Czech PM to leave for postponed visit to Armenia, Mongolia

Czech News Agency
May 14, 2010 Friday

CZECH PM TO LEAVE FOR POSTPONED VISIT TO ARMENIA, MONGOLIA

Prague, May 14 (CTK) – Czech Prime Minister Jan Fischer will on Monday
leave for a working visit to Armenia and for an official visit to
Mongolia he was originally to pay in late April but had to postpone it
over his illness, Government Office press department told CTK today.
The main goal of the trip is to enhance trade between the Czech
Republic and the two countries. Fischer will be accompanied by a
strong delegation of Czech businessmen. On Monday and Tuesday Fischer
will stay in Armenia. In Yerevan he will meet his counterpart Tigran
Sargsyan and other officials. The Czech Republic had significant trade
relations with Armenia in the past, mainly in the energy industry
area. At present, Czech experts cooperate on enhancing the safety of
Armenian nuclear power plants. Fischer’s Mongolian trip will be the
first official visit by a Czech prime minister to Mongolia. Fischer
will meet Prime Minister Sukhbaatar Batbold. Both will attend a
ceremonial reception marking the 60th anniversary of bilateral
relations. Fischer will also meet Buddhist representatives in the
Gandantegchinlen monastery. Mongolia is one of the eight countries on
which Czech development aid has focused in the long run. Bilateral
economic cooperation could further develop mainly in the construction
area and related activities, in raw materials mining and subsequent
recultivation of former mining areas. rtj/dr/pv

Russia deal puts Turkey on path to become nuclear energy nation

Russia deal puts Turkey on path to become nuclear energy nation
Turkey moved closer to becoming a nuclear energy nation after inking a
deal with visiting Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to build a
nuclear power plant on the Mediterranean coast.

Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev (l.) and his Turkish counterpart
Abdullah Gul applaud as they watch the signing of agreements at the
Cankaya Palace in Ankara, Turkey, Wednesday. Medvedev is in Turkish
capital for a two-day state visit.

/0512/Russia-deal-puts-Turkey-on-path-to-become-nu clear-energy-nation
By Scott Peterson, Staff Writer / May 12, 2010

Istanbul, Turkey
Turkey has taken a big step toward being a nuclear energy nation by
signing a deal with Russia on Wednesday to build its first nuclear
power plant on the Mediterranean coast.

Will Nabucco pipeline deal free Europe from Russian gas? Turkey moves
to engage more deeply in Mideast ` and with neighbors All Turkey news
coverage The project ` along with a pipeline plan to bring Russian oil
overland from the Black Sea to a refinery on Turkey’s southern coast
for export to Europe, and a host of other measures ` was signed during
a visit here from Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

`By taking these steps, Turkey is taking its position as an energy hub
to a much different level,’ said Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
ErdoÄ?an. `The solidarity with Russia on this issue is of utmost
importance.’

Mr. Medvedev was also effusive: `This agreement opens a new page in
our cooperation¦. Our talks today showed that Turkey and Russia are
strategic partners not only in words but in deeds,’ he said.

Turkey expands influence
The energy deals are part of NATO-ally Turkey’s broader strategy to
expand its influence in the region and become an energy corridor
between East and West, while also serving as an increasingly important
diplomatic player seeking to help resolve Iran’s nuclear standoff with
the West and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

For Russia, the Turkey visit is part of a regional swing that saw the
Russian leader in Syria earlier this week in a bid to raise Moscow’s
profile in the Middle East. In Damascus, Medvedev sought to rejuvenate
some of Syria’s historic ties with the former Soviet Union ` even
while the United States has signaled a partial thaw with Syria by
appointing the first US ambassador since 2005, though the US Senate
has held up his nomination and on May 3 President Obama extended
economic sanctions for one year.

Medvedev followed up in Turkey, where the 20 or so agreements made on
Wednesday will generate some $25 billion in investment, a figure that
he said `really looks rather impressive.’

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul said the two nations aimed to triple
annual bilateral trade to $100 billion in the next half decade.

