Presence of Russian Mil in Armenia Lost its Strategic meaning

PRESENCE OF RUSSIAN MILITARY UNITS IN ARMENIA’s TERRITORY
LOST ITS POLITICAL AND STRATEGICAL MEANING: VAZGEN MANUKYAN

YEREVAN, JUNE 9. ARMINFO. Presence of Russian military units in
Armenia’s territory lost its political and strategical meaning,
stated Leader of opposition “National-Democratic Union” party,
Armenia’s ex- deputy defence minister Vazgen Manukyan in an interview
to ARMINFO.

“I think, neither Russia’s nor the US or NATO’s military units should
be deployed in Armenia’s territory”, he stated. At the same time,
Manukyan stressed that Armenia should not follow Georgia’s example
and quickly withdraw Russia’s units from its territory. “This issue
will be solved in time as neither Russia nor Armenia need it”, he
stated. Manukyan stressed that all the three Southern Caucasian
republics should free themselves from the military presence of
foreign countries in their territories. -r-

Baku and Yerevan deceive themselves, former OSCE MG supposes

Pan Armenian News

BAKU AND YEREVAN DECEIVE THEMSELVES, FORMER OSCE MG CO-CHAIR SUPPOSES

09.06.2005 04:38

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Nagorno Karabakh conflict should be solved by the
parties involved in the conflict first of all, while the superpowers can
merely have an influence for them finding common points. Former Co-Chair of
the OSCE Minsk Group Vladimir Kazimirov stated it when answering a question
why the three superpowers: Russia, US and France have not managed to solve
the dispute of two small countries – Azerbaijan and Armenia, Day.az
reported. In his words, there are no serious talks without concessions.
However Presidents have not started making the society ready for these, just
the opposite – for many years they assured they will gain and not give.
`Armenians should understand they have to return the territories and
Azerbaijan should understand that it is necessary to solve the issue of the
status of Nagorno Karabakh. But the two countries are engaged not in what is
necessary, but in deceiving themselves. They should engage themselves is
strengthening the cease-fire regime and reconciling. Azerbaijan has to give
up militant terminology, while Armenia – from absurd ideas of `liberated’,
i.e. occupied territories of Azerbaijan. I have been stating for several
years already that participation of Nagorno Karabakh in the talks will only
benefit Azerbaijan. However, Baku agrees to it in no way. At the same time
considering that someone from the outside will put press and the problem
will solve automatically is naive,’ V. Kazimirov emphasized.

Kocharian congratulated Russian Embassy staff on Day of Russia

Pan Armenian News

KOCHARIAN CONGRATULATED RUSSIAN EMBASSY STAFF ON DAY OF RUSSIA

09.06.2005 04:05

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian President Robert Kocharian visited the
Russian Embassy in Yerevan on the occasion of the Day of Russia, reported
the Press Service of the Armenian leader. In his congratulation speech the
President said that he is sure the ties between the Armenian and Russian
peoples formed during centuries will further strengthen.

Expectations of fainess and transparency

A1plus

| 13:28:29 | 08-06-2005 | Official |

EXPECTATIONS OF FAIRNESS AND TRANSPARENCY

Today Robert Kocharyan has had a working meeting with the Minister of
Education and Science Sergo Yeritsyan. The course of educational reforms and
the commitments of Armenia coming from the joining of the Bologna resolution
were discussed.

A reference has been made to the process of organizing the entrance
examinations. Robert Kocharyan has mentioned that the examinations must be
held as fair and transparent as possible.

Sergo Yeritsyan has said that the monitoring carried out by the control
service of the President last year helped greatly raise the degree of
transparency, this year too the Ministry experts suchlike support.

MOSCOW: Shanghai six has no military build-up plans – Russian FM

Shanghai six has no military build-up plans – Russian minister

RIA news agency
6 Jun 05

Moscow, 6 June: The Shanghai Cooperation Organization [SCO] member
countries [China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan] are not planning to create any kind of a military
structure, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has asserted.

“The SCO does not envisage having military structures. We are speaking
about organizing very close cooperation between state bodies involved
in fighting terrorism, organized crime and drug trafficking. No
special brigades are being planned,” Lavrov said in an interview with
the Vremya Novostey newspaper.

He recalled that rapid-reaction forces for countering possible
external threats had been created within the framework of the
Collective Security Treaty Organization [comprising Russia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Armenia]. “But nothing of this
kind is being planned with the SCO. Nobody has ever proposed this,”
Lavrov said.

The SCO members will maintain cooperation between their law
enforcement bodies and special services in real time so that “those
who are planning extremist or, more than that, violent acts in SCO
member countries could be switched off instantly”, he said.

