BAKU: When The Action Plan Is Adopted, EU, Azerbaijan Will Enter A N

WHEN THE ACTION PLAN IS ADOPTED, EU, AZERBAIJAN WILL ENTER A NEW ACTIVE PHASE IN THEIR RELATIONSHIP – EU SR
Author: A.Mammadova

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Oct 10 2006

Trend’s exclusive interview with European Union’s Special
Representative for South Caucasus Peter Semneby

Question: When exactly will you arrive in Azerbaijan?

Answer: I have the intention of visiting all three countries in
the South Caucasus with regular intervals. I just returned from the
successful EU troika visit, which also brought me to Azerbaijan. I
intend to come to Azerbaijan at least once more before the end of
the year.

Question: What are the objectives of your visit to Azerbaijan in
November? Who are you planning to meet during the visit?

Answer: The purpose will be to discuss some aspects of the European
Neighbourhood Action Plan, which are particularly relevant for my
activities, in particular the political parts, such as conflict
resolution, the development of democratic institutions, the rule of
law, human rights, and regional cooperation.

As usual, I will discuss the issue of conflict resolution. Although the
negotiations on Nagorny Karabakh are the responsibility of the Minsk
Group, there is a lot the EU can do to support their work and create
conditions for confidence-building. I believe that the lack of contacts
between Azeris and the people in Karabakh is a serious problem. There
is a similar situation in Georgia, in particular between Georgians
and Abkhaz, who have not had any significant contacts for one and a
half decades. The lack of contact and the development of societies in
different directions make a peaceful resolution more and more difficult
as time passes. Therefore, we should think about how to gradually
create conditions for interaction and contacts between the communities.

When the Action Plan is adopted, the EU and Azerbaijan will enter
a new and much more active phase in their relationship. I am very
happy that Azerbaijan has made the choice to deepen its relationship
with the European Union. This is very much a mutually beneficial
relationship. The EU made a strategic choice by extending the European
Neighbourhood Policy to the countries of the South Caucasus, and
I believe that the Azeri decision to accept the offer represents a
strategic choice as well.

I do not yet know exactly whom I will meet on my next visit, but I
usually see a range of the highest political leaders, senior officials
in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as well as media, civil society
and opposition representatives.

Question: When and where will the ENP Action Plan be finally
approved? What steps will be taken after the approval?

Answer: The Action Plan is scheduled to be formally approved at
the meeting of the Cooperation Council in mid-November. This also
marks the formal start of programming. Beginning next year, funding
will be available under the so-called European Neighbourhood Policy
Instrument. In order to be able to support the implementation of the
action plan as effectively as possible, the European Commission is
planning to open a Delegation in Baku in early 2007.

Question: Will you visit Georgia and Armenia too? Which meetings are
you planning to hold in those countries?

Answer: Yes, I will also go to Armenia and Georgia before the end of
the year. I usually have very similar programmes in all countries:
government, media, civil society and opposition. In Georgia, I also
pay special attention to areas where the EU has recently been active
with advice, in particular the judicial sector and border management.

The support that we have given to Georgia in these areas can in some
ways serve as inspiration for our relations with Azerbaijan, as we
now move into the implementation of the Action Plan.

ARMENPAC Survey Results Published

PRESS RELEASE
ARMENPAC, The Armenian-American Political Action Committee
421 E. Airport Freeway, Suite 201
Irving, Texas 75220
Contact: Jason P. Capizzi, Esq.
Tel: (972) 635-5347
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: <;

THE ARMENPAC SURVEY RESULTS ARE IN – 380 Respondents’ Positions Published on
– 207 Pledges to Join the Armenian Caucus

Irving, TX – ARMENPAC has released the responses of its 2006 Congressional
Candidate Questionnaire in which over 1,900 congressional hopefuls were
surveyed on current issues of importance to the Armenian-American community.
ARMENPAC investigated the positions of all candidates for the United States
Senate and House of Representatives to empower Armenian-American voters by
providing them with the information necessary to make an informed decision
in the upcoming midterm elections on November 7, 2006. ARMENPAC is the
first Armenian organization to educate all federal candidates, and to
provide them with a forum to share their opinions, on fundamental
Armenian-American issues.

"ARMENPAC’s Congressional Candidate Questionnaire initiative, which educates
federal candidates who are unfamiliar with the pressing issues that are
important to Armenian-Americans and empowers voters concerned with Armenia,
Nagorno Karabakh and Unites States relations, is a critical component of
ARMENPAC’s efforts to raise awareness of, and advocate for, policies that
help create peace, security and stability in the Caucasus region," commented
ARMENPAC Co-Chair Edgar Hagopian.

