WAC Prioritizes Collection Of Materials On Karabakh And Genocide

WAC PRIORITIZES COLLECTION OF MATERIALS ON KARABAKH AND GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
13.02.2008 15:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The World Armenian Congress is presently focused
on collection of documents on the Armenian Genocide and the Nagorno
Karabakh problem, WAC President Ara Abrahamyan told a news conference
in Yerevan.

"The package will be produced to the in International Court of Justice
in The Hague. The WAC has already issued a three-volume edition edited
by international law professor Yuri Barsegov," Mr Abrahamyan said.

No Criminal Case Filed Against Hakob Hakobian, However His Acquainta

NO CRIMINAL CASE FILED AGAINST HAKOB HAKOBIAN, HOWEVER HIS ACQUAINTANCE CHARGED WITH KEEPING HOUSE OF PROSTITUTION

Noyan Tapan
Feb 13, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 13, NOYAN TAPAN. No criminal case has been filed
against Hakob Hakobian, an MP of the National Assembly, however,
there is a criminal case against an acquaintance in connection with
procuration, keeping houses of prostitution, as well as avoiding
from tax obligations. As Aghvan Hovsepian, the Prosecutor General
of the Republic of Armenia, stated at the press conference held on
February 12, there are detained people, the preliminary investigation
is underway.

Rumours about the persecutions towards MP and defender of the land
Hakob Hakobian spread after the Soul’s Ordeal organization headed by
him declared at the February 9 rally that it supports the candidature
of Levon Ter-Petrosian, the first President of the Republic of Armenia,
in the February 19 presidential elections.

The prosecutor clarified that still on December 9 the administrator of
the resting house located in the building of the former Anush textile
factory, which has no registration and formulation, has applied to
law enforcement bodies stating that a person suffering from a sexual
infection has extorted 50 thousand drams from him. That person,
who allegedly extorted money, in his turn explained that there are
prostitutes in the resting house and that he has been infected from
them and that he is currently receiving treatment for syphilis.

The checkings showed that a house of prostitution really operated in
that resting house for a long period. According to the prosecutor, as
of today 8 rostitutes have been discovered, who were always there, were
involved in prostitution and gave the money to the administrator and
finally they reached the "director": certain Galstian. He, according
to the prosecutor, is the close friend and neighbour of MP Hakob
Hakobian, who has signed a contract with Hakob Hakobian on making
a termless and gratituous use of the Anush textile factory. All the
prostitutes have been sent to examination to check the circumstance
of venereal diseases.

Armenian Experts Propose Creating Free Economic Zone Between Armenia

ARMENIAN EXPERTS PROPOSE CREATING FREE ECONOMIC ZONE BETWEEN ARMENIA AND GEORGIA

Noyan Tapan
Feb 12, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenian experts attach importance
to creation of a common exonomic zone between Armenia and Georgia with
the aim of promoting economic relations between the two countries, was
stated at the February 11 presentation of the research "Armenia-Georgia
Relations. Unused Opportunities". The research was done by a group
of Armenian experts under the UNDP program on transborder cooperation
between Shirak and Samtskhe-Javakheti regions.

The head of the research group Tigran Jrbashian characterized
the current economic relations between the two countries as quite
passive. Trade turnover volumes of Georgia with Turkey or Azerbaijan
are several times as much as its trade turnover with Armenia. Georgia
is most active in Armenia’s service sector: transportation, transit
traffic, communication, tourism.

According to T. Jrbashian, the revenues of Georgia from transit
transportation of gas made nearly 41 million dollars in 2006. For
comparison, he said that goods of 54 million dollars were exported
from Armenia to Georgia during the same period.

In the opinion of T. Jrbashian, in order to overcome this disproportion
in Armenian-Georgian trade and economic relations, it is necessary
to use a mutually beneficial model of development. He said that the
creation of a common economic zone would reduce the trade restrictions
that other countries use with respect to Armenia and Georgia. It would
neutralize Russia’s restrictions on Georgian goods and the economic
consequences of Armenia’s blockade by Turkey. This approach would
also increase the opportunity of developing trade links of the two
countries with the European Union, which is in line with the EU policy
in the region. Active transborder cooperation may also contribute to
improvement of the socioeconomic conditions of border communities in
Shirak marz of Armenia and Samtskhe-Javakheti region of Georgia.

