficiaries of
humanitarian aid or persons striving to deliver it.

The Third Protocol was adopted by a large majority of States at
a diplomatic conference held in December 2005 in Geneva. The 29th
International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, which took
place in June 2006, amended the Movement’s statutes to incorporate
the additional emblem.

So far, 84 States have signed the Third Protocol and nine States have
ratified it. The Swiss government is the depositary of the treaty.

Now the challenge will be to generate the same worldwide recognition
of and respect for the red crystal as is widely afforded to the red
cross and red crescent. This is a long-term task that must be pursued
by the members of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement
and by the States party to the Geneva Conventions.

Normalization Of Armenian Turkish Relations In Ankara’s Hands

NORMALIZATION OF ARMENIAN TURKISH RELATIONS IN ANKARA’S HANDS

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.01.2007 17:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ All aspects of normalization of the Armenian-Turkish
relations – opening of borders, establishment of diplomatic relations
and acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide – are in Ankara’s
hands, U.S. expert Richard Giragosian told a news conference
in Yerevan. According to him, all depends on the outcomes
of the current "ideological revolution" in Turkey. "Turkish
national self-consciousness is in process of re-comprehension
at present. Supporters of European integration tend to the West;
Islamists are aspired to the East.

Everything depends on those who will come to power after the
presidential and parliamentary election.

Nevertheless, one thing is clear: the Armenian Genocide recognition
issue is a deadlock for Turkey from diplomatic standpoint. Armenia
is right stating readiness for dialogue without preconditions," the
expert underscored. At that he considers that Turkey is held hostage
by Azerbaijan and that is why cannot cooperate with all the states of
the region. "The Armenian Genocide recognition is not a priority for
the normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations but it’s needed
for Turkey’s future," Richard Giragosian said.

Nalbandyan Lost To Marat Safin

NALBANDYAN LOST TO MARAT SAFIN

ArmRadio.am
11.01.2007 16:58

In the first round of the tournament held in the city of Koyong not
far from Melbourne Argentinean Armenian tennis player David Nalbandyan
lost to Russian Marat Safin with the score 1:2 (7:5, 1:6, 2:6). David
Nalbandyan arrived in Melbourne with knee injury and it’s not clear so
far whether he will be able to participate in the first "Grand Slam"
tournament – the Australian Open, which will soon start in Melbourne.

Diasporan Students Take Action for Armenia

PRESS RELEASE
Advocates for Armenia
CONTACT: Tamar Hayrikyan, Officer
P.O.Box 250771
New York, NY 10025
Email: [email protected]
http://www.advocates forarmenia.org/
Tel: 781.913.7617

*College Students Work Towards Greater Role for the Diaspora in **Armenia**’s
Development*

New York, N.Y. –

On February 3rd and 4th, 2007 Armenian students from all over the United
States and Canada will gather at Columbia University in New York City to
discuss the challenges and opportunities for development in Armenia. Organized
by the Columbia University Armenian Club and Advocates for Armenia , the
summit is being sponsored by the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU)
and the Armenian Center at Columbia University.

The purpose of the summit, titled "Armenia’s Development: The Students’
Role", is to empower young Armenians to effect positive change in Armenia
today. The two-day meeting will feature presentations by prominent figures
in the developing fields of business, information technology, health, law,
and education, as well as addresses by high-ranking Armenian diplomats.
These presentations will set the stage for the core of the summit: Intensive
working sessions that will facilitate student action. During these sessions,
student participants will work with experts to formulate innovative ideas
for specific, small-scale projects to be implemented in Armenia within the
next two years.

Founder and Coordinator of Advocates for Armenia, Levon Bagramian, believes
that activities such as this summit should become frequent in the Armenian
communities of the United States. "We are trying to get people to shift
their attention to things that matter, things that will outlive us," says
Bagramian. "We believe that Armenians of our generation have a lot at stake
in the future of Armenia, a country that has been growing and changing at a
pace unprecedented in its recent history. At the end of this road, we
envision an Armenia that is independent, peaceful, prosperous and
democratic. Until then, we will not be satisfied with sitting back and
watching it happen on its own. We have made the decision to be a part of the
action, and we encourage our colleagues from the Diaspora to do the same."

