TBILISI: New Customs Bridge Between Armenia And Georgia

NEW CUSTOMS BRIDGE BETWEEN ARMENIA AND GEORGIA

The Messenger
Dec 12 2008
Georgia

Georgia and Armenia have agreed to build a second customs bridge at
the border of two countries. This was announced on December 9 during
the visit of Armenian PM Tigran Sarkisian to Tbilisi. The Armenian
PM also said that certain taxation and customs regulations will be
brought in compliance.

Sarkisian highlighted that his country is interested in creating
favourable conditions for more intensive cooperation between the
two countries. He stated that the delimitation of the borders of two
countries is 70% complete.

BAKU: Novruz Mammadov: Solution To Nagorno Karabakh Conflict On Terr

NOVRUZ MAMMADOV: SOLUTION TO NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT ON TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY GETS MORE INTERNATIONALLY CONSOLIDATED

Azeri Press Agency
Dec 12 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku. Ramil Mammadli – APA. "Settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict
within the framework of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and basing
on the norms of the international law is also important for Russia,"
Director of International Affairs Department of the President’s Office
Novruz Mammadov told journalists, APA reports.

Noting that the outcomes of Helsinki meeting of OSCE Ministerial
Council had not been discussed yet, Novruz Mammadov said solution
to Nagorno Karabakh conflict on territorial integrity got more
consolidated in the international arena.

"As a result of active processes in the region, international
organizations, such states as Russia, Turkey and the United States
are interested in the solution to the conflict within the framework of
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. They support Azerbaijan’s position
on the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The decisions adopted
by the international organizations should also support Azerbaijan in
this issue," he said.

Touching on the negotiations on the settlement of the conflict Novruz
Mammadov underlined that the next meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian
presidents would be likely held at the beginning of the following year.

TOL: Getting Away With Too Much

GETTING AWAY WITH TOO MUCH

Transitions Online
nguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=299&N rSection=2&NrArticle=20255
Dec 12 2008
Czech Republic

Armenia has been given many chances to observe its human rights
commitments. It may be time for stronger measures.

Imagine a country that flagrantly violates some of the core principles
of an organization of which it is a member. Despite pleas from that
organization’s officials, the country continues to unjustly imprison
innocent men, solely for their religious beliefs, and a representative
of the country’s Foreign Ministry even rejects the notion that this
is a human rights issue at all. Yet the organization can do little
to press the issue and largely lacks punitive measures to force the
offending country into line, and so the situation goes unchanged.

This is not the Middle East, and this is not the United
Nations. This is Armenia, a controversial member of the Council of
Europe since 2001. Before joining, the country promised to adopt
a law on alternative service within three years and to free all
conscientious objectors from prison. Yet a report this week by Forum
18, an Oslo-based NGO that monitors religious freedom, has found that
around 80 Jehovah’s Witness conscientious objectors remain imprisoned,
with another 15 likely to face trial in the coming months. Reneging
on promises made to the Council of Europe, the Armenian government
has still not created an alternative to military service that is not
under military control.

MILITARY MANAGES ‘CIVILIAN’ SERVICE

The authorities officially registered Jehovah’s Witnesses in October
2004, another Council of Europe recommendation. Some sources cite
the Witnesses’ first appearance in Armenia 20 years ago, soon after
the then Soviet republic experienced a massive earthquake that left
large areas in ruins and 25,000 dead. Official figures have estimated
at least 4,000 members in Armenia. In addition to being harassed over
their religious beliefs – which clash with traditional Christianity –
followers have been persecuted in a number of countries for their
refusal to perform military service. In countries with compulsory
service, the problems have obviously been exacerbated.

The passage of an Armenian law on alternative service in 2004,
and two subsequent amendments, was supposed to solve all of that,
allowing conscientious objectors to avoid military service while still
serving the state in a useful capacity. Yet the Defense Ministry still
manages the supposedly "civilian" service. According to Forum 18, while
jurisdiction over the service may have technically been farmed out to
other ministries, the military still remains very much in control,
supervising where participants are assigned to work and subjecting
them to the army’s code of conduct.

Jehovah’s Witnesses have also complained that the military regularly
checks up on participants, who are entered as soldiers in military
records and must ask permission from the army to go on leave – all
requirements that defeat the purpose of creating an alternative service
for those who don’t want to be connected with the military. Refusing
to enlist in this sham "option," the conscientious objectors are now
serving prison sentences of one to three years, church members told
Forum 18.