It was stated that a similar research was also done by Georgian
experts, and its presentation will be held soon. The proposals of
Armenian and Georgian experts will be submitted to international
organizations, Armenian and Georgian authorities, the appropriate
bodies for discussion.

Rep. Lantos Dies; Survived Holocaust

REP. LANTOS DIES; SURVIVED HOLOCAUST
By Sean Lengell

Washington Times
icle?AID=/20080211/NATION/951072527/1001
Feb 11 2008
DC

Rep. Tom Lantos of California, a longtime advocate of human and civil
rights causes and the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress,
has died. He was 80.

Mr. Lantos died early this morning at Bethesda Naval Medical Center
due to complications from cancer. He was surrounded by his wife of
57 years, Annette, two daughters, and many of his 18 grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren.

Mr. Lantos, a Democrat who represented his San Francisco area district
for 27 years, announced last month he was diagnosed with cancer of
the esophagus and would not seek re-election in November.

He said at the time; "It is only in the United States that a penniless
survivor of the Holocaust and a fighter in the anti-Nazi underground
could have received an education, raised a family, and had the
privilege of serving the last three decades of his life as a Member
of Congress. I will never be able to express fully my profoundly felt
gratitude to this great country."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who also represents a San Francisco area
district and was a longtime friend of Mr. Lantos, said his death was
a "loss for the Congress and for the nation and a terrible loss for
me personally.

"Tom Lantos devoted his life to shining a bright light on dark corners
of oppression," Mrs. Pelosi said. "Having lived through the worst
evil known to mankind, Tom Lantos translated the experience into a
lifetime commitment to the fight against anti-Semitism, Holocaust
education and a commitment to the state of Israel."

Rep. Adam Putnam, chairman of the House Republican Conference, said
Mr. Lantos "brought to this institution a unique sense of purpose
forged by a difficult and very personal struggle on behalf of freedom
and human dignity."

Mr. Lantos became chairman of the powerful House Foreign Affairs
Committee when Democrats took control of Congress in January 2007.

Last fall he moved through his committee a measure that would have
recognized the World War I-era killings of Armenians as a genocide,
something strongly opposed by Turkey. The bill, which was not
supported by many Republicans and the Bush administration, did not
pass the House.

He was a leading advocate among Democrats for the 2002 congressional
resolution authorizing the Iraq war, although later he became a strong
critic of the Bush administration’s war strategy.

In 2004, he led the first congressional delegation to Libya in more
than 30 years, meeting personally with Moammar Gadhafi and urging
the Bush administration to show "good faith" to the North African
leader in his pledge to abandon his nuclear weapons programs. Later
that year, President Bush lifted sanctions against Libya.

He was also one of five members of Congress arrested in a protest
outside the Sudanese Embassy in 2006 over the genocide in Darfur.

Mr. Lantos was born in Budapest in 1928 and joined the anti-Nazi
Hungarian underground movement after Germany invaded his native
country when he was 16. He was captured and sent to a forced labor
camp, where he was severely beaten after he tried to escape. He later
successfully escaped, making it to a safehouse in Budapest.

Mr. Lantos came to the United States in 1947 after being awarded a
scholarship to study at the University of Washington in Seattle. In
1950, he married Annette, his childhood sweetheart, with whom he
had managed to reunite after the war. The couple moved to the San
Francisco Bay area so he could pursue a doctorate in economics at
the University of California, Berkeley.

Mrs. Lantos said her husband’s life was "defined by courage, optimism,
and unwavering dedication to his principles and to his family."

Mr. Lantos and his wife had two daughters, Annette and Katrina,
who between them had 18 grandchildren. According to Mr. Lantos,
his daughters were following through on a promise to produce a very
large family because his and his wife’s families had perished in
the Holocaust.

The date for a public memorial service has not been set.

http://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/art

Turkish Activists Demand Justice At Dink Murder Trial

TURKISH ACTIVISTS DEMAND JUSTICE AT DINK MURDER TRIAL

Agence France Presse
Feb 11 2008

Turkish intellectuals and politicians called for a fair and transparent
ruling Monday in Istanbul as the third hearing began in a case against
three alleged killers of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

"This stain must be cleaned so that a Turkey where opinions are no
longer judged and those who express them are no longer condemned can
exist," said a statement read to journalists near the Besiktas court.

The statement was signed by politicians from various leanings, as well
as well-known intellectuals who called for "complete transparence"
in a case that is being closely followed by the European Union,
which Turkey is looking to join.

