45,000 Armenians Expected To Spend Summer Vacations In Ajaria

45,000 ARMENIANS EXPECTED TO SPEND SUMMER VACATIONS IN AJARIA

Armenpress
Sept 05 2006

BATUMI, SEPTEMBER 5, ARMENPRESS: Some 45,000 Armenians are expected
to have spent their summer vacations in Georgia’s autonomous region
of Ajaria on the Black Sea coastline by the end of September. The
anticipated figure will be up from 20,000 in 2005.

During a meeting with Armenian ambassador to Georgia, Hrach Silvanian,
the region’s prime minister Levan Varshalomidze said at the beginning
of September some 35,000 Armenians had already spent a week or more
in Ajaria’s sea resorts.

The ambassador went to Ajaria to welcome the crew of Cilicia ship,
patterned from a medieval Armenian merchant vessel that arrived in
Georgia after traveling through several seas and will be transported
from there to Armenia.

The region’s prime minister said the growing number of Armenians
choosing Ajaria as their vacation destination has brought about the
necessity of opening a Armenian consulate in its capital Batumi.

The prime minister also promised to instruct Batumi municipality to
help fence the Armenian church of Batumi.

Criminal Groupings Are More Important Than Political Ones

CRIMINAL GROUPINGS ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN POLITICAL ONES

A1+
[03:34 pm] 05 September, 2006

Aram Karapetyan, leader of the "New Times" Party, claims that the
visit of Vyacheslav Ivankov (nicknamed Yaponchik), representative
of the Russian criminal world will be one of the most significant
events in the political life of Armenia. According to some sources,
the visit is anticipated by the end of the week.

It is yet unknown what business the Russian criminal has in our country
but Aram Karapetyan maintains that pre-election groupings in Armenia
will be done in two directions; specification of relations between
authorities and opposition on the one hand and between criminal –
non-criminal groups on the other. Aram Karapetyan urges that criminal
– non-criminal groupings during the pre-election period are more
actual. He doesn’t think that there will be any chance of fair and
just elections. "The administrative livers are still in the hands of
the officials, and electronic media are still under control." By the
way, it is noteworthy that none of the above-mentioned media, that’s
to say TV channels, was interested in the meeting with the leader
of "New Times" and didn’t come to cover his press conference. In
comparison with them, Russian newspapers, especially "Nezavisimaya
Gazeta," which published Karapetyan’s article, are greatly interested
in Aram Karapetyan. The advertisement of the article was published
on the first page of the newspaper. It reads, "Moscow is no more
interested in Kocharyan. The relations of the two countries are on
the verge of collapse."

Today the leader of the "New Times" Party claimed that the contents
of the advertisements has nothing to do with his article. He also
added that he gave no money to the newspaper for his article.

Asked the question what the opposition will do during the pre-election
period taking into account the specification of criminal – non-criminal
relations, Aram Karapetyan answered that the representatives of
the opposition will unite during the pre-election period under the
following motto, "We say no to criminal elements in political sphere."

By the way, Mr. Karapetyan is convinced that there is some discord
among our high-rank officials as well.

"The division of administrative livers has already started, and
Serge Sargsyan is displeased with it. All those who ignore the God,
have a rather unhappy end."

Awaiting Key Vote, Turks Mull Risks Of Lebanon Troop Move

AWAITING KEY VOTE, TURKS MULL RISKS OF LEBANON TROOP MOVE
by Hande Culpan

Agence France Presse — English
September 4, 2006 Monday 12:44 PM GMT

Analysts on Monday cast doubt on the wisdom of Turkey’s decision to
join the enlarged UN force in Lebanon, saying it could carry grave
risks, as parliament readied to vote on the planned deployment.

Lawmakers were due to gather Tuesday to vote on authorising the
government to implement a one-year deployment of troops as part of
the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

The ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) is highly likely to
secure the vote since it holds an absolute majority in the 550-seat
parliament.

