BAKU: Indian companies engaged in gold mining in occupied territorie

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Feb 12 2005

INDIAN COMPANIES ENGAGED IN GOLD MINING IN OCCUPIED TERRITORIES OF
AZERBAIJAN, INDIAN AMBASSADOR SAYS
[February 12, 2005, 20:14:56]

The Indian companies are engaged in development of gold mines in the
Kalbajar region of Azerbaijan occupied by the Armenians aggressors.
Ambassador of India to the Azerbaijan Republic Jyoti Svarup Pande
confirmed the fact.

It became possible after establishment of contact with the Indian
embassy in Armenia, the Ambassador noted.

The Ambassador also said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of India
and the Indian Embassy in Armenia have already warned the Indian gold
miners that they are working in the occupied territories of Azerbaijan.

BAKU: Russian vice-speaker lays out his view on Garabagh conflictset

Russian vice-speaker lays out his view on Garabagh conflict settlement

Assa-Irada
Feb 10 2005

Baku, February 9, AssA-Irada
The Russian Duma (parliament) vice-speaker Vladimir Zhirinovsky says
that the most appropriate solution for the problem over Upper
Garabagh would be its entering the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS). He said that Moscow is afraid of taking either side in the
conflict settlement to avoid hurting their interests.
Zhirinovsky added that neither Azerbaijan nor Armenia will ever
accept losing Upper Garabagh.
Commenting on the statement, the Milli Majlis first deputy chairman
Arif Rahimzada regarded it as nonsense. He did not rule out that this
statement may be put on discussion in the Azerbaijani parliament,
since it was made by the second top official of the Russian
parliament.*

Head Of Georgian-Armenian Diocese To Turn To Saakashvili For Help

HEAD OF GEORGIAN-ARMENIAN DIOCESE TO TURN TO SAAKASHVILI FOR HELP

Azg/arm
10 Feb 05

Akhalkalaki-based A-Info agency informed that unknown people took
away the headstones with Armenian names from the yard of the Armenian
Norashen St. Mother Mary Church, replacing them with the ones with
inscriptions in Georgian.

Concerning the issue, Archbishop Vazgen Mirzakhanian, head of the
Georgian-Armenian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, is going
to turn for help to Mikhail Saakashvili, President of Georgia.

Zurab Zhvania’s Funeral Finished In Georgia

ZURAB ZHVANIA’S FUNERAL FINISHED IN GEORGIA

Arminfo
7 Feb 05

TBILISI. Georgia’s Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania’s funeral came to an
end in Georgia.

He was buried in the Didube Pantheon of Eminent Public Persons of
Georgia. The Pantheon was created in XIX century; It is the home
for famous persons working in science, culture, writers and public
persons. All in all there were 100 graves in the Didube Pantheon. Grave
of Zurab Zhvania is the 101th in Didube Pantheon.

The Ceremony was accompanied by artillery that fired volleys. Family
members of the premier, Georgia’s president Mikheil Saakashvili,
vice premier Giorgi Baramidze, state minister Giorgi Khaindrava and
Zurab Zhvania’s relatives were at the burial ceremony.

At about 15:30 the coffin was taken to Rustaveli Avenue at the
parliament building of Georgia. Those present paid a minute of silence
in honor of the prime minister. After this the orchestra played the
national anthem.

The servicemen of 11 brigade of Shavnabada battalion took the coffin
from the Rustaveli Avenue to the cathedral of Sameba.

Thousands of people gathered at the building of parliament. Ceremony
was attended by the president of Georgia, spokesperson of parliament
Nino Burjanadze, members of the government, MP, public persons,
representatives of international organizations, ordinary citizens.

After the ceremony at the parliament representatives of the government
and foreign delegations brought flowers to the place where the coffin
with Zurab Zhvania’s body was rested.

Over 50 delegations including heads of diverse international
organizations from different countries arrived for the funeral,
including delegations from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Germany,
Russia, the USA, Turkey, Ukraine, France, Finland, Czechia. To note an
Armenian delegation headed by Vice Speaker of the Armenian Parliament
Tigran Torosyan also attended the ceremony. The delegation consisted
of Minister for Transport and Communication Andranik Manukyan,
Yerevan Mayor Yervand Zakharyan, other officials, as well as the first
president of Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrosyan and the former speaker of
the Parliament Babken Ararktsyan.

