TBILISI: Georgia not interested where Russia relocates its bases

Georgia not interested where Russia relocates its bases, say officials

Kavkasia-Press news agency
28 May 05

TBILISI

The Georgian executive and legislative authorities believe that
selecting new places of deployment of the Russian military bases after
their pullout from Georgia is the sole prerogative of the Russian
authorities.

The chairman of the Georgian Parliament’s Committee on European
Integration, Davit Bakradze, said that the issue of the Russian bases’
redeployment to Armenia was beyond Georgia’s sphere of authority or
interests. “As long as Russia stays within the international limits on
the types of arms in question, Moscow can deploy them anywhere outside
Georgia. It is not the subject of our interest where Russia takes its
arms,” Bakradze said.

Minister of State for Settlement of Conflicts, Giorgi Khaindrava, said
that according to information available to him Russia was going to
transfer certain types of equipment, rather than the entire
[Akhalkalaki] base, from Georgia to Gyumri [in Armenia]. Khaindrava
also noted that new places of the bases’ deployment was Russia’s
business. “For the Georgian population, the issue of the pullout is
already decided, only some technical details are still to be agreed
upon with the Russian side. As to where they will go, this is business
of the Russian authorities and the Russian military,” Khaindrava said.

The Azerbaijani ambassador to Georgia [Ramiz Hasanov] recently said
that consultations were under way with the Georgian authorities to
prevent the redeployment of Russian military hardware from Georgia to
Armenia.

DM Awarded Aide-General of Kansas State “Drastamat Kanayan” Medal

ARMENIA’s DEFENCE MINISTER AWARDED AIDE-GENERAL OF KANSAS STATE
“DRASTAMAT KANAYAN” MEDAL

YEREVAN, MAY 26. ARMINFO. Secretary of National security council at
Armenia’s President, Armenia’s Defence Minister Serzh Sargssyan met
today with a delegation of Kansas State (USA) headed by Aide-General,
Major-General Tod Banting. The delegation arrived in Yerevan within
the Armenia-Kansas cooperation program framework.

Minister’s press-secretary, colonel Seyran Shakhsuvaryan informed
ARMINFO that the US Ambassador Plenipotentiary and Extraordinary to
Armenia John Evans participated at the meeting, too. Minister asked
the guests to convey his deep gratitude to State governor, Mrs. Katlin
Sibelius for recognizing Armenian Genocide and proclaiming April 24
the Day of Armenians’ memory. Stressing the significance of
cooperation in the sphere of military medicine and peacemaking
activity, Sargssyan noted the possibility to cooperate in other
spheres as well. The sides ascertained with satisfaction that the
cooperation between the National guard of Kansas and Armenia’s Defence
Ministry started two years ago spreads to various civil
spheres. Sargssyan awarded Major General Tod Banting the “Drastamat
Kanayan” medal – for effective cooperation.

Officials inaugurate BTC to ship Caspian Sea oil to Mediterranean

Officials inaugurate pipeline to ship Caspian Sea oil to Mediterranean

By AIDA SULTANOVA
.c The Associated Press

SANGACHAL, Azerbaijan (AP) – The presidents of Azerbaijan, Georgia and
Turkey pulled orange levers Wednesday to send the first flow of
Caspian Sea crude into a $3.2 billion pipeline seen as key to reducing
the West’s reliance on Middle East oil.

By year’s end, the 1,100-mile pipeline is to ship up to 1 million
barrels a day to Turkey’s Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.

President Bush, whose administration is seeking to diversify energy
sources, said in a letter read at the ceremony by Energy Secretary
Samuel Bodman that the pipeline “opens a new era in the Caspian
Basin’s development.”

“The United States has consistently supported (the pipeline) because
we believe in the project’s ability to bolster energy security,
strengthen participating countries’ energy diversity, enhance regional
cooperation and expand international investment opportunities,”
Bush’s letter said.

The U.S.-backed pipeline realizes several crucial goals for
Washington, including reducing dependence on Russian pipelines and
avoiding Iran. While the pipeline crosses areas plagued by separatist
conflicts, raising security concerns, the countries hope it will be a
catalyst for calm and prosperity as well.

The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, or BTC, pipeline aims to boost access by the
energy-hungry West to the rich Caspian fields, estimated to hold the
world’s third-largest reserves. Iran, Russia, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan
and Kazakhstan all claim shares of the undersea wealth.