Commenting upon the common view that countries should sometimes
sacrifice their sovereignty in an emergency, Lavrov said that national
sovereignty would not be limited.

“The same kind of cooperation is carried out within the UN
antiterrorist committee, to which all countries report on the measures
taken by their law enforcement bodies and special services to reveal
and frustrate terrorist plots,” he said.

To answer a question about the possible creation of a second Russian
military base in Kyrgyzstan, the minister recalled that the Kyrgyz
leadership had denied media reports about a corresponding proposal it
allegedly made to Russia.

“Nobody has addressed us officially. The Kyrgyz leadership has a
sovereign right to decide upon the ways of to safeguard their national
security. This question has not been discussed,” Lavrov said.

Energized Bunny: Nabaztag with wi-fi connection

TIME
June 5 2005

Energized Bunny
Can a new computer gadget pull the rabbit out of the hat for wi-fi?

By GRANT ROSENBERG

Sunday, Jun. 05, 2005

What’s the 21st century’s pet rock? A jumbo Tamagotchi pet? Nah.
French tech company Violet () has created Nabaztag, a
plastic, 23-cm-tall (with ears up) white rabbit with a constant wi-fi
connection. The device provides access to other Internet users and
vital daily information like traffic reports and the weather.

Programmed by its owner, Nabaztag (rabbit in Armenian) relays the
information in a slightly cartoonish female voice, and flashes
colored lights on her tummy when new e-mails arrive. The wi-fi
rabbit, which also plays MP3s and MIDI files and dances a jig, flags
these quotidian needs in order to reduce time spent in front of the
computer.

“Nabaztag is a way to stay connected without burnout,” explains
Violet co-founder Olivier Mével. Its creators wanted a noncomputer
form for their invention, and a bunny fit the bill. “We wanted
something that was cute, modest and not intimidating,”says Mével.
Retailing for $120, Nabaztag is scheduled for launch in France at the
end of June, and the firm is planning for a global release next year.

Will the rabbit catch on? The folks at Violet know whose foot to rub.

,13005,901050613-1067924,00.html

–Boundary_(ID_GcCsDTWDSJVuW5LRXxIIxQ)–

http://www.time.com/time/europe/magazine/article/0
www.violet.net

USA considers Czech rep target country in trade in people

USA CONSIDERS CZECH REP TARGET COUNTRY IN TRADE IN PEOPLE

Czech News Agency
June 3, 2005

WASHINGTON/PRAGUE, June 3 (CTK) – The United States continues to
consider the Czech Republic a source and target country of trade
in people, but it ranks it in the best of three groups into which
it divides countries according to their effort to fight the evil,
says an annual report by the U.S. State Department.

This is the fifth such report and the department works it out under
the law on the protection of victims of trade in people.

Slovakia is ranked in the second group, which means that developments
there are a source of worries to Washington and that sanctions could
be imposed on it if the situation worsened.

The same group includes Russia, Ukraine, Greece, Azerbaijan, Armenia
and Uzbekistan.

According to the report which CTK got from the U.S. embassy in Prague,
the Czech Republic is a source, transitory as well as target country
of trade in women and children.

They are illegally brought from Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, Moldova,
Lithuania, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovakia, China and Vietnam mainly for
sexual abuse and prostitution.

The report also says that intra-state trade in people is extensive
and that mainly Romany women are a risk group of victims.

The Czech Republic meets the fundamental demands of the fight against
trade in people because the government reinforced the relevant
legislation in 2004 and raised the pilot programme of aid to the
victims of trade in people to the national level, the report says.

It notes an improvement in legislation and in the work of the police,
but points out that the number of cases taken to courts and the
sentences handed out have remained low.

According to the report, the Czech police investigated 30 cases and
prosecuted 19 perpetrators on suspicion of committing the criminal
offence of trading in people last year.

Courts convicted 12 perpetrators compared to five in 2003.

Out of the 12 convicts, three got unconditional sentences from three
to five years in prison and nine got suspended sentences.

Though no civil servant was accused, it is alleged that border officers
help illegal people smugglers, the report says.

It says that help to the victims and their protection does not meet
minimal requirements in Slovakia.

Though the government is preparing a national plan of fighting trade
in people, it is still too early to guess its efficiency.

Armenia’s big dance

Tens of thousands of Armenians literally embrace their country’s highest mountain.
By Gegham Vardanian under Mount Aragats

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
June 2 2005

ARMENIA’S BIG DANCE

One step forward, one step back. Around a quarter of a million
of Armenians performed this simple manoeuvre last week in a mass
display of national unity. Participants in the Round Dance of Unity
symbolically embraced Mount Aragats – Armenia’s highest mountain –
on First Republic Day, May 28, by dancing hand in hand for 15 minutes.

