Heads of CIS tax services meet in Yerevan

RIA Novosti
October 09, 2004

HEADS OF CIS TAX SERVICES MEET IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, October 9 (RIA Novosti) – The 7th session of the
coordination council of the CIS tax services’ heads opens in the
Armenian capital on Saturday.

Changes in the coordination council’s staff and reports on the
execution of previous council’s decisions on the development and
efficiency of CIS economic cooperation in 2003-2010 are on the
session’s agenda, said the press service of the Armenian State Tax
Service.

Moreover, the participants will discuss the analysis of small
business taxation systems used in the Commonwealth of Independent
States, analyze the activities of the CIS tax systems in 2003,
consider the mechanism of registration of the identification numbers
of taxpayers, draft the convention on mutual administrative
assistance in tax issues, and discuss the use of the agreement to
avoid double taxation and the plan of the coordination council’s work
for 2005.

The coordination council of the CIS tax services’ heads was
established on May 31, 2001. At the moment it is led by chairman of
the State Tax Service under the Armenian government Felix Tsolakyan,
elected for one year in October 2003.

The previous session of the coordination council took place in Minsk,
Belarussian capital, on May 29, 2004.

Gloomy Past and Obscure Future of Dvin Hotel

A1 Plus | 17:04:42 | 08-10-2004 | Social

GLOOMY PAST AND OBSCURE FUTURE OF DVIN HOTEL

Andreas Ghukasyan, a representative of Yerevan’s Dvin Hotel new owner
Caucasus Communications Group company, speaking at a news conference on
Friday, said it had become clear after intense scrutiny that a part of a
half-million debt accumulated for years and now inherited by the company are
groundless and confirmed by forged papers. Some of the papers are declared
invalid by court.

Ghukasyan neither confirmed nor denied rumors that the hotel belongs to
Russian popular singer Iosif Kobzon.

He promised journalists to reveal some secret facts connected with the
hotel.

It is worth to be noted that there were many dark and ominous circumstances
surrounding the hotel, such as the murder of the former lessee with
privatization right. He had been killed in Moscow. After his murder, the
government sold the hotel at $3 million.

Ethnic Armenian appointed chief adviser of Georgian president

Ethnic Armenian appointed chief adviser of Georgian president

Noyan Tapan news agency, Yerevan
28 Sep 04

Akhalkalaki, 28 September: The former head of the Akhalkalaki District
executive authorities, [ethnic Armenian] Artyush Ambartsumyan, was
appointed the chief adviser of the Georgian presidential administration
on 23 September.

As A-Info news agency reports, Ambartsumyan will be in charge of
regional problems and ethnic issues.

BAKU: Azeri party complains about persecution of independent media

Azeri party complains about persecution of independent media

Turan news agency
27 Sep 04

Baku

The persecution of the independent and opposition press in Azerbaijan
has intensified over the past year. Attacks on the press and individual
journalists represent not only a violation of freedom of speech,
but also of the citizens’ right to information, the Hope Party says
in a statement issued today.

The document says that the leading opposition newspapers and magazines
are under constant pressure by the authorities: their employees are
subjected to attacks and abduction, while courts impose considerable
fines on them. All this is aimed at bringing the opposition media to
bankruptcy and forcing it into silence.

The statement also says that over the past year, Georgia has held 65
and Armenia 70 trials involving the media, while in Azerbaijan there
have been 700 such trials. All this demonstrates the proportion of the
campaign to suppress the freedom of the media which the authorities
launched after the 2003 presidential elections.

The Hope Party demands that the authorities put an end to the
persecution campaign and free the editor-in-chief of Yeni Musavat
newspaper, Rauf Arifoglu, who has been imprisoned for 11 months now.

Bientot La Convention Des Armeniens D’Europe

FEDERATION EURO-ARMENIENNE
pour la Justice et la Démocratie
Avenue de la Renaissance 10
B – 1000 BRUXELLES
Tel./Fax : +32 (0) 2 732 70 27
E-mail : [email protected]
Web :

COMMUNIQUE DE PRESSE
15 septembre 2004
Contact: Talline Tachdjian
Tel.: +32 (0)2 732 70 27

BIENTOT LA CONVENTION DES ARMENIENS D’EUROPE

— Vartan Oskanian, le Ministre des Affaires Etrangères d’Arménie,
attendu. —
— Des rencontres entre les délégations arméniennes et les responsables
européens en préparation. —

Plusieurs dizaines de cadres associatifs arméniens d’Europe ont déjà répondu
positivement à l’invitation lancée par la Fédération Euro-Arménienne et
participeront à la première Convention des Arméniens d’Europe.