INTERNATIONAL DISAPPROVAL

None of this has gone unnoticed by the Council of Europe. The
organization’s Parliamentary Assembly passed a resolution in 2007
criticizing the failure to introduce a civilian alternative service and
advised pardoning the conscientious objectors in the meantime. In April
2008, the council’s commissioner for human rights, Thomas Hammarberg,
repeated those calls and reaffirmed the council’s belief that Armenia
does not offer a "genuine civilian service."

Amazingly, even in the face of such criticism and more from the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, an official from
the human rights department at the Armenian Foreign Ministry still
insisted to Forum 18 that the country was fulfilling its commitments
to the Council of Europe and denied that this was even a human rights
issue. More comically, the official disputed the numbers of imprisoned
conscientious objectors compiled by Forum 18, but said the ministry
itself didn’t have any figure. Over at the Justice Ministry, an
official claimed the military did not oversee the alternative service
system, which thus provided a real choice for the Jehovah’s Witnesses
and discounted their assertions about being "prisoners of conscience."

In an interview with TOL, the author of the report, Felix Corley,
explained the inaction of Armenian officials by pointing to the
powerful role of the military in government affairs. The unresolved
conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh keeps military leaders
on edge and determined to force young people to enlist, despite
worries over reports of conscripts killed during hazing episodes and
other accidents. "Some people fear that if there are these exceptions,
then everyone will use them to get out of military service and then
who will defend Armenia?" Corley said. Other officials simply feel
they have already done enough and don’t understand the continuing
problems. "They probably think, ‘we’ve changed the law three times
and they aren’t still satisfied. They probably never will be,’
" Corley said.

The debate eight years ago over inviting Armenia into the Council
of Europe revolved around consideration about whether a state that
was far from being a true democracy in any sense of the word could
be better reformed within the organization or not. Even local human
rights activists largely advocated inclusion, believing that would
foster progress and place greater pressures on the political elite
to adjust their behavior. Membership in the Council of Europe also
means that citizens of member countries can take their governments
to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, which a number
of Armenian Jehovah Witnesses have done (one case was ruled partially
admissible in 2006, but remains unresolved).

Next month, the council’s Parliamentary Assembly will again debate
sanctions against Armenia over the violent suppression of political
protests in March. Add this to the latest news on the continued
imprisonment of conscientious objectors – not to mention all the
fixed elections, media pressure, and other violations since Armenia
was invited to join – and it may be time to reassess whether the
decision was a good one.

Cartoon by Andrej Graniak. Courtesy of Cartoonists Rights Network

Transitions Online encourages readers to respond to this and other
commentaries or articles. For information or to read other letters
to the editor, see the Letters page. We also invite readers to
submit longer, more detailed commentaries. For information, read our
submission guidelines.

http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/article.tpl?IdLa

CSTO Security Councils Secretaries Adopt Joint Statement And 2009 Ev

CSTO SECURITY COUNCILS SECRETARIES ADOPT JOINT STATEMENT AND 2009 EVENT PLAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.12.2008 14:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Secretaries of the CSTO Security Councils adopted
a joint statement upon the outcomes of their December 9 meeting
in Yerevan.

The statement says that CSTO member countries support Russia’s
initiative on the European Security Treaty.

"We hail the Russian-French initiative to hold a pan-European summit
with participation of CIS, CSTO, EU and NATO for a discussion of
future security architecture," said Nikolay Patrushev, head of the
RF Security Council.

Secretaries of Security Councils also signed an event plan for 2009.

"Lincy" Foundation To Continue "School Building" Program

"LINCY" FOUNDATION TO CONTINUE "SCHOOL BUILDING" PROGRAM

ARMENPRESS
Dec 9, 2008

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS: "Lincy" foundation is planning to
continue the "School Building" program in Armenia. The senior vice
president of the Foundation Harout Sassounian told Armenpress that the
government must soon study how many schools need urgent repair. "If the
financial crisis will soon smoothen the program may be expanded but
now it is impossible to speak about the details. It will be possible
to speak about the financial means only in spring," he said.

According to H. Sassounian, with the funds of the Foundation a
brilliant work has been done within the framework of school building
program which ended in September. He said in Armenia still hundreds
of schools need renovation and some of them are not even seismically
secure. "The government may reconstruct roads and we wish to continue
ensuring good school conditions for children," Sassounian noted.

Within the frameworks of "School Building" program "Lincy" Foundation
provided 19 million 993,538 USD within which during the last two
years in one school of five provinces and in 5 schools in Yerevan
reconstruction and renovation works were carried out. The Foundation
also carried out "Road Building" program.