Georgian government received dozens of condolences from different parts
of the world in connection with the death of Zurab Zhvania. Among
them are heads of international organizations, well-known public
persons. One of the first persons to express his condolences was
president of Ukraine Victor Yushenko; President of Russia Vladimer
Putin sent a telegraph; condolences were also received from the
president of Turkey Taip Rejeb Erdogan, President of Azerbaijan Ilham
Aliev, European Commission, European Union and other organizations;
Georgia’s president received a personal call from the State Secretary
of the US Condoliza Rice.

Despite cold whether – it’s been snowing in Tbilisi for a few days
already – the funeral ceremony was attended by thousands of people
from all the corners of Georgia.

Central Bank says $ to continue losing its value against Armenian Dr

CENTRAL BANK SAYS DOLLAR TO CONTINUE LOSE ITS VALUE AGAINST ARMENIAN DRAM

ArmenPress
Feb 8 2005

YEREVAN , FEBRUARY 8, ARMENPRESS: Central Bank chairman Tigran
Sarkisian told a Monday news conference that the US Dollar that
devaluated 15 percent against Armenian national currency dram in
2004, will continue to lose its value in 2005. He added that the
Central Bank is not going to intervene in this process and will
remain faithful to the policy of “floating exchange rate.”
“We do not give assessments concerning the dram’s rate and make no
forecast, like we cannot fight against Dollar’s devaluation and plan
no such measures,” Sarkisian said. Sarkisian said if economic
entities and individuals see that it is more profitable to keep their
money in drams, there will be no deficit for it in the domestic
market.
According to Sarkisian, last year Armenians working abroad sent
home some $740 million. He added that according to Central Bank
forecasts, price growth rate this year will make 7 percent and the
average household’s income will grow by 12-14 percent.

The legal definition of genocide

Vail Daily News, CO
Feb 8 2005

The legal definition of genocide

Rohn K. Robbins
February 7, 2005

The recent slaughter in Darfur, coupled with the popularity of the
movie, Hotel Rwanda, and the 60th anniversary of the liberation of
Auschwitz bring into sharp focus the question of genocide. Darfur, of
course, is in the western part of Sudan where, over the last two
years, at least 70,000 people have been killed and more than 2
million have been dispossessed of their homes.

Since February 2003, in the context of a military counter-insurgency
campaign against two rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA)
and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) Sudanese government
forces and government-backed Arab ethnic militias known as
“Janjaweed” have committed war crimes, crimes against humanity and
“ethnic cleansing” in the Darfur region of Sudan. Government forces
and militias have systematically targeted civilian communities that
share the same ethnicity as the rebel groups (the black, non-Arab
Fur, Zaghawa and Masalit people), killing, looting, raping, forcibly
displacing and destroying hundreds of villages. Over a million
people, driven from their homes, now face death from starvation and
disease as the government and Janjaweed militias attempt to prevent
humanitarian aid from reaching them. The same forces have destroyed
the people of Darfur’s villages and crops, and poisoned their water.

The Hotel Rwanda recounts the genocidal terror of the 100 bloody days
commencing in April, 1994 in Rwanda when the ethnic Hutu tribesmen
engaged in the wholesale slaughter of the ethic Tutsi, ultimately
killing an estimated 800,000 Tutsi and politically moderate Hutu
before the Tutsi rebels of the Rwandan Patriotic Front regained
control. Most of the dead were hacked to death with machetes by the
frantic Hutu hordes. Radio Mille Collines, featured prominently in
the movie, read the names, addresses and license plate numbers of
many Tutsi and moderate Hutus whom the Hutu slated for annihilation
and whom were summarily executed.