The government argues the move will strengthen its influence in the
Middle East, a region which was ruled by its predecessor, the Ottoman
Empire, for centuries and where Ankara has for years strived to become
a regional player.

In a bid to quell concerns, Turkish leaders have underlined that the
mission has minimal risk, that Turkish soldiers will not be a combat
force and they will not be tasked with disarming the Shiite Muslim
Hezbollah militia.

But the government’s rationale has failed to convince sceptics who
see Lebanon as a predicament in which Turkish troops risk being in
the line of fire.

"To send soldiers into a quagmire like Lebanon… and to say that
they will not get into fighting at all is like saying ‘I am going to
swim in the sea but not get wet’," commentator Mustafa Balbay wrote
in the left-leaning Cumhuriyet daily.

Political scientists Dogu Ergil raised the possibility of Turkish
troops facing hostilities in Lebanon due to locals’ resentment of
their former Ottoman rulers.

"There is a bitter legacy of Turkish rule in the region that the
Turkish official historiography has covered up. The appearance of
Turkish flags and uniforms will rekindle this anxiety to the risk of
the security of the Turkish contingent in Lebanon," he said in the
English-language Turkish Daily News.

Lebanon’s Armenians — the largest such community in the Arab world —
have already spoken out against Turkish peacekeepers on account of
the massacres of Armenians under Ottoman rule in 1915-1917 and the
concurrent Ottoman occupation of Lebanon.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered by
Ottoman Turks in a genocide campaign.

Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 300,000 Armenians
died when Armenians sided with invading Russian troops for independence
in eastern Anatolia and were deported to the Middle East.

Some commentators, meanwhile, saw the risk of Turkey being drawn into
a wider regional conflict if Turkish troops engage in fighting with
fellow Muslims and Hezbollah militia whose main backer is Iran.

"The gist of the story is this: They (Turkish soldiers) will probably
die and kill in Lebanon. They will rehearse for a possible conflict
with Iran. They will be accepted as a party to the wider sectarian
and ethnic civil wars in the region," commentator Umur Talu said in
the mass-circulation Sabah newspaper

Then there is also widespread public opposition to the deployment.

Polls carried out by several Turkish newspapers on their Internet sites
showed staunch opposition to the deployment of Turkish soldiers. Of the
51,000 participants who voted on the website of the mass-circulation
Hurriyet daily, 77.2 percent opposed Turkey’s UNIFIL participation.

"What are we going to do in Lebanon? We should first take care of
the terrorist threat we face," a reader said in a message left on
the website of the Milliyet daily, referring to mounting Kurdish
insurgency in Turkey’s southeast.

At emotional funeral services at the weekend for eight Turkish soldiers
killed in fighting with separatist Kurdish rebels, mourning relatives
spoke out against the government’s plans.

"The government should send soldiers not to Lebanon but to northern
Iraq", which the rebels use as a springboard for attacks against
Turkey, the father of one of the slain soldiers said, according to
Sabah newspaper.

Romanian Minister Of National Defense To Pay An Official Visit To Ar

ROMANIAN MINISTER OF NATIONAL DEFENSE TO PAY AN OFFICIAL VISIT TO ARMENIA

ArmRadio.am
04.09.2006 17:10

September 6 the Minister of National Defense of Romania Teodor Atanasiu
will arrive in Armenia on a tree-day official visit.

September 7 the Minister is scheduled to meet with RA president Robert
Kocharyan, Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan, Defense Minister Serge
Sargsyan and Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan.

The same day the Romanian delegation will visit the Genocide museum
and will lay a wreath of flowers at the memorial to the victims of
the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

September 8 visits to the Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin and Matenadaran
are expected. Later the Romanian delegation will meet with mass
media representatives.