Au premier rang des personnalités attendues se trouve M. Vartan Oskanian, le
ministre des affaires étrangères d’Arménie qui a souhaité une participation
au plus haut niveau de son ministère.

Cette convention se déroulera au Parlement européen à Bruxelles, les lundi
18 et mardi 19 octobre 2004. Elle vise à créer un espace de dialogue entre
les différentes sensibilités qui traversent les communautés arméniennes d’
Europe afin de dégager des positions communes sur des questions
essentielles.

Des experts européens, des universitaires, notamment de Grèce, d’Italie, de
Grande-Bretagne, de France, d’Allemagne, du Portugal et de Belgique
participeront aux tables rondes, aux côtes de responsables d’organisations
et d’institutions arméniennes, de parlementaires européens et d’officiels de
la Commission européenne. Ces derniers feront le point de la politique de l’
Union sur chacun des sujets traités.

Les thèmes abordés couvriront un large spectre allant des enjeux
énergétiques de l’Arménie à la culture, la langue et l’identité arméniennes
en Europe en passant par le problème de l’adhésion de la Turquie à l’Union.

« Nous tenons là une occasion unique de faire entendre notre voix dans un
contexte politique crucial et au cœur même de la vie politique européenne.
Nous préparons activement des rencontres entre la présidence du Parlement,
diverses représentations nationales et des délégations issues de la
Convention. Ces entrevues devraient avoir lieu dans l’après-midi du mardi »
a annoncé Hilda Tchoboian la présidente de la Fédération.

« D’ores et déjà la participation des jeunes responsables arméniens d’Europe
est remarquable. » s’est elle félicitée.

La Fédération Euro-Arménienne rappelle que l’inscription à la Convention est
gratuite mais obligatoire. Tous les détails pratiques sont fournis sur le
site Internet de la Fédération , où un programme provisoire va
être incessamment publié.

###

http://www.feajd.org
www.eafjd.org

Strong ties bind Russia & Armenia at Karabakh talks

STRONG TIES BIND RUSSIA AND ARMENIA AT KARABAKH TALKS
Sergei Blagov 9/14/04

EurasiaNet Organization
Sept 14 2004

As Armenia and Azerbaijan prepare for tomorrow’s presidential summit
on Nagorno-Karabakh, Russia has begun to emphasize its own ties with
Yerevan, prompting Baku to question the Kremlin’s role as an objective
mediator for the conflict.

Chances for a genuine breakthrough in the September 15 talks at
the Confederation of Independent States (CIS) conference in Astana,
Kazakhstan are doubtful, but both Azerbaijan and Armenia are already
touting their respective inclinations for peace. On September 2,
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev told reporters in the province of
Naxcivan, near the Armenian border, that “[t]he fact that I have not
yet abandoned negotiations on Nagorno-Karabakh means that I believe
in their productivity,” Interfax reported. In turn, Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanian announced at an August 30 meeting in Prague
with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov that the two sides
had made progress in laying “the foundation” for the September talks,
according to Interfax.

But that foundation is one that Baku believes should include Russia.
In August, Azerbaijan called on the Kremlin to step up its own
contributions to a Karabakh peace deal. Russia, long the region’s
heavyweight, appears to be seen by Baku as a potentially influential
counterweight to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe, whose own peacemaking efforts via the tripartite Minsk
Group have been the subject of much criticism from Azerbaijani
parliamentarians and government officials.

When Moscow’s response to Baku’s demand came, however, it took
place at a meeting with Armenia’s President Robert Kocharian —
the sixth such in the past year. At an August 20 summit in Sochi,
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that “Russia is ready
to play a role of mediator and guarantor” in the Karabakh conflict,
but noted that “[t]here have been no breakthrough decisions.”

A show of Russian support could stand Armenia in good stead at the CIS
talks. Speculation has recently mounted that Kocharian is prepared
to return the seven Azerbaijani territories it occupies in exchange
for a peace deal on Armenian-controlled Karabakh. According to one
recent opinion poll, that would place Kocharian at variance with nearly
half of Armenia’s population — a delicate situation for a leader who
withstood weeks of opposition protests earlier this spring. In a June
25 poll by the Armenian Center for National and International Studies,
45.5 percent of Armenians stated that they believe that territories
seized during the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan should remain under
Armenian control.