Around 250,000 dancers formed a 168 kilometre ring around Mount
Aragats in an event that organisers hoped would show the world that
the Armenians are a united nation and give them an entry into the
Guinness Book of Records. Others speculated that the ceremony’s
organisers had a long-term political agenda.

On the day – which marks the declaration of independence in 1918
– hundreds of thousands of people gathered at the foot of Mount
Aragats, an extinct volcano which is 4090 metres high. They stood
hand in hand ready to start dancing. It was decided from the start
that the movement in the dance would be the simple Gyovndi dance –
one step forward, one step back. A week before, Armenian television
stations had started broadcasting clips that were meant to explain
to the population how to perform the movement correctly.

“The dance could have lasted five minutes, not fifteen. The main
idea here is that of unification. Huge sums of money are being spent
in Europe to support the idea of the European Union. However, it is
not being implemented, as there is no spirit in it,” Karen Gevorkyan,
chairman of the Union of National Art of Dancing, told IWPR.

Dancers were given orange caps, as the organisers wanted the dance
to look as an uninterrupted apricot-coloured ring when shot from
a helicopter.

In advance, it was said that this dance would need 168,000 thousand
participants, or one thousand people per kilometre. However, in the
event many more than that showed up and there were quite a number of
sections of the ring where people had to dance in several lines.

The ranks were especially thick where Armenian president Robert
Kocharian was dancing and the cameras focused their lenses on him.
He danced hand in hand with an old man in national Armenian clothes,
a young boy, and an elderly woman, all smiling broadly as they kept
time with the music.

The president was surrounded by officials and ministers, all of
whom danced extremely well, giving the impression that they had been
practicing hard in advance. However, the density of the line was uneven
and there were sections that were empty, spoiling the ambition for
an uninterrupted circle. That did not dampen enthusiasm and there
was universal celebration with music everywhere and separate groups
of people organising mini-dances.

“We are inspired by the fact that the Armenians can unite and organise
themselves,” said Shushan, a student at the Academy of Arts, told IWPR.
She and her friends stayed on the slopes of Aragats after the dance
was over and went on dancing.

However, the organisation of the event actually fell well short of
promises made beforehand. The organisers of the dance had said they
would slaughter animals for meat, supply drinking water and plastic
sacks for rubbish and build field toilets. In the event, there was
one toilet per 1,000 people and there were few plastic sacks. Piles
of rubbish were left at the foot of the mountain when people went
home after the ceremony.

“We thought that there would be some food, so we did not take much
food. We are now going back home earlier because none was provided
for us,” said Andranik who came to the dance with his family and
neighbours.

“We came here a day earlier, on the evening of May 27. They promised
that night’s lodging would be provided but we had to look for rooms
in a nearby village,” said a student from Yerevan State University.
He and his friends – around 20 young boys and girls – managed to
find two rooms with eight beds in them. “However, we are content.
We will remember this all our lives,” Khachik said with a smile.

The dance was planned by the Nig-Aparan Union, which brings together
people from the same Armenian district who settled in the capital
Yerevan.

Aghvan Hovsepyan, Armenia’s chief prosecutor, the head of the union
from Aparan, the area around Mount Aragats, spearheaded the event. He
took ten days’ leave ahead of the ceremony to make it happen but had
planned it over four months.

Hovsepyan is one of Armenia’s most prominent officials and received
support from politicians, businessmen and public servants. Each group
of a thousand people had its leader, who was responsible for bringing
people to the dance and supplying food, water, and transport.

The main committee, named Shurjpar and headed by Hovsepyan, resembled
a campaign headquarters, with expensive cars outside and emotional
discussions inside about who would transport how many people to the
mountain. Businessmen and government officials transported their own
employees. This level of organisation naturally aroused suspicions
that the dance had a hidden agenda.

“Shurjpar is being organised by the people who want to show that
they are able to organise events at a state level,” said lawyer Haik
Tovmasian. “They are ‘showing their muscles’.”

The Armenian capital virtually came to a halt on May 28 as most of
the public transport vehicles were taking dancers to Aragats and
taxis were hard to come by.

Student Arsen Kharatian, who did not take part in the Aragats dance,
was not impressed saying, “It’s unacceptable that state funds are
used to implement an idea like this. The main aim is to ensure a
large number of participants. It would perhaps be best to describe
this event as a compulsory celebration.”

Despite such criticisms, chief prosecutor Aghvan Hovsepyan said
immediately after the dance that everything had been wonderful, “Nature
helped me, God helped me, everything was excellent and beautiful.

“I am so full of emotion that I do not even know what to think about.
I invite you to Shurjpar next year.”

