The Situation In Javakhk Is Stable

THE SITUATION IN JAVAKHK IS STABILE

Panorama.am
12:32 04/04/06

After the murder of Gevorg Gevorgyan in Tsalka and the events after
it the situation in Javakhk has become calm. As “A-info” has been
informed from the press department of Samtskhe-Javakhk Armenian public
organizations’ council the Javakhk Armenians demand just judgment
from the legislative bodies of Georgia.

At present Javakhk community has become watchful and is trying not to
turn to instigations. Thus, when certain unidentified organizations
spread news about a mass meeting to be organized in Akhalkalak on March
16, there was no one in the square. In the council of Samtskhe-Javakhk
Armenian public organizations it was mentioned that the mass meeting
in Akhalkalak was programmed by such forces the problem of which is
destabilization of the situation.

Romania Participates In International Conference On Energy In BlackS

ROMANIA PARTICIPATES IN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENERGY IN BLACK SEA AREA

Rompres news agency
4 Apr 06

Bucharest, 4 April: The recently ended Black Sea Energy Conference,
hosted in Bucharest by Romania’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry,
discussed various energy-related themes and presented energy projects
for the Black Sea area in the near future, along with existing
opportunities and challenges to the Black Sea energy markets.

Minister of Industry and Energy of Azerbaijan Natig Aliyev told a panel
meeting on the impact of energy on regional stability and economic
development that natural gas consumption worldwide has increased at
a constant annual pace of 10 per cent. He mentioned that Azerbaijan
possesses significant hydrocarbon resources which trading is part of
the energy policy of the country. He also pointed out that specialists
reckon the projects for the energy field have created an attractive
environment friendly to foreign investors in the country.

In connection with the Nabucco gas pipeline project, jointly carried
out by Romania, Turkey, Bulgaria, Hungary and Austria, the participants
said this will have a major contribution to the diversification of gas
supplying sources as it will offer access for European countries to
important natural gas reserves in the Middle East. At the same time,
this project was deemed to boost competition on the domestic market
of Romania for natural gas, to consolidate Romania’s importance as a
country crossed by major energy transportation corridors for Central
and Western Europe, to boost related industries as a result of the
involvement of Romanian goods and services providers, as well as to
create new jobs. The importance of this project has been acknowledged
by EU bodies, and the European Commission included it on the list of
priorities under the Trans-European Networks (TEN) project.

Official of the Minister of Mines and Energy of Serbia-Montenegro
Slobodan Sokolovic mentioned the participation of the oil and natural
gas sector of this country in the development of transit and import
routes as well as to the interconnection of pan-European pipelines,
together with Italy, Croatia and Romania.

Fulvio Conti, Chairman of the Administration Board of ENEL, presented
the experience of his corporation in Romania following its takeover of
the local Electrica Banat and Electrica Dobrogea electricity suppliers,
at a plenary meeting on energy policies and strategies. He said ENEL
is contemplating investing some 400m euro over the next five years
in modernizing and improving the supply networks of the companies
acquired by it in Romania, in order to bring these companies up to
European standards.

Government officials from Armenia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria
talked about the development of energy policies in line with the
EU requirements, highlighting the harmonization of their countries’
national energy policies with the EU principles of sustainability,
competitiveness and market safety.

Director with the US Centre for Strategic and International Studies
Janusz Bugajski pointed out the need of Europe to brake away from
what he said is acute dependency on the Russian Federation as far
as the supply of oil and natural gas is concerned. To this end,
he suggested that energy sources and transport routs be diversified.

According to him, 40 per cent of the gas used in Europe originates
in the Russian Federation, a percentage that might go up to 70percent
in some years.

Russian specialists presented a project for synchronous interconnection
between the energy systems of continental Europe and the Russian
Federation that might benefit 36 countries and 730 million
consumers. The attendees in the panel meeting on energy technology
and environmental protection unanimously agreed that today’s energy
systems are a threat to the natural environment, which requires the
use of energy resources as eco-friendly as possible.

Deputy Minister for Sustainable Development of Sweden Stefan Stern
shared the Swedish experience with the promotion of high tech
for energy, given that fossil fuels are becoming increasingly more
expensive. Social and economic costs have to be diminished by a braver
approach of bio-energy and biomass, the utilization of which would
lead to a reduction in pollutants.

