Parliament chairman urges opposition to stop boycott

PARLIAMENT CHAIRMAN URGES OPPOSITION TO STOP BOYCOTT

ArmenPress
Nov 24 2004

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS: Armenian parliament chairman
Arthur Baghdasarian called again on the opposition urging it to end
its several-months long boycott of parliament ‘s work and return to
legislature at a moment when it is discussing bills of key importance,
“that will guide Armenia’s economic, political, cultural and scientific
progress in the next decade.”

In his annual report to the parliament, Baghdasarian said the absence
of the opposition in the parliament could not be justified any longer.

He once again reiterated the readiness of the ruling coalition,
first voiced last May, to engage in dialogue with the opposition
“to seek jointly ways out of a range of very pressing problems.”

“I think it is high time for the opposition to revise its style of
work and get involved into the country’s and parliament’s work,”
he said, adding that apart from parliament’s boycott there are other
ways of political struggle.

Opposition lawmakers have been refusing to attend parliament since
February in protest of last year’s re-election of president Robert
Kocharian in a vote, which they claim was marred by widespread
irregularities. They say they want to change the law on referendums
so a vote can be held to learn whether Armenians have confidence
in Kocharian.

BAKU: Azeri Finance Ministry uncovers widespread misuse of public fu

Azeri Finance Ministry uncovers widespread misuse of public funds

ANS TV, Baku
21 Nov 04

Presenter The 12.5bn manats 2.6m dollars of budget funds misspent in
19 districts of the republic could have been used for solving social
problems in hundreds of villages.

Correspondent over video of a man in office Cavansir Yusifov, head of
the financial monitoring department of the Finance Ministry, has told
ANS that over the last 10 months of 2004, financial violations have
been uncovered mainly in Xocali, Xocavand, Susa, Haciqabul, Davaci,
Beylaqan, Ucar, Saki, Tartar, Agstafa and Qazax Districts. Much of
the public funds were misused in the education, health, culture and
forestry spheres in these districts. There were also cases when public
funds were misspent under the guise of renovation work. It has been
established that 38m manats 7,800 dollars were misused in Haciqabul
District central Azerbaijan alone.

There were serious violations in the use of 100m manats 20,000 dollars
in the education sphere in the town of Xocali. It has been uncovered
that public funds were misused mainly in the education field in
Susa and Xocali Districts which are under Armenian occupation. The
cases of misuse are related to the number of lessons and extra jobs
at schools. Another violation of the law was related to accountants
artificially increasing salaries.

Cavansir Yusifov said that 3.5bn manats 714,000 dollars of the misused
12.5bn manats have already been returned to the budget. As for the
remaining 9bn manats, Mr Yusifov said that evidence regarding several
cases has been submitted to the law-enforcement bodies. He said that
it would be impossible to return all the remaining funds since they
have been paid as salaries in some districts.

Employees have already received that money. It is already impossible to
get the money back, end quote. The Ministry of Finance has dismissed
nine people directly responsible for spending public funds and
85 people will receive an administrative punishment, he said. Mr
Yusifov added that inspections are under way in the financial
departments of Ismayilli, Salyan, Neftcala, Kurdamir, Samux and
Zaqatala Districts. The executive authorities in 14 districts will
also be inspected by the end of the year, he said.

Aide: Armenia should reject policy of partial compromises over NK

Aide says Armenia should reject policy of partial compromises over Karabakh

Arminfo,
19 Nov 04

YEREVAN

“In the Karabakh issue we have to reject the policy of the cuckoo from
the well-known Armenian fairy tale. We can’t sacrifice one part of the
territory of Nagornyy Karabakh to preserve another,” the leader of the
Liberal Democratic Union and advisor to the Armenian president on
local government issues, Seyran Avakyan, has told the Union’s congress
which opened today.

He said Armenia must speak to the international community in the
language it understands.

“If great superpowers have interests in the region, then we have to
try to make Armenia more attractive than, say, Azerbaijan, and not to
take offence because the world community is not accepting our position
the way we want. They have to see that Armenia has much more important
values not under the ground, but on the surface,” the leader of the
Liberal Democratic Union said.

Eq. Guinea wants death for coup suspect, 26 years for Armenians

Reuters, UK
Nov 18 2004

Equatorial Guinea wants death for coup suspect

By Estelle Shirbon

MALABO (Reuters) – Equatorial Guinea’s state prosecutor has demanded
the death penalty for a South African accused of plotting to topple
the president of sub-Saharan Africa’s third-biggest oil producer.

Summing up the case against 19 suspected mercenaries standing trial,
state prosecutor Jose Olo Obono said on Thursday that the group was
working for an international web of financiers seeking to put exiled
politician Severo Moto in power.