On January 19, 2006, 52-year-old Dink was shot outside the office
of the weekly publication he ran — the Turkish-Armenian Agos —
by a 17-year-old boy with close links to Turkish nationalists.

A group calling themselves "The Friends of Hrant Dink" read a statement
to a separate crowd of several hundred people in Besiktas.

They demanded that justices "do their job correctly and follow this
through to the end." The courthouse was surrounded by police as those
standing trial arrived in armed police vans.

Dink campaigned for reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia,
but ran into trouble with the law for articles in which he labeled
the 1915-1917 mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire
during World War I a "genocide." The journalist was slapped with a
suspended sentence of six months in jail under article 301 of the
Turkish penal code, which deals with offences that insult Turkishness
and is denounced by the EU.

Monday’s hearing took place behind doors due to the fact alleged
murderer Ogun Samast is a minor. Samast has confessed to the murder
and could face up to 42 years in prison. His co-charged, Yasin Hayal
and Erhan Tuncel, allegedly ordered the attack on Dink and could face
life in prison. Sentences ranging from 7.5 to 35 years have already
been handed out to 16 others accused in the case.

Police Investigate Fact Of Beating Three Persons In Nor Nork

POLICE INVESTIGATE FACT OF BEATING THREE PERSONS IN NOR NORK

Noyan Tapan
Feb 11, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The police are conducting
investigation into the fact of three persons being subjected to beating
in 4th block of Nor Nork district in Yerevan. According to information
at the website of the RA police, the Nor Nork police station received
information from a hospital on February 7, at 10 p.m. that Aghvan
Hakobian, Gevorg Zakarian and Hovhannes Grigorian requsted medical
aid in connection with injuries they received in various parts of
their bodies. As it turned out, at about 7:10 p.m. on the same day,
some unknown persons beat them during an argument in 4th block of
Nor Nork, inflicting injuries.

To recap, according to Armenian press, the above mentioned young
men were members of the headquarters of the RA presidential candidate
Levon Ter-Petrosian, and while putting up leflets about the rally to be
held on February 9, they were beaten by the head of the pre-election
headquarters of another presidential candidate – Serge Sargsian,
and his companions.

The spokesman for the RA ombudsman Grigory Grigoriants said during
a talk with NT correspondent that the ombudsman Armen Harutyunian
condemns this violence. Accoridng to him, the fast response group
of the ombudsman office met with the victims who are already out of
hospital, and police are taking measures to find those guilty.

Soviet-Era Statues, Letter From Great War, Resurface In France

SOVIET-ERA STATUES, LETTER FROM GREAT WAR, RESURFACE IN FRANCE

Agence France Presse — English
February 6, 2008 Wednesday 5:03 PM GMT
Paris

French archaeologists said Wednesday they had discovered a cache of
shattered Soviet-era statues in a chateau north of Paris, as well as
a letter sent to an American World War I soldier in 1918.

Broken heads and limbs from the giant statues — which measured 2.5
to 3 metres — were discovered piled inside several 17th-century
ice chests in the chateau in Baillet-en-France in 2004, the INRAP
archaeology institute said.

They also found a series of sculpted stone disks, originally from
far-flung parts of the Soviet empire including Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Researchers identified the works as part of the Soviet pavillion
at the 1937 arts and techniques exhibition in Paris, a vast display
depicting allegories of the 11 Soviet republics — pitched opposite
the pavillion from Nazi Germany.

They were later given as gifts to France’s biggest union, the General
Labour Confederation (CGT), which put them on display in the grounds
of the chateau.

But at the start of World War II, the property was confiscated by
the pro-Nazi French government and the statues were set aside and
forgotten.

Also in 2004, in the eastern town of Messein, archaeologists unearthed
a glass beer bottle with a porcelain cap — containing a rolled-up
four-page letter that was posted to a US soldier at the end of the
Great War.

Posted from Oklahoma City on July 15, 1918, it was written to sergeant
Morres Vickers Liepman by an aunt, and describes wartime hardships,
labour shortages and the mass conscription of black Americans.

Liepman returned to the United States in August 1919 and was
demobilised in September of that year. His letter has been added to
the French National Archives.