Registration is open to everyone on a first-come first-serve basis. More
information and access to the registration page are available at

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/armenian.

Second Ferryboat Line To Link Armenia With Russia

SECOND FERRYBOAT LINE TO LINK ARMENIA WITH RUSSIA

Armenpress
Jan 09 2007

YEREVAN, JANUARY 9, ARMENPRESS: Armenia has been posting double-digit
economic growth rates in the last several years with its foreign trade
growing 20-25 percent annually. Armenpress asked Arsen Ghazarian,
chairman of the Armenian Union of Industrialists and Businessmen,
(he is also director general of Apaven forwarding company), to
share his views on whether the current external transport and road
infrastructures are sufficient to meet the demands of the expanding
business.

A. Being constrained by a partial blockade and being unable to use
some of major roads, for example the railways conduits towards Russia,
Iran, Turkey and Europe, Armenia has managed through these years
to adapt to working in these conditions and its economy has been
expanding by double-digit rates in the last 5 years with forwarding
companies making their contribution to the overall GDP growth. These
companies are trying to improve their services and make them conform
with international standards. But transport infrastructures-sea
ports, railways and terminals may fail in several years to meet the
demands of expanding economy. Nevertheless I believe we will be able
to resist in upcoming years regional competition challenges, posed
also by transport infrastructures.

Q. What routes Armenian businessmen are using now to conduct foreign
trade and are there prospects for new routes that could open any
time soon?

A. Now there are two major roads linking Armenia to the external
world. One of them is through Iran from where Armenian businessmen
can reach the Persian Gulf and further towards East and the second
route lies through Georgian ports of Poti and Batumi on the Black Sea.

Armenian businessmen use seaways to transport their cargo batches
to Russia, particularly, by Poti-Novorosiysk and Poti-Ilichevsk
ferryboats. A program envisaging foundation of a second ferryboat line
with a Russian port, by the way, this program has been elaborated in
the last 10 years, is set to materialize soon and in all likelihood
in March or April we shall have a second ferryboat line between the
port of Poti and the Russian port of Kavkaz.

Vessels with required displacement have been constructed to
operate this new route as the Russian port Kavkaz is in shallow
waters. Operation of this new route will enable Armenian businessmen
to transport their goods to Russia by freight cars and this in turn
will decrease all costs by 20-25 percent and will fill also the gap
that was caused by the closure of Azerbaijani and Abkhazian railways
for Armenia.

This new road will also boost development of facilities in Georgian
sea ports- construction of new terminals and mooring lines. We also
appreciate the decision of the government on handing the Armenian
Railway to a concessional management that will be accomplished in
2008. The company that will win the right to run the Armenian Railways
will have to make serious investments to improve its overall operation
and management.

Reopening of the Abkhazian section of the railway and of another
railway from Turkish Kars to Armenian Gyumri offer alternative
options but they are possible only after the settlement of the
Georgian-Abkhazia conflict and normalization of Armenia-Turkey
relationships. Given this Armenia will regain its once status of a
transit transport juncture.

Q. Several years ago a new $20 million worth terminal was built for
Zvartnots airport to make Armenia a transit country for transportation
of goods by air. Does it serve this goal?

A. The terminal was built on a $20 million credit and in conformity
with European standards. It is supposed to become a transit juncture
for both passenger and cargo aircrafts. A government decision that has
adopted the so-called ‘5th free corridor’ for cargo transportation
will give a fresh boost to these plans. In view of a tough struggle
launched by Lufthansa, British Airways, Austrian Airlines and Russian
carriers for Armenian air market and in view of a new terminal which
is being built for the airport we can say that real opportunities
are opening for invested money to serve their goals.