ARMENPAC requires a strong foundation of Armenian-American supporters in
order to maintain and advance a beneficial relationship between the United
States, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. To execute Armenian goals, a
legislative body comprised of leaders devoted to facilitating and supporting
initiatives that benefit Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh is imperative. The
ARMENPAC Congressional Candidate Questionnaire has apprised voters with the
knowledge necessary to make an informed decision when voting. The right to
vote is a primary aspect of democratic governments, and ARMENPAC urges the
Armenian-American community to refer to its survey results, which are posted
at <; , before voting on November
7, 2006. Armenian-American unity, despite partisan political beliefs, is
guaranteed to assist the Republics of, and our brothers and sisters in,
Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.

"Armenian-American voters have profited from ARMENPAC’s leadership in
pioneering this daunting survey initiative; ARMENPAC’s initiatives are
setting the advocacy standard which other organizations are quickly
following and embracing as their own after a decade of apathy," said
ARMENPAC Co-Chair Annie Totah. "The information gained from this survey,
which is published on <; for the
benefit of the entire Armenian-American community, will help us all to vote
for the candidates that will most likely promote pro-Armenia/Nagorno
Karabagh initiatives."

To date, three-hundred eighty (380) candidates responded to ARMENPAC’s 2006
Congressional Candidate Questionnaire; visit
<; to view the survey results and find out if your
candidates took the time to respond? Is your candidate interested in
fighting for Armenian-American issues? Of the candidates that responded,
ARMENPAC received two hundred seven (207) pledges to join the Congressional
Caucus on Armenian Issues. Already one of the largest caucuses in Congress,
increasing membership with passionate leaders will only enhance Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh’s relationship with the United States. Nine (9) of the
respondents do not support the reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide, with
varying explanations. Does your candidate regard the Armenian Genocide as a
forgotten tragedy, better left in the past?

In addition to viewing the responses to the 2006 Congressional Candidate
Questionnaire, visit <; to obtain
voter registration information. Posted on the ARMENPAC website are the
voter registration forms of all fifty (50) states. To download your state’s
form, just click on the name of your state in the
< t; "Register to Vote" link, fill out
the form, and mail it to the designated agency before your state’s
registration deadline. If you do not have internet access, contact ARMENPAC
at (877) 286-1046 to have a hard copy of your state’s application form sent
to you in the mail. It is imperative to the success of ARMENPAC’s advocacy
efforts that every eligible member of the Armenian-American community is
registered to vote.

ARMENPAC is an independent, bipartisan political action committee with a
nationwide membership. ARMENPAC raises awareness of, and advocates for,
policies that help create peace, security and stability in the Caucasus
region. ARMENPAC provides financial support to federal officeholders,
candidates, political action committees and organizations that actively
support issues of importance to Armenian-Americans. For more information
and how to join ARMENPAC, please call (877) 286-1046 or visit
<; .

###

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Armenia Fears Russia Blockade Of Georgia

ARMENIA FEARS RUSSIA BLOCKADE OF GEORGIA
By Avet Demourian
Associated Press Writer

Associated Press
Oct 8 2006

Arkady Sarkisian has made his living by shipping containers full of
ripe peaches and fish to Russia.

But after Moscow severed all transportation links this past week with
Georgia, the main transit country for Armenian goods, Sarkisian has
had to pay more to transport his containers by a less direct route.

Armenia’s prime minister, whose country is a close ally of Russia,
insists that so far the Caucasus nation hasn’t suffered any financial
losses. Sarkisian, though, angrily disagrees.

"And what about me?" he said. "What about dozens like me?"

Russia and Georgia have been locked in a bitter dispute since the
arrests of four Russian officers by Georgia on Sept. 27 on charges of
spying. Despite their release, Moscow has imposed a range of sanctions
on its ex-Soviet republic neighbor to the south and tightened controls
on Georgians living in Russia.

Politicians and analysts warn that Russia’s transport and postal
blockade may end up economically isolating Armenia, Georgia’s
landlocked southern neighbor.

Lawmaker Grair Karapetian said Armenian entrepreneurs were suffering
"terrible losses" with the new restrictions. He estimated that
transporting some 20 tons, essentially bypassing Georgia, carried an
added expense of some $2,500.

Russia is the main trading partner for Armenia, where the average
monthly salary is equivalent to $90.