Meanwhile, Moscow appears ready to assist. Russia’s longtime
influence in the Caucasus is already under political pressure from
the US in Georgia and Azerbaijan and also under increasing economic
pressure in both Georgia and Armenia from outside energy players like
Iran. Even while expressing no official concern at reported US plans
to establish a base in Azerbaijan, Moscow has been busy reinforcing
its traditionally strong ties with Armenia.

Recent military exercises between the two longtime allies appear to
have sparked the sharpest concern in Baku. At a training base not
far from Yerevan on August 24-28, 1,900 Armenian and Russian troops
fought back an imaginary invasion and assault on Russia’s 102nd
military base at Guymri.

Despite assurances from Armenia’s army that the maneuvers are not
directed against a third country, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry has
taken a different view. Voicing concern that Russia had held war
games with “an aggressor state,” Defense Ministry spokesman Ramiz
Melikov has stated that the operations contradicted Russia’s role
as a mediator in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. In November 2003,
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov described Armenia as Russia’s
“only ally in the South.”

The Russian military presence in Armenia has deep roots. A 1995 treaty
gives Russia’s military base a 25-year-long presence in Armenia,
while a 1997 friendship treaty provides for mutual assistance in the
event of a military threat to either country. Currently, there are
2,500 Russian military personnel stationed in the country. Recent
military materiel shipped to Armenia includes MiG-29 jetfighters and
S300 PMU1 air defense batteries, an advanced version of the SA-10C
Grumble air defense missile. Russia’s Federal Border Guard Service
is also deployed to guard Armenia’s borders with Turkey and Iran.

Economic ties could also fuel Azerbaijani fears of favoritism toward
its longtime rival. Armenia is heavily dependent on Russia for its
natural gas and nuclear fuel supplies. In 2002, Russia wrote off $100
million of Armenia’s external debt in return for control of five
state-run Armenian enterprises, including the Razdan thermal power
plant. Russia’s state-run Unified Energy Systems power monopoly also
controls Armenia’s Metsamor nuclear power station and hydro-power
plants under a similar debt repayment arrangement — a deal that has
placed 90 percent of Armenia’s energy system in Russian hands.

At the same time, however, divergent interests have begun to emerge,
most notably with Armenia’s aspiration to limit its dependence on
Russian energy supplies by building a $120 million, 141-kilometer gas
pipeline from Iran to Europe. Iran reportedly has agreed to supply
36 billion cubic meters of natural gas to Armenia from 2007-2027,
a plan that could undercut Russian energy companies’ own position in
the Caucasus. The plan has yet to be finalized.

Such a situation would appear likely to push Russia to forge even
closer links with Armenia to protect its own energy interests. If so,
the bid to promote Moscow as an objective mediator could be fraught
with additional difficulties.

In the meantime, with little time remaining before the summit in
Astana, the Kremlin is playing its own cards carefully. Azerbaijani
Foreign Minister Mamedyarov had little to show after an August 19
trip to Moscow to discuss Nagorno-Karabakh other than an official
statement that the Kremlin recognizes Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. Kocharian was treated to similarly circumspect language at
his Sochi summit with Putin. Wedged between foes Turkey and Azerbaijan,
Armenia, the Russian leader said, is in “a very difficult geopolitical
situation.”

Editor’s Note: Sergei Blagov is a Moscow-based specialist in CIS
political affairs.

My Greatest Mistake John Kampfner, Political Editor, New Statesman

MY GREATEST MISTAKE JOHN KAMPFNER, POLITICAL EDITOR, NEW STATESMAN
BY JOHN KAMPFNER

The Independent (London)
September 7, 2004, Tuesday

I CAN STILL see the article, 18 years on. It was on the back page
of Pravda. I was a trainee with Reuters, on my first overseas
posting. That morning I was the only correspondent on duty in our
office, which was hardly surprising given that there were only three
of us and we were all working long hours. Our full contingent was
five, but two colleagues had been expelled in a tit-for-tat “spy”
row after Margaret Thatcher had kicked a couple of Tass journalists
out of London.

This was a time, to coin Lenin’s phrase, of two steps forward and
one step back. Mikhail Gorbachev’s policy of glasnost, or openness,
had achieved remarkable changes. Then came the Chernobyl nuclear
disaster, news of which had reached the West well before it was
reluctantly confirmed by the Soviet authorities.