Everyday reality returned all too quickly. On his way back from Aparan,
a car driver took a look at the heaps of rubbish on the mountainside
and remarked bitterly, “The Armenians have been here.”

One peasant from Aparan, a short old man with a wrinkled and sunburned
face, shouted out “What are you doing?” as expensive cars moved across
a ploughed field to beat the traffic jams. He had a wooden stick in his
hand and beat the sides of the vehicles with it as they bumped past.

Gegham Vardanian is a journalist with Internews in Yerevan.

BAKU: Azerbaijan says Russian arms transfer to Armenia to cause tens

Azerbaijan says Russian arms transfer to Armenia to cause tension

Azad Azarbaycan TV, Baku
1 Jun 05

[Presenter] That one of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia,
transfers weapons from its bases in Georgia to Armenia, the aggressor
country, has a negative impact on the peaceful settlement of the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. In the view of the [Azerbaijani] Defence
Ministry, this process will make the military and political situation
tense not only in the region, but in the world as a whole. The USA
have a similar position.

[Correspondent over video of the radar station, Russian troops in
Georgia] The Baku government may review the agreement on leasing
the Qabala radar station to Russia as a result of the redeployment
of the Russian military bases from Georgia to Armenia. Russian news
agencies report this. Quoting a source in the Azerbaijani government,
they say that the Azerbaijani authorities will soon demand that Moscow
close down the radar station.

We want to build relations of friendship and cooperation with
Russia. However, the recent steps taken by Moscow make us think once
again. It appears to us that Russia is deliberately heightening the
tension in relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the source said.

A member of the US Senate has made a similar statement. Russia’s
reinforcing its bases in Armenia poses a serious threat to the region,
a visiting US senator and member of the Foreign Relations Committee
of the Senate, Chuck Hagel, has said.

[Hagel, captioned, speaking at a press conference with Azeri
voice-over] It is good news that Russia has agreed to withdraw its
bases from Georgia. I congratulate Russia and Georgia on reaching this
agreement. However, it would cause a lot of concern if the weapons
and equipment are to be redeployed from Georgia to Armenia.

Azerbaijan and Armenia are independent countries and there should
be no foreign forces on their territories. This step is especially
dangerous for the region.

Yet, I see this as a positive step [as heard]. I hope that the Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict will be resolved and the settlement of this issue
requires Russian assistance.

[Correspondent] The first train with Russian weapons and equipment
headed from its military base in Batumi to Armenia yesterday [31
June]. The 15 carriages of the train delivered the arms to the military
base in Gyumri [Armenia].

[Passage omitted: The number of the Russian troops in Georgia]

TBILISI: Separatist president accuses Russian forces of negligence

Separatist president accuses Russian forces of negligence
By Mary Makharashvili

The Messenger, Georgia
May 2 2005

Eduard Kokoiti visited Moscow on Wednesday, three days after the
death of four Ossetians and one Georgian in South Ossetia. Kokoiti,
the de-facto president of the unrecognized republic, partially blamed
Russian peacekeepers for failing to intervene prior to the gun battle
during his press conference on Wednesday, June 1.

According to his statement, the armed incident was planned in advance.

“I have information that Georgia is getting ready for a fight with us,
though I want you to know that we will not change our position since
we are an independent state,” he said.

“A minister of such a high level as Georgia’s Minister of Internal
Affairs must know what the situation is,” he said. He added that
this was a well prepared provocation against the Ossetian Emergency
Affairs Ministry.

He also stressed that Russian peacekeepers must fulfill the obligations
included in their mandate. He mentioned that the incident was close
to their post and they “had the full right to be involved in this
conflict and to avoid this bloodshed.”

“The Georgian policeman should not have been in this area and what
were they doing there?,” he added.

Kokoiti reported that he arrived in Moscow to discuss integration
issues, as well as the problems facing Russian citizens residing in
South Ossetia. He noted during his briefing that the majority of the
population in South Ossetia are Russian citizens.

There were no meeting with the Russian leadership scheduled during
his visit. “We are solving economic problems,” he said. He stressed
that the meeting was very important for the republics. “We want
to coordinate efforts and support each other in the formation of
states,” Kokoiti said. “We want to help each other be free, as the
democrats say.”

He added that a summit for the separatist leaders of Transdnestre,
Abkhazia, Karabakh and South Ossetia is planned to be held in a month.

Kokoiti also used the opportunity to declare he supports the withdraw
of Russian military bases from Georgian territory if this will assist
in strengthening the relations between Georgia and Russia.

Earlier this week the president of North Ossetia, Alexander Dzasokhov,
announced he would step down from the post later this year. Calls
for his resignation first came in the aftermath of the Beslan hostage
tragedy. Neither Georgian or South Ossetian officials have commented
on his resignation.