Decrees of NKR President

DECREES OF NKR PRESIDENT

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
29 Dec 04

On December 24 NKR president Arkady Ghukassian signed the decree `On
the Amendment to the October 9, 2002 Decree of the President of the
Republic of Nagorni Karabakh `On the Structure of the Government of
the Republic of Nagorni Karabakh’. On the same day Ararat Ashot
Danielian was relieved of the post of head of administration of the
NKR president and appointed vice prime minister of the Republic of
Nagorni Karabakh. Armen Michael Zalinian was relieved of the post of
adviser on state and legal questions to the president and
appointedhead of the NKR president administration. The president of
NKR signed a decree on relieving Armen Temur Sarghissian of the post
of minister of education, culture and sport for the reason of passing
to other work. Ashot Vladimir Ghulian was relieved from the post of
minister of foreign affairs and appointed NKR minister of education,
culture and sport. By the decree of the NKR president Arman Vardan
Melikian was appointed NKR minister of foreign affairs. By the NKR
president’s decree signed on December 24 Benik Hovhannes Bakhshiyanwas
released from the post of minister of agriculture. Vahram Boris
Baghdassarian was appointed NKR minister of agriculture.

AA.
29-12-2004

Tbilisi: Saknavtobi plans natural gas storage

The Messenger, Georgia
Dec 28 2004

Saknavtobi plans natural gas storage
By M. Alkhazashvili

The leadership of Saknavtobi (the Georgian Oil corporation)
attributes great importance to the issue of building large
underground natural gas storage facilities in Georgia. They hope that
next year the Georgian government will pay extra attention to this
problem. On December 24, Saknavtobi organized a special presentation
at which it introduced a project to build an underground natural gas
storage facility at the Ninotsminda deposit.

Many analysts maintain that constructing such facilities will serve
as a significant guarantee for Georgia’s energy security. Each of
these storage units could contain several months’ worth of reserves
for the country, which could be used in case of emergency.

Furthermore, tt would also be possible to buy gas cheap in the summer
and use it in winter, when the tariff increases. This, in turn, would
allow for the conservation of hydro-resources. And, as Akhali Taoba
reports, if there was a surplus in winter, it would be possible to
export it for a profit.

In a word, Saknavtobi says, natural gas storage units have many
pluses. Construction sites have already been selected and relevant
projects have been developed. Georgian territory was studied for
these reasons in 2002-2003 within the framework of the TACIS program.
Ninotsminda, in the southern Georgian region of Javakheti, and
Rustavi emerged at the top of the list.

Experts evaluate that a gas storage facility with a 120-150 million
cubic meter capacity would cost approximately EURO 50 million. If
certain issues regarding finances are resolved soon, the construction
of such units could begin as soon as next year. However, so far there
are neither potential investors nor donors.

Supporters of the project hope that this will not be the case for
long, maintaining that if Georgia becomes home to a strategic natural
gas reserve, this will be significant for countries of the European
Union.

Statistics show that Georgia consumes 1.2 billion cubic meters of
natural gas annually. During the Soviet period, Georgia used to
consume six billion cubic meters, but the majority of this gas went
to industrial enterprises which no longer function today.

All of the world’s leading countries have natural gas storage
facilities. All together in the world there are 634 such units. There
are three underground storage facilities in the South Caucasus – two
in Azerbaijan and one in Armenia. Turkey is also planning to build an
underground gas reserve near Istanbul.

NKR: New FM says international recognition for Karabakh top priority

New foreign minister says international recognition for Karabakh top priority

Artsakh State TV, Stepanakert
27 Dec 04

Presenter On 27 December NKR Nagornyy Karabakh Republic Foreign
Minister Arman Melikyan held a press conference where he outlined the
most important areas of his activity as the newly appointed foreign
minister. Arman Melikyan, in particular, said the following:

Melikyan addressing press conference There will be three most
important areas for the NKR Foreign Ministry’s activities. The first
area will be the international recognition of the Nagornyy Karabakh
Republic. All our relations will be directed primarily by this
intention. This is the core area of the Foreign Ministry’s activities.

The second area will be protection of the rights of NKR citizens
abroad. In this sphere we have a lot of problems and we are resolute
to solve them. This will require close cooperation with different
structures.

And the third area will be reforming and strengthening the main
structures inside the Foreign Ministry. We plan to bring them into
line with international standards. Strengthening the Foreign Ministry
will increase the effectiveness of our work.