As the world looked on in horror, reporters in Moscow were under
pressure to find out more. That is where my howler came in. Our affable
if excitable Armenian assistant pointed me to information in Pravda
that suggested the scope of the accident was bigger than had been
revealed. The piece named a number of towns potentially affected. I
quickly bashed out an alert reporting that a second exclusion zone
had been declared. The markets went wild. Governments went wild. HQ
congratulated me on outsmarting our rivals. We counted the minutes
before the other agencies caught up. The trouble was – they didn’t.

My stomach began to churn. I re-read the piece and realised I had
got it wrong. Some of the towns involved were already in the existing
exclusion zone. The zone had been enlarged in places, but basically
it was not a story. As soon as I got hold of my boss (these were the
days before mobiles and I couldn’t find him at home) we knew we had
to kill the story. Reuters always prided itself on double and treble
checking, especially stories as sensitive as this. I was truly in the
doghouse. That was May 1986. I think they would have sent me home,
if only the office had not been so short-staffed.

John Kampfner is the author of Blair’s Wars’. He was a foreign
correspondent with Reuters and The Daily Telegraph’ and political
correspondent for the Financial Times’ and BBC

Armenian Speaker calls for expansion of relations with Iran

Armenian Speaker calls for expansion of relations with Iran

IRNA web site, Tehran
2 Sep 04

Moscow, 2 September: Armenian National Assembly Chairman Artur
Bagdasaryan on Thursday [2 September] called for further expansion
of mutual cooperation between his country and Iran in various areas.

In a meeting with Iran’s ambassador to Yerevan, Ali Reza Haqiqiyan,
Bagdasaryan said the forthcoming visit by Iran’s President Mohammad
Khatami to Armenia is considered as a significant factor to promote
bilateral ties.

He also attached significance to Iran-Armenia mutual cooperation,
parliamentary relations and further communication between parliamentary
friendship groups of the two countries.

The Iranian diplomat, for his part, attached significance to
Khatami’s visit to Yerevan and parliamentary cooperation between the
two countries.

“The Republic of Armenia enjoys special status in Iranian foreign
policy. Tehran calls for strengthening stability and security and
economy of Armenia, said Haqiqiyan.

President Mohammad Khatami is scheduled to pay an official visit to
the Republic of Armenia in near future.

How oil brought the dogs of war back to Malabo

How oil brought the dogs of war back to Malabo

As eight alleged coup plotters languish in jail, Raymond Whitaker reports
from Equatorial Guinea, where the President and his friends have lined their
pockets at the expense of their
countrymen

Independent/uk
02 September 2004

When Frederick Forsyth was looking for a suitable setting in which to
write The Dogs of War, his 1974 thriller about white mercenaries in
Africa, he chose this island capital. That was three decades ago but
not much has changed in Malabo since. Beneath green-draped volcanic
slopes, 200-year-old Spanish cannon still guard the palm-fringed
harbour and the damp-stained shopfronts. An air of “malarial lethargy”,
VS Naipaul’s phrase, still prevails.

But look out to sea from the terrace of the Bahia Hotel, where Eddie
the Eel practised in the comma-shaped swimming pool, one of only two on
the island, for his moment of glory at the Sydney Olympics, and there
is a sight Forsyth would not have seen. At night, the horizon glows
red; here and there a pinpoint of flame pierces the darkness. These
are the flares of the offshore platforms which have transformed
Equatorial Guinea into sub-Saharan Africa’s third-largest oil exporter.

When Forsyth was writing, there was little to lure soldiers of
fortune to this tropical dictatorship, which consists of a few,
lush, volcanic islands and a jungle-covered strip of the African
mainland. Its population of 500,000 subsisted mainly on cocoa exports,
so the novelist, who rechristened the country Zangoro, endowed it
with valuable deposits of platinum. But the oil is real enough, and
it appears to have attracted a band of adventurers who imagined that
the 1970s had never gone away.

Languishing since March in the island’s Black Beach prison are eight
former members of South Africa’s apartheid-era special forces, six
Armenian aircrew and five local men. They are accused of being the
advance guard for a coup planned by Simon Mann, a former SAS officer
turned mercenary soldier, allegedly supported by his friend Sir Mark
Thatcher, Lord Archer and his friend Ely Calil, a Lebanese-born oil
trader based in London, who is said to have commissioned the whole
operation.