Of course, these two episodes of ethnic slaughter, roughly a decade
apart, were not the first of their kind in the 20th and early 21st
century. In 1915, the Turks massacred approximately 1 million
Armenians. In the 1940s, Nazi Germany exterminated more than 6
million Jews and another 5 million or so Poles, Roma, Communists and
other “undesirables”. In Cambodia, in the mid-1970s Pol Pot and the
communists Khmer Rouge exterminated roughly 2 million (out of a
population of 7 million) ethnic Vietnamese, ethnic Chinese, Muslim
Chams, Buddhist monks and “intellectuals” (which translated,
literally, to anyone who could read or who wore glasses). In the late
1980s Saddam Hussein gassed and otherwise murdered tens of thousands
of Kurds. In early 1990s in Srebrenica, Kosovo and Bosnia, Muslims
and Croats were slaughtered wholesale by the Serbs. It is a sad and
sordid history of our species.

Despite the outrage which is oftentimes expressed, most times, it is
little more than politic lip service. Far more times than not, the
international community has done little more than offer its
collective condemnation and limp-wristed condolences but has, to say
the least, dragged its collective heels in offering any meaningful
intervention.

It historically may not seem so, but there is, in fact, an
international law against such things. Known as the Genocide
Convention, it took the United States more than 40 years to adopt it.

The term “genocide” was first coined by Raphael Lemkin, a survivor of
the Holocaust, and derives from the Greek “geno”, meaning “tribe” and
the derivative “cide” from the Latin word “caedre” meaning “killing”,
thus the “killing of a tribe” of peoples.

Genocide is defined as any of the following acts committed with
intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial,
or religious group, as such:

a. Killing members of the group;

b. Causing serious bodily or mental harm to the members of the group;

c. Deliberately inflicting on the group the conditions of life
calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in
part;

d. Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;

e. Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

For a party to be found guilty of genocide, it has to: 1) carry out
one or more of the aforementioned acts, 2) with the intent to destroy
all or part of 3) one of the groups protected. The law does not
require the Holocaust-like extermination of an entire group, only
acts intended to destroy a substantial part.

And that has been the bugaboo; first, intent must be shown and second
a “substantial part” must be quantified. Simply, how much is
“substantial?”

The “Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide” was adopted by the United Nations in 1951. The United
States did not ratify the act until 1988.

In Nuremberg the Nazi War Crimes tribunal was convened following the
Second World War to mete out justice to the perpetrators of genocide.
A similar tribunal was not convened again until the Balkans in the
1990s . A standing UN war crimes tribunal was not established at The
Hague in Belgium until 1993.

While it seems the declamations of genocide are flying earlier in
Darfur than in previous genocides, the world seems, yet again, to be
largely sitting on the sidelines. Waiting for precisely what, I
remain uncertain.

Rohn K. Robbins is an attorney licensed before the Bars of Colorado
and California who practices in the Vail Valley. He is a member of
the Colorado State Bar Association Legal Ethics Committee and is a
former adjunct professor of law. Mr. Robbins lectures for Continuing
Legal Education for attorneys in the areas of real estate, business
law and legal ethics. He may be heard on Wednesday nights at 7:00
p.m. on KZYR radio (97.7 FM) as host of “Community Focus”. Mr.
Robbins may be reached at 970/926.4461 or at his e-mail address:
[email protected]

UN Expert Group to Meet in Azerbaijan

PRESS RELEASE

UN Department of Public Information, Yerevan Office
2 Petros Adamyan str., First Floor
Yerevan 375010, Armenia
Contact: Armine Halajyan, UN DPI Information Assistant
Tel.: (374 1) 560 212
Fax/Tel.: (374 1) 561 406

UN Expert Group to Meet in Azerbaijan on Issues in Linking Implementation of
Beijing Action Plan, Millennium Goals, 7 – 10 February

The United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women will organize an
expert group meeting on “Achievements, gaps and challenges in linking the
implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action and the Millennium
Declaration and Millennium Development Goals”, hosted by the Government of
Azerbaijan, in Baku, from 7 to 10 February 2005.

The meeting is being convened in preparation for the session of the
Commission on the Status of Women in New York from 28 February to 11 March
2005, which will consider the 10-year review and appraisal of the
implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and the
outcome document of the twenty-third special session of the General Assembly
“Women 2000: gender equality, development and peace for the twenty-first
century”.