Melikyan categorically rejected reports that the Karabakh Foreign
Ministry was moving to Yerevan, Armenian news agency Mediamax reported
(in Russian 1430 gmt 27 Dec 04). Melikyan said that Karabakh’s foreign
minister would need to spend more time in Yerevan than before to boost
contacts with international organizations, embassies and the Armenian
Foreign Ministry.

BAKU: Azeri, Armenian foreign ministers to meet in Prague on 15 Janu

Azeri, Armenian foreign ministers to meet in Prague on 15 January

ANS TV, Baku
23 Dec 04

[Presenter] The time of the next round of talks between the Azerbaijani
and Armenian foreign ministers on resolving the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict has been agreed on. It is expected that the talks will be
more specific this time, Yuriy Merzlyakov, Russian co-chairman of
the OSCE Minsk Group tackling the conflict, has said.

[Correspondent over archive footage] The next round of consultations
between the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers on how to settle
the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict will be held in Prague on 15 January,
Merzlyakov told ANS. He thus indirectly responded to the Armenian
Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan’s latest remarks.

Oskanyan said at yesterday’s [22 December] press conference that
Armenia was ready to speed up the process of resolving the issue of
Nagornyy Karabakh’s self-determination.

[Merzlyakov on telephone, with Azeri voice-over] We are now working
on a specific task, on holding consultations on 15 January. The sides
will lay out their positions in Prague and we will try to bring them
closer. No comments or declarations must be made at this point.

[Correspondent] In Merzlyakov’s words, specific issues will be
discussed on 15 January in Prague.

[Merzlyakov] We are now working on specific elements of the talks. The
sides have already expressed their positions. Therefore, we are
working on proposals.

I would also like to point that there are no very contentious issues
in their stances. There is a subject of the talks and the sides are
not rejecting it.

[Correspondent] Bernard Fassier, France’s newly appointed co-chairman
of the OSCE Minsk Group, will take part for the first time in the
Prague talks.

Legacy of former Soviet Union infects new states

Legacy of former Soviet Union infects new states

The Irish Times
December 22, 2004

Journalism and politics are the most dangerous jobs in the former
Soviet Union, writes Seamus Martin.

The ravaged face of Viktor Yushchenko has been the iconic image of
Ukraine’s electoral process. Poisoned with dioxin, Yushchenko lived to
tell the tale and have his case proven by medical tests in a Vienna
hospital. Others, a large number of them journalists in eastern and
central Europe, have not been so lucky.

Yuri Petrovich Shchekochikhin, like Yushchenko, fell ill at a
crucial stage in his career. A deputy in the Russian parliament
for the pro-western Yabloko party, he was also deputy editor of
the investigative journal Novaya Gazeta and was intent on exposing
corruption in post-communist Russia just as he had done in the
communist era.

After a visit to the city of Ryazan in the summer of 2003, he developed
a slight fever. Suddenly his symptoms began to resemble those we
recognise from Yushchenko’s recent photographs. His face broke out
in blisters, and his skin began to peel. He died nine days later.

The official cause of death was given as Lyell’s Syndrome, or
Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, an extremely rare allergic reaction to
medication, infections or other illnesses.

His friends and colleagues believe he was poisoned. Andrei Mironov,
a Soviet-era dissident journalist and Gulag survivor, doubted from the
beginning that Shchekochikhin died from natural causes. The publication
of Yushchenko’s photographs from Kiev has confirmed his suspicions.

Journalists on Novaya Gazeta opened their own investigation, but could
not come to a definite conclusion, even though some doctors involved
in the case were convinced that poison was administered.

Their task encountered some serious obstacles. A request for samples
of Shchekochikhin’s hair for forensic analysis, while he still lived,
was refused. Thus they were unable to discover what type of toxin
may have ended his life. In an even more suspicious development,
the official file on his death was classified as secret.

I knew Yuri Shchekochikhin quite well, spoke to him frequently and
sipped his favourite Armenian brandy in his office in the Duma during
my time as Moscow correspondent of this newspaper. He spoke often of
the difficulties his colleagues on Novaya Gazeta faced as journalists
in today’s Russia.

He spoke of reporter Igor Domnikov, who was beaten to death at the
entrance to his apartment block. He believed that the intended target
was another Novaya Gazeta journalist, Oleg Sultanov, who lived in the
same building and was investigating the affairs of the giant Russian
oil company, Lukoil.

He told of Oleg Lurye, who was hospitalised after a similar attack.
He mourned the death of Larisa Yudina, the murdered Kalmyk journalist