ANTELIAS: Congratulatory letter to Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

THE CONGRATULATORY LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS ARAM I
TO THE NEWLY ELECTED ARCHBISHOP OF ATHENS AND ALL GREECE HIS BEATITUDE
IERONYMOS II

His Beatitude
Archbishop Ieronymos
Archbishop of Athens and All Greece
14, Ioannoy Gennadioy
115 21 Athens
Greece

Your Beatitude,

We heard, with great joy indeed, your election as Archbishop of Athens and
All Greece. We greet, in the spirit of Christian love and fellowship, this
event in the life of the Orthodox Church of Greece and in your ministry. We
are confident that your election will open a new page in the modern history
of the Orthodox Church of Greece.

As you know, long-standing relations exist between the Greek and Armenian
Churches, and between our two nations. It is our firm expectation that with
your election these relations will further develop and expand. With your
predecessor, the late Archbishop Christodoulos we have developed fraternal
re – lations and personal friendship. We look forward, with the same spirit of
broth – erly love, to continue our ecumenical collaboration.

We warmly congratulate your election and pray the Almighty God to strengthen
you spiritually and physically as you prepare to assume this major
re – sponsibility as head of the Orthodox Church of Greece.

His Grace Bishop Khoren Doghramadjian, the Primate of the Armenian community
in Greece will represent us at the enthronement ceremony. We look forward to
meeting you in the near future to express our love and fellowship in person.

Yours in Christ,

ARAM I
CATHOLICOS OF CILICIA

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme

389 Enterprises With Foreign Capital Registered In Armenia In 2007

389 ENTERPRISES WITH FOREIGN CAPITAL REGISTERED IN ARMENIA IN 2007

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Feb 6 2008

YEREVAN, February 6. /ARKA/. 389 enterprises with foreign investments
were registered in Armenia in 2007.

According to Armenia’s National Statistical Service, investments in
these organizations totaled 4,533.87mln Drams. Of them, 1773.34mln
Drams were investments in 145 enterprises with both local and foreign
founders. The remaining 224 enterprises have been registered as 100%
foreign with capital totaling 2,760.53mln Drams.

3,822 legal entities with investments totaling 10,070.27mln Drams
were registered in Armenia in 2007. ($1=308.27Drams).

"It Is Very Good To Move Cautiously And Only To Take Up Points That

"IT IS VERY GOOD TO MOVE CAUTIOUSLY AND ONLY TO TAKE UP POINTS THAT WE HAVE SEEN OURSELVES, OR THAT WE HAVE SEEN PROOFS"

Mediamax
February 5, 2008

Exclusive Interview of the Head of the Long-Term Observation Mission
of OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR)
in Armenia, Ambassador Geert-Hinrich Ahrens to Mediamax Agency

– Mr. Ambassador, I know that you have great work experience in the
former Yugoslavia and the Balkans. In fall of 2004, you headed the
OSCE Observation Mission during the elections in Ukraine. Would you,
please, tell us whether you see any trends, related to elections,
which are characteristic of the states of the former Soviet camp?

– What I see is a certain difference between Yugoslavia on one side and
the former Soviet Union on the other. Somehow in Yugoslavia development
has gone relatively far. I was a Head of the observation mission in
Serbia a year ago and there we could say that the elections met OSCE
commitments, which is a very positive statement. On the other hand,
on the side of the former Soviet Union there were also countries that
have made great progress, for example, the Baltic States. I have not
been in these states myself, but I know that the situation there is
quite good.

I always hesitate a little bit in comparing different countries too
closely, because each country has a different set of conditions, under
which it conducts the elections. And that is also true for Armenia. I
mean if you look at the external situation, you have four neighbors,
with one there is a ceasefire line, with another one there is a closed
border, then there is Georgia and Iran. And you are certainly very
interested in coming out of these elections with a good reputation
that Armenia was able to conduct good election that meets the OSCE
commitments. And I think internally this would also be very important.

The Armenian government and the President and everyone from the
officials have given assurances that this will happen, but of course,
we will have to measure the factual development up against the OSCE
commitments, what we have seen so far is in the interim report, much as
a first report, that is always highly descriptive, but I would rather
look at Armenia as a case just for Armenia, and not as a typical case
of the port-soviet developments, because you really have differences.

You mentioned Ukraine in 2004, it was a totally different situation,
and also a very different country, because of this strong East-West
difference inside one country, which you do not have here.

– On January 30, the first interim report of your Mission was
published. How righteous is the impression that the basic concern of
the Mission is related to the non-balanced coverage of the candidates
by broadcast media before the start of the official campaign?

– I would not say that this is the basic concern, but this is one
concern, which we could express on the basis of facts, which we have
established ourselves and with the head of our media monitoring
unit, so that we were able there to base our statement on what we
had seen ourselves.