Fisk: American and Muslim: six million people in search of identity

Robert Fisk: American and Muslim: six million people in search of an identity
Seattle businessmen, students, Miami housewives… Well, what did I expect,
asks Robert Fisk at the Chicago Muslim convention

Sunday Independent/UK
03 September 2006

A guy with brown eyes and dark skin and a thick American accent walks
up to talk to me. I guess he’s an Iranian, possibly a
Pakistani. Where’re you from, I ask? "Austin, Texas," he replies. Fisk
foiled again. But where do you originally come from I ask him? "I was
born in Newark, New Jersey." Fisk clears his throat. Where does his
family originally come from? I’m beginning to feel like the man from
Homeland Security, racially profiling my new friend. "Lahore," he
replies laconically and I try to make amends. The only beautiful city
in Pakistan, I say, and he smiles witheringly at me.

And I go on making the same mistake at the conference hall where the
biggest annual convention of American Muslims – perhaps 32,000 of them
– is meeting for a weekend of speeches and discussions that run all
the way from drug addiction to Condi Rice’s "new" and bloody Middle
East, from banking without interest to the Bush administration’s use
of torture and yes, of course, the after-effects on Muslims of the
international crimes against humanity of September 11, 2001.

You from Jordan I ask? "Denver, Colorado," the young woman
replies. Born in San Diego. Family, yes, from Jordan. From Lebanon, I
ask another? "Buffalo, New York." Actually, the family was from Syria.

It takes a while to realise that I’m playing the game of so many
American non-Muslims in the aftermath of the plane hijackings. I’m
sniffing for the world’s enemies only hours after President George W
Bush went into paranoid mode while addressing the American Legion in
Salt Lake City. He had just claimed that America is fighting "the
decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century" and then jumped on
the crumbling old arguments of pre-Second World War appeasement to
bang the Hitler drum as well.

Oddly, it’s the Muslim converts rather than the Muslim-born Americans
who are toughest on Bush. "He wants eternal war," a young man with a
brown beard but very bright blue eyes – yes, he was from Vermont –
hissed at me. "He talks shit and we have to listen to this and promise
to be non-violent or someone will point the finger at us." All agree
that the most pernicious element to the latest Bush rant is his gift
to Israel of placing Ehud Olmert in the ranks of his "war on terror",
quite specifically linking Israel’s slaughter of Lebanese civilians in
July and August to his own manic project by stating that combatants
from Iraq and Lebanon "form the outlines of a single movement, a
worldwide network of radicals that use terror to kill those who stand
in the way of their totalitarian ideology".

I search for the anger amid these thousands of Muslims, businessmen
from Seattle and students from Harvard and housewives from Miami. It’s
there, I know, but as an Armenian friend of mine remarks in the
afternoon, they seem happy. And it’s true. There are more smiles than
expressions of contempt, more babies in backpacks and prams than
posters of pain. In fact there aren’t any posters at all. But I
suspect I know the truth. On their own, as thin minorities in the
towns and cities of the United States, America’s Muslims – perhaps six
million of them – can feel under siege, distrusted and even hated.

At the convention centre, however, they are in a self-confident
majority, Sunnis for the most part – America’s Shias, who may be in
the majority over all, don’t have the same organising abilities at
present – who blithely ignore the officers of the Illinois state
police and the Chicago cops’ bomb squad. I watch them, guns swinging
at their hips, go from stand to stand, occasionally inspecting the
boxes of books piled against the walls. Just who, I wonder, do they
think is going to bomb Muslims in Chicago? Salam al-Marati – he is
one of the few Muslims I meet who actually was born in the Arab world,
in the Baghdad suburb of Qadamiyeh – is director of the Muslim Public
Affairs Council (MPAC), a Los Angeles advocacy group which repeatedly
urges American Muslims to work with the authorities against violence
but who sees other dangers and other targets for Muslim political
anger: the pro-Israeli lobbyists who ostentatiously insist that the
vast majority of American Muslims are peaceful and law-abiding but
that a "network of Islamic terror" exists across the nation.