He is said to have wanted to put Severo Moto, an exiled Equatorial
Guinea opposition politician, in power in exchange for favourable
oil deals.

Apart from Mr Mann, who is in Zimbabwe awaiting sentence for illegally
attempting to buy arms, all have denied having anything to do with the
affair. But in Equatorial Guinea, unaccustomed to world attention, the
alleged involvement of internationally known figures in a conspiracy
against it is more exciting than anything else that has happened
since the Spanish loosened their colonial grip in the 1960s.

Not only is there an English lord whose book sales outstrip even those
of Frederick Forsyth, but the Iron Lady herself is now reported to
have put up bail for her son, who has been under house arrest in Cape
Town on suspicion of having helped to finance the plot.

Even Equatorial Guinea’s President, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, appears to
have been caught up by the mood. When the alleged mercenaries were put
on trial last week, the death sentence was demanded by the prosecution
for their leader, Nick du Toit, who has confessed to his role. The
case was moved to a recently built conference centre and the world’s
press, normally excluded from the country, given access. On Tuesday,
the trial was suspended until the alleged role of Sir Mark and a number
of other accused coup supporters abroad can be explored. The judge said
yesterday it would resume in 30 days but Mr Obiang summoned the foreign
press for what turned out to be little more than an opportunity for
him to be photographed giving them an audience. The men on trial, he
said, were “individuals without morals who attempted a crime against
our country which would have resulted in blood being spilt”.

The journalists would have welcomed the opportunity to ask the
President about his own reputation for spilling blood. Since he deposed
and killed his despotic uncle, Macias Nguema 25 years ago – opinion
varies on whether he pulled the trigger himself – his opponents charge
him with having had several enemies disposed of. There are even claims
that he ate the testicles of some, to imbibe their masculinity. But,
while conceding that President Obiang permits no dissent, winning his
last election by the customary 97 per cent, nearly everyone agrees
his uncle was infinitely worse.

As we had dinner at an outdoor restaurant in Malabo, with ample bar
girls half-heartedly trying to chat up a couple of grizzled European
bush pilots, a government adviser said: “Look, we have had at least
five other coup attempts. One of them even involved Moto but nobody
was killed in any of them. The President just kept them in jail
for a while then let the plotters go, telling them to change their
ways. Moto went to Spain when he was released.

“This one was different. Simon Mann said they had taken account of the
possibility that Mr Obiang might be killed in the operation. That’s
why the death sentence was demanded for Nick du Toit, to show the
seriousness of the whole business, but the President would never let
it be carried out.”

That may be little consolation to the South African, who faces the
prospect of months more in Black Beach before he learns his fate,
but the oil, discovered in the mid-1990s, has raised the stakes
heavily. President Obiang and his clan have always run Equatorial
Guinea as a private enterprise, but the advent of American oil majors
such as Conoco and Amerada Hess has turned a trickle of agricultural
earnings into a torrent of oil dollars.

American congressional committees are said to be upset at human rights
abuses in Equatorial Guinea, and tales of contracts which provide for
oil revenues to be paid directly into personal bank accounts. Oil
wealth has given the country the sixth highest income per head in
the world, but the run-down state of the capital testifies that very
little of it trickles down.

The country has been refused aid by major donors because of
misappropriation of funds, and US government reports state openly
that the President and his circle control nearly all official revenues.

But in a world where Washington faces threats to its strategic
oil supplies across the Middle East, it is not likely to be too
fastidious about events in a country few of its citizens could find on
a map. Indeed, the US is mulling plans to build its biggest military
base in Africa right here. The arrival of American warships, aircraft
and service personnel would heighten the already surreal contrasts
that exist in Equatorial Guinea.

Hefty oilmen with Texan accents live in isolated compounds with
their equally hefty spouses and offspring, while African villagers a
few miles away live the way they always have, practising subsistence
agriculture and animist beliefs. There, it is said, one can hear dark
mutterings about certain omens concerning the President.

When his uncle was killed, Mr Obiang apparently took custody of the
clan’s most precious ritual object, a skull, which should have passed
to his eldest brother. And when his wife had twins – considered an
evil event in many African societies – he failed to have the younger
one killed. No good will come of it, traditionalists say. Hearing
such tales, and bearing in mind that many of the ruling “elite”
are illiterate, must have convinced anyone plotting a coup that they
could not fail. “But just because someone is illiterate does not mean
that he is stupid,” the government adviser said. “There was a lot of
white arrogance towards black people in this.”