The experience in the same field of Romanian Petrom company was
presented by Petrom President and CEO Gheorghe Constantinescu.

According to him, Petrom has steered production towards the use
of the most up-to-date technologies in the world in an attempt to
bring about a drastic fall in carbon emissions. Director General
of Nuclearelectrica Theodor Chirica talked about the importance of
electricity generated by nuclear power plants.

The attendees in the panel meeting on opportunities and challenges
to the business environment discussed how to improve the investment
environment so that each country in the Black Sea area may benefit form
as many easy terms as possible for sustainable economic developments.

Director of the Chinese Institute for Technological Research Xu
Xiaojie campaigned for regional and sub-regional cooperation that will
include as many countries as possible, indicating that the presence
of Black Sea countries in joint projects for technological and energy
development might be a model for cooperation among Asian countries.

Austrian specialist Hans Haider said it is vital for the European
Union to have a unitary energy policy. A harmonization of the
various regulations of the relevant bodies from various countries,
he said, would allow low-cost production and supply of energy. The
attendees argued that the problem with clean energy relates to price
sustainability, because energy could be produced using the beat
performing technologies, but there is a risk of such energy being
left unsold because it is too expensive.

Representatives Of Armenian Side Leave For Budapest For Taking Part

REPRESENTATIVES OF ARMENIAN SIDE LEAVE FOR BUDAPEST FOR TAKING PART IN COURT SITTING ON CASE OF ARMENIAN OFFICER’S MURDER

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 03 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 3, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Representative of
RA Defence Ministry Hayk Demoyan and representative of the aggrieved
party, lawyer Nazeli Vardanian left for Budapest for the purpose of
taking part in the court sitting on case of murder of Officer of RA
Armed Forces Gurgen Margarian. Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed
about it by the Spokesperson for RA Defence Minister, Colonel Seyran
Shahsuvarian. At the April 4 sitting, Budapest city court will hear
the final speech of Azeri Officer Ramil Safarov who killed Gurgen
Margarian with an axe. The prosecution and defence parties will
make speeches the same day. The court will pronounce a verdict
on April 13. To recap, the 4th expert conclusion was made public
at the previous, March 7 court sitting. The conclusion recognized
R.Safarov’s emotional manifestations within the limits of the norm,
the defendant was recognized sane and the second expert insisting on
Safarov’s “limited consciousness” again was not able to ground his
conclusion at the sitting.

Azerbaijan: Opposition Youth Activists on Trial

Azerbaijan: Opposition Youth Activists on Trial

Reuters, UK
March 31 2006

30 Mar 2006 21:38:18 GMT

Source: Human Rights Watch

(New York, March 31, 2006) – The Azerbaijani government must ensure a
fair trial for three opposition youth leaders whose trial begins
today in Baku, Human Rights Watch said today. The case against the
youth leaders originated with their arrest before the November 2005
parliamentary polls that the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, the European Union and others declared to have
fallen well short of international standards. Ruslan Bashirli, head
of the Yeni Fikir (New Thinking) youth group, is charged with
attempting to forcefully overthrow the government and of engaging in
illegal business activities. Yeni Fikir deputy heads Said Nuri and
Ramin Tagiev face identical charges.

“The context and timing of the arrest of the Yeni Fikir leaders
suggests that the case is politically motivated,” said Holly Cartner,
executive director of Human Rights Watch’s Europe and Central Asia
division. “It also casts an even darker shadow on the 2005
parliamentary elections, which were blatantly fraudulent.”

Azerbaijani authorities arrested the three Yeni Fikir leaders in
August and September 2005, in the run-up to the November
parliamentary elections. Yeni Fikir is closely aligned to the
opposition Popular Front Party. Prior to the elections, authorities
arrested dozens of other individuals, including many former
government officials and prominent business leaders, who are alleged
to have ties to opposition parties. These individuals similarly face
charges of attempting to overthrow the government and committing
other crimes against the state.