Daniel Pipes is a bête noire, as is Steven Emerson, a freelance
journalist who grinds out article after article about the "American
jihad" for such august papers as The Wall Street Journal, which, by
the way, more and more reads like The Jerusalem Post. Emerson and his
work are taken apart by al-Marati and his colleagues in a widely
circulated booklet entitled Counterproductive Terrorism: How
Anti-Islamic Rhetoric is Impeding America’s Homeland Security.

"Those representing pro-Israeli groups continue to intimidate and
marginalise those who are critical of Israeli policies by claiming
this is pro-terrorism," al-Marati says with a mixture of anger and
weariness. "This is to the detriment of America, to the detriment of
countering terrorism."

Maher Hathout, originally from the Cairo suburb of Qasr el-Aini and an
MPAC advisor, is, if anything, even more angry. "We are that group of
Americans who are not intimidated," he says. "You go to the campuses,
and the Muslim students are the most outspoken. They are asking – we
are asking – how we can get the average American who knows the truth
about the Middle East to have the guts to speak it. Our job is to say:
‘Shame on you. You criticise your President. But when you speak of
Israel,you whisper.’ What has happened to the home of the brave?"

MPAC – which is operating in Chicago under the auspices of the
distinctly pro-Saudi Islamic Society of North America – has produced a
handbook called the Grassroots Campaign to Fight Terrorism, which
quotes from the Koran ("Whoever killed a human being… it shall be as
if he had killed all mankind") and advises its supporters that "it is
our duty as American Muslims to protect our country and to contribute
to its betterment".

"But what is the American-Muslim identity?" al-Marati asks. "Our
religious values and our American values are not incompatible. There
is no dissonance between the founding principles of America and Muslim
values. Unless we have this identity, we will be trapped. We will end
up creating Muslim ghettoes in America."

Sometimes, though, these men and women remind me of nothing so much as
the more ardent members of the Israeli – or Armenian – lobby: fluent,
just a little bit over-eloquent, passionate – and I wonder if one day
they may get a little loose with the facts.

Abkhazia denies HR violations in Georgian-populated district

Abkhazia denies human rights violations in Georgian-populated district

Apsnypress
1 Sep 06

Sukhumi, 1 September: The Abkhaz president’s representative in Gali
District Ruslan Kishmaria has rejected and described as provocative a
statement released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia which
says that mass human rights violations are being perpetrated in Gali
District [predominately Georgian district in Abkhazia].

"All of this is being done to provoke the situation in Gali District
and the whole of Abkhazia," Kishmaria told Apsnypress while commenting
on the statement by the Georgian Foreign Ministry’s Press and
Information Department which said that "Sukhumi’s separatist regime
continues to perpetrate gross human rights violations in Abkhazia on a
massive scale".

The Georgian Foreign Ministry’s document reads that "Georgian
residents of Gali District are forced to dig trenches for the
so-called Abkhaz army". Kishmaria said that no one was digging
trenches in Gali District. Work is under way there to restore
fortification buildings in the limited armament zone along the entire
line of the separation of sides, he said.

"Given the actions carried out by official Tbilisi in the upper part
of the Kodori Gorge, we do not rule out that Georgia will go to war
against Abkhazia.

Therefore, we are preparing for the defence and protection of our
state and its independence. Residents of Gali District, alongside any
other residents and citizens of Abkhazia, are participating in this
voluntarily," Kishmaria said.

Commenting on the allegation of forceful conscription of Georgian
youths into the Abkhaz army, Kishmaria said: "There exists such a
state called the republic of Abkhazia. Even though it has not been
recognized by the world community it still has its armed forces in
which all of its citizens over age 18 serve. Anyone who considers
themselves a citizen of the republic of Abkhazia is obliged under the
constitution to pay their duty to their homeland. This applies to the
local Megrelian [ethnic subgroup of Georgians] population of Gali
District as well."

Georgians constitute 3 per cent of the population in Gali, Russians,
Armenians and Abkhaz another 3 per cent, while Megrelians constitute
94 per cent, Kishmaria said.