Most of Armenia’s goods travel to Russia via Georgia since neighboring
Turkey and Azerbaijan have closed their borders in protest of the
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian territory inside
Azerbaijan, which the two countries dispute.

Some, like Sarkisian, have had to transport their goods to a Georgian
port, then ferry them to a Ukrainian port and only then take them to
Russia. Others have had to rely on cargo planes or could not afford
the new costly routes.

And the dispute could deal another blow to Armenia if Moscow cuts
its natural gas supplies to Georgia, effectively blocking supplies to
Armenia. Several Russian politicians already have raised that prospect.

Opposition leader Khachatur Kokobalian has warned that such measures
would be devastating for Armenia.

"I am sure that our republic is in for tough times, because the
blockade of Georgia can lead to the most serious consequences for us
in the transport, gas and energy sectors," Kokobalian said.

Relations between Russia and Georgia have been strained since Georgian
President Mikhail Saakashvili came to power following the 2003 Rose
Revolution, vowing to take the country out of Russia’s orbit and join
NATO. Georgia also accuses Moscow of backing two breakaway Georgian
provinces – an allegation Russia denies.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has blamed the conflict on Georgia
and spurned Western calls to lift the sanctions, saying Georgian
conduct was "aimed at escalating tension."

In addition to the sanctions, Russian authorities also have raided
a number of Georgian-owned firms and closed down several popular
restaurants in Moscow. Russian media reported that similar raids have
been launched in several Russian provinces.

Moscow police also have asked schools to provide lists of children with
Georgian last names in order to detect illegal migrants, education
officials said. On Friday, 132 Georgians were deported after being
detained as alleged illegal migrants.

Georgia’s Foreign Ministry on Saturday protested Russia’s crackdown,
denouncing the move as "repressive measures against Georgian citizens
and ethnic Georgians," and calling on the international community to
comment on Russia’s actions.

Meanwhile, the head of Georgia’s airline, Airzena, said his company
and two other Georgian airlines operating flights to and from Russia
plan to contest Russia’s decision to suspend air links between the
two countries.

Police also detained more than a dozen activists rallying Saturday
in support of Georgia outside the country’s embassy.

Associated Press Writer Maria Danilova contributed to this report
from Moscow

Ameria Audit CJSC Conducting Statutory Audit Of Synopsys Armenia CJS

AMERIA AUDIT CJSC CONDUCTING STATUTORY AUDIT OF SYNOPSYS ARMENIA CJSC

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 5 2006

YEREVAN, October 5. /ARKA/. The Ameria Audit CJSC is currently
conducting a statutory audit of the Synopsys Armenia CJSC.

"As one of the PwC partners Ameria Audit CJSC was appointed by PwC
Ireland as an engagement office for statutory audit of Synopsys
Armenia CJSC," says a press release provided to ARKA.

This year Ameria Audit CJSC has completed the audit of annual financial
statements of the Synopsys Armenia CJSC.

"Following contentment by both PwC partners and Synopsys shareholders
Ameria Audit cjsc will continue to meet client expectations for the
audit years 2006 and 2007,"the press release says.

In 2005 following a competitive selection process PwC was assigned to
replace KPMG as the lead engagement office for the audit of a number
of EMEA and ASIAPAC Synopsys entities for the 2005 – 2007 years.

The Synopsys Armenia CJSC is a subsidiary of Synopsys Ireland Limited
(SIRL), which is the holding company for many of the EMEA/Asia Pacific
subsidiaries.

Synopsys is a leading provider of electronic design automation (EDA)
software and services used to design complex integrated circuits
(ICs), field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) and systems-on-chips
(SoCs) for the global semiconductor and electronics industries.

Synopsys’ solutions include pre-designed and pre-verified blocks of
intellectual property (IP) that can be easily inserted into design
flows, as well as technology to address yield and manufacturing issues
early in the design process.

Ameria is a group of professional services companies registered in
Armenia with the objective to provide a comprehensive package of
professional advisory and assurance services. Ameria specializes
in four major areas of professional activities: management advisory
services; assurance and advisory services; legal advisory services;
investment banking. Established in 1998, the company has become
a leader in the Armenian market of advisory services bringing an
international reach and local touch to complex issues rising in more
than 30 industry sectors.

Russia May Speed Up Troops Withdrawal From Georgia – Defence Ministe

RUSSIA MAY SPEED UP TROOPS WITHDRAWAL FROM GEORGIA – DEFENCE MINISTER

RTR Russia TV, Moscow,
4 Oct 06

[Presenter] Russia may speed up the withdrawal of Russian military
bases from Georgia, Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Sergey
Ivanov said in Bishkek today.