On August 6, law enforcement officers in camouflage uniforms and
black masks arrested Ruslan Bashirli. The next day the Prosecutor
General’s Office charged Bashirli with attempting to forcefully
overthrow the government and accused him of meeting with Armenian
security service officers in Georgia in July and accepting U.S.$2,000
from them. Bashirli was then questioned for two days in the presence
of a state-appointed lawyer instead of the lawyer he had explicitly
chosen at the time as defense counsel. Bashirli informed his own
lawyer that during this questioning, law enforcement officers
pressured Bashirli to give evidence against Ali Keremli, leader of
the Popular Front Party, suggesting that if he made a statement on
television implicating Keremli, he would be released within 24 hours.
Bashirli refused to make such a statement.

Human Rights Watch has spoken with Bashirli’s lawyer, who states that
Bashirli maintains that the meeting in Georgia indeed took place, but
he believed that his counterparts were members of civil society
organizations and that the funds were intended to support
democratization activities. On September 12, police arrested Said
Nuri and charged him also with attempting to violently overthrow the
government. The authorities accused him of organizing weapons and
equipment for a coup in Azerbaijan while he was in Poland in late
July and early August. Nuri was in Poland during this period for a
conference sponsored by the European Institute for the Furtherance of
Democracy, a Vienna-based organization that supports individuals and
organizations working to promote democracy in Southern and Eastern
Europe. On September 14, police arrested Ramin Tagiev on the same
charge and accused him of “molding opinion about the falsity of
elections among the population.”

Since these arrests, prosecutors have also charged the three men with
illegal business activity.

For days after Bashirli’s arrest, state-controlled Azerbaijani
television showed video footage of him drinking at a table with two
men who the government alleges are Armenian agents, and another
member of Yeni Fikir, Osman Alimuradov. The prosecuting authorities
claimed that the men alleged to be Armenian agents filmed the meeting
and then gave the video cassette to Alimuradov, threatening to use it
against the Yeni Fikir members should they change their minds about
cooperation.

The government further alleges that it was Alimuradov who began to
have second thoughts and decided to inform the Azerbaijani
authorities about Bashirli and handed over the tape as evidence. It
is not clear how the television station received copies of the video
tape.

Posters showing still photographs from this video, alongside graphic
photographs allegedly depicting bodies of Azerbaijanis killed and
mutilated by Armenian forces during the Nagorno-Karabakh war,
implicating Bashirli in collusion with Armenian security agents, were
displayed in public places widely throughout Baku. It is not clear
who created or distributed these posters.

“Azerbaijan’s government is known for pressing charges against
opposition figures for what appear to be political reasons, and the
Yeni Fikir case fits this pattern,” said Cartner. “We are deeply
concerned that the three men will not get a fair trial.”

Azerbaijan has a history of arresting opposition figures during
election periods and convicting them without guaranteeing basic fair
trial standards. In October 2003, following fraudulent presidential
elections and post-election violence, seven opposition leaders were
convicted on charges of organizing or participating in mass
disturbances and resisting or committing violence against a state
representative. Human Rights Watch documented torture in the
pre-trial detention of four of the seven defendants. Prosecution
witnesses in this case also told the court that police and
prosecutors had coerced and tortured them to make statements
incriminating the opposition leaders. It is widely considered that
the convicted opposition leaders are political prisoners.

HRW news

ANKARA: Denmark-Based Roj TV Calls For Violence And Riots In Turkey

DENMARK-BASED ROJ TV CALLS FOR VIOLENCE AND RIOTS IN TURKEY
Menekse Turkyilmaz

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
March 30 2006

Denmark-based Roj TV has called for violent uprisings in southeastern
Turkey. After the call, the PKK militants and sympathizers terrorized
the biggest city Diyarbakir in the region.

Roj TV has been the focus of recent controversy, as Turkey has made
a series of high level diplomatic requests that it be shut down in
Denmark, where it continues to broadcast uninterrupted by the Danish
government.

Turkish media accuses Denmark of supporting international terrorism.