Serbian Foreign Minister Criticizes Armenian Arms Deal

SERBIAN FOREIGN MINISTER CRITICIZES ARMENIAN ARMS DEAL

Vecernje novosti, Belgrade, Serbia
Dec 6 2007

Interview with Serbian Minister of Foreign Affairs Vuk Draskovic by
Tanja Markotic

"Serbian diplomacy increasingly private!"

The story of arms exports to Armenia continues. As Kragujevac armourers
await a denouement, the domestic political discord between President
Tadic and Prime Minister Kostunica is setting the decisive tone in
the entire matter more than anything else.

Foreign Minister Vuk Draskovic, whose ministry has come under fire for
refusing to issue the permit for that arms export, explains to Vecernje
Novosti that that does fall under his purview. He also criticizes the
steps taken by President Tadic in recent days in connection with the
controversial export deal.

[Draskovic] The Ministry of Foreign Affairs does not issue permits
for the exportation of arms; rather, that is the job of the Serbian
government. We only provide a political opinion, and that opinion
has not changed from the outset. We have long declared that the OSCE
has imposed an arms embargo on Armenia and Azerbaijan because of
the conflict in Nagornyy-Karabakh and that there is an instructive
Resolution 8153 by the UN Security Council that requires all countries
to refrain from supplying "any arms or ammunition to Armenia or
Azerbaijan." Then there is the decision by the US Government to
discontinue business with countries that violate arms embargoes. Since
the Kragujevac arms manufacturers earn more than 20m dollars a year
from exporting arms to the United States, there is a big risk of
losing 22m dollars because of that 2m dollars deal with Armenia,
but from the outset I have thought that the state should compensate
the arms manufacturers.

[Markotic] What does that mean in concrete terms? That our arms
manufacturers will nevertheless be unable to export arms to Armenia?

[Draskovic] They will if the government decides they can, because
that it entirely under their purview. If that is what the government
decides after this, in my opinion, irresponsible and private diplomacy
by President Tadic, then our state is obliged to report that exporting
of arms to the OSCE and the United Nations and explain to them why
the embargo and the UN instructive resolution were violated.

[Markotic] How it is possible, then, for Russia to give a positive
opinion about the arms export while both the OSCE and the United
Nations oppose it?

[Draskovic] There has never been a Russian embargo on exporting arms to
Armenia and Azerbaijan, and so there was no reason for the president
to send his emissaries to Moscow and ask permission to export arms to
Armenia. He should have read the opinion of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, but he either failed to read that or ignored it. Because of
all that, we are in a very difficult and awkward situation.

[Markotic] So how does the government intend to resolve this situation
now?

[Draskovic] The government, as the prime minister has told me, has
been presented with a fait accompli. This is a typical example of
how not to engage in diplomacy. It should not be done privately or
for partisan-electioneering purposes.

[Markotic] It is already more than obvious that Prime Minister
Kostunica and President Tadic are also at odds over dispatching our
ambassadors who have already been accredited by their host countries.

Have you discussed this with Tadic? Why does he refuse to sign the
letters of credence?

[Draskovic] We have officially asked the office of the president to
sign the orders and letters of credence on several occasions. But we
have either heard a negative response or no response at all. This
is absurd and inexplicable. President Tadic’s explanation that he
is waiting for the election is hardly acceptable in view of the
fact that these are ambassadorial positions that have been vacant
for seven months now. Aside from ambassadors to the United Nations
and the OSCE, Serbia has not sent out a single ambassador since
Montenegro’s departure.

[Markotic] Does the appointment of ambassadors impact Serbia’s position
at a time when negotiations on Kosovo are going on? Opinions about
that vary.

[Draskovic] Of course a vacant ambassadorship is very harmful to
Serbia’s interests. We do not have ambassadors in some countries that
are members of the Contact Group, which is in charge of deciding
the future status of Kosovo – Russia, Great Britain, and Italy. To
say nothing of other countries that are also very important to a
resolution of the Kosovo issue, such as Spain, Belgium, or Finland,
where, say, the ambassador was proposed in June, when Finland began
its EU presidency. Now that has ended, and we still have no ambassador
in Helsinki. Well, that is irresponsible foreign policy.