The Platform for Action was adopted by consensus in 1995 at the Fourth World
Conference on Women and embodies the commitment of the international
community to the advancement and empowerment of women and to gender
equality. It sets out measures for national, regional and international
action in 12 critical areas of concern: women and poverty; education and
training; health, including reproductive rights; violence; armed conflict;
economy; power and decision-making; institutional mechanisms; human rights;
media; environment; and the girl child. The outcome document of 2000
identified further action required to achieve the full implementation of the
Platform for Action and emphasized the crucial links between the advancement
of women, gender equality and progress for society as a whole.

The Millennium Declaration, adopted by United Nations Member States in
September 2000, represents a global political commitment towards the
promotion of sustainable human development, peace and security, human
rights, democracy and good governance. The Declaration includes equality
among the fundamental values essential to international relations, and
governments resolved to promote gender equality and the empowerment of women
as effective ways to combat poverty, hunger and disease and to stimulate
development that is truly sustainable. States also resolved to combat all
forms of violence against women and implement the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. The objectives in
the Millennium Declaration were derived from the outcomes of the major
summits and conferences of the 1990s, including the Fourth World Conference
on Women. Some of the objectives were subsequently formulated as eight
Millennium Development Goals, to be achieved by 2015.

The findings and recommendations of the expert group meeting in Baku will
provide inputs for the discussion on the contribution of the Commission on
the Status of Women, transmitted through the Economic and Social Council, to
the review of the Millennium Declaration at the high-level plenary of the
General Assembly in September 2005. The 12 independent experts and
additional observers will consider national, regional and global experiences
and approaches and formulate conclusions and recommendations on enhancing
the linkages in the implementation of the Platform for Action, the
Millennium Declaration and the Millennium Development Goals.

http://www.undpi.am

Russia is sitting on the fence

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
February 4, 2005, Friday

RUSSIA IS SITTING ON THE FENCE

WPS observer

The Russian Defense Ministry has handed over the Tbilisi Armored
Vehicle Repair Plant to the balance of the Georgian Defense Ministry,
the Russian and Georgian media reported of late. Colonel Levan
Nikolaishvili, deputy chief of the Georgian General Staff, and
Colonel Andrei Popov, deputy chief of the headquarters of the Russian
Group of Forces in the Caucasus (GRVZ) signed the corresponding
agreement on February 2. Under the agreement, Russia is obliged to
repay the debt to the Georgian budget for communal services and
renting. Tbilisi is saying that the plant was allegedly handed over
in the framework of the Istanbul agreements of 1999 on withdrawal of
the Russian military bases and military hardware from Georgia. This
is not entirely so, since in Istanbul the matter only concerned
withdrawal of the Russian military bases from Vaziani and Gudauta and
granting permission for temporary deployment of Russian bases in
Akhalkalaki and Batumi. The documents signed in Istanbul mention no
other military objects, including a military plant. Thus, handing
over the tank repair plant has been the initiative of Moscow.

The observers have already assessed negative effects of this action.
Firstly, according to observers with Nezavisimaya Gazeta, until
lately under repair in Tbilisi have been Georgian and Russian tanks,
as well as the armored vehicles for the Armenian army. In this
connection official Baku accused Georgia several years ago of giving
military aid to the unfriendly Yerevan. Baku then refused to accept
an offer of such services for the Azerbaijani army in Baku, initiated
by Georgia and the GRVZ command. It is clear now that the enterprise
has been the property of Georgia and it will be harder for Yerevan to
repair its tanks.

Secondly, Vladimir Popov, academician at the Academy of Military
Sciences, told WPS, “handing over a Russian tank repair plant to
Georgia by the GRVZ means that Moscow is indirectly supporting
preparation of the Georgian troops for invasion in South Ossetia and
Abkhazia.” Popov reminds that in June 1992 Russia already handed over
military plants, objects and armored hardware of the former Soviet
Trans-Caucasian Military District to Georgia (modern tanks included).
Several weeks later these tanks took part in the fratricidal war on
approaches to Sukhumi and Tskhinvali. The situation differs now.
However, the Georgian president doesn’t rule out the script of
subduing the intractable autonomies by force. In this case the
specialists won’t have time to idle at the tank repair plant.