A civilian economic sanction against Denmark goods is asked by the
Turkish groups

DIYARBAKIR – When Denmark-based Roj TV has called for violent rioting
on the streets of Diyarbakir, the funerals for 4 of the 14 terrorist
PKK members killed in clashes became an opportunity to attack the
civilian and police targets in Diyarbakir city. Yesterday, a call
to shop and business owners to “close their shutters and roll down
their metal blinds” in deference to the funerals led to violence
by PKK supporters on the streets of Diyarbakir against up to 70
shops, 3 banks, and one health clinic that chose not to heed the
Roj TY broadcasted warning from the PKK. Supporters of the outlawed
terrorist group threw molotov cocktails at unshuttered businesses,
and some banks’ ATMs were destroyed.

It is believed that the Roj TV has been financed by the PKK which is
on the list of terrorist organizations in the US, UK and EU. The TV
channel is also used for money laundering and other illegal business.

However Denmark has rejected to close down the station. The PKK’s
previous TV stations MED TV and MEDYA TV were closed by the UK and
France. Turkey accuses Denmark of supporting terrorism.

Events occured in follow-up to funeral

The event leading up to the rioting and clashes in Diyarbakir was the
funerals held for PKK terrorists Bulent Tanisik, Muzaffer Pehlivan,
Mahmut Guler, and Kenan Demir. The funerals were attended by an
estimated 5,000 people, who accompanied the bodies from Diyarbakir’s
Sefik Efendi mosque to the Yenikoy Graveyard where they were buried.

Stones were thrown by the crowd at the 2nd Tactical Air Force regiment
which passed nearby the funeral procession. Following the burials,
a group of 1,000 marched through the streets shouting slogans in
support of imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan. Later, gas bombs and
stones were thrown in clashes between police forces behind barricades
that confronted the marchers in the street. With crowds dispersing
into sidestreets, businesses that had not closed their metal shutters
were attacked by PKK supporters armed with molotov cocktails, sticks,
and stones.

No one was killed yesterday in Diyarbakir, although 10 police force
members and one soldier were injured. Funerals for the remaining 10
PKK members killed in clashes this week were also marked by protest
in Batman, Adana, and Siirt, though none of the other funerals turned
into anything like the events in Diyarbakir.

Denmark Supports International Terrorism

Kemal Tuzcu named Denmark “supporter of terrorism”. Most of the Turkish
newspapers and TV channels yesterday accused Denmark of encouraging
international terrorism. “All in Danish government and security
services know that the Roj TV is a branch of PKK. Most of the staff
of the station are PKK members and the Roj TV supported the violent
events in Turkey. The Roj TV is one of the leading factors in violence
in Turkey. And denmark allows the PKK TV to broadcast” Tuzcu added.

Worse Than Cartoon Crisis” Dr. Sedat Laciner from USAK said “the
Roj TV case is worse than cartoon crisis”. “Denmark insists on the
mistakes. If the Danish police and intelligence services cannot see the
difference between a civilian TV station and terrorist organization,
they are very bad at their business. But no one in Turkey believes
in Denmark’s sincerity.

Roj TV calls for violence and people are killed in Turkey.” Dr.
Laciner added.

According to Dr. Nilgun Gulcan, the Danish Government aims to prevent
Turkey’s EU membership: “The anti-Turkish groups in Europe abuses the
Kurdish, Cyprus and Armenian problems in order to prevent Turkey’s
EU membership. When the Danish Government supports the terrorists in
Turkey, the Turkish Government and people lose their trust towards
the EU. This is a very dirty game. The supporter of the terrorists
are not Iran or Syria but Denmark and some groups in the EU”.

Dr. Laciner says if Roj TV continues to broadcast, Turkey-Denmark
relations would be damaged permanently. “It is like an Al Qeada
TV in Ankara. The PKK is a terrorist organization. It is on the
terrorist organizations list of the European Union, United States,
United Kingdom and many other countries. However the PKK has offices
in many EU cities. Similarly another Turkish terrorist organization
DHKP-C has office in Belgium. Belgium ‘allowed’ a DHKP-C militant
Fehriye Erdal to escape. The double standart is clear”.

Kemal Tuzcu argues that “no one should expect anything in combating
international terrorism”. “They have their own terrorists and they do
not consider the PKK who is responsible for more than 40.000 lives
terrorist. The Western combating terrorism is just the words but
nothing more” Mr. Tuzcu added.

