After The Israeli Election

AFTER THE ISRAELI ELECTION
By Gwynne Dyer

AZG Armenian Daily
28/03/2006

“It’s a trade-off,” said Dror Etkes, director of the Israeli
organisation Settlement Watch, just after Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
carried out the dramatic withdrawal from the Jewish settlements in
the Gaza Strip last August. “The Gaza Strip for the settlement blocks;
the Gaza Strip for Palestinian land; the Gaza Strip for unilaterally
imposing borders. They don’t know how long they’ve got. That’s why
they’re building like maniacs.”

But they are going to have lots of time: Ariel Sharon may be in a
permanent coma, but his project is doing just fine. The new party
he founded, Kadima, will do extraordinarily well in the Israeli
elections on 28 March, probably winning almost as many seats as
the two traditional major parties, Labour and Likud, combined. The
only question about the new government is whether Kadima will have
to include either of those major parties in the new coalition, or
whether it can leave them both out in the cold.

Neither is there any doubt about what acting Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert will do once he is prime minister in his own right, with a
solid majority behind him. In far blunter terms than Sharon had used
in recent years, Olmert sketched out the new government’s policy
last month.

“Reality today obliges us to separate ourselves from the Palestinians
and to remodel the borders of the state of Israel,” said Olmert,
“and this is what I will do after the elections. This will force us
to evacuate [some] territories currently held by the state of Israel
[in the West Bank, but] we will hold on to the major settlement
blocks. We will keep Jerusalem united. It is impossible to abandon
control of the eastern borders of Israel.”

In other words, there will be no more peace negotiations: the
Palestinians will just have to live within the 420 miles (680 km)
of tall fences that mark out Israel’s new borders, in a pseudo-state
surrounded and almost cut in half by Israeli settlements. The whole
Jordan valley will stay in Israel’s hands, cutting Palestinians off
from the rest of the Arab world except for one Israel-controlled border
crossing into Jordan at the Allenby Bridge and one that crosses into
Egypt from the Gaza Strip.

The 200,000 Arabs living in the old city of Jerusalem are already
cut off from the rest of the Palestinian territories by a ring of
new Jewish suburbs and a maze of gates that they cannot pass through
without magnetic cards. New settlements linking the existing Jewish
suburbs east of Jerusalem with the settlement block of Maale Adumim
will push Israel’s frontier most of the way across the West Bank in
the centre, effectively cutting off the northern West Bank from the
southern part.

All the big settlement blocks in the West Bank — Ariel, Gush Etzion
and Maale Admumim — will formally become part of Israel, sheltering
behind the walls that divide them from the misery and desperation
on the other side. Some isolated settlements will be abandoned,
and the estimated 60,000 Jews who live in them will be moved to join
the 185,000 people who already live in the bigger blocks. The Israeli
army will police the areas that remain Palestinian, making incursions
as necessary. And there you have it: the permanent solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian problem.

Israelis justify this unilateral and highly one-sided “solution”
with the argument that there is nobody on the Palestinian side to
negotiate with, and since the victory of the radical Hamas party
in Palestinian elections two months ago that argument sounds more
plausible. But we arrived at this sorry situation because Israel
was unwilling to negotiate fairly with any of the previous, more
reasonable incarnations of the Palestinian leadership either. The
settlements always got in the way.

As former US president Jimmy Carter, who negotiated the 1978 Camp
David peace accord between Israel and Egypt, wrote in the Israeli
newspaper Haaretz last week, “the pre-eminent obstacle to peace is
Israel’s colonisation of Palestine. Israel’s occupation of Palestine
has obstructed a comprehensive peace agreement in the Holy Land,
regardless of whether Palestinians had no formalised government, one
headed by Yasser Arafat or Mahmoud Abbas, or with Abbas as president
and Hamas controlling the parliament and cabinet.”

For twenty years, while one peace initiative after another died due
to Israeli stalling and the patience of moderate Palestinians eroded,
the settlements doubled and redoubled in population, taking up more
and more Palestinian land. So now, since the Palestinians are too
radical to talk to any more, the settlements must become part of
Israel. Most Israeli voters are willing to accept this logic at the
moment, but it does not serve Israel’s long-term security.