"Megrelians living in Gali District consider Abkhazia their homeland
and they choose to serve in the armed forces of the republic. Forceful
conscription is out of the question. The Georgian side is trying to
artificially inflate this problem," Kishmaria said.

The joint command of the CIS collective peacekeeping force operating
in the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict zone did not confirm the information
circulated by the Georgian Foreign Ministry’s Press and Information
Department either.

"The Russian peacekeeping force has not registered any gross mass
human rights violations on Abkhaz territory. If there had been such,
the peacekeepers’ command would have known about them, the head of the
press service of the peacekeeping force, Vladimir Anikin, said.

Neither does the UN Human Rights Office in Sukhumi know anything about
"gross and mass human rights violations in Gali District".

"We learnt about this from Georgian media reports and are now
verifying the information. No one has addressed the UN office in
Sukhumi regarding this yet.

No complains have been made," the head of the office, Vladlen
Stefanov, said. Stefanov said he had sent his staff to Gali District
to verify the information circulated by the Georgian Foreign Ministry.

Gov’t Approves 2007 Program of Restoring Sevan Lake Ecosystem

GOVERNMENT APPROVES 2007 PROGRAM OF EVENTS ON RESTORING SEVAN LAKE
ECOSYSTEM

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA Government approved at the
August 31 sitting the 2007 program of events on restoring, keeping,
reproducing and using Sevan Lake ecosystems. As Noyan Tapan was
informed by the RA Government’s Information and Public Relations
Department, by the Government’s decision, the program will be involved
in the RA 2007 draft state budget. The annual program was worked out
corresponding to the RA laws "On Lake Sevan" and "On Establishing
Annual and Complex Programs of Events on Restoring, Keeping,
Reproducing and Using Sevan Lake Ecosystem." The goal of the program
is to guarantee implementation of the programs and events scheduled
for 2007, addressed to preservation of the Lake Sevan and its basin
ecosystems, re-establishment of ecological balance of the lake, to
normal consonant development of the basin bio-variety.

Azerbaijan, Armenia Will Find Compromise – U.S. Mediator

AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA WILL FIND COMPROMISE – U.S. MEDIATOR

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS General Newswire
August 30, 2006 Wednesday 4:31 PM MSK

The parties to the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict will compromise
in order to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, U.S. co-chairman
of the Organization for Security and Co- operation in Europe (OSCE)
Minsk Group Matthew Bryza said.

There is no alternative to a peaceful settlement, and compromise is
the only way to resolve the issue, the U.S. diplomat told journalists
accompanying Azeri President Ilham Aliyev on his trip to Slovenia.

BAKU: Ethnic Azeri Activist Says Foreign Services Behind Reported Tr

ETHNIC AZERI ACTIVIST SAYS FOREIGN SERVICES BEHIND REPORTED TROUBLE IN GEORGIA

Ekho, Baku
26 Aug 06

A leading member of an Azeri ethnic body in Georgia is perplexed
about recent unconfirmed media reports about a campaign by the
Georgian authorities against ethnic Azerbaijanis. In an interview
with Ekho newspaper, Zumrud Qurbanov said it was probable that the
foreign services of a number of countries were behind the recent
trouble in Kvemo Kartli Province and it is high time the Georgian
authorities expressed their view on the matter. The following are
excerpts from R.Orucov’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper Ekho on 26
August headlined "Who is stirring up trouble? Georgian Azerbaijanis
are lost in conjectures and official Tbilisi simply keeps silent";
subheadings have been inserted editorially:

With some strange regularity more and more blatantly false reports have
been appearing in the local media recently about incidents allegedly
happening in eastern Georgia, in Kvemo Kartli Province which is
populated primarily by Azerbaijanis. The original information, as a
rule, comes from Baku, then it creates a natural stir in Georgia, and
finally, without being backed up by any facts, is somehow forgotten.