Sanction Against Denmark Goods

A civilian economic sanction against Denmark goods is also asked by
the Turkish groups.

Melahat Karayol, economy correspondent of Turkish newspaper, told
the JTW that “the best way to persuade the Danish Government is the
sanctions against the Danish goods”. “remember the cartoon crisis.

Denmark did nothing but watched the crisis till the economic
sanctions. Trade is more important for Denmark than the human life”
she added.

President Of Azerbaijan Received New French Ambassador

PRESIDENT OF AZERBAIJAN RECEIVED NEW FRENCH AMBASSADOR

Regnum, Russia
March 30 2006

Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev received credentials of newly
appointed Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of France to
this country Bernard Amaudric du Chaffaut.

As a REGNUM correspondent reports, having congratulated the ambassador
with the new appointment, Ilham Aliyev expressed his confidence that
relations between the both countries would strengthen. “We successfully
cooperate in all spheres,” said the president. “My visits to France
are additional evidence of strengthening of cooperation between us
in political, economical, and cultural spheres. At the same time,
our expanding cooperation with EU positively influences our bilateral
relations.” Aliyev said that France as co-chair of the OSCE Minsk
Group contribute to settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani, Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, and expressed his hope that efforts of mediators
would bring results.

In his turn, Du Chaffaut stressed that both countries are connected
with each other by friendly relations and stated: “President of France
Jacques Chirac has special friendly attitude to you. These really
friendly relations give impetus for development of cooperation in all
spheres. President Jacques Chirac and the French government approach
settlement of theArmenian-Azerbaijani, Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
in a very delicate way fulfilling their political obligations.”

2005 World Press Freedom Review

2005 WORLD PRESS FREEDOM REVIEW

A1+
[08:50 pm] 30 March, 2006

The embattled television station A1+ continued to have problems in
2005. In January, the Armenian Academy of Sciences continued its
demands that the company vacate the premises it used at one of the
Yerevan buildings, which also hosted a number of media editorial
offices. The company has been off the air since April 2002, when
National Commission on Television and Radio refused to give A1+ a
broadcasting licence. The company has participated in seven licence
tenders since that time, but without success. According to the
Yerevan Press Club, A1+ currently operates as a production studio,
along with the editorial office of a popular Web site ,
the Ayb-Feh weekly, and the television training courses of A1+’s
founder, Meltex LLC.

The station was evicted from its premises in July, and it was given
notice to vacate its office in the Armenian Academy of Sciences by
23 July. A1+ now largely produces programmes for regional television
stations, as well as keeping a Web site and publishing a weekly
newspaper.

However, later in July, Prime Minister Andranik Markarian asked the
head of the governmental Department of State Property Management to
find alternative premises A1+. The station also found a compromise
with the Academy of Sciences President Fadey Sarkisian and may continue
to occupy its offices until new accommodations were found.

According to a Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) report, the
European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) will most likely agree to hold
hearings and make a ruling on the hotly disputed 2002 closure of A1+
in January 2006.

On the afternoon of 1 April, the car of Samvel Alexanyan,
editor-in-chief of the Syunats Yerkir newspaper, was burned in the yard
of his house in Goris, in the southeastern region of Kapan. According
to reports, Alexanyan received threats after he gave an interview
to the Novoye Vremya newspaper on 12 March. He issued a statement
on the same day in which he accused the regional administrator Surik
Khachatrian of instigating an arson attack that destroyed his car.

According to RFE/RL, Alexanyan claimed Khachatrian was angered by an
interview Alexanyan gave to a Yerevan newspaper in March. Alexanyan
similarly blamed Khachatrian for an attack on his newspaper’s premises
in autumn of 2004.

The subject of the 1915 murder of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians
in Ottoman Turkey continues to be a sore point in relations between
Armenia and Turkey.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian urged Turkey to acknowledge the
killings as a genocide when addressing the opening session of an
international conference in Yerevan on 20 April.

On 13 July, seven Armenian media groups, such as the Yerevan Press
Club and the Armenian Union of Journalists, released a joint letter
criticising the government’s proposed constitutional amendments. In
the letter, they argued that the constitutional amendments would
inadequately guarantee the independence of the National Commission
on Radio and Television, which regulates commercial broadcasting.