Evident is the situation when Russia has initiated the loss of its
geopolitical and military influence in Georgia to some extent.
Undoubtedly, detached repair battalions are included into GRVZ units.
However, they are unable to perform mid-life and major repair of
combatant vehicles. It means the Russian General Staff has doomed the
military hardware of the GRVZ to slow extinction. As is widely known,
Georgia is trying as hard as it can to weaken the GRVZ. Other steps
linked to reducing the number of Russian military objects in this
country will follow the above action.

Perhaps Moscow is not insisting on the long-term stay of its military
bases in Georgia and plans to change their profile into peacekeeping
or anti-terrorist centers. In opinion of Russian Defense Minister
Sergei Ivanov, “such centers must have nothing in common with
military bases. This could be an utterly different form of military
co-operation, which meets the Russian-Georgian interests and promotes
resolution of the problems available,” the minister said. It is not a
secret that Georgia is after NATO membership and is increasing its
armed forces with the aid of the USA. Georgia’s military budget is
about $65 million now. In 2005 the Pentagon intends to allocate $60
million more for a year-long training of four battalions in Georgia.
The Pentagon had already allocated $64 million in the framework of
the Training & Equip program earlier, which were used to train four
army special force battalions and several units for other security
structures. All these units are being used in Iraq now. The observers
don’t rule out that on gaining experience the Georgian commandos
might commence hostilities against Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin

Azeri army purge

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Feb 3 2005

Azeri army purge

Is the Defense Ministry weeding out officers for financial
misdemeanors, or because they are viewed as disloyal to the regime?

By Jasur Mamedov in Baku for IWPR (04/02/05)

About 10 officers in Azerbaijan’s army have been arrested and dozens
more demoted for bribery in recent weeks. The defense ministry
advertised the move as the beginning of a sweeping anti-corruption
drive, stated as a response to a new anti-corruption bill which
President Ilham Aliev signed into law by the president on 1 January
2005. But some observers are asking whether the officers who have
been targeted are really thought to be on the take, or whether they
make convenient scapegoats because their support for the regime is
viewed as suspect. `The officers in question are accused of forging
some papers in 2003 to let some draftees dodge conscription,’ defense
ministry spokesman Ramiz Melikov told IWPR. Melikov declined to name
the officers or reveal how many were involved, citing confidentiality
restrictions surrounding the investigation. Without saying that
corruption is a problem in the military, Melikov said the arrests
could be linked to the new anti-corruption law, which applies to all
government agencies including the armed forces. To comply with the
law, the defense ministry is now obliged to run checks on its staff.
`The defense ministry audits its ranks on a regular basis, and
punishes offenders,’ said Melikov said. The new law against
corruption was passed under pressure from international lending
institutions, which set it as a precondition for advancing further
credit to the Azerbaijani government. Azerbaijan set up an
anti-corruption commission in April 2004, headed by presidential
chief of staff Ramiz Mehtiev. Now that the new law has been enacted,
the commission is gearing up for a series of audits targeting
government bodies and the armed forces.

Incidents of bribery?
The incidents of bribery that led to the arrest of the army officers
were exposed on 13 January, when Mehtiev’s commission announced the
findings of an audit of the Barda Corps conducted in December 2004.
The corps is stationed 40 kilometers from the ceasefire line
separating Azerbaijani from Armenian forces around Nagorno Karabakh.
Some details of the case were leaked to the press earlier via a
retired army officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Uzeir Jafarov, who named two
officers who had been arrested. More recently, it transpired that two
other men, who commanded military units belonging to the Barda Corps,
were taken into custody around 20 January. A criminal file has been
opened on another officer in one of the units, and several more
high-ranking officers have been demoted or sacked. Retired army major
Alekber Mamedov, who heads the non-government Centre for Civilian
Supervision of the Armed Forces, agrees that corruption is widespread
in the army. However, Lieutenant-Colonel Jafarov, who dismissed from
the army in 2003, does not believe these arrests mean the defense
ministry is genuinely committed to rooting out corruption. Instead,
he thinks the officers concerned were removed for political reasons.
`The arrests at the Barda Corps were politically inspired,’ he said.
`I know for a fact that many officers in Barda voted for Isa Gambar
in the last presidential elections.’ Gambar is the leader of the
opposition Musavat party who challenged the current president, Ilham
Aliev, in 2003. According to Jafarov, officials were so alarmed by
the level of support for the opposition that Defense Minister Safar
Abiev took steps to get rid of the dissidents. To back up this
version of events, Jafarov says the Barda Corps commander-in-chief
Talib Mamedov tried to protect his subordinates, and was immediately
shunted off to a minor diplomatic post in Kazakhstan. A Defense
Ministry staffer who did the same found himself similarly dispatched
abroad, in his case to Azerbaijan’s embassy in Pakistan. `With these
two out of the picture, they swooped on the other officers,’ said
Jafarov.