[Markotic] Could it soon be the case that Serbia has no ambassador
in Washington either, since Ivan Vujacic’s mandate has expired?

[Draskovic] No. Ambassador Vujacic will remain there until a
replacement is chosen. [Passage omitted]

Lecture on Genocide Recognition, Turkey-Armenia Relations, Diaspora

PRESS RELEASE
ARPA Institute
18106 Miranda St. Tarzana, CA 91356
Contact: Hagop Panossian
Tel: (818) 586-9660
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

ARPA Institute presents the Lecture/Seminar: "Genocide
Recognition, Turkey-Armenia Relations and the Role of
the Diaspora," by Mr. Harout Sassounian, on Thursday,
January 25, 2007 at the Merdinian School auditorium.

The Address is 13330 Riverside Dr., Sherman Oaks, CA
91403. Directions: on the 101 FWY exit on Woodman, go
north and turn right on Riverside Dr.

Abstract: Mr. Sassounian’s lecture will cover several
topics, followed by an exchange of views with the
audience:

— Genocide recognition, is it really necessary?
— Should Armenians support or oppose the application
of Turkey for EU Membership?
— Turkey-Armenia relations
— Diaspora-Armenia relations
— How best to organize the Diaspora?
— The firing of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans
— The hold on the nomination of Ambassador-designate
Richard Hoagland
— UAF’s assistance to Armenia and Lebanon
— Lincy Foundation’s infrastructure projects in
Armenia and Artsakh

Harut Sassounian, the publisher of The California
Courier newspaper, is the President of the United
Armenian Fund which has shipped $460 million worth of
humanitarian assistance to Armenia since 1989. He is
also the Vice Chairman of The Lincy Foundation which
has funded $230 million worth of infrastructure
projects in Armenia and Artsakh. He worked for Procter
and Gamble in Geneva, Switzerland, as an international
marketing executive from 1978 to 1982. He served for
10 years as a non-governmental delegate on human
rights at the United Nations in Geneva, playing a key
role in the UN recognition of the Armenian Genocide in
1985. He has a Master’s degree in International
Affairs from Columbia University (NY) and an MBA from
Pepperdine University. His book, `The Armenian
Genocide: The World Speaks Out, 1915-2005, Documents
and Declarations,’ published in 2005, was republished
in Arabic translation in Lebanon in 2006. He has been
awarded the `Anania Shiragatsi’ medal of honor by the
President of Armenia and has received numerous other
awards for his leadership and community activities.

For more Information Please call Dr. Hagop Panossian
at (818)586-9660

http://www.arpainstitute.org/

Why Turks are growing disillusioned with Europe

Why Turks are growing disillusioned with Europe

The Financial Times
By Vincent Boland
Published: January 3 2007 22:52 | Last updated: January 3 2007 22:52

In 1933 Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the father of modern Turkey, threw down a
tantalising challenge to his countrymen on the 10th anniversary of the
founding of the republic: `We shall raise our country to the level of the
most prosperous and civilised countries … we shall raise our national
culture above the level of contemporary civilisation,’ he said.

Atatürk, who died in 1938, bequeathed many exhortations to the Turks. Some
are pithy, some are apocryphal and one or two are even wise. They can be
found today in school textbooks and engraved on the walls of official
buildings. But the reference to `contemporary civilisation’ is more
ambiguous than most. It is generally assumed by Turks that he meant that
Turkey, once the heart of the Ottoman Empire, should become European. He
admired French republicanism and the British parliamentary system and under
his leadership Turkey adopted the weekend, western dress and an army on the
French model, beginning a journey westward that continues more than 80 years
later.
But the ambiguity of the remark, long overlooked, seems prophetic today.
Inside Turkey, the debate about `contemporary civilisation’ is as pertinent
now as it was in Atatürk’s time and this year will be critical in shaping
its outcome. Last year Turkey’s long-held ambition to join the European
Union suffered a head-on clash with reality. The negotiating process is now
partly frozen because of a dispute with Brussels over Cyprus.