Standing in front of a transparent section of pipe with Bodman and BP
PLC Chief Executive John Brown, whose company leads the consortium
that built the pipeline, the presidents pulled the levers that allowed
the oil to flow through.

The pipeline “can be called the Silk Road of the 21st century,”
Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer said during the ceremony at the
Sangachal oil terminal, 25 miles south of Baku.

It “will take new supplies of oil to the world market and will help
to demonstrate that security is best achieved by having multiple
sources of supply and trade routes,” said Brown.

But the plan to circumvent Russian pipelines has angered the
Kremlin. Most Caspian oil exports go through Russian pipelines to the
Black Sea port of Novorossiisk, where the oil is loaded onto tankers
that squeeze through the busy Bosporus strait. Russian officials tried
to persuade Azerbaijan not to sign on to the project.

Instead, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey look to earn substantial
revenue from the pipeline, through transit fees and royalties.

Azerbaijan is banking on the pipeline to swing international support
behind Baku in its dispute with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
enclave, which ethnic Armenian separatists took control of more than a
decade ago. The conflict continues to simmer, undermining the region’s
security.

The underground pipeline passes within a few miles of
Nagorno-Karabakh, and critics of the project have suggested it could
be vulnerable to terrorist attacks at various points.

Azerbaijan also hopes the pipeline will raise its profile in the
world, and it tightened security ahead of its inauguration. On
Saturday, police broke up a banned demonstration by protesters
demanding free elections and arrested demonstrators, with the
government citing safety concerns ahead of the pipeline’s opening.

Tensions between the government and the opposition in the tightly
controlled former Soviet republic has increased since a 2003 election
in which Ilham Aliev replaced his late father, Geidar Aliev, as
president in a vote the opposition said was marred by fraud.

“This pipeline first of all will help solve economic and social
problems, but the role of the pipeline in strengthening peace and
security in the region also is not small,” Aliev said at the
ceremony.

The pipeline’s route through Georgia does not pass near the two
separatist areas in the north of that country, but does traverse
comparatively wild areas in the nation where security is fragile.
Some of its stretch in Turkey goes through conflict-prone Kurdish
areas.

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, who has sought to lessen
Russia’s influence on his small, impoverished country, suggested that
the pipeline, by spurring investment, could undermine that influence.

“Because of our geographical position, we’ve been in the center of
attention for various empires,” he said in apparent reference to
Russia. “However, today Georgia is changing into a place where the
largest energy companies in the world are trying to make
investments.”

The drive for alternatives to Middle East oil intensified after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks highlighted potential regional
instability.

Once fully operational, the pipeline will represent a “significant”
addition to Western oil supplies, said analyst Jason Kenney of ING
Financial Market s, although because of the time needed to fill it,
“you won’t see exports until the later part of the year.”

Other experts say the new oil will provide only short-term relief to a
world that is consuming more crude every year. Oil prices, while down
from their recent highs, are still around $50 a barrel.

Pipeline officials said it would take up to a month and a half to fill
the Azerbaijani section. The Georgian part will be ready after that,
and then the Turkish stretch, which Turkish authorities have said
should be filled by Aug. 15.

It will take approximately 10 million barrels of crude to fill the
entire pipeline. Bodman said Tuesday that deliveries of oil to tankers
at the terminal in Turkey are to begin in the fall.

05/25/05 17:40 EDT

BTC Launch Disturbs Region’s Economic Balance: Andranik Margaryan

OPENING OF BAKU-CEYHAN OIL PIPELINE DISTURBS REGION’S ECONOMIC
BALANCE: ANDRANIK MARGARYAN

YEREVAN, May 25. /ARKA/. The opening of the Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline
disturbs the economic balance in the region, RA Premier Andranik
Margaryan told reporters. According to him, the Baku-Ceyhan project
was a project where Armenia was to be involved to a certain extent.
However, the project results from “political talks.” Margaryan
stressed that Armenia will try to find alternative ways of maintaining
the region’s economic balance. According to him, one of them may be
the construction of an Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, which may be laid as
far as Georgia and farther to Europe. P.T. -0–

New bill

A1plus

| 20:17:00 | 24-05-2005 | Politics |

NEW BILL

Today the bill on insertion of amendments to the law «On Taxes» was
given its first reading in the parliament. The bill was presented by
co-author Samvel Balasanyan.