Indeed, the accused conspirators are the ones who look stupid: not
only was their security appalling, with a paper trail a mile wide,
but they seemed oblivious to Equatorial Guinea’s strategic importance
having changed since the 1970s, when it had Cold War ties to the
Soviet Union and China. African governments are also working far more
closely with each other these days.

As Mr Mann arrived at Harare airport to meet a planeload of former
soldiers arriving from South Africa, the government of Zimbabwe,
tipped off by South African intelligence, was ready. Equatorial
Guinea was warned after the arrests, and rounded up Mr du Toit and his
co-accused. Britain and the US were also aware of what was happening;
a source in Malabo said American oil workers had been told to stay
in their compounds the night the mercenaries were supposed to go
into action.

Equatorial Guinea has pointed no fingers at London or Washington but
government sources have accused the right-wing former government in
Spain, ousted in the election later in March, of complicity in the
plot. Rumours persist that Spanish warships, with commandoes, were
in the vicinity of Equatorial Guinea at the time, only to sail away
when the coup fell apart.

As for Mr Moto, the putative beneficiary, reports from South Africa
say he was lucky not to have ended up in Black Beach with Mr du Toit
and the rest. Sources said a light aircraft with two South African
pilots had taken him as far as the Canary Islands on his way back to
Equatorial Guinea. From there, the plane was supposed to refuel in
Mali and continue to Malabo, landing just after Mr Mann and his men
had arrived.

What saved Mr Moto from testing the quality of President Obiang’s
mercy a second time, it appears, was a motor race being held on the
runway at Las Palmas. It delayed his departure from the Canaries,
and when the plane landed in Mali the pilots were warned by a text
message that Mr Mann’s aircraft and everyone aboard had been seized
in Zimbabwe. Equatorial Guinea has launched a High Court action
in London, accusing Greg Wales, a British businessman, of being
involved in the plot. South African newspapers say they have found
registration records which show he stayed at a hotel in Las Palmas
with David Tremain, a South African businessmen, at the same time as
Mr Moto and the two pilots. Mr Wales and Mr Tremain deny involvement.

For President Obiang, who is used to being treated somewhat
circumspectly by other African leaders, let alone the rest of the
world, the unfolding saga is a windfall as welcome as the oil under
his country’s seabed. The value of the unexpected gift increases with
every revelation and allegation, particularly if it concerns someone
as famous as Sir Mark Thatcher.

And since the former Prime Minister’s son is not due to appear in
court until November, there is little risk of interest fading. The
only people for whom this is not good news is Mr du Toit and his
colleagues in Black Beach.

ASBAREZ ONLINE [08-31-2004]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
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08/31/2004
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1) Kerry Message to ‘Armenstock’ Music Festival Vows Continued Fight Against
Armenian Genocide Denial
2) Straw Backs Launch of Turkey-EU Accession Talks
3) Trial of Armenian Mercenaries Halted Pending Investigation From Abroad
4) Ossetia Offers Equal Negotiations to Georgia

1) Kerry Message to ‘Armenstock’ Music Festival Vows Continued Fight Against
Armenian Genocide Denial

“There can be no compromise on the clear moral imperative to end genocide.”
–John Kerry, August 28, 2004