Sergei Kiriyenko, the chief of the Russian nuclear corporation
Rosatom, said nuclear deal alone was `a very big contract’ that could
be worth $18 billion to $20 billion, according to Agence
France-Presse. Russia would hold a controlling stake in the plant and
operate it.

`Russia has never owned a nuclear power station outside its
territory,’ Mr. Kiriyenko said.

The nuclear power plant is to start in 2014 and take seven years to
build in the coastal town of Akkuyu. It is not unlike the one Russia
is building for Iran at Bushehr, which has taken more than a decade
and faced repeated delays ` some of them, Iran suspects, for political
reasons.

Pipeline plans
The pipeline proposal, reported to be worth $3 billion, would bring
Russian oil from Turkey’s Black Sea port of Samsun to a joint refinery
on the Mediterranean at Ceyhan, which already links oil flows from
Azerbaijan and Iraq. The deal would bypass the narrow Bosphorus at
Istanbul, which is congested with tanker traffic, and would provide
for both Turkey’s domestic and European markets.

Erdogan also spoke of Russia’s South Stream gas pipeline project,
which aims to provide Russian natural gas to Europe while bypassing
Ukraine, though it is a rival to the European Union Nabucco pipeline,
which Turkey also supports.

In the past year, Russia has become one of Turkey’s primary trading
partners, at a volume worth $40 billion in 2008 and dipping ` because
of the global recession ` to $22.9 billion in 2009. Russia already
provides some 60 percent of Turkey’s natural gas.

One of the first orders of business during the Russian leader’s visit
was an agreement to lift tourist visa restrictions between the two
nations. More than 2 million Russians flock to Turkish resorts and
beaches each year, often on package tours flying direct from Moscow
and other Russian cities to Turkey’s sunny southern coast.

`It’s a historical agreement that will before anything else ease the
life of millions of people,’ Medvedev said.

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2010

Yerevan And Bucharest Pleased With Level Of Political Dialogue

YEREVAN AND BUCHAREST PLEASED WITH LEVEL OF POLITICAL DIALOGUE

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 14, 2010 – 19:52 AMT 14:52 GMT

Yerevan hosted political consultations between the Armenian and
Romanian Foreign Ministries. The parties referred to a wide range of
bilateral relations.

The two states’ delegations were pleased with the level of political
dialogue between Yerevan and Bucharest, saying that it is necessary
to develop bilateral cooperation. Besides, the parties reached a
preliminary agreement on organization of joint cultural events,
business-seminars and signing of a range of bilateral agreements
in 2010-2011.

Outlooks of cooperation within Eastern Partnership, Organization of
Black Sea Economic Cooperation and other international structures
were also discussed during the consultations.

Besides, Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Karine Kazinyan received
the Romanian delegation. The Armenian-Romanian relations, Armenia-EU
cooperation, Karabakh conflict settlement, as well as Armenian-Turkish
normalization were in the focus of discussion. Bucharest will host
the next stage of political consultations, the RA MFA press service
reported.

Military Construction Discussed In Stepanakert

MILITARY CONSTRUCTION DISCUSSED IN STEPANAKERT

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 12, 2010 – 17:19 AMT 12:19 GMT

On May 12, President of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan received Armenia’s
Chief Military Inspector, Colonel General Mikael Harutyunyan.

Military construction and the two Armenian states’ cooperation in
this field were in the focus of discussion, reported the Central
Information Department of the Office of the Artsakh Republic President.
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Content-Description:

MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
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From: Mihran Keheyian <[email protected]>
Subject: Military construction discussed in Stepanakert

Military construction discussed in Stepanakert

May 12, 2010 – 17:19 AMT 12:19 GMT
PanARMENIAN.Net –

On May 12, President of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan received Armenia?s Chief
Military Inspector, Colonel General Mikael Harutyunyan.

Military construction and the two Armenian states? cooperation in this
field were in the focus of discussion, reported the Central
Information Department of the Office of the Artsakh Republic
President.