EU Gives Green Light To Eastern Partnership

EU GIVES GREEN LIGHT TO EASTERN PARTNERSHIP

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.12.2008 16:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ European Union leaders backed plans on Friday to
offer closer ties to the bloc’s eastern neighbors.

The Eastern Partnership plan is to offer new areas of cooperation
to Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and, subject to
domestic reforms, Belarus. But the plan is vague, with details only
to be worked out by March, 2009.

"The European Council (EU governments) agrees on the need to further
promote regional cooperation among the EU’s eastern neighbors and
between the EU and the region," said the leaders’ draft statement,
due to be endorsed at the summit.

Poland and Sweden, authors of the project, hope it will become a
forum of multilateral cooperation with regular meetings of ministers
and leaders. They said it could prepare the countries for eventual
EU membership.

The EU’s eastern neighbors are already linked to Brussels through the
strictly bilateral European Neighborhood Policy, which offers countries
better trade access, economic assistance and visa liberalization as
they adapt to EU standards, Reuters reports.

The Damages Of The Dialogue

THE DAMAGES OF THE DIALOGUE

Azat Artsakh Daily
06 Dec 08
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

The Chairman of the European office of Armenian Cause Hilda Choboyan
said: "Armenia-Turkey dialogue is beneficial for those who refrain from
decisive actions towards the recognition of Armenian Genocide". She
underscored that after the establishment of Armenian-Turkish
Reconciliation Commission the issue has been speculated by the
political circles. And every time when they don’t want to "offend" or
"break the heart" of the Turkish government, they justify themselves
saying that they don’t want to hinder the process.

Getting Russia Into Proportion

GETTING RUSSIA INTO PROPORTION
Paul Taylor

Reuters
Dec 8 2008

General, 2008 campaign, Barack Obama, credit crunch, dmitry medvedev,
gas monopoly, global financial crisis, missile shield, putin, Russia,
russian investors, russian tanks, russian union, soviet satellite –
Paul Taylor is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his
own –

It’s time to get Russia back into proportion.

Moscow’s resurgence as a major power, determined to be treated with
respect and to stamp its influence on its neighborhood, has been one
of the big stories of 2008.

The sight of Russian tanks rolling into Georgia in August, coupled
with a Kremlin drive to extend its control over energy supply routes
to Europe, sent shivers through former Soviet satellite countries
and drew loud condemnation from Washington.

President Dmitry Medvedev’s threat to site short-range missiles
in Kaliningrad aimed at Poland if Warsaw deploys part of a planned
U.S. missile shield raised the rhetorical stakes.

Yet the global financial crisis, the collapse of oil prices, the
aftermath of the Georgia war and U.S. President-elect Barack Obama’s
victory have all cast doubt on Russia’s real weight.

The credit crunch has hit Russia harder than other emerging economies,
hammering confidence in its stocks, bonds and the rouble and forcing
the central bank to spend some of its huge foreign currency reserves
to stabilize the financial system.

Foreign portfolio investors have fled and many Russian investors have
parked more of their money in foreign currency abroad, at least partly
due to heightened political risk since the military action in Georgia.

State gas monopoly Gazprom (GAZP.MM: Quote, Profile, Research,
Stock Buzz), feared in many parts of Europe as a predator seeking
a stranglehold on the continent’s gas supply, has lost more than
two-thirds of its market capitalization since May.

SHRINKING POPULATION

With oil prices down from a peak of $147 a barrel in July to below $50
now, the heavily oil-and-gas-dependent economy looks more vulnerable,
especially since Russia needs Western technology to boost its energy
extraction.

Alexander Shokhin, president of the Russian Union of Industrialists
and Entrepreneurs, says that after a 10-year boom, growth will fall
to between 0 and 3 percent next year.

Russia remains a lucrative market for Western consumer goods, but
concerns about state meddling in business, widespread corruption and
shortcomings in the rule of law have contributed to its failure to
diversify away from hydrocarbons and minerals.

Compounding the weakness of its non-energy economy, Russia’s
demographics are among the worst in the world, with a life expectancy
of just 67 (60 for men) and the combination of a low birth-rate,
an aging population and a public health crisis.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
projects the population could shrink by nearly one-third by 2050 to
100 million from 143 million.

Diplomatically, Russia overreached itself after its lightning military
victory in Georgia by recognizing the breakaway regions of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent.

Only Nicaragua followed suit. Major allies such as China and India,
fearing the precedent, pointedly declined.