Equatorial Guinea says the plot to oust President Teodoro Obiang
Nguema Mbasogo was organised by Simon Mann, a former British special
forces officer who was jailed by Zimbabwe in August on charges
related to the alleged coup.

Obono told the court he wanted the death penalty both for South
African Nick du Toit, who was in court flanked by four armed guards
with his hands and feet shackled, and for Moto, who lives in Spain
and is being tried in absentia.

Du Toit was the only man in the trial to admit involvement in the
plot, but he retracted his confession on Tuesday.

The South African said he had been tortured and confessed only to
save his life. But in his summing up, Obono rejected any allegations
of mistreatment, saying all the prisoners’ rights had been respected.

“Any statement to the contrary … is not admissible in this trial,”
he told the court.

Obono also called for seven other South Africans on trial to be
sentenced to 86 years each and for six Armenians to serve 26 years
each.

LIST OF FINANCIERS

Fourteen people, including Mark Thatcher, the son of former Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher, are listed in court documents read out by
Obono as financiers of the plot.

Thatcher is accused of stumping up $275,000 (148,000 pounds), while
Lebanese oil tycoon Eli Calil is alleged to have contributed
$750,000. Both deny any involvement.

A number of British businessmen are also named in the list handed out
in the Malabo court, including a J.H. Archer. He is alleged to have
provided $240,000 to the coup plotters.

Disgraced British politician and best-selling novelist Jeffrey
Archer, who spent time behind bars for perjury and perverting the
course of justice in relation to a libel case, denied any links to
the case. His middle initial is H.

“Lord Archer emphatically denies any involvement with the alleged
coup in Equatorial Guinea,” Archer’s lawyers said in London,
repeating a statement they first made in August.

Members of Equatorial Guinea’s legal team denied media reports that
Thatcher had been charged by the country, which has yet to decide
whether to seek his extradition from South Africa.

Thatcher is due to appear in a Cape Town court on November 26 to
answer questions from Equatorial Guinea about the alleged plot.
However, his lawyers have challenged this, saying it may infringe on
his right to a fair trial in South Africa or Equatorial Guinea,
should he later be extradited.

He is also due to attend a November 25 court hearing at which he
faces charges under South Africa’s anti-mercenary law.

Karabakh peace process “officially” dead, says Armenian paper

Aravot, Yerevan, in Armenian
17 Nov 04

Karabakh peace process “officially” dead, says Armenian paper

by Tigran Avetisyan’s “The process has died”

It can already be boldly stated that the Karabakh negotiating process
has “officially” failed. Actually the process failed long ago, but if
over recent years the parties to the conflict were trying to create
an illusion of dialogue, now mutual official statements talk about
the inexpedience of continuing the negotiations. Such statements by
different top officials in Baku are not new. But only yesterday did
the Armenian party officially announce the final failure of the
negotiations and Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan talk about
this failure. “If Baku continues asserting that the NKR Nagornyy
Karabakh Republic resolution should be adopted in the UN, and if this
resolution is, nevertheless, adopted, in that case the situation in
the negotiating process will radically change. Actually in that case
Azerbaijan should negotiate with Nagornyy Karabakh,” Vardan Oskanyan
said. In fact he officially announced the death of the negotiating
process, which is in deadlock.

Let us note that Oskanyan’s statement is not thunder in a cloudless
sky and has a “prehistory”. Two days ago at the press conference with
the Estonian president Armenian President Robert Kocharyan expressed
pessimism on the prospects for a settlement, complaining about the
incorrectness of the negotiating format (i.e. the absence of the
Karabakh party) and uncompromising position of Azerbaijan. It is
worth mentioning that this format did not seem wrong to Kocharyan
when, some years ago, he was accepting an award from Jacques Chirac’s
hand in Paris or was enjoying a walk on Key West beach. And if we add
to this Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan’s idea that he has already
lost “hope of achieving success” in the negotiations, it becomes
clear that Oskanyan’s statement was simply the final chord of the
political decision, according to which the failure of the
negotiations is officially announced.

It is absurd to think that, listening to Oskanyan, Baku will
immediately withdraw from the UN its application to discuss the
problem of the “occupied territories”. Moreover, recently Azerbaijan
has been more active on the conflict in other international instances
(for instance in the Hague court) and aspires to discuss the problem
in another format, which Azeri Foreign Minister Mammadyarov announced
recently. So what? War? Maybe not immediately and in a slightly
different form?

Putin forges new ties with former republics

Putin forges new ties with former republics
By Steven Lee Myers

Seattle Times
Nov 14 2004

MOSCOW — President Vladimir Putin is not subtle.