Let me recall that, according to an agreement signed in March this
year, the military base located in Akhalkalak should be removed by
1 October 2007, and the one located in Batumi, by the end of 2008.

[Ivanov] As for the group of Russian troops deployed in the
Transcaucasus, specifically the part of them deployed in Georgia, as
we also have a military base in Armenia, let me assure you, we are not
going to increase the number of these troops, as it makes no sense at
all. On the contrary, we will keep withdrawing our two Russian bases
from Georgia in line with the schedule and even ahead of it. Given
the conditions our servicemen are living in – [changes tack]. I think
all of you understand the condition of our soldiers and officers there.

Armenian Prison Conditions Again Deemed Inadequate

ARMENIAN PRISON CONDITIONS AGAIN DEEMED INADEQUATE
By Ruzanna Stepanian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 5 2006

Conditions in most Armenian prisons remain harsh and in some cases
"inhumane" despite having somewhat improved since Armenia’s accession
to the Council of Europe, civil society representatives that regularly
inspect them said on Thursday.

Presenting its latest report, a monitoring team comprising
representatives of a dozen non-governmental organizations and the
Armenian Apostolic Church said the country’s four largest prisons
do not meet international standards and must be relocated to new
buildings. The detailed report, based on the team’s annual inspection
of the Armenian penitentiary facilities also concludes that most
inmates are poorly fed and not provided with adequate healthcare.

Officials from Armenian Justice Ministry department running the
prisons disagreed with that assertion, insisting that the prison
population has free access to doctors and medicine and does not suffer
from malnutrition.

Members of the monitoring team painted a similarly bleak picture
in their previous report released last year. It urged the Armenian
authorities to do more to improve the plight of the convicts. Justice
Ministry officials accepted much of the criticism at the time, but
blamed the problem on a lack of funds.

Armenia’s penitentiary system was transferred from the police to
the Justice Ministry jurisdiction in 2002 under pressure from the
Council of Europe. The measure was followed by the passage of a new,
more lenient Armenian Criminal Code that led to the early release of
most of the country’s 3,600-strong prison population.

In a July 2004 report, the European Committee for the Prevention of
Torture (CPT), a Council of Europe watchdog agency, said that although
the Armenian prison conditions have since improved they still fall
short of European standards.

According to the Armenian prison monitors, mistreatment of prisoners
is another serious problem. "While the police resort to violence to
extract confessions from suspects [kept in pre-trial detention], in
prisons violence is used as a punishment for disobedience and escape
attempts," said Avetik Ishkhanian, a human rights campaigner and
member of the monitoring group. "Sometimes beatings are very brutal."

The group’s latest report refers in particular to the alleged beating
of five inmates of a maximum-security jail in the southern town of
Goris where a riot broke out last April. Citing eyewitness accounts,
the report says the riot was quashed by a special police unit sent from
Yerevan. Security forces are also said to have also demonstratively
burned the belongings of all prisoners’ in retaliation for the protest.

Also, recent reports in the Armenian press said that four men serving
life sentences at Yerevan’s Nubarashen prison were tortured and held
in inhuman conditions following their unsuccessful attempt to break
free last July. The men reportedly tried to kill themselves after
being caught by prison guards. The prison chief denied the reports.

"I’m not saying that such cases are numerous," Ishkhanian told
reporters. "But they do happen and seem to have been frequent of late."

Vaghinak Kocharian, deputy head of the Justice Ministry’s prison
department, admitted that prison guards "use force" against inmates,
but said they do so only "in cases of emergency." "We have legally
defined sanctions against unruly convicts," he said. "So have to use
and will use force if necessary."

First Member of SHAC 7 Heads to Jail for Three Year Sentence

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006

First Member of SHAC 7 Heads to Jail for Three Year Sentence

________________________________________ ________________________________
We look at one of the country’s most controversial cases involving the
prosecution of activists for animal rights. Earlier this year, six
people were convicted for their role in a campaign to stop animal
testing by the British scientific firm Huntingdon Life Sciences. The
activists are with a group called Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty, or
SHAC. We speak with Andrew Stepanian, one of the convicted members of
the SHAC 7 on the day he heads to prison for a three-year sentence.
[includes rush transcript]
_________________________________________________ _______________________

We look at one of this country’s most controversial cases involving the
prosecution of activists for animal rights. Earlier this year, six
people were convicted for their role in a campaign to stop animal
testing by the British scientific firm Huntingdon Life Sciences.