At the moment, Israel holds all the cards in the Middle East. Its
army and its economy are incomparably stronger than those of its Arab
neighbours. It has hundreds of nuclear weapons, and they have none. And
it has 110 percent support from the United States, the world’s only
superpower. But a prudent Israeli leader would conclude that now is
therefore the right time to make a permanent peace with the Arabs,
including the Palestinians, because nobody can be certain that it
will still hold all those cards in twenty-five or fifty years’ time.

Israel cannot have a permanent peace and the settlements too. It is
making a bad trade.

BAKU: Azerbaijan’s President Visits National Security Ministry Acade

AZERBAIJAN’S PRESIDENT VISITS NATIONAL SECURITY MINISTRY ACADEMY

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 27 2006

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev today attended the opening of
Shohrat Museum and Heydar Aliyev memorial in the Academy named after
Heydar Aliyev in National Security Ministry (MNS) (APA).

The president presented a battle flag to education center. He
familiarized with the conditions in Shohrat museum as well as in
the Academy.

National Security Minister Eldar Mahmudov addressing the meeting, said
apply of the late President Heydar Aliyev’s traditions in preserve of
national interests is the main priority of their activity. Mr. Mahmudov
said serious improvements in the MNS such as strengthening of technical
base, improving of working conditions and other important issues is
the result of attention to this structure.

According to the Minister, naming the MNS Academy after Heydar Aliyev
and confirmation of Regulations on Battle Flag of Academy and its
description gave high spirit to the staff.

“As a result of operations conducted by the Ministry, dangerous
criminal gangs composed of local and foreign citizens who have links
with international terrorist organizations have been neutralized. The
Ministry is also fighting against aggressive separatism and
religious extremism. It has taken necessary actions about attempts
of provocation, destructive actions in Azerbaijan by Armenian state
organizations and Diaspora. Recent improvements in information struggle
with Armenia are of special importance,” Mr.Mahmudov stressed.

Addressing to the audience, President Ilham Aliyev said that the
Academy was established in 1998 under the executive order of Heydar
Aliyev and it was named after him in 2004. Mr. Ilham Aliyev noted that
the education center meets modern standards and called on cadets to
benefit from these conditions.

Stating that Heydar Aliyev was the first Azerbaijani chairman of
the State Security Committee, the state head reminded that he gained
great success and experience in that post. The President also said
that the policy pursued by Azerbaijan meets our national interests.

Highly appreciating the MNS’s service in preserve of national
interests, Mr. Ilham Aliyev noted that necessary measures will be
implemented to improve this system and supply it with modern equipment.

Mr. President also stressed that Azerbaijan is pursuing an independent
policy and does not interfere in internal policy of any country.

“We do not intervene in interior affairs of any state and no state
can do it against us. We are aware of all processes ongoing in the
country and in the region as well. Azerbaijan will further achieve
great prospects. Pressures on Azerbaijan might increase after operating
of Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline,” the head of state concluded.

The Commander-in-Chief presented battle flag to the Academy after
that. He also conferred orders and medals on several security officers
on the occasion of 28 March-professional holiday of Azerbaijan’s
security bodies. The staff of the Academy marched before the
Commander-in-Chief.

RA President Issues A Congratulating Message On The Occasion Of TheT

RA PRESIDENT ISSUES A CONGRATULATING MESSAGE ON THE OCCASION OF THE THEATRE DAY

ArmRadio.am
27.03.2006 15:55

President Robert Kocharyan addressed a congratulating message on the
occasion of the Theatre Day.

The message says, “I congratulate theatre figures and theatre lovers
on the occasion of the International Theatre Day. The spiritual,
cultural, as well as social development of our people would be
impossible without the Armenian theatre.

Persistence of its traditions and modern comprehension are important
today for the progress of our culture and society.

The audience highly appreciates out actors, directors, all theatre
workers for their great devotedness to their work and professional
skill.

I wish creative success, full halls and ovations to representatives
of our theatric art.”

Armenian Soldier Wounded in Cease Fire Violation on Azeri Border

ARMENIAN SOLDIER WOUNDED AS A RESULT OF CEASE FIRE REGIME VIOLATION ON
ARMENIAN-AZERI BORDER

YEREVAN, MARCH 25. ARMINFO. The cease fire regime on the
Armenian-Azeri border was violated Mar 23.