[Passage omitted: reports in Regnum agency about arrests of members
of National Assembly of Azerbaijanis of Georgia which turned out to
be false]

Yesterday, Ekho asked an inhabitant of Marneulskiy District, a
former Georgian MP and member of the board of the Qeyrat [Honour]
National Movement of Georgian Azerbaijanis, Zumrud Qurbanov, to give
his assessment of these events.

Insulting leaflets distributed

"To start with, all the cards have become shuffled, in the sense that
much is being hyped up. All kinds of factitious forces have joined
in the Georgian political game, and at times like these it is very
difficult to sort out what is the truth and what isn’t. Take a recent
incident when leaflets with an insulting content were distributed
en masse in our district. They carried the words: ‘Tatrebo (Tatars –
author’s note), the land is ours. You were warned in 1991 – Georgia for
the Georgians.’ These fliers were circulated around Marneuli, during
the night in 10-15 villages, and no-one noticed anybody. This is very
strange. Is someone carrying out somebody’s orders? After all, if these
actions are not being done openly, not by definite political forces,
and at the same time various statements are being heard from public
platforms, the people are at a loss to know where an attack might
come from, whether is it worth worrying about it, or whether it is
serious or not. Let us try and work out who is benefiting by all this.

"If one proceeds from the AzTV version, it is the Armenians who are
behind this. But I live here and I can see this is not the work
of Armenians. They are not interested in coming to Kvemo Kartli,
where none of them live, to set Azerbaijanis against Georgians. And,
incidentally, the Armenian media in Georgia has never paid any
attention to this, especially as Armeniaphobia has been spread among
the Georgians themselves.

"Of course, it is easy for the Azerbaijani and Georgian leadership
to attribute all these incidents to an Armenian trace. This helps
them to maintain political and economic relations at the present
level. In the past 15 years hundreds of interviews have appeared in
which Azeri and Georgian politicians accuse the Armenians alone of
all the sins of Kvemo Kartli. But if this is the case, then why in all
these years have they been unable to find a single Armenian who could
be accused of such actions? Where then are the authorities, where are
the special services? This is a very important question. I do not rule
out that these might be Armenians, but why then are the Georgian and
Azerbaijani special services not working together on this question?

Foreign services behind trouble

"On the other hand, Russia, too, has always been named as the third
force.

We all know that there are certain problems at the moment between
Georgia and Russia, and Russia has a vested interest in destabilizing
the situation in Georgia. Let us suppose that Moscow wants to create
the same tension in Akhalkalaki and Kvemo Kartli as in Abkhazia
and South Ossetia. But if the Russians are behind this, that means
some people here are working for their special services. Why, then,
has not a single case of the participation of the Russian special
services in these activities been proved based on the facts? Why is
nothing being done at all and all we get is empty statements?

"In other words, it cannot be ruled out that the special services of
various states are operating in Georgia today, and there are local
people who are serving the interests of different states. These
could be Iran, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Russia, and so on. For example,
instability in Georgia is of no benefit to Azerbaijan, since it is a
strategic partner for Baku, and it is important that everything here
is stable and normal. But then Azerbaijan must work side by side with
Georgia in all crimes against the Azeris.

"One thing is clear – some people are trying to exacerbate the
situation in Kvemo Kartli and to use it either against the state or
against the present government. But it is also perfectly possible
that this is being done not from outside but from within, simply to
give an impression that somebody is heating up the situation – in
other words, by the state itself. Here we have thousands of leaflets
being distributed surprisingly quickly and unnoticed.

"This caused excitement among the Azeris. If the government was
concerned, it would have immediately made a political statement about
it. But neither the country’s leadership nor the province has expressed
any opinion about what happened, and they could have reassured the
people and told them where they stood on it.