Serzh Sargsyan Receives PACE President Mevlut Cavusoglu

SERZH SARGSYAN RECEIVES PACE PRESIDENT MEVLUT CAVUSOGLU

ARMENPRESS
MAY 12, 2010
YEREVAN

Armenian President Serzh Sargayn received today PACE President Mevlut
CavuÅ~_oglu. Presidential press office told Armenpress that welcoming
the guest Armenian president expressed hope that the visit of the
delegation headed by the PACE president will help to get acquainted
on place and get more objective opinion about the challenges existing
in Armenia and in the region. "This visit will enable to discuss the
agenda issues, and I am sure it will contribute to the deepening of
cooperation between the Republic of Armenia and Council of Europe,
and particularly between the PACE and Armenian National Assembly. We
wish and we are ready to establish closer relations and cooperation,"
Serzh Sargsyan said.

Mevlut CavuÅ~_oglu said that as a newly elected chairman he considers
one of the priorities of his activity the deepening of cooperation
between the Assembly and member states, exclusion of applying of double
standards and ensuring of objective and balanced attitude toward all.

The PACE chairman said that an active cooperation has been established
in PACE with the Armenian parliamentary delegation. He also highly
praised the progress registered in democratic processes and fighting
against corruption in Armenia.

Armenia Has 523,000 Pensioners

ARMENIA HAS 523,000 PENSIONERS

ARKA
May 12, 2010
YEREVAN

On January 1, 2010 some 522,835 Armenian citizens were pensioners,
according to the latest government data. The National Statistical
Service said 9,100 of them were military pensioners and the rest,
518,000 were social and insurance pensioners.

According to official figures, an average pension in Armenia is 24,500
Drams or $63.1. Yerevan has the largest number of pensioners- 180,700.

The least has Vayots Dzor-10,300. Armenia’s overall population is a
little over 3.2 million.

In late March the government approved more than ten percent increases
in pensions and poverty benefits to cushion the effects of a 37.5%
rise in the price of natural gas for Armenian households which took
effect on April 1. Monthly benefits to low-income households increased
by 15 percent from May 1. The pension was raised by 11%. It will come
into effect from November 1.

BAKU: Armenia Accuses Azerbaijan Of Distorting Karabakh Talks

ARMENIA ACCUSES AZERBAIJAN OF DISTORTING KARABAKH TALKS

news.az
May 12 2010
Azerbaijan

Edward Nalbandian Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian has
told the Council of Europe that Azerbaijan is not constructive in
resolving the Karabakh conflict.

Addressing the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers on 11 May,
Nalbandian referred to the basis for a conflict settlement, known as
the Madrid principles, proposed by the OSCE mediators.

‘The statement on Nagorno-Karabakh adopted by the OSCE foreign
ministers in Athens emphasizes the non-use of force or the threat
of force, the right of peoples to self-determination and territorial
integrity as basic principles of conflict settlement,’ Nalbandian said,
according to Armenian website A1+.

‘The same principles lie at the basis of the Madrid principles proposed
by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in 2007. For over a year Azerbaijan
was rejecting the existence of that document, until they announced
recently that they accept the proposals with certain reservations. If
we try to clarify what Azerbaijan agrees to and what it rejects, we’ll
see that there are a lot of exceptions. Azerbaijan not only continues
distorting the reasons, consequences and the essence of the conflict,
but also uses every opportunity to make threats of force at all levels.

‘Proceeding from the experience of the past years, it becomes obvious
that all Azerbaijani efforts to transfer the issue to other structures,
and thus affect the negotiations under way within the framework of
the OSCE Minsk Group, are unconstructive. Despite all the obstacles
Azerbaijan creates on the way of resolution of the conflict, Armenia
is resolute to uphold the efforts towards settlement of the conflict
through negotiations.’

The updated version of the Madrid principles, put forward by the OSCE
mediators in late 2009, has been the subject of discussions amongst
the mediators, Armenia and Azerbaijan ever since.

Baku accepts the updated principles in general, but ‘there are elements
that do not suit us’, Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said in March,
comments that Nalbandian was presumably referring to yesterday.