Fire was opened at the Armenian positions near the village of Baganis,
Tavush region of Armenia from a military base in Gazax region of
Azerbaijan. Armenian soldier Voskan Hovhannisyan, 24, was wounded as a
result. He is now in hospital.

BAKU: Semneby: EU to take a direct part in settlement of NK conflict

Today, Azerbaijan
March 25 2006

Peter Semneby: “EU to take a direct part in settlement of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict”

25 March 2006 [16:11] – Today.Az

EU special representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby made a
statement.

The European Union (EU) will take a direct part in the resolution of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Trend report cutting Peter Semneby,
the EU special representative for the South Caucasus, as stating to
local television channel ATV.

“The resolution of conflict in the South Caucasus is one of the EU’s
priorities. It signals to more active attraction of the organization
to the resolution of the problem situation,” Semneby underlined in
his interview for Radio Liberty. EU’s mandate in the issue has been
expanded and resolution of conflict situation has been included in
it.

“Unless the conflict is resolved, Armenia might turn out in
isolation,” the Swiss diplomat stressed.

Moreover, Semneby did not conceal his concerns in connection with the
calls to the armed resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

“Attempts for the armed resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
might lead to serious results. It might sharp drop in inflow of
investments in the country,” he underlined.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/24429.html

Dispute Over Common Grammar Goes On

DISPUTE OVER COMMON GRAMMAR GOES ON

Lragir.am
24 March 06

On April 7 the final act of the judicial process between Paruir
Hairikyan and the Language Inspection will take place at the Court of
Appeals. Paruir Hairikyan suggests applying a common grammar, and a
number of academicians and representatives of the intelligentsia
oppose to him. Hairikyan says their resistance is the consequence of
their linguistic unawareness. `In fact, they oppose to Paruir
Sevak. Do they know the language better than Sevak, are they better
scholars than Sevak?’ says Hairikyan. The leader of the United
National Party says there is linguistics and language policy, that
must not be confused but combined.

Like Vramshapuh instructed Mesrop Mashtots to create the Armenian
alphabet, similarly the president could sign a decree on starting to
teach common grammar at schools within three years. Our president has
complexes, he does not hide that his education is Russian, and he has
complexes, says Hairikyan.

According to him, his opponents are illiterate. `We have arrived at a
point when Beria Mirzoyan (i.e. the chief of the Language Inspection
Lavrenti Mirzoyan) says that hopefully the court will not enforce
their decision, and the tribunal acts accordingly because they are
also illiterate,’ states Paruir Hairikyan.

Double digit real growth of GDP recorded in Armenia in 2005

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 23 2006

TWO-DIGIT REAL GROWTH OF GDP RECORDED I ARMENIA IN 2005

YEREVAN, March 23. /ARKA/. Two-digit real growth of GDP was recorded
I Armenia in 2005, Tigran Sargsyan, Chairman of the Central Bank of
Armenia, said Thursday in Armenian National Assembly.
He said that GDP reached two-digit real growth in Armenia. `Besides,
the republic had its deflator grown 4.2% and its national currency
strengthened by 7.2% and by 14% on averaged index. It means nominal
GDP grew nearly 35%’, Sargsyan said.
Current account deficit in GDP made 3.2% in 2005 against 4.5% in
2004, the CBA head said. In his words, export rose 33% and import
increased 30% in 2005.
`AS a result, 0.2-percent deflation was recorded by late 2005 and
average inflation made 0.6%, compared with previous year.
GDP real growth in Armenia made 13.9% in 2005. M.V. -0—

Jon M. Huntsman Joins Board of Beaumont Foundation of America

Jon M. Huntsman Joins Board of Beaumont Foundation of America

Business Wire; Mar 22, 2006

Jon M. Huntsman, founder and Chairman of Huntsman Corporation, the
nation’s fourth largest chemical company, has joined the Board of
Directors of the Beaumont Foundation of America (BFA), a charitable
foundation dedicated to the use of technology to enhance the lives of
America’s underprivileged. Mr. Huntsman was the 2003 recipient of the
Humanitarian of the Year Award from CNN’s Larry King. He has served
the past eight years as a member of the Board of Governors of the
American Red Cross and as Chairman of its Biomedical Services
Committee (America’s blood supply). Among countless donations he has
given to homeless and underprivileged people around the world were the
significant funds he gave to rebuild the country of Armenia following
the devastating 1988 earthquake.