Hostility in some EU countries to Turkey’s membership is increasing, while
support for membership among Turks is falling. This year, two events will
have a decisive impact on Turkey’s European ambition. Turkey’s parliament is
due to elect a new president in May in a process that could change the
country’s political dynamic, especially if Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime
minister, seeks the presidency (he has not ruled out such a move). Also,
parliamentary elections slated for November could usher in a coalition
government that lacks the singlemindedness with which Mr Erdogan’s ruling
neo-Islamist Justice and Development party has pursued EU membership.

By the end of 2007, Turkey’s relationship with Europe will not be decided
but it may be clarified. The elections will take place against a background
of a profound change in public consensus on the EU. When Turkey began its
accession process to join the EU in 2004, support for membership stood above
two-thirds. per cent, according to a recent opinion poll in Milliyet,
a Now it is about 35 daily newspaper. The decline is matched by rising
suspicion of the west more generally. The German Marshall Fund of the United
States, in its 2006 Transatlantic Trends survey, showed that Turkey’s
attitude towards the US, on a 100-point scale, declined from 28 in 2004 to
20 in 2006, and towards the EU from 52 to 45.

This about-turn in perceptions is shaking the faith of even the truest
believers in the country’s European destiny. Umit Boyner, a businesswoman
who heads a corporate initiative to promote Turkey in the EU, says: `Most of
us wanted to believe that the EU meant democracy and minority rights and
women’s rights and fighting corruption. Now we see this phobia about Turkey,
this feeling that we are not wanted by other Europeans, and we are asking
ourselves: `Is this really the Europe we believed in, or were we kidding
ourselves?”

The EU’s failure to honour a commitment to end the isolation of Turkish
Cypriots in northern Cyprus is the most obvious cause of this change in
sentiment. The recent vote in the lower house of the French parliament to
make it a crime to deny that the massacre of Armenians in 1915-16 was
genocide created much bitterness. It also led to a backlash against France,
perceived as the most formidable opponent of Turkey’s EU membership.

The EU’s constant focus on minority rights and the role of the armed forces,
mixed with the perception among large numbers of Turks of rising
Islamophobia in Europe, has added to the feeling that the EU is casting
around for an excuse to say a final No to Turkey’s membership. EU officials
insist, however, that the human and political rights of prospective members
are always closely scrutinised and that the door to Turkey remains open.

Cengiz Aktar, a professor and staunch pro-European at Bahcesehir University
in Istanbul, says the tone of the debate in some EU countries suggests that
Turkey is being made to address a question that no other member state has
had to address: whether it is a European country. `Nobody questions the
`Europeanness’ even of Cyprus, which is closer to the Middle East than
Ankara, but Turkey’s Europeanness is under question,’ he says.

Turkey is different from other aspiring EU member states in crucial
respects. Most of the formerly communist countries that have joined the EU
since the end of the cold war saw their destiny in Europe or were seduced by
Europe’s famed `soft power’ – its ability to persuade countries to transform
themselves, with the promise of membership, into stable democracies. This is
not the case with Turkey, a country with an embedded sense of identity based
on a distinctly hard nationalism inherited from Atatürk and the founders of
the republic through an ideology known as Kemalism.

Among its tenets are an unwavering belief in the soundness of Turkey’s
constitutional arrangements – which dictate a delicate balance between the
state and the citizen and parliament and the military – and fidelity to the
founding myths of the republic. These tenets are perceived, in some cases,
to be antithetical to European norms as set out in the Copenhagen Criteria –
a set of political objectives that aspiring EU members must achieve to get
in.

One of the most serious ideological clashes between Turkey and the EU
concerns the role of the military. Since 1923, Turkey’s armed forces have
seen themselves as the guardians of the republic and have staged four coups
d’état since the second world war (the fourth, in 1997, was a `post-modern
coup’ without actual tanks in the streets) as if to prove the point.