They also maintained that presidential power to appoint all nine
commission members should be curtailed, and that the Armenian
parliament must have the power to endorse or reject appointees to the
Commission. Criticism of the absence of any proposed changes to the
formation of the governing board of the Armenian Public Television
and Radio was also voiced.

The media groups also released a joint statement on 27 July,
in which they criticized a 21 July statement by the Council of
Europe’s Venice Commission, which positively evaluated the latest
version of draft constitutional amendments proposed by the Armenian
government. According to an RFE/RL report, the groups believe that the
Commission’s proposals on the freedom, independence, and diversity of
mass media are flawed and cannot put in place the necessary guarantees
of freedom of speech in Armenia.

According to RFE/RL, the draft constitutional amendments are to be
debated by the parliament on 29 August before being voted on in a
national referendum in November.

On 27 November, Armenia held a referendum on a package of draft
constitutional amendments to the 1995 constitution. A few international
monitors were present, and they and local observer groups reported
large-scale fraud, such as inflation of turnout numbers, ballot
stuffing and intimidation of observers. According to official results,
Armenians endorsed the amendments.

www.a1plus.am

Foreign-Agent Lobbyists Amid Uproars, Duck For Cover

FOREIGN-AGENT LOBBYISTS AMID UPROARS, DUCK FOR COVER
By Elana Schor and Roxana Tiron

The Hill, DC
March 29 2006

Corruption at the United Nations. Blowback against Chinese oil moves.

Hysteria over the Dubai ports deal.

When members of Congress lash out at a foreign entity, its local
lobbyists are inevitably caught in the crossfire.

The domestic lobbying industry makes constant headlines for its huge
profits and brewing scandals, but the smaller and more secretive
world of foreign-agent lobbying has begun attracting more than its
share of attention.

As the challenges and unanswered questions facing foreign-agent
lobbyists continue to bleed into the news and influence international
affairs, lawmakers shaping the lobbying reform debate are finally
poised to take up the issue.

The Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) was passed in 1938 to levy
criminal penalties against Nazi propagandists exploiting the U.S.

political process before World War II. The law forces strict reporting
requirements on any individual paid by a foreign government or business
for lobbying, public relations and advocacy within the United States.

A growing number of foreign-government-owned businesses, such as
Dubai Ports World and the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corp.

(CNOOC), are finding it in their best interests to have American
lobbyists helping them gain a foothold here.

In 2005, 455 foreign-agent lobbyists had active registrations working
with 661 foreign entities, according to Justice Department statistics.

“It is ridiculous to think that major [state-controlled]
multinational corporations are not going to have to pay attention
to the U.S. political process, and they would come up short if they
didn’t,” said one lobbyist currently advising foreign governments.

Like many K Street insiders contacted for this article, the lobbyist
asked to remain anonymous to speak freely about the nature of
foreign-agent lobbying without attracting unnecessary attention.

For foreign-agent lobbyists who thrive on image maintenance, former
State Department and National Security Council staffer Robert Cabelly
serves as a cautionary tale. Cabelly’s lobbying and PR firm, C/R
International, has represented African nations struggling with the
remnants of oppressive regimes, such as Angola and Equatorial Guinea,
as well as Base Petroleum, a company linked to the late Nigerian
military dictator Sani Abacha.

But it was Cabelly’s State Department-sanctioned contract to lobby
for the Sudanese government, which the Bush administration has accused
of genocide in the Darfur region, that led Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) to
mount a one-man crusade against the lobbyist.

“Some things are inappropriate” in the world of foreign-agent lobbying,
Wolf said in an interview, “but others are more so, particularly if
it’s a former federal official. Doesn’t it shock people anymore?”

Wolf, as chairman of the House Appropriations subcommittee with power
over the State Department’s purse strings, was uniquely positioned
to pressure Foggy Bottom to cut off its support for Cabelly. While a
spokesman for State initially protested that Cabelly “would provide a
perspective on United States concerns and policy that would be useful
in advancing the peace process and resolving the crisis in Darfur,”
his $530,000 contract was terminated last month.