Mr. Huntsman and his wife, Karen, are perhaps best known for their
$225 million donation to establish and fund the Huntsman Cancer
Institute and Hospital at the University of Utah, one of America’s
premier cancer centers, dedicated to finding cures for cancer based on
genetic research.

Wayne Reaud, Chairman of the BFA Board, commented, “Jon Huntsman is
widely recognized as one of America’s foremost concerned citizens and
philanthropists. His experience, guidance and direction will be a
tremendous asset to the work of the BFA.”

Established in 2002, the Beaumont Foundation of America supports the
use of computer technology to enhance and advance the lives of
underprivileged individuals and populations in all 50 states and the
District of Columbia.

Initiatives the BFA has funded include donations to the Salvation Army
and Boys and Girls Clubs of America. More than 500 schools have
received BFA computers, as have the children of military personnel who
lost their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan. In addition, the BFA has
delivered computers to such organizations as affordable housing,
children’s hospitals, college and university scholarship programs,
faith-based initiatives, foster care and mentoring programs for
children, persons with disabilities, restart programs for released
offenders, and senior citizens.

To date, the Beaumont Foundation of America has granted and delivered
computer equipment valued at over $63 million.for Beaumont Foundation
of America Eric Wetzel, 800-469-0661 [email protected]

Shavarsh Kocharyan Has the Key to Fair Elections

A1+

SHAVARSH KOCHARYAN HAS THE KEY TO FAIR ELECTIONS

03:25 pm 22 March, 2006

Leader of the National Democratic Party Shavarsh Kocharyan has
processed a program together with the NGO `Democracy’. According to
Kocharyan, in case the program is put into execution, it will be
practically impossible to tamper with the elections. Shavarsh
Kocharyan has not doubt about the efficiency of the control
program. He represented the program which is at present being
discussed in OSCE.

If the program is ratified, during the 2007 elections two foreign
observers will be present in every electoral area. They will be
present since early in the morning until the end of the calculation.
According to Kocharyan, about 4000 observers are needed. `4000 is a
large number, but there are countries, where more than ten thousand
observers have been sent; for example Ukraine’. According to
Kocharyan’s calculations, the expenditures for one observer are about
1000 USD, and for 4000 observers – four million USD.

The other issue refers to inner control: every polling station must
have a computer, and no one in the station can access the computer. It
is connected to the server and has its `twins’ in the OSCE office and
in the Central Electoral Committee. `That is to say, interference is
practically impossible’. Every station has its computer with different
accessories. First – every ballot box has a bug on it which states the
hour, minute and second and number of voting. Second – All the polling
stations have cameras and monitors which shoot the whole process of
voting. Third – when the passports are checked, they are immediately
photocopied and scanned and thy remain in the memory of the computer
to avoid their double use.

Everything is connected to the net and every citizen can surf in the
internet and watch what is going on in the station he is interested
in, as what is shot in the station is not for the archive but for
online broadcasting.

According to Shavarsh Kocharyan, the program will cost about 2.5-3
million USD, including tutoring.

Abkhazian Railroad is Expensive

ABKHAZIAN RAILROAD IS EXPENSIVE

Lragir/am
23 March 06

The reconstruction of the Abkhazian railroad will cost 150-200 million
dollars, told Member of Parliament Volodya Badalyan to journalists on
March 22, who represents Armenia in the four-party consortium on the
reconstruction of the Abkhazian railroad. `I think the reconstruction
of the railroad will cost 150-200 million dollars, but this is an
approximate figure,’ said the member of parliament, informed the news
agency ARKA. Volodya Badalyan said the high cost is determined by mine
clearance, three ruined bridges, as well as the reconstruction of
140-150 km of railroad. The Armenian member of parliament said Russia
can cover 50 per cent of the expenses, Georgia 30 per cent, Armenia
and Abkhazia 10 per cent each.