The European Union, the main customer for Russian gas, has responded by
accelerating efforts to reduce its dependency, planning an alternative
supply corridor through Turkey and seeking new suppliers in Africa,
the Middle East and Central Asia.

Other former Soviet republics, including Azerbaijan, Belarus and
Turkmenistan, have sought closer ties with the West.

True, the U.S.-led NATO alliance has gone no further toward giving
Georgia and Ukraine a roadmap to membership — the issue is off the
agenda for now — and it has now resumed some frozen contacts with
Russia, as has the EU.

But Moscow’s efforts to reshape the security architecture of Europe,
sidelining the role of the United States and of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, loathed by Moscow for its election
monitoring, have gained little traction.

STATUS QUO POWER?

Russian analysts insist the Georgia war was a defensive action
responding to pro-Western Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili’s
bid to retake control of South Ossetia by force.

"Russia is a status quo power, not a recidivist aggressor on the
prowl," says Dmitry Trenin, head of the Moscow office of Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace.

Moscow has taken a number of steps recently to suggest it wants
peaceful solutions to other "frozen conflicts" in its neighborhood,
brokering the first summit talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh, and seeking a deal between Moldova and its breakaway
region of Transdniestria.

In Ukraine, the biggest former Soviet republic where a democratic
"Orange Revolution" in 2004 infuriated the Kremlin, Russia has other
political and economic levers it can pull to maintain influence
without having to use force.

Getting Russia into proportion does not mean ignoring Moscow or its
security interests. Its location and the fact it supplies 40 percent
of Europe’s gas imports mean it cannot be neglected.

The United States and the EU have an interest in binding Moscow
rapidly into rule-based international bodies such as the World Trade
Organization and the OECD, although they put both processes on hold
in reprisal for the Georgia war.

Some Western analysts believe a weak Russia could be more dangerous,
if mishandled, than a strong one.

In NATO circles, some see a risk of the "Weimarisation" of Russia,
comparing it to Germany’s economically enfeebled Weimar Republic that
was swept away by the rise of Hitler’s Nazi party.

Political humiliation and economic instability could lead to a surge
of aggressive nationalism.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, wags branded Boris
Yeltsin’s rump Russian Federation "Upper Volta with nukes," capturing
the paradox of a failed state with a ruined economy sitting on a huge
arsenal of atomic weapons.

When Vladimir Putin succeeded Yeltsin in 2000, he was determined
to restore Russia’s power and pride after a decade in which many
Russians felt the West ignored their interests by expanding NATO in
ex-communist eastern Europe.

Today, it sometimes seems that Russophiles and Russophobes in Europe
and the United States have become objective allies in exaggerating
the importance of or the threat from Moscow.

A more self-confident Europe and a less unilateralist America need
to find a way of engaging with Russia according to its true weight,
without treating it as a giant.

Human rights panel flouts mandate

?AID=3D/20081202/OPINION/812020330

Cape Cod Times
Hyannis, Massachusetts

December 2, 2008

Human rights panel flouts mandate

By SHAHKEH Y. SETIAN

The Barnstable County Human Rights Commission, which has done some
good work, claims that it takes human rights "very seriously"
("Commission supports ‘No Place for Hate,’" My View, Oct. 20). The
facts say otherwise.

The commission still defends the national Anti-Defamation League and
its so-called No Place for Hate anti-bias program even though the ADL
denies the Armenian genocide and shamelessly collaborates with a major
human rights violator, Turkey, in lobbying against recognition of that
genocide.

The national ADL’s statement of Aug. 21, 2007, was the very opposite
of the genocide acknowledgment that human rights advocates had long
requested.

It was deceptively worded so that the premeditated murder of 1.5
million Armenians from 1915 to 1923 would not fit the official
definition of genocide in Article II of the United Nations Genocide
Treaty of 1948. Echoing Turkey’s own denials, the ADL implied that the
Armenian deaths were not intentional but rather merely a "consequence"
of wartime conditions.

The national ADL has yet to retract, apologize for or clarify that
statement, though the ADL and Barnstable County Human Rights
Commission would have you believe otherwise.

Since that time, the city governments of Arlington, Bedford, Belmont,
Lexington, Medford, Needham, Newburyport, Newton, Northampton,
Peabody, Somerville, Westwood and Watertown have shut down their No
Place for Hate programs in response to the ADL’s anti-human rights
actions against Armenians.

Those cities and their human rights commissions realized that No Place
for Hate, which the ADL created, trademarked, sponsored, funded and
certified, had lost its credibility.