WASHINGTON, DC–In his strongest campaign statement to date on Armenian
issues, John Kerry publicly committed this weekend that a Kerry-Edwards
administration would “fight against the denial of the Armenian Genocide,”
reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).
The strongly worded statement was read by a long-time friend of the Armenian
American community, Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) at the “Armenstock–Kef
for
Kerry” music festival on August 28 in Franklin, Massachusetts. In the
statement, Senator Kerry thanked the “organizers of Armenstock, Armenians for
Kerry, and the Armenian National Committee of America, for bringing so many
Armenian Americans together,” for the music festival.
Joining Congressman Frank in making presentations at the program were US
Representative James McGovern (D-MA), who represents the Franklin area, and
State Representatives Peter Koutoujian (D-Waltham) and Rachel Kaprielian
(D-Watertown). The all-day concert and rally in celebration of the
Kerry-Edwards campaign attracted over eight hundred Armenians to hear Armenian
musicians and to kick-off a nationwide voter mobilization and
“get-out-the-Armenian-vote” campaign for the fall of 2004.
In his statement, Senator Kerry explained that it has been his “privilege
over
the past two decades to work with the Armenian community on important issues
including US recognition of the Armenian Genocide, strengthening US-Armenia
relations and trade, lifting the devastating blockades of Armenia, and working
for a fair and lasting peace in Karabagh.”
He added that he is “honored to have the endorsement of the ANCA,” and
appreciates the organization’s “work to encourage Armenian Americans around
the
country to go to the polls in record numbers for the Kerry-Edwards ticket on
November 2.” The ANCA endorsed the Kerry-Edwards ticket on July 25 of this
year.
Addressing concerns about the actions of a future Kerry-Edwards
administration, Senator Kerry said, “I want to assure you that, as
President, I
will continue to fight against the denial of the Armenian Genocide. My
administration will recognize April 24, 2005 as the 90th Anniversary of this
atrocity and will work to ensure that the lessons of this crime against
humanity are used to prevent future genocides. There can be no compromise on
the clear moral imperative to end genocide.”
During his long tenure in the US House and Senate, Senator Kerry has
consistently been a leading advocate of issues of concern to Armenian
Americans. As a US Senator, Kerry has forcefully fought for US recognition of
the Armenian Genocide, and is currently a cosponsor of the Genocide
Resolution,
S.Res.164. In 1990, Senator Kerry voted on the Senate floor for Senator Bob
Dole’s (R-KS) Genocide Resolution.
The Massachusetts Senator has been a vocal and effective champion of stronger
US-Armenia relations and has consistently backed legislative initiative to
increase aid and expand trade with Armenia. He is currently a cosponsor of
legislation, S.1557, which would grant Armenia permanent normal trade
relations
status.
Senator Kerry has spearheaded a number of initiatives to lift the Turkish and
Azerbaijani blockades. In 1991, he was the lead sponsor of legislation, which
was later enacted as Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act, restricting US
aid
to the government of Azerbaijan until its blockades of Armenia and Mountainous
Karabagh are lifted. He also worked for the adoption of the Humanitarian Aid
Corridor Act, which called for US aid to Turkey to be cut off unless Turkey
lifted its blockade of Armenia. As recently as this January, Senator Kerry
formally called on President Bush to press the visiting Prime Minister of
Turkey to lift his nation’s illegal blockade of Armenia.
The program was produced by “Armenians for Kerry” and Pomegranate Music
Events
(). For additional information, visit:

For more information about the ANCA’s endorsement, visit:

For information about Armenians for Kerry, visit:

Complete coverage of Armenstock will be forthcoming. The full text of the
Kerry-Edwards statement is provided below.

2) Straw Backs Launch of Turkey-EU Accession Talks

PRAGUE (AFP)–Turkey should be allowed to open membership talks with the
European Union (EU) since isolating the country would not be in anyone’s
interests, British Foreign Minister Jack Straw said during a visit to Prague.
“I know that views differ on this but people need to think very carefully
about the strategic implications of pushing Turkey away, of pushing Turkey to
the east and to the south. I don’t think that’s in anybody’s interests in
Europe,” Straw told AFP.
The European Commission is due to announce on October 6 whether it would
recommend opening EU accession negotiations with Turkey, whose membership
aspirations have sparked controversy.
And EU leaders will decide in December whether to begin membership talks with
Ankara based on progress made by Turkish leaders on individual liberties and
respect of human rights.
“We have long supported Turkey’s membership of the European Union. Turkey
is a
European nation and part of Europe’s history, it is entitled as a member of
the
Council of Europe and NATO to make an application for membership of the
European Union and I hope a decision will be made in December for a start to
negotiations,” Straw said.
“The country has made very considerable progress particularly in the past two
years towards meeting the necessary pre-conditions before negotiations can
begin,” he added.
Straw emphasized that the current debate was only about opening negotiations.
“We are not talking about a finishing date or an accession date,” he said.
Earlier, in a speech delivered to a meeting in Prague of Czech ambassadors,
Straw backed opening negotiations with Turkey and linked it with
Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution in 1989 that brought down the communist
regime and brought “values of freedom, tolerance and democracy.”
“There would be no better signal of Europe’s wish to support the spread of
those universal values than a positive decision to open accession negotiations
with Turkey this December,” he told delegates.
Czech Prime Minister Stanislav Gross said Monday he supported Turkey’s
accession to the EU.