The activists are with a group called Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty, or
SHAC. Unlike other cases, the activists were never accused of causing
physical damage. Instead, they were convicted of targeting Huntingdon
workers, shareholders, and associates by posting personal information
about employees and their families on the internet. The case has drawn
scrutiny from civil rights advocates who say groups like SHAC have been
singled out because they campaign against major corporations. The FBI
has called animal rights groups the nation’s number one domestic terror
threat.

Our next guest is a SHAC 7 member whose jail term begins today. Andrew
Stepanian has been sentenced to three years in prison – the maximum
allowed under the Animal Enterprise Protection Act. He is the first SHAC
7 member to go to jail following the convictions. We also speak with
Andrew Erba, one of the lead attorneys in the case.

* Andrew Stepanian, member of SHAC 7. He joins us on the line from
Huntington, New York. More information at SHAC7.com.
* Andrew Erba, one of the lead attorneys in the SHAC 7 case.
Speaking to us from Philadelphia.

Special thanks: Footage from a forthcoming documentary by Z-Axis
Productions, produced by Andy Roth and Hal Weiss.

_________________________________________ _______________________________
RUSH TRANSCRIPT

This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help us
provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our TV
broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
Donate – $25,$50, $100,more…

AMY GOODMAN: Our next guest is a SHAC 7 member whose jail term begins
today. Andrew Stepanian has been sentenced to three years in prison, the
maximum allowed under the Animal Enterprise Protection Act. He is the
first SHAC 7 member to go to jail following the convictions. He is
speaking with us from Huntington, New York. We welcome you to Democracy
Now!, Andrew Stepanian.

But before we begin, a warning for our television audience. We’ll be
playing some graphic footage taken of lab tests inside the Huntingdon
facility in 1997. The video led the British government to temporarily
take away Huntingdon’s license.

We’re also joined by Andrew Erba. He has been one of the lead attorneys
in the SHAC 7 case, and he joins us from a studio in Philadelphia.
Andrew Stepanian, you are turning yourself in today. Explain what you
were convicted of.

ANDREW STEPANIAN: I was convicted of one count of a numerous count
indictment that came down on both myself and co-defendants, including
the corporation Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty USA, to which I was not a
member. I didn’t facilitate a website. But with the website, with the
corporation and myself, all of these charges stem from speech-related
activity, whether or not that was speech on internet or if it was speech
engaged at a peaceful demonstration, most done with the oversight of
police. And that’s where my charge came in.

I sat through a court case of about 40 days, and at the end of it, I was
convicted, mainly on evidence stemming from my attendance at a protest
against an auditing firm by the name of Deloitte & Touche. The
prosecutors claim that because Deloitte & Touche severed its
relationship with Huntingdon Life Sciences, Huntingdon Life Sciences may
have incurred more than $10,000 in damages. And as long as a threshold
of $10,000 is met, I could participate in legal activities leading up to
that point, but the second I cause $10,000 of intellectual damage, then
I could be charged under this conspiracy to violate the Animal
Enterprise Protection Act. I would be charged with a substantive charge
if I actually destroyed some property, for example, that was worth
$10,000, but in this case, it was a purely intellectual matter.

And that demonstration, in particular, the Nassau County Police in Long
Island appeared on the scene. They didn’t find any reason to cite any of
the people in attendance of the demonstration, including myself, and I
was more than open about my attendance at that demonstration. I had no
idea that at the end of a 40-or-so-day trial, that that is why I’m going
to end up serving 36 months in jail.

AMY GOODMAN: Your sentence was upped, because you had a party a few
weeks ago, a going-away party?

ANDREW STEPANIAN: Yeah. My mother thought it was a good idea to have a
going-away party for myself. I used to be a promoter in the punk rock
scene a few years ago on Long Island. I also was a talent buyer at a
club called The Downtown in Long Island, New York. And so, a bunch of
bands got together and played a show in my backyard. And the best that I
can make of it is that people that were like-minded got together, and
there must have been some folks who decided to go out and do a
demonstration that night.

Again, the demonstration wasn’t illegal. No property was damaged, but
the fact that a demonstration happened on the same day as my going-away
party, it warranted some response from the prosecution during
sentencing, saying that I’m a lightning rod for this type of activity,
and if I’m not a leader, that I should start acting like a leader and
try to stop activism like this on Long Island. It’s my contention that
at this point I’m being prosecuted as a leader, and I’m not a leader,
and I’m not about to start becoming a leader in this movement and
dissuade people from following their hearts and getting involved with
activism that I think is righteous.