As the presidential campaign climaxed late last month in Ukraine, a
country once dominated by Russia’s czars and commissars but now free
to choose its own way, Putin went to Kiev for three days of
politicking on behalf of the candidate who promised to strengthen
bonds with Moscow.

That candidate came in a close second to one advocating closer ties
to Europe — another way of calling for greater independence from its
big neighbor. On Friday, barely a week ahead of the runoff, Putin was
in Ukraine again.

In the language of international diplomacy this is known as
interfering in another country’s internal affairs. For Putin,
however, it is an increasingly typical feature of what might be
called Russia’s soft imperialism.

>>From the edges of a new Europe to the Caucasus to Central Asia, Putin
is wielding Russia’s considerable resources — and his personal clout
— to keep those countries in what Russians call the “near abroad”
under the sway, if not outright domination, of the Kremlin.

He has used Russia’s economic levers — above all, its oil and gas,
often sold at discounts — to bind its neighbors into an ever tighter
dependency. He has countered the U.S. military buildup in Central
Asia after the Sept. 11 attacks with a buildup of Russian forces in
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Separatist regions abetted

In Moldova and Georgia, Russia has openly abetted separatist regions
by refusing to keep its commitments to withdraw its troops. In
Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, it has also granted Russian
citizenship to thousands who, technically, are citizens of other
countries, an act that makes them candidates for the special
attention of Kremlin diplomacy.

Putin is not rebuilding the Soviet Union. But he is trying to forge
an economic, social and military facsimile, with Moscow again at the
core, in all but three of its former republics. The notable
exceptions are the Baltic nations, which irrevocably severed the old
chains and now belong to NATO and the European Union.

Elsewhere, despite new national identities that took root after the
Soviet collapse, he appears to be succeeding.

“Russia is on its way to recover the degree of soft power the
U.S.S.R. once enjoyed in its immediate sphere of influence,” Fiona
Hill, an expert with the Brookings Institution, wrote in a recent
study for the Foreign Policy Center in London, referring to the
economic power and cultural influence that once accompanied the far
harder power of the troops and security apparatus that controlled the
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.

Protecting interests

It is no surprise that Putin, like any leader, would consider it his
right to protect what he sees as the country’s interests in its
extensive back yard, especially now that the United States, the
European Union, China and others are actively pursuing their own
business and strategic interests there.

But some of his policies and pronouncements have revived fears of
Russia’s long shadow. In Poland, a former Soviet satellite, a scandal
has erupted over allegations of bribery and espionage involving a
Russian agent and the country’s largest oil company.

“We are facing a restoration of the Russian empire through economic
means,” Zbigniew Siemiatkowski, the former Polish chief of
intelligence, told a parliamentary inquiry last month.

Indeed, the rebound of Russia’s economy after the financial crisis of
1998 has given Putin new leverage with which to counter the economic
and political incentives the West is offering Ukraine, Georgia,
Armenia, Azerbaijan and the countries of Central Asia to lure them
out of Moscow’s embrace.

Russia has the advantage of proximity and old ties, as well as
linguistic bonds, because Russian remains the language of commerce
and diplomacy throughout the region. Even more important, it has oil
and gas.

As Stephen O’Sullivan, the head of research at the United Financial
Group in Moscow, put it, “Oil and gas is what makes Russia important
to a lot of the world.”

Reclaiming status

Putin, who not long ago called the Soviet collapse a “national
tragedy,” is clearly eager to reclaim for Russia some of its status
as a superpower. And there is more to it than economics. The
perceived losses of the Baltics and, more recently, of Georgia have
been treated in Russia as a blow to national prestige.

That is what has made the outcome of Ukraine’s election so evidently
vital to Putin. Despite gaining independence in 1991, Ukraine retains
deep ties to Russia because it spent centuries under Moscow’s rule.
Many Ukrainians are ethnic Russians.

Now, President Leonid Kuchma’s decision to step down after 10 years
has opened up a fiercely contested fight over the country’s future.
Kuchma himself zigzagged between Russia and the West, but he has
thrown his support to Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, who has made
it clear he feels the country’s interests lie to the east.

And that makes Yanukovich the candidate favored by Putin over Victor
Yushchenko, who wants to balance trade with Russia with expanded ties
to Ukraine’s European neighbors.

“This election is not about Yushchenko or Yanukovich or even
Ukraine,” Hryhoriy Nemyria, director of the European Center for
International Studies in Kiev, said in an interview after the first
round of voting. “It’s about Russia.”

He said a victory for Yushchenko in the runoff would amount to a
public humiliation of Putin, at home and abroad.

“The perception would be that Ukraine escaped, like Georgia,” he
said. “It would be like the escape of a little sister from the
family.”