Turkey’s armed forces, a popular and monumentally self-important
institution, have agreed to greater civilian control of military affairs,
including budget supervision, as part of the EU process. But whether Turkey
is institutionally ready to accept a complete subordination of the military
to civilian authority, as the EU would require, is one of the central
ambiguities of the country’s European ambition. There are occasional signs
that the ostensibly pro-EU general staff is unconvinced that its vision of a
strong, centralised, sovereign Turkey is consistent with the country’s EU
membership.
If the military is undecided, so is the broad spectrum of public opinion.
For Turkey, joining the EU is a choice rather than a destiny. Because they
view it as a choice and see the decks increasingly stacked against them,
many are starting to rediscover their inner Kemalist. Turks are openly
questioning whether European norms or values are in any way superior to
those they already hold.
Kemalism may merely be a grander name for hard Turkish nationalism, suffused
with a strong sense of republicanism, sovereignty and self-reliance. But
whatever it is called, it is posing a direct challenge to the EU’s soft
power.

Sedat Laciner, director of the International Strategic Research
Organisation, a think-tank in Ankara, says Turkey’s experience of its EU
accession process is of a piece with its experience of other
western-inspired developments in Turkey’s neighbourhood in the past five
years – especially the invasion of Iraq, which remains hugely unpopular
among Turks, and the plight of the Palestinians. `All of these have changed
Turkish attitudes to the EU, with the result that the EU is losing the most
important tool in its arsenal, which is its ability to persuade Turkey to do
as it asks,’ Mr Laciner says.

Suat Kiniklioglu, director of the Ankara office of the German Marshall Fund
of the United States, sees a direct historical parallel between Turkey’s
most recent bout of suspicion of Europe and a similar attitude provoked in
the late 19th century by the agitation of foreign powers for minority rights
in the Ottoman Empire – which in practice would have given European citizens
living there almost colonial-style privileges.

The dynamic of Turkey’s relationship with the EU, where every aspect of its
modern identity and history appears to be a legitimate target for European
scrutiny and criticism, `is almost a replay of a time that invokes Turkey’s
worst fears about disintegration, about our unity being broken, about an
undue emphasis on minorities and people of non-Turkish stock,’ Mr
Kiniklioglu says. By `hitting Turkey on its most sensitive issues,’ he adds,
`the EU has overplayed its hand as far as the impact of its soft power is
concerned.’

The EU accession process has stimulated important reforms in Turkey – such
as changes to the country’s penal code and abolition of the death penalty.
But some commentators say the accession agreement between Turkey and the EU
contains the seeds of its own failure, because it does not offer Turks a
guarantee of membership. It is the first time such a pledge has been
withheld from a candidate country. Ahmet Evin, director of the Istanbul
Policy Centre at Sabanci University, says this fact compromises the EU’s
ability to use moral suasion to encourage Turkey to reform in the way that
would satisfy European public opinion. `The ability of the EU to Europeanise
Turkey is fatally undermined by this lack of commitment,’ he says.

A dialogue of the deaf would therefore appear to be preordained between
Turkey and Europe. A curious side-effect has been the manner in which
Turkish people are now turning on the EU with the message that `without
Turkey, the EU Erdogan has transformed his argument for Turkey’s membership
from is doomed’. Mr one of civil rights, economic stability and
greater democracy to one couched in religious and `civilisational’ terms.

Businesspeople are also increasingly likely to lecture the EU – as they did
at a recent World Economic Forum conference in Istanbul – about how Europe
needs Turkey’s young workforce, which is mainly unskilled, and its market,
which is large but relatively poor. Some observers say this argument is
indicative of the sometimes overblown notions Turks harbour about their
country’s strategic importance and urge a little modesty. `We have to
remember that we are the ones who want to join the club,’ Ms Boyner says.

Others say the basis of Turkey’s engagement with and understanding of the EU
needs to adapt to today’s realities. `The pro-EU argument in Turkey is
overstated by its supporters,’ says Ercan Uygur, professor of economics at
Ankara University. He says it was shaped initially by a lack of information
about the EU and now by a misunderstanding of what the EU might mean for
Turkey.