Few governments looking for lobbyists to smooth over questionable
human-rights records have acted as publicly as Sudan.

Mark Edmond Clark, a former Council on Foreign Relations fellow, signed
an $18,000, six-month contract to lobby for Iran on the “mission of
international relations to the United Nations.” The contract ended
last year.

The brutal ruling junta of Burma dropped its last foreign-agent
lobbyists, the Republican PR firm DCI Group, in 2003. Neither Syria
nor North Korea has an active foreign-agent lobbying contract,
according to Justice Department records.

“I need to be able to go to sleep at night,” said Mark Tavlarides,
a Van Scoyoc & Associates lobbyist who represents the Pakistan Embassy.

“You lose your reputation once and that’s it. You represent a rogue
state and, even if you follow the law, it does have an impact on
your reputation.”

Another international furor over foreign lobbying occurred last year
in the Philippines, when political foes of embattled President Gloria
Arroyo pounced on her $75,000-per-month lobbying contract with Venable.

The Philippine Senate held Arroyo’s national-security adviser
in contempt when he refused to answer questions about the hiring
of lobbyists Jim Pitts and James Jatras, whose deal asks them to
“secure grants or congressional earmarks for support of the Charter
Change initiative” – an Arroyo-backed plan to replace the Philippine
government with a parliamentary system.

“You have to take the political culture of each country as you find
it,” said Jatras, who said he worked largely for general military
assistance to Philippines, not Charter Change. “Each country has
its own unique political culture and mode of political discourse. It
seems part of that in the Philippines is people making unsubstantiated
charges of the most exaggerated kind.”

The Arroyo government yanked Venable’s contract after it dominated
Philippines media, but Jatras and Pitts have since negotiated a more
flexible deal “generally promoting bilateral relations,” Jatras said.

His foreign-agent lobbying work for India on its pending civilian
nuclear agreement with the United States continues.

Rather than defending their own image in a foreign nation, lobbyists
representing suspicious or even rogue states largely find themselves
working to improve those governments’ reputations with Congress and
the White House.

“Their job is hard, but at the same time also fairly easy,” said
another lobbyist who previously worked with foreign agents. “They
defend the image of the country they represent.”

But countries like Syria or North Korea also face the challenge of
“finding quality lobbyists that are good at what they are doing and
willing to take their money,” this lobbyist said.

Ambassador Patrick Theros, the former top U.S. diplomat in Qatar and
a founding partner of Theros & Theros, last year worked as an adviser
for Ayad Allawi, then interim prime minister of Iraq.

“The hardest lesson I learned is convincing a client who does not
know the United States that the U.S. government is different from
any other big Western governments and does not speak with one voice,”
Theros said. “That’s almost impossible to sell. … As a government,
we are incomprehensible to the outside world.”

Often foreign agent lobbyists have to fight the powers of strong
grassroots movements. When the Armenian-American community urged
Congress to adopt human-rights legislation concerning the Armenian
genocide in Turkey, the Turkish government brought in the Livingston
Group and its top hired gun, former House Appropriations Committee
Chairman Bob Livingston (R-La.), to block the bill. Still, the House
International Relations Committee adopted the measure last year,
and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is considering it.

Another part of foreign agents’ challenge comes from perceptions that
are triggered because they have to register with the Department of
Justice’s criminal division.

“There is almost a negative connotation, like you are pulling something
and using undue influence in some way,” said a lawyer who advises
several foreign clients on legal and business matters.

For those not seasoned in the process, such as PR companies hired
to work on advertising campaigns, registering under FARA comes with
a stigma.

“You feel like, ‘Oh my God, we are not criminals,'” said a PR
specialist who, after the Sept. 11 attacks, worked on an ad campaign
for a strategic Middle Eastern ally.

One lobbyist working for a friendly Western government described the
FARA process as “a nightmare” and was reluctant to go through the
rigorous accounting.

Because the law’s reporting requirements are very strict – every means
of communications, every meeting has to be detailed – some lobbyists
actively seek exemptions or loopholes allowing them to register under
the Lobbying Disclosure Act, which asks for less broad disclosure.