While Barnstable County’s commission has been burying its head in the
sand, the ADL’s assault on Armenians has become an international
scandal, widely condemned by both Jewish and non-Jewish human rights
advocates (please visit ).

Had No Place for Hate’s sponsor denied the Jewish genocide and huddled
with foreign lobbyists to persuade the U.S. to not recognize that
genocide, the Barnstable County commission would long ago have
rejected the program and its sponsor. The commission refuses to show
similar respect for Armenians and their genocide.

Frankly, this demonstrates that its seven members, sadly including
those of Jewish descent who share the Armenian experience of genocide
and denial, are giving preferential treatment to the ADL while
discriminating against Armenians. The commission is violating its own
charter, and the county is violating civil rights statutes.

Every No Place for Hate chapter must be recertified annually by the
ADL (local ADLs, by the way, answer to their national office in New
York City). Meanwhile, the Barnstable County commission ignores the
obvious: No civil or human rights program should be subject to review
by a political group that lobbies against genocide recognition.

Every No Place for Hate program, such as those in Barnstable,
Falmouth, Harwich, Mashpee and Provincetown, must also have been
formally approved by the municipality’s public officials. It’s
inappropriate for those officials to have implicitly endorsed ADL
policy. Moreover, No Place for Hate often invites ADL instructors
into public schools. No instructor representing a political group
that works to suppress genocide recognition should be lecturing public
school children.

The Massachusetts Municipal Association represents every municipality
and its elected officials. It very publicly ended its umbrella
sponsorship of No Place for Hate earlier this year because of the
national ADL’s unconscionable efforts against Armenians. The
association recommended that No Place for Hate be replaced by the
well-regarded Inclusive Communities program of the National League of
Cities.

Officials in Cape Cod communities with No Place for Hate programs need
to seriously reflect on the civil and human rights principles that led
the Massachusetts Municipal Association to make those decisions and
that led 13 city governments and their human rights commissions to
sever ties with the ADL program. The Barnstable County Human Rights
Commission should do the same.

If the commission doesn’t sever ties with the ADL and rededicate
itself to its mandate of truth, honor and non-discrimination, the
commission must remove the "human rights" from its name.

***
Shahkeh Y. Setian of Mashpee has taught the issue of genocide at Cape
Cod Community College, and has also taught development in minority
communities at Springfield College. She is currently writing a book
about Muslims who saved Armenians during the Armenian genocide.

http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article
www.NoPlaceForDenial.com

France Was Among The First To Offer Assistance To Armenia In 1988

FRANCE WAS AMONG THE FIRST TO OFFER ASSISTANCE TO ARMENIA IN 1988

armradio.am
08.12.2008 17:55

On December 8 the President of Parliament of the Republic of Armenia,
Hovik Abrahamyan received members of the National Assembly of France,
Chairman of the France-Armenia Friendship Group Francois Roshblaun and
Vice-Chairman Rene Ruke, who visit Armenia to attend the commemoration
of the 20th anniversary of the devastating earthquake of 1988. The
meeting was attended by Head of the Armenia-France Deputy Friendship
Group Ara Babloyan and Chairman of the National Assembly’s Standing
Committee on European Integration Avet Adonts.

Hovik Abrahamyan noted that by inviting them to Armenia on the 20th
anniversary of the 14988 earthquake, he once again wanted to express
gratitude for the assistance and warm attitude to the Armenian
people. In December 1988 Armenia had become the centre of attention
of the world and tens of countries rushed to render humanitarian
assistance to the casualties. France was the first to send rescuers,
doctors and constructors to Armenia.

Turning to the Armenian-French interparliamentary ties, the Armenian
Parliament Speaker attached importance t the active work of the
Deputy Friendship Groups and reciprocal visits, which can contribute
to the development of cooperation in other spheres. The President of
Parliament expressed gratitude to the National Assembly of France for
adopting the bill on criminalizing the Armeni an Genocide denial. He
stressed the importance of France’s assistance to Armenia on the path
of European Integration. Mr. Abrahamyan invited the President of the
National Assembly of France, Bernard Accoyer to Armenia.

Chairman of the France-Armenian Deputy Friendship Group Francois
Roshblaun is visiting Armenia for the 17th time. He first came to
Armenia in 1990 and he saw a completely different Gyumri then and now.

Mr. Roshblaun said he emphasizes the importance of Armenia’s
membership to the International Organization of the Francophonie,
which is another evidence of French Armenian friendship.

During the meeting reference was made to the cooperation between
Armenian and French Deputies within the Parliamentary Assembly of
the Council of Europe and other issues.