3) Trial of Armenian Mercenaries Halted Pending Investigation From Abroad

LIBREVILLE (allAfrica.com)–A court in Equatorial Guinea on Tuesday suspended
the trial of 14 suspected foreign mercenaries who are accused of trying to
topple the president, because more time was needed to weigh evidence from
abroad, witnesses said.
The 14 defendants–eight South Africans and six Armenians–were arrested in
Malabo on March 6. They were charged with paving the way for a planeload of
South African mercenaries who were arrested 24 hours later in Zimbabwe,
allegedly on their way to Equatorial Guinea.
Since the trial kicked off last Monday only one of the defendants, South
African arms dealer Nick du Toit, had admitted taking part in the coup plot
against President Teodoro Obiang Nguema in the tiny oil-rich state split
between a square of mainland jungle and a volcanic island.
“The trial has been suspended to wait for outside elements,” Celestino Edou,
an adviser to the mayor of Malabo, told IRIN by telephone from the capital
after watching the court proceedings.
The judge did not say when proceedings would resume, he said.
The prosecution, which has demanded the death penalty for du Toit, asked for
the indefinite suspension in light of evidence emerging from outside
Equatorial
Guinea, like last week’s arrest of Mark Thatcher in South Africa.
Authorities in Equatorial Guinea have asked for permission to interview the
51-year-old son of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who they
suspect helped finance the plot to overthrow Obiang with the aim of installing
exiled opposition leader Severo Moto.
The government has also requested international arrest warrants for Moto and
other suspects including Greg Wales, a London-based businessman and Elie
Khalil, an international oil dealer of Lebanese origin.
But observers within the Equatorial Guinea government and civil groups say
the
trial has really been suspended because the prosecution realized that it could
not convict Du Toit and his 13 co-defendants.
“Most of the elements brought forward to prove the mercenaries’ guilt have
not
been able to link them strongly enough to the attempted coup d’etat to impose
the maximum penalties,” a senior official in the Ministry of Information told
IRIN by telephone.
And Ange Ichaito, a human rights advocate, agreed the prosecution had
presented a weak case.
“The Malabo trial, which was only supposed to last three days, has still not
come up with details of how each of the suspects was involved in the
attempt to
topple Obiang’s regime,” he said.
Last Friday all but one of the 67 suspected mercenaries held in Zimbabwe were
absolved of attempting to procure arms for the alleged coup in the former
Spanish colony which is Africa’s third-largest oil producer.
Residents in Malabo quoted state radio as saying that Friday’s acquittal had
seriously influenced the Malabo judge’s decision to suspend the trial.
Obiang, who came to power by executing his uncle in a 1979 coup, has been
widely accused of spending Equatorial Guinea’s oil wealth on his own family
and
friends while leaving the country’s 500,000 inhabitants in a state of dire
poverty.

4) Ossetia Offers Equal Negotiations to Georgia

TSKHINVALI (Civil Georgia/Itar-Tass)–South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoev
called on the Georgian administration to begin equal negotiations to discuss
problems of concern to Ossetia and Georgia.
“We will do our best to retain the fragile peace we have achieved thanks to
the agreements, but we will have to take adequate measures if Georgia breaks
the accords,” Kokoev told the press in Tskhinvali on Tuesday.
The situation around South Ossetia is tense, Kokoev told Itar-Tass. “Georgia
has simply imitated a pullout. The units are stationed in direct proximity to
the South Ossetian border, they have not been withdrawn outside the conflict
zone,” he said. Kokoev said that provocations had not ceased, referring to the
Tuesday seizure of Ossetian buses in the Georgian village of Eredvi.
“Our opponents are not ready for political dialogue. They are inclined to
solving the problem of South Ossetia by force,” he said.
“We can provide for security of all residents of South Ossetia regardless
their nationality,” Kokoev said.
Meanwhile, Senior Russian MP Dmitri Rogozin, the leader of the parliamentary
faction “Rodina” (Homeland), met with Kokoev in the capital of breakaway
region
Tskhinvali on Tuesday. “Residents of South Ossetia are citizens of the Russian
Federation; hence the Russian Duma Council [lower chamber of the Parliament]
can not remain indifferent towards the situation here,” the Press and
Information Committee of South Ossetian reported quoted Rogozin as saying.
Rogozin emphasized that the South Ossetian conflict can be solved only
through
political means.
“And the priority in the settlement process should be the right of rejoining
of the Ossetian people,” MP Rogozin added, referring to the Tskhinvali’s
demands over unification with Russia’s North Ossetian Republic.

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