Wolf said he plans to introduce amendments to the House’s lobbying
reform bill, expected to come to the floor before the April recess,
prohibiting former senior executive-branch officials from quickly
profiting off their inside knowledge with foreign-agent deals.

Five other pending bills aim to bring greater transparency and
disclosure to the foreign-agent system. Reps. Jean Schmidt (R-Ohio)
and Joel Hefley (R-Colo.) have called for immediate online disclosure
of foreign lobbying contracts, while Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio)
wants to increase the foreign lobbying “revolving door” moratorium
to five years after leaving office and establish a foreign-agent
clearinghouse at the Federal Election Commission that would prevent
overseas cash from influencing U.S. elections.

Florida GOP Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Mario Diaz-Balart and Lincoln
Diaz-Balart have introduced a bill that would block former members
from lobbying on behalf of any nation designated a sponsor of terrorism
by the State Department.

Kenneth Gross, a lobbying and ethics lawyer at Skadden Arps, echoed
complaints from foreign agents that the criminal statute governing
their behavior has a chilling effect. FARA should be revamped as a
civil statute, similar to the Lobbying Disclosure Act, Gross said.

Van Scoyoc’s Tavlarides said foreign-agent lobbyists have nothing
to fear from FARA transparency: “Our firm represents the government
of Pakistan and we are proud to represent them. If you are doing the
right thing and are interacting with foreign governments, you should
not have to hide it.”

Those who violate the FARA regulations have to pay hefty fines and
risk up to five years in prison. The Justice Department also can
seek an injunction that would bar violators from acting as a foreign
agent for a certain amount of time, according to department spokesman
Bryan Sierra.

BAKU: European Commission’s Move Angers Azeri Officials

EUROPEAN COMMISSION’S MOVE ANGERS AZERI OFFICIALS

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 29 2006

Baku, March 28, AssA-Irada
A row emerged after the European Commission indicated Azerbaijan’s
territories occupied by Armenia and the exclave of Nakhchivan as
Armenian territories on its website.

The Azeri representative at the EU Arif Mammadov has sent an enquiry
to the organization over this.

Mammadov said the European Commission has pledged to alter the data
on its web-page in a day’s time. He noted that the Azeri embassy in
Belgium is scrutinizing the reasons for the move.

“We are trying to establish whether the step resulted from negligence
or was taken on purpose. If this was done deliberately, the person
responsible will lose his job in the Commission,” the diplomat added.

This is not the first such mistake made by European organizations. A
map of the South Caucasus region uploaded to the European Parliament’s
website in February presented Upper Garabagh not as Azerbaijani,
but Armenian territory.

Home Farms Headed By Women Make 31.6% In 2004 In Armenia

HOME FARMS HEADED BY WOMEN MAKE 31.6% IN 2004 IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Mar 28 2006

YEREVAN, MARCH 28, NOYAN TAPAN. In 2004, women made 51.8% of the
constant population of RA. In that year the home farms headed by
women made 31.6%. Hrachya Petrosian, a member of the Statistical
Council of RA Statistical Service, informed about it at the March 28
presentation of the statistical brochure “Women and Men of Armenia”. He
mentioned that in the 2004/2005 educational year women made 69.1%
of 30483 students attending institutions of vocational education
and 55.8% of 85109 students of higher education institutions. In
2004, women made 28.1%, 36.4% and 23.3%, respectively, of those
who entered post-graduate studies, studied and graduated from
them. In 2004, the number of women among people who were convicted
for committing a crime amounted to 5.3%, In 2004, the share of women
among 15-70-year-old population made 52.3%. 52.1% of the women of this
age was economically active. The share of employed women was large in
spheres of education, culture and art, healthcare and social services,
as well as crediting and state insurance spheres (54-78%). In 2004,
only 5% of RA MPs were women, the involvement of women in executive
power republican bodies made 39.7%, in territorial government bodies
37.8%, in judicial power bodies 20%. According Consuelo Vidal,
Coordinator of UN Permanent Representation in Armenia, the fact that
the Armenian women’s participation in making political decisions is
so much limited causes anxiety. As she mentioned, women are aware of
the country’s needs best of all, so it’s important that their voice
be listened to and their opinion be taken into consideration.