"But everyone is keeping silent. And people are starting to say that
it is not only external forces, but also the country’s authorities who
are benefiting from this. There are also Azeri emigres from Georgia
who are living in Russia and writing articles in which they sharply
and wrongly criticize the Georgian authorities, accusing them of things
that are not happening or which are not important (although there are
things which the authorities should be criticized for). And I have a
feeling that these people are operating artificially, again one does
not know on whose orders, so that in the future, when the Azeris have
a real problem, nobody pays any attention to our complaints and does
not take us seriously. Recently these people have been saying that
they killed some Azeris in Marneuli or they beat up some people and
detained them and their newspapers. But when one starts investigating
the facts, one suddenly discovers that one person was killed in an
accident, or something like that.

One gets as far as the deputy Interior Minister and finds out that
nobody of that name has been arrested.

"These people should be putting their questions in another way –
for example, why, when the Azeris are being treated unfairly, is not
one single investigation taken to its conclusion and it drags out for
years? It is not the Russians who are behind all this but some kind
of local forces who offend the Azeris when they feel like it and try
to portray us as professional swindlers.

All this is being done artificially. I would even suggest that it is
the Georgian special services, who have been given the task to prove to
everyone that there are no problems among the Georgian Azerbaijanis,
who are behind all this. Therefore, I think that the intelligence and
special services of many different states in the region, including
Georgian, are mixed up in all of this.

It may even be that they are working together on some issues. And by
the way, according to Georgian official data, 119,000 Azeris have
left Kvemo Kartli and the country as a whole for good in the past
ten years. This is 70-80 per cent of the overall number of people
who have left here. And nobody gives this a thought."

Azerbaijani MP and a member of the interparliamentary group of
friendship between Georgia and Azerbaijan, Nasib Nasibli, found it
difficult to say who might be behind all the intrigues and provocations
of the past month in Kvemo Kartli.

"We want to know what is the official attitude of the Georgian
authorities to all this – how do they explain such incidents? But,
in theory, there are those who want the Azeris to quit Georgia. And
having followed all this for ten years, I believe there are certain
forces of a chauvinist hue in Georgia who are putting pressure on
the Azeris. That is a fact. On the other hand, theoretically, Russia,
too, has a vested interest in a pocket of tension being created there,
because of their relations with Georgia. It is a pity that we do not
hear anything from representatives of the Georgian leadership about
all this," Nasibli said.

Issues Related To Development Of Draft Law On Activities Of Church D

ISSUES RELATED TO DEVELOPMENT OF DRAFT LAW ON ACTIVITIES OF CHURCH DISCUSSED AT MEETING OF KAREKIN II AND NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SPEAKER

Noyan Tapan
Aug 28 2006

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, NOYAN TAPAN. Speaker of the RA National
Asembly Tigran Torosian on August 28 received Catholicos of All
Armenians Karekin II. NT was informed about it from the RA National
Assembly PR Department. His Holiness, who was for the first time
in the parliament since T. Torosian’s election as the NA Speaker,
congratulated T. Torosian, wishing him fruitful activities.

Karekin II also spoke about the long-standing and efficient
cooperation that preceded T. Torosian’s election as NA Speaker and
found its expression in protection of the interests of the Armenian
Apostolic Church. Issues related to the development of a draft law on
activities of the Armenian Apostolic Church were discussed during the
meeting. These issues are among new laws and legislative amendments
to be adopted after the referendum on constitutional amendments. His
Holiness expressed a hope that the development and adoption of
the draft will allow to regulate relations between the church and
the state and all problems related to the protocol of state events
with the participation of high-ranking clergymen, as well as the tax
field, spiritual upbringing and education, and the use of the Armenian
Apostolic Church’s symbols. Attaching special importance to the role
that the Armenian Apostolic Church plays in the society and underlining
the necesity to adopt the draft law and to set up a authorized
body to regulate the current state-church relations and issues,
T. Torosian said that the draft should specify the mission of the
Armenian Apostolic Church, the role it played and will play in the
spiritual and cultural life in terms of rights. The inrelocutors
agreed to have meetings in the future as well – in order to develop
a draft law through joint discussions and to put that draft in
circulation. T. Torosian and Karekin II also discussed a number of
other issues of mutual interest.