The Madrid principles include the return of the territories surrounding
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control, an interim status for Karabakh
providing guarantees for security and self-governance, and the future
determination of the final legal status of Nagorno-Karabakh through
a legally binding expression of will. The status of Karabakh remains
the biggest sticking point in the negotiations.

Turkey And Russia Agree To Waive Visa Requirements

TURKEY AND RUSSIA AGREE TO WAIVE VISA REQUIREMENTS

RTT News
px?Id=1302683&SM=1
May 12 2010

(RTTNews) – As part of continuing effort to improve their relations,
Turkey and Russia agreed to waive visa requirements for their citizens
to travel to the other country.

One of the several deals signed Wednesday by the two sides obliges
Russia to build a nuclear plant in Turkey. The country’s first nuclear
power plant will be constructed near the Mediterranean port of Mersin.

The deals were signed as part of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s
two-day visit to Turkey.

Speaking at a joint press conference in Turkish capital Ankara with
his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul, Medvedev called the lifting of
visa requirements a "historic agreement that will make life easier
for millions of people."

The deal excludes those visiting for up to a month from visa
requirements. Three million Russians are estimated to visit Turkey
annually.

Several other cooperation agreements signed by Turkey and Russia
envisages to attract over $25 billion in investment for joint projects.

Both the leaders said they would like to see trade between their
countries triple over the next five years to reach $100 billion.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan said Turkey expected Russia to
cover 70 per cent of Turkey’s requirements for oil and gas.

"The Mideast must be a region clear of nuclear weapons," Medvedev told
reporters, echoing a recent call by the permanent members of the U.N.

Security Council.

Medvedev also said Moscow supported efforts to restore relations
between Turkey and Armenia, which has close ties to Russia.

Medvedev’s state tours of Turkey and Syria are seen as Moscow’s
strategy to deepen its influence in the Middle East.

In March, U.S. Congressional Committee’s passage of a resolution
describing as genocide the killings of Armenians by Turkish forces
during World War I had evoked strong reaction from Turkey, which
recalled its ambassador to Washington.

http://www.rttnews.com/Content/GeneralNews.as

VivaCell-MTS Offers Internet Package Service For Prepaid Subscribers

VIVACELL-MTS OFFERS INTERNET PACKAGE SERVICE FOR PREPAID SUBSCRIBERS

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 11, 2010 – 19:18 AMT 14:18 GMT

VivaCell-MTS announces Internet Package service for prepaid
subscribers, offering much more affordable tariffs for data exchange.

Tariffs are as follows: inet 10 – 10MB Package size at AMD 400; inet
50- 50MB Package size at AMD 1500; inet 100- 100MB Package size at
AMD 2500; inet 500- 500MB Package size at AMD 6000.

Validity period of all Internet Packages for prepaid subscribers is
30 days. MBs not used during this period are cancelled.

The service is not available for "18+" and "Business Control" tariff
plan subscribers, company press service reported.

Links Found Between Ergenekon And Dink Suspects

LINKS FOUND BETWEEN ERGENEKON AND DINK SUSPECTS

armradio.am
11.05.2010 12:00

The latest hearing on the assassination of the Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink, who was fatally shot by an ultranationalist
teenager outside the Agos weekly in 2007, revealed that some defendants
in the Ergenekon case were in contact with defendants in the Dink case,
Today’s Zaman reports.

A report sent from the Istanbul Police Department to the court
hearing the Dink case said six Ergenekon defendants had telephone
conversations with the defendants in the Dink case prior to Dink’s
murder. According to the report, these Ergenekon suspects were Veli
Kucuk, Kemal Kerincsiz, Mustafa Levent GöktaÅ~_, Muzaffer Tekin and
Erbay Colakoglu.

The report was the result of the request by the Dink family’s lawyers,
who had demanded the 14th Ä°stanbul High Criminal Court write to
the Ä°stanbul Police Department to inquire about any links, such as
possible telephone conservations, between suspects in the Ergenekon
case and the Dink case.

The court asked the police department to look for any links between
the two cases, such as whether or not suspects had their telephone
numbers in each others’ phone books and if they had called one another.