–Boundary_(ID_s1MlzIiNccbi5verwZHLdg)–

Armenia’s top prosecutor ends criminal investigation into 1999parlia

Armenia’s top prosecutor ends criminal investigation into 1999 parliament attack
by AVET DEMOURIAN; Associated Press Writer

Associated Press Worldstream
November 11, 2004 Thursday 10:14 AM Eastern Time

Armenia’s top prosecutor closed the criminal investigation into
the 1999 shooting attack on parliament that killed this ex-Soviet
republic’s prime minister and seven other people, a decision that
some politicians criticized Thursday as premature.

Prosecutor General Agvan Ovsepian said Wednesday that the five-year-old
investigation into the organizers of the Oct. 27, 1999, attack was
being closed because of a lack of information.

Six gunmen barged into the parliament chamber, shooting then-Prime
Minister Vazgen Sarkisian, Parliament Speaker Karen Demirchian and
six other officials and lawmakers. Forty hostages were held overnight
before the attackers surrendered and released the captives in exchange
for time on television and promise of a fair trial.

Alleged leader Nairi Unanian and five others were sentenced to life
in prison; one later committed suicide.

The attackers claimed they were saving Armenia from economic collapse
and official corruption. But the opposition has long suspected a
political motive since Sarkisian was believed to be moving to sideline
President Robert Kocharian.

“As a victim and a witness… I had the impression that the terrorists
did not act alone and were waiting for help from the outside,” said
Prime Minister Andranik Markarian, who was in the parliament session
during the terrorist attack.

He said that steps must be taken to “dispel this suspicion that exists
among witnesses of the terrorist attack and society.”

Democratic Party leader Aram Sarkisian, whose brother was killed in
the attack, criticized the prosecutor general’s decision, saying
it was taken “not on a legal basis but political, with the aim to
forever conceal the organizers.”

Markarian called on anyone who might have additional information to
provide it to the prosecutor general’s office. According to Armenian
law, criminal cases may be reopened if new information emerges.

Rehabilitation Center: Current And Future Plans

REHABILITATION CENTER: CURRENT AND FUTURE PLANS

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
09 Nov 04

It cannot be denied that the rehabilitation center of Stepanakert
develops and expands its sphere of activities. The organization
operates on state financing but there are also many programs brought
into being owing to benefactors.

On the means provided by the London office of the Armenian General
Benevolent Union on October 3-10 a trip to Armenia was organized
for 10 disabled receiving treatment in the center. According to the
director of the center Vardan Tadevossian, more trips are going to
be organized. “We aim to pay more attention to disabled children. In
this case we must also involve their parents which will bring about
more expenses but, I think, the idea is worthwhile, and we must
fulfill it at any price (of course, with the help of sponsors),”
said the director of the center.

NVARD OHANJANIAN.
09-11-2004

Pace N1405 Resolution Criticized

A1 Plus | 17:33:33 | 09-11-2004 | Politics |

PACE N1405 RESOLUTION CRITICIZED

Partnership for the Sake of Open Society initiative staged a round
table on Tuesday to discuss the PACE recent resolutions and reports
on how Armenia is fulfilling its CE commitments.

The PACE resolution N1405 adopted at the PACE fall session and Teri
Davis report were criticized by the round table participants.

They noted either the report or the resolution was ill-disposed
toward Armenia and could have adverse consequences for the republic,
especially if taken as basic documents by the CE.

The initiative members expressed their opinion saying the resolution
didn’t reflect the real situation.

French FM Sec. of State Believes Armenia Might Join EU in 15 years

FRENCH FOREIGN MINISTRY SECRETARY OF STATE BELIEVES THAT ARMENIA MIGHT
JOIN EU IN 15 YEARS

EREVAN, November 6 (RIA Novosti, Gamlet Matevosyan) — Mr. Renaud
Muselier, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs of the French Foreign
Ministry believes that Armenia might become the EU member in 15 years.

He met with speaker of the Armenian Parliament Artur Bagdasaryan, who
is currently on an official visit to France.

Officials at the public relations department of the Armenian
Parliament told RIA Novosti that Mr. Muselier also stressed the
importance of integration of Armenia in European structures in the
framework of the EU program “Enlarged Europe: new neighbors.” In his
turn, Mr. Bagdasaryan pointed out that all countries must have similar
EU membership criteria, emphasizing the inadmissibility of the
double-standard policy.

The participants of the talks discussed the possibility of French
technical aid to Armenia, the creation of the House of Friendship with
France in Armenia, which might become a coordinating link in the
implementation of scientific, cultural, trade and economic programs of
cooperation between more than 20 twin-cities of the two countries.

The Armenian community in France numbers about 300,000 people.