The bill provides for the following: «The laws providing for the
change of interest, change of the new tax in case it does not contain
clauses restricting the conditions of the activities of the tax-payer,
are to come into force no sooner than during 30 days since its
declaration». The bill is to come into force January 1, 2006.

Resolution der PEN-Jahrestagung in Bochum am 21.5.2005,

Resolution der PEN-Jahrestagung in Bochum am 21.5.2005, einstimmig
verabschiedet:

Jahrestagung 2005 in Bochum

RESOLUTION

In die Wüste getrieben, massakriert, ausgelöscht ` das war das
Schicksal des armenischen Volkes vor nunmehr genau 90 Jahren. In einem
bis dahin beispiellosen Genozid verfolgte die Führung des Osmanischen
Reiches unter den Augen deutscher Diplomaten und deutscher Militärs
ihr Ziel, die Armenier zu vernichten. Die Erinnerung an diesen
Völkermord, dem anderthalb Millionen Menschen zum Opfer fielen, ist
mit den letzten Ã`berlebenden nicht gestorben: Die Türkei leugnet
dieses Menschheitsverbrechen zwar hartnäckig bis heute, Deutschland
hat geschwiegen ` in den Seelen der Nachfahren jedoch ist die Trauer
lebendig.

Wir fordern die türkische Ã-ffentlichkeit auf, endlich den
Völkermord an den Armeniern anzuerkennen.

Wir fordern die Fraktionen des Deutschen Bundestages auf, in ihrem
gemeinsam geplanten Entschließungsantrag auf sprachliche
Verschleierung zu verzichten und eindeutig zu formulieren, was alle
Redner zu diesem Antrag ohnehin erklärt haben und was die Parlamente
vieler anderer Länder längst anerkannt haben: Ein Völkermord ist
ein Völkermord. Nur mit einer so klaren Aussage des Parlaments wird
in Zukunft die Leugnung des Völkermords ` nach Elie Wiesel die zweite
Tötung ` justitiabel sein.

Ferner fordern wir die Kultusministerkonferenz auf, das Lehrmaterial
an deutschen Schulen darauf hin zu überprüfen, wie weit dieser
Völkermord und die deutsche Mitverantwortung dafür verleugnet,
verschwiegen, verharmlost werden. Nur wenn die jungen Menschen in
unserem Land ` Türken, Deutsche, Armenier ` ihre Geschichte gemeinsam
kennen lernen, werden sie in Zukunft in der Lage sein, Versöhnung zu
leben.

__________________
Jochen Mangelsen
Bückeburger Str. 24
28205 Bremen
Fon/Fax 0421-441448

BAKU: Analysts say Azeri pipeline to become region’s major oil route

Analysts say Azeri pipeline to become region’s major oil export route

Trend news agency
23 May 05

BAKU

“The launch of the Azerbaijani section of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
(BTC) oil pipeline is an event the strategic importance of which goes
far beyond the boundaries of our region,” the former state adviser on
foreign political issues, Vafa Quluzada, has told Trend.

He is sure that this pipeline will transport not only Azerbaijani, but
also Kazakh, Turkmen and even Russian oil in the future because Turkey
will soon completely block the passage of oil tankers through the
Bosporus for environmental reasons.

“The launch of the BTC will bring Azerbaijan huge revenue. However, at
the same time the Azerbaijani government has to learn how to
distribute this windfall evenly and fairly among Azerbaijani
citizens,” he said.

The political expert believes that the commissioning of the
Azerbaijani section of the oil pipeline will precondition broader US
expansion into the Caucasus.

“This event carries a special geopolitical and geostrategic importance
for the region and opens up another way for the USA to master the
Caucasus,” he said.

As for the opinion of some experts that the commissioning of the BTC
might mean that Azerbaijan is giving up hope for the return of its
territories currently under Armenian occupation, Quluzada said the
time for a military solution to the problem had been missed long ago.

“The military option was possible in 1994. This is why a negotiated
settlement will be found. And this settlement will be fair by all
means because the USA is not interested in the existence of a
smouldering conflict in this region,” Quluzada said.