The EU is a choice for Turkey that should not be based on a
misunderstanding. `When it comes to a choice – an informed choice – most
Turks would still choose the European Union,’ Prof Uygur says.

aa70-0000779e2340.html

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/cec617aa-9b7b-11db-

TBILISI: Ethnic Armenians demand 5 member quota in de facto parl.

Daily Georgian Times, Georgia
Jan 5 2007

Ethnic Armenians demand 5 member quota in de facto parliament

Ethnic Armenians are seriously preparing for the upcoming elections
of the de facto Abkhazian parliament scheduled for 4 March. At
present the Abkhazian parliament of 35 MPs has only one Armenian MP,
Galust Trapizonyan.

Armenian Diaspora in Abkhazia has filed a requiest in Abkhazian
government in which he demands five member quota in Abkhazian
parliament, which will be represented by Armenians.

Experts tie the strengthening of Armenian Diaspora in Abkhazia to the
weakened positions of de facto president Baghapsh, who has a serious
rival in the election race, vice-president Raul Khajimba. Khajimba is
Moscow’s favourite and in fact governs the unrecognized republic.
Baghapsh, predicting possible defeat in the upcoming elections, has
no other way but to rely on the support of ethnic Armenians, who
represent the majority of the breakaway region’s population.

Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku project contradicts Georgia interests

14:43 28.12.2006
Permanent news address:

Expert: Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku project contradicts Georgia’s
interests The _Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku_ project contradicts
Georgia’s interests, as the main goal of the project initiated by
Ankara and Baku envisages turning Turkey into the key communication
center of the region, which indirectly supposes that role of Georgian
ports of Poti and Batumi will be reduced to zero, expert of Caucasus
Analytical Center _Aris Kazinyan_ believes.

According to him, despite the fact that officially the project is seen
in Georgia as a key factor of national security, however, in some
sense, the decision on participating in the project was imposed on
Tbilisi, so it is taken ambiguously by Georgia itself. Today many in
the country believe that the project decreases sharply Georgian
geopolitical opportunities and turns it into a kind of transit
state. As for Turkish position concerning the project, Kazinyan says,
an approach contrary to the Georgian one can be registered. In this
case, there is a traditional conflict of US and Turkish interests
involving the North-South corridor.

`The question is, Turkey is trying to minimize the role of Poti
andBatumi, and, as we can see, much money is being spent for it,’ the
expert says.

Besides, the USA factor is to be taken into account here. As Kazinyan
stressed, in this case, it is no matter to the USA what projects will
be implemented in the South-Caucasian region, the only requirement is
to provide the East-West direction instead of the North-South
one. This is the very reason why official Washington has shown a
restrained, to some extent, a pro-Armenian position concerning
effectiveness and prospects of laying the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilis
railroad. To some extent, the USA supports approach of official
Yerevan concerning effectiveness of operating the railway between Kars
and Tbilisi via the Armenian Gyumri, as in this case it meets the
interests of the Armenian lobby and official Yerevan (on the one hand)
and provides for latitudinal direction of communications, on the other
hand.

The USA is mostly interested, as the expert says, in Georgia’s NATO
membership, as it will put an end to possibility of using the
North-South direction.

In general, according to Kazinyan, operation of the
Kars-Gyumri-Tbilisi railway could have been profitable for
Turkey. `First, it could be good will gesture for Armenia. Besides, it
would make it unnecessary spend $400 mln for construction of the
Kars-Akhalkalaki section,’ the expert says. Moreover, as Kazinyan
notes, Armenia will become a hostage as it will only join Azerbaijan
and Turkey and nothing more. `In this situation Armenia does not have
access to Russia, it is difficult to imagine that an Armenian train
could reach Russia bypassing 7-8 Azerbaijani provinces.’ According to
the expert, the only factor that makes Turkey disagree with the
variant is the prospective threat to its long-term interests that can
emerge in case the Georgian ports are modernized and a more stable
connection starts functioning between them and East-European Black Sea
ports.

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