I will not hide from you that there is also quite a big concern on
election day and the night after the election counting, tabulation,
but not in a sense that I now expect irregularities, I cannot predict
anything, but normally the election day and the day after the election
is half the election, and we will see how that will develop. And we
have of course mentioned that there were quite a few stories which we
hear about certain beliefs and a very low degree of confidence in the
elections, so that I have in my talks with the government and also
election administration structures said that one might do a little
bit more particularly as regards the protection of the secrecy of the
vote. It seemed to me quite a few people in this country believe that
somehow others can control how they vote.

– During your first news conference in Yerevan you said that "media
sometimes play a decisive role in securing democratic elections". How
applicable that notion is for today’s Armenia?

– Well, this again is country specific. I would say that in countries,
like my own Germany, the role of the media cannot be overestimated. It
is very great. Here in Armenia it is still very important, but
maybe not so decisive, at least that is what some of the candidates
themselves have told us. They did not think that the media situation
is their greatest concern in the election campaign.

– What is your assessment of how responsible the Armenian presidential
candidates carry out the campaign? What is your assessment of the
statement of one of the candidates, according to which in case the
given candidate is elected, Armenia will choose the "salvation path",
and in case another candidate wins the elections – the "path to
inevitable catastrophe"?

– In the West, when you have election campaigns, you hear a lot of
things, and campaign is campaign, that goes sometimes very far, so
that I think a high degree of tolerance in principle is necessary. Of
course, we do observe also the conduct of the elections by the election
headquarters of the different candidates, but will certainly not
now give any notes to how the candidates have so far conducted the
campaigns, but of course, there are certain rules that should not
be overlooked.

– How sincere are the authorities in their statements on the striving
to hold free and democratic elections? The opposition argues that
the authorities have already started using administrative resource
to secure the victory of their candidate in the first very round.

– I mean you have now defined the whole task. And we are working on
it. It is too early to say something about it. I just told you that
the government made these assurances and they have an interest in
good elections, on the other hand we hear a lot of criticism from
candidates to different degrees, some candidates more than others,
but this is now our task to measure the elections up to the OSCE
commitments and see how far one or the other is right.

– Head of pre-election staff of presidential candidate Artur
Baghdasarian stated that she regularly hands over to your Mission
facts of violation of the electoral legislation. Would you be able
to share with us information on some of those facts?

– I have met Mr. Baghdasarian yesterday [January 31, 2008] and we
had a very interesting conversation and we have asked him if he has
also criticism against the conduct of the elections, that he should,
please, let us know, and what we always need is evidence. We cannot
act on just some stories or rumors or sometimes we are being told
not necessarily by Mr. Baghdasarian, also from others that the people
are not prepared to give evidence, because they are afraid to do so.

But this makes for us difficult and I indeed have asked
Mr. Baghdasarian to provide us with evidence cases, if there are any,
but right now I could not give you any such cases, because we are
just in contact about this. He mentioned certain things, but the
point for us is that we have to verify them.

– Some of the candidates crossly react to the data of the polls,
which are carried out regularly by Gallup on the order of USAID. What
is your attitude towards those surveys? Do they contribute to
the process of holding free and fair elections, or maybe they are
creating an atmosphere of additional mistrust between the society
and the candidates, and among the very candidates?

– This has to do with the attitude of the individual voter towards
the elections, for example, in my own country, of I see in an opinion
poll certain percentages for certain parties, I would not change my
decision anyway. And then, there is of course always this possibility
of the accusation that such opinion polls might be manipulated, or
very often, exit polls, are being criticized and such points of view,
I myself am not in a position to assess the scientific reliability
of the opinion poll you might refer to, but at least I would advise
every voter in this country to make his decision independently of
such opinion polls, because voting is a question of conviction and I
would not change my conviction if I hear that another candidate has
more to expect than one of his competitors.

– Does the OSCE Observation Mission follow the law observance only by
the authorities, or by all the candidates? What is reaction in cases,
when the actions of a certain candidate violate the law? For instance,
the supporters of one candidate a few days ago held an unapproved
car-rally with the participation of over 100 cars in the center of
Yerevan and they refused to obey the orders of the policemen.

– In such cases we also first try to establish the facts. I was
today [February 1] received by the Mayor of Yerevan and I asked him
a few questions about this. Particularly whether there had been an
application for this sort of procession, when you go with cars, and
he said that there was no such application. I am a lawyer myself,
and there is a famous principle for lawyers – always to hear the
other side. I have not yet talked with Mr.