“The launch of the BTC will put to shame those who thought that this
project was a politically motivated utopia,” another political expert,
Rasim Musabayov, has told Trend. He said this project is economically
and technically viable.

“Revenue from the implementation of the project will lay the
foundations for modernizing the country,” he said. Also, the
commissioning of the pipeline will boost the West’s attention and
interest in this region.

Musabayov described as an exaggeration the suggestions that Azerbaijan
was losing the chance of solving the Karabakh issue militarily.

“The BTC will operate, but it would be wrong to speak so categorically
about this. We could just as well say that Azerbaijan has dissolved
its armed forces. But this is impossible,” the expert said.

Of course, the BTC will compel the world’s leading countries involved
with the project, such as the USA and Britain, as well as European
countries interested in the project as consumers of oil, to ensure
that there is no threat to the pipeline, Musabayov acknowledged. But
in that case they will have to step up their efforts so that the
conflict is resolved as soon as possible, he said.

The former Azerbaijani foreign minister, Tofiq Zulfuqarov, also
considers the launch of the BTC as a landmark event.

“This event has special importance for Azerbaijan and its future. By
starting to operate the pipeline, Azerbaijan will resolve the problem
of a secure and effective delivery of its oil to world markets for
many years to come,” he said.

In his opinion, the BTC will soon turn into a major route which will
transport oil from the entire Caspian region.

Leadership does not need strong advocacy

LEADERSHIP DOES NOT NEED STRONG ADVOCACY

A1plus

| 14:07:20 | 21-05-2005 | Politics |

The adoption of the RA law “On advocacy” purposed an objective
to weaken the institute of advocacy and secure the concealment of
violation of law with the help of the institute of public defender. It
is supposed that a certain number of lawyers should deal with public
defense. In Armenia this clause can give the authorities a good
possibility to impose their wish on the public defenders

As for the law in general, in a country with 1.5 million population
the split of the institute of advocacy and the activities of several
lawyer unions, ex-chairman of the former International Union of
Lawyers Tigran Ter-Yesayan. The day of adoption of the should have
become historical for the institute of advocacy. The principal
task was the unification. The unions always elected the councils,
chairmen, commissions. However on the first day of the unification
the lawyers divided.

Since the law does not provide for precise determination of the
transitional clauses, the lawyers entered the transitional stage and
now are making no headway. The law has passed three readings in the NA,
however there was an agreement that some clauses has to be re-considers
and corrected, T. Ter-Yesayan says. To note, some lawyers appealed
to the appropriate bodies with their remarks and objections. They
even appealed to the President, who ratified the law taking into
account that it should be amended. At the same time, according to
Tigran Ter-Yesayan, there are really good clauses in the law

Does the law make a lawyer subordinate? “It would be an exaggeration
to say that a lawyer in under the law’s control. Other institutes are
as well engaged in advocacy. Violations have become an essential part
of our life while we are called to defend the people”, he notes.

To date, in the atmosphere of impunity a lawyer loses his
authority. Who need it and why? “The leadership do not need string
advocacy that is why they want the institute to lose its authority”,
Tigran Ter-Yesayan resumed.

Lena Badeyan

Armenian President decorated Kirk Kerkorian with Order of Fatherland

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT DECORATED KIRK KERKORIAN WITH ORDER OF FATHERLAND

Pan Armenian News
20.05.2005 07:21

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian President Robert Kocharian met with
Armenian philanthropist Kirk Kerkorian, Armenian President~Rs press
service reported. During the meeting they discussed the process
of reforms carried out in Armenia as well as the prospects of the
economic growth. Armenian president decorated Kirk Kerkorian with
order of fatherland.

Bush nominates new Ambassador to Georgia

BUSH NOMINATES NEW AMBASSADOR TO GEORGIA

Armenpress

TBILISI, MAY 18, ARMENPRESS: U.S. President George W. Bush nominated
John F. Tefft as new Ambassador to Georgia, the U.S. President’s
Press Secretary’s Office reported on May 17. John F. Tefft, of
Virginia, currently serves as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
European and Eurasian Affairs at the Department of State. Ambassador
Tefft previously served as the International Affairs Advisor at the
National War College. Earlier in his career, he served as Ambassador
to Lithuania. The term of office of outgoing Ambassador Richard Miles,
who serves in Georgia since April 2002, has already expired