AMY GOODMAN: Andrew Stepanian, let me read you from the Southern Poverty
Law Center intelligence report. It’s by Heidi Beirich and Bob Moser.
Just the beginning of it.

ANDREW STEPANIAN: Okay.

AMY GOODMAN: It says, `A Chicago insurance executive might seem like one
of the last people who’d be opening a letter with this succinctly
chilling message: `You have been targeted for terrorist attack.’ But
that’s what happened last year, when a top official at Marsh USA Inc.
was informed that he and his company’s employees had landed in the
crosshairs of an extremist animal rights group. The reason? Marsh
provides insurance for one of the world’s biggest animal testing labs.
`If you bail out now,’ the letter advised, `you, your business, and your
family will be spared great hassle and humility.’

`That letter — and the harassment campaign that followed, after Marsh
declined to `bail out’ — was another shot fired by Stop Huntingdon
Animal Cruelty (SHAC). This British-born group, now firmly established
in the United States, is waging war on anyone involved with Huntingdon
Life Sciences, which tests drugs on approximately 70,000 rats, dogs,
monkeys and other animals each year. In the process, SHAC is rewriting
the rules by which even the most radical eco-activists have
traditionally operated.

`In the past, even the edgiest American eco-warriors drew the line at
targeting humans. They trumpeted underground activists’ attacks on
businesses and laboratories perceived as abusing animals or the
environment — the FBI reports more than 600 incidents, causing $43
million in damage, since 1996. But spokespeople for the two most active
groups in the U.S., the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and the Earth
Liberation Front (ELF), have always been quick to claim that their
underground cells have never injured or killed any people.

`Since 1999, however, members of both groups have been involved with
SHAC’s campaign to harass employees of Huntingdon — and even distantly
related business associates like Marsh – with frankly terroristic
tactics similar to those of anti-abortion extremists. Employees have had
their homes vandalized with spray-painted `Puppy killer’ and `We’ll be
back’ notices. They have faced a mounting number of death threats, fire
bombings and violent assaults. They’ve had their names, addresses and
personal information posted on Web sites and posters, declaring them
`wanted for collaboration with animal torture.’

`When cowed companies began responding to the harassment by pulling away
from Huntington, many radical environmentalists cheered – even when
SHAC’s actions clearly went over the `nonviolent’ line.’ Your response?

ANDREW STEPANIAN: My response to that is that historically, the animal
rights movement still to date has never hurt anyone in the United
States. And so, to somehow say that we’re at par with anti-abortion
extremists is a bit of a stretch. Anti-abortion extremists obviously
have hurt people. I can’t be the spokesperson for SHAC, SHAC USA
Incorporated, and especially not the activities of SHAC in the UK. I was
a volunteer with a group called the Animal Defense League of Long
Island, and my involvement with SHAC began the second I was indicted
with everybody else in accordance with this conspiracy.

All I could really say in regards to what you just repeated to me is
that some of that seems grossly exaggerated. And that’s just from my
experience with sitting in on this trial and the court record. I don’t
recall at any point the prosecutors ever alleging or saying that a
letter of that nature ever arose. And I was pretty attentive, taking
notes the entire time during the trial. Also, there was never an
incident of human-to-human violence that happened in the United States.
The historical record will show that things like spray paintings did
happen, and demonstrations happened out in front of people’s houses.

And, in fact, I think the most violent rhetoric that was read back into
an email was something in regards to `How would you feel if someone
treated your child the way these poor animals are being treated?’ Later
on, I read a New York Times article that showed that an FBI agent was
misquoting that same exact quote that was given during testimony, that
was alleged to have been in an email received from an anonymous
individual, not SHAC or SHAC USA or SHAC UK or any of the parties
sitting there in the court case, but rather an anonymous individual,
saying, `How would you like it if your child was treated that way?’ And
that’s open to a great deal of speculation. You can go and say, alright,
maybe someone’s trying to make someone feel empathy for an animal the
way people feel empathy for a child. And there was a lot of room for
argument, obviously, in the eyes of the prosecution.