Ter-Petrosian’s headquarters about this rally. But of course there are
certain rules, by which also candidates have to play, and I cannot say
on the base of what I know now whether they have been violated or not.

– Mr. Ambassador, despite the good assessments of the past
parliamentary elections, in fall of 2007 Armenia joined the initiative
of Russia, the essence of which was the proposal on reducing the
authority of OSCE/ODIHR observers. There is an opinion that this fact
may somehow influence your assessment of the upcoming elections. How
righteous is this opinion?

– No, it will certainly not. First of all, I myself am not an employee
of ODIHR, because I am one on the list of specialists, should I say
diplomats, who could be called upon to lead such a mission like this
one, and it is up to ODIHR to call upon us and I can say yes or no. I
am a retired German Ambassador and my career is anyway over and I
am very independent. I am personally convinced of the principles,
correctness of the ODIHR approach and the ODIHR methodology for
election observation. One thing is clear, you have to have a long-term
observation. You cannot just come three days before the election
and then pass a judgment. That would not be serious. And secondly,
you have to have a number of observers that somehow corresponds to
the size of the country. And I mean, here in Armenia, we have 1923
polling stations and we will have probably 250 short-term observers,
plus ourselves, so that it makes altogether maybe 300 or something
like that. This would of course by far not cover everything, but we
can at least go to certain spots, and try to find out beforehand,
where it would be particularly appropriate to go and see certain
areas which have a certain reputation that they might need some more
observation than others. And I think this is necessary.

And there is one more point: the first assessment given the day
after the elections. I think it is necessary, because otherwise
you would have a cacophony of many different voices. We try to come
and we always came to a unified statement by this mission, and the
three parliamentary delegations from the Council of Europe, OSCE
and the European Parliament, which would then give a preliminary
assessment. But this is of course a preliminary statement.

And I would try to make this very clear, because, as I said, half
of the way is the election day and the night after the election,
and reports are coming in all night. So, maybe certain developments
have not yet been observed, when we come up with the preliminary
statement. So, I have a certain tendency of making very clear that it
is preliminary, not doing it to early in the day and also be cautious,
because one might have to adapt it to later findings and we always
have the possibility of having another report before we do two months
after the elections the final report, which is a possibility, but I
would prefer to avoid that and come up with something that can stand
beyond the day after the elections.

– Despite all the differences, it is obvious that the recent elections
in Georgia, which were far from being ideal, will be considered a
precedent for Armenia. The authorities, for example, may state that, as
opposed to Georgia, in Armenia TV-Companies were not closed. Besides,
Saakashvili’s victory with minimal advantage in the first round will
also be used as a precedent. Maybe the international community should
have reacted to the violations during the elections in Georgia more
strictly to rule out the establishment of such a precedent?

– What I just told you about what my ideas are about our preliminary
statement the day after the elections. It also takes into consideration
certain developments that might have taken place in Georgia. I was not
in Georgia, I have not observed these elections. But I think it would
be wrong to look too much to that one election in Georgia. I myself
have observed two elections in Azerbaijan and one in Georgia, more than
a year ago, that was the local elections, when already a little bit you
could see certain developments, but I would certainly not be influenced
in assessment of these Armenian elections by Georgian events.

My method is that I have always tried to be careful not to forget
that the first statement is preliminary, not to go over the top by
saying something.

I think we should not look too much to Georgia and one would also
have to see how these different statements came about.

– You have been here for already 20 days, a little more than 2 weeks
are left before the start of elections. I assume that you came to
this country with positive expectations. So, not, if you compare
those expectations with the ones you have now, do you see any change
in your moods regarding the quality of the elections?

– Not really. What I see very positively is, first of all, the team,
which we have here, and the Armenian colleagues, whom we have here,
they are all very good and they understand what this mission is
about. This is not something which goes by itself. It shows a high
degree of awareness also.

This is one point. The second point is that our working conditions are
good, so that you feel that you are being accepted as a mission. It is
of course clear, that all of those players have certain expectations,
and the government would only be too happy if the we come up with
a report that says there was rather progress, and some opposition
figures might be very angry if we overlook certain things that may
have indeed happened. And this puts a heavy responsibility on us,
and that is why I think it is very good to move cautiously and only
to take up points that we have seen ourselves, or that we have seen
proofs, but that we will do when we do well our job.