Financial insecurity
Alimamed Nuriev, who heads the Azerbaijani parliament’s commission
for defense and national security, believes the anti-corruption drive
is real. `The events at Barda show that the ministry is getting
serious about corruption,’ he said. `I believe that in a month or
two, we will see the results of this anti-corruption initiative
across all government agencies, including the defense ministry.’
Whatever the truth about the accusations made against the Barda unit,
many officers and soldiers in the corps told IWPR that bribery was
rampant. `In return for a monthly fee paid to their superiors, dozens
of soldiers on the payroll were allowed to live in their homes while
officially serving in the unit. This was common practice here,’ a
Barda Corps soldier, who declined to be named, told IWPR. `Hundreds
of soldiers were never paid their wages. Most of our wages were
deducted under various pretexts such as building a new mess hall or
something.’ Major-General Tajeddin Mehtiev, a former defense minister
who now works at the ministry’s Centre for Military Studies,
prescribes reform rather than punishment. `I don’t think punitive
action alone can prevent offences in the army. The root of the
problem is that military servicemen feel financially insecure,’ he
said. `We should give our soldiers a pay rise to at least 100 US
dollars a month [current pay is between four to 10 dollars], and pay
at least 500 dollars a month to our officers, who are now earning
between 100 and 150 dollars. That would be a strong disincentive to
corruption.’

Jasur Mamedov is a reporter for Zerkalo newspaper in Baku.
This article originally appeared in Caucasus Reporting Service,
produced by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR).
Caucasus Reporting Service is supported by the UK Foreign Office and
the US State Department.

Tbilisi: “In their sights”

The Messenger, Georgia
Feb 4 2005

“In their sights”

According to the Russian newspaper Gazeta SNG, an Azeri-Georgian
agreement regarding the prohibition of cargo delivery to Armenia is
directed not against the transportation of illegal foreign goods into
Armenia, but toward further isolating the nation from Russia.
The paper also refers to the “Carpathian Declaration” signed recently
between Ukraine and Georgia, which is directed at the expansion of
the GUUAM alliance (Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and
Moldavia) with the aim to attract Poland and Turkey-NATO members-to
this bloc.
The paper writes that the situation is aggravated by the fact that
Russian military bases in Armenia are isolated from the Russian
Federation because there is no agreement regarding the transit of
soldiers and military materials between Russia and Georgia.
According to Gazeta SNG, such transport cannot take place through
either Azerbaijan or Turkey. “Though, everything can be implemented
though Iran, within the framework of a binding Soviet-Iranian
agreement regarding friendship and cooperation, but this way is more
hypothetical than practical given the long distance,” the paper
notes.
According to Gazeta SNG, it is possible that the aggravation of the
relations of the Russian Federation with Georgia and Azerbaijan
because of the mentioned agreement is part of a plan to lay the
groundwork for American-Israeli military actions against Iran.
Russia’s response to the agreement may be to increase its military
presence in Armenia and the Caspian Basin, while in Tbilisi and Baku
this certainly will be perceived as a threat to national security and
be followed by the United States and NATO increasing their military
presence in the Caucasus and Turkey.
This will complicate Moscow’s relations with Ukraine and South
Caucasian countries, the paper states. The Russian Federation has no
reliable military-political allies in this region aside from Armenia.
“In any case, the Russian leadership is not about to risk developing
the military sector of the relations with Iran and Turkmenistan at
the present time,” the paper writes.