But when it comes down to it, at the end of the day, no one was hurt.
SHAC USA, on their website, never advocated for anyone to be hurt. SHAC
USA, at the bottom of every page, when you load up the html, always had
a disclaimer that said that we do not advocate any form of violent
activity, and in fact, we urge people that when they write letters or
they send emails, that they’re polite, they’re to the point, they’re not
threatening in nature. And, obviously, all that happened on the SHAC USA
website was a legal form of reporting. It wasn’t, `You go and go do this
or go annoy these people or go harass these people,’ but rather, `These
are the people that are supporting this laboratory. This is how they put
bread on the table. And this is how this company exists.’ The website
existed for a purpose, to say, `This company is an organism. And there
are different things that feed this organism and keep it alive.’

Whether or not people took that information and did less than savory
things or things that even made myself feel uncomfortable, well, that
wasn’t necessarily the business of SHAC USA to be responsible for. The
only business that they had was reporting on the facts. And all that, no
matter how uncomfortable you might say it is, is protected underneath
the First Amendment.

AMY GOODMAN: Andrew Stepanian, speaking to us before he turns himself in
today. And, Andrew, let me say that I was reading to you from a fall
2002 article, which doesn’t specifically describe the case that you were
involved with. Andrew Erba also joins us from Philadelphia, Andrew
Stepanian’s lawyer. Can you put SHAC 7, this case, in the context of
other conspiracy cases?

ANDREW ERBA: Well, actually, it’s very important piece of legal actions,
because it moves the internet into prosecution. I mean, really what is
being prosecuted here is, as Andy said, the posting of notices, the
posting of news, the exchange of emails on an internet website. The
government says that as a result of this posting of information, which
otherwise, I think, is completely legal and First Amendment-protected,
other individuals were incited to take actions. But the government has
never proven any individual actually read the information on the website
and then took an immediate action based on that, which is the test under
Brandenburg v. Ohio.

And so, what we have is a very important extension of a constitutional
doctrine into an area, which I think affects many activist groups,
because, certainly, if we look on the web today, on the internet, many
people hold websites which say things which may be somewhat rhetorical,
may be somewhat passionate, and as a result of posting that, if someone
should act on that, should that website, should that activist group be
held responsible? I think not, under the First Amendment.

AMY GOODMAN: Andrew Erba, can you compare the Animal Enterprise
Protection Act, an industry-specific statute that provides harsher
sentences for those protesting animal-related businesses than perhaps
those protesting women’s health clinics around the issue of abortion?

ANDREW ERBA: One of the things we have to understand is that — and this
is one of our arguments, will be in the Third Circuit — that the
government is really misconstruing the Animal Enterprise Protection Act.
It’s a very specific act, and what it really prohibits is someone who
would go on the property of an animal enterprise and free an animal
that’s in an experiment or break a window or knock down a door — I
mean, do something physically in a trespass action.

Now, what the government has done in this case is transmute that into an
action which says that if I organize activities, which may lead to
someone organizing against an animal enterprise, they’re held
responsible. And this is in direct contradiction to the legislation
under the abortion statutes or the anti-abortion statutes, to really
talk about a specific action, a person picketing an abortion clinic, a
person preventing a woman from entering an abortion clinic. So, in one
sense, the government has accepted that it has to have a greater nexus,
but with the Animal Enterprise Protection Act, they’ve lost that nexus
and really are prosecuting people who merely advocate having a movement
against the various animal enterprise. And so, therefore, we feel it’s a
gross extension of what Congress intended under the act.

AMY GOODMAN: Andrew Stepanian, if you had this all to do again, would
you do it differently?

ANDREW STEPANIAN: I would have to say no. I mean, I have a minimal
involvement with this, from start to finish. And my only involvement was
with the Animal Defense League of Long Island, a group that’s been
acclaimed by local politicians. I recently got an award from both the
U.S. military and the United States Humane Society for my work down in
New Orleans helping right after Hurricane Katrina. And, you know, it’s
like, these are activities that I partake in with my affinity group and
my activists in Long Island, and I’m proud to be working with them. What
motivated us to help the people down in New Orleans is exactly what
motivated us to get involved with, you know, picketing Deloitte &
Touche, saying that they shouldn’t support the murder of 180,000 animals
each day.

And with closing that, you know, I think that what scares me is that it
doesn’t end here. Currently, the Senate subcommittee hearings that are
trying to broaden these laws and have them go after other specific focus
activist groups. And if I can quote Senator James Inhofe, a Republican
from Oklahoma, dated October 26 of 2005, he says, `It seems to me
unimaginable that this country’s worldwide symbol of the integrity of
capital markets, the New York Stock Exchange, would capitulate to
threats, or in this case even the mere threat of threats from a
single-issue extremist group. Appeasing these groups only validates
their effectiveness and the effectiveness of their tactics and inspires
them to replicate this model of activism in some sort of other venue.
What then happens when the activists move to the timber, the defense or
some sort of other controversial industry?’

And I interpret that and that entire Senate subcommittee hearing as,
they don’t want effective models of activism, like the Stop Huntingdon
Animal Cruelty campaign, to be applied to antiwar activism, to be
applied to women’s health issues, to be applied to civil rights issues,
to be applied to — for example, in great model would be organizing
against sweatshops.

And this is something that obviously is important to me, and I am ready
to go to the Third Circuit. I’m ready to appeal. And I’m ready to win on
this issue, because I think that at the end of the day, I’m not willing
to have my name brought up in the middle of a battle that loses and thus
chills free speech for all types of people that believe in all different
kinds of issues around this country, even issues I don’t agree with. I
want people to have that freedom to go do what they want to do.

AMY GOODMAN: Andrew, how old are you?

ANDREW STEPANIAN: 28 years old. I’m going to be 31 when I get out.
Obviously, it’s stressful. is a website where people can
get in touch with how to write us letters or how to donate to legal
defense, and it has not only bios on myself, but my other co-defendants,
great individuals like Kevin Kjonaas, Lauren Gazzola, Darius Fulmer,
Jacob Conroy and Josh Harper. They all could use letters, when we’re all
in jail. And we obviously want to thank our supporters that are out
there.

AMY GOODMAN: And where will turn yourself in?

ANDREW STEPANIAN: I’m turning myself in on Cadman Plaza West today at
the U.S. courthouse. I’m going to be meeting up with some U.S. marshals
there. And I do believe that they are going to be taking me to the
Metropolitan Detention complex in Brooklyn.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you for joining us, Andrew Stepanian and
Andrew Erba, your attorney, joining us from Philadelphia.

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Romania’s President Pays Official Visit To Armenia

ROMANIA’S PRESIDENT PAYS OFFICIAL VISIT TO ARMENIA

Rompres news agency, Bucharest,
4 Oct 06

Yerevan, 4 October: Rompres special correspondent Andreea Rotaru
reports: President Traian Basescu was received in Yerevan on Wednesday
[4 October] with military honours.

The official ceremony during which President of the Republic of
Armenia Robert Kocharyan received the Romanian president included
reviewing the guard of honour and playing the two national anthems
and was followed by face-to-face talks and talks in the plenum of
the two official delegations.

On this occasion the two heads of state are to tackle subjects
connected to the bilateral cooperation but also to the international
situation with emphasis on the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.

So far there have been six visits at head of state’s level: Romania’s
presidents visited Armenia in 1996, 1998 and 2001 and Armenia’s
presidents came to Bucharest in 1994, 2000 and 2003. In exchange
there has been no official visit at prime minister’s level in Romania
or Armenia.

Armenian Chess Players Made A Successful Start

ARMENIAN CHESS PLAYERS MADE A SUCCESSFUL START

A1+
[07:26 pm] 04 October, 2006

The Chess youth World Championship was launched in Yerevan. Armenia
is represented by 11 boys and 11 girls.

In the first round Arman Pashikyan, Zaven Andreasyan, Levon Babujyan,
Hrant Melqumyan, Robert Hovhannisyan, and Gevorg Alaverdyan celebrated
victories.

As for the girls, only Liana Aghabekyan won in the first round.

Aliyev Received OSCE MG Co-Chairs; KLO Requests To Stop The Co-Chair

ALIYEV RECEIVED OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS; KLO REQUESTS TO STOP THE CO-CHAIRS’ ACTIVITY

Regnum, Russia
Oct 3 2006

On October 2, Ilham Aliyev received OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in
Baku. According to Azerbaijani presidential press office, exchange
of views on current situation and prospects of talks, held in
connection with settlements of Armenian-Azerbaijani and Nagorno
Karabakh conflicts, took place during the meeting.

In its turn, Karabakh Liberation Organization (KLO) released its
statement, condemning visit of the OSCE MG co-chairs into the region:
"Biased attitude of OSCE MG co-chairs continues. Once more they go
into the region not from Azerbaijan but from Armenia; we condemn
visit to aggressive Armenia," it is said in the statement. It is
stressed in the statement; last proposal of the MG co-chairs fully
corresponds with Armenia’s interests. The KLO believes; fulfillment
of such variant means loss of Nagorno Karabakh and Lachin.

The KLO requests to stop visit of the OSCE MG co-chairs into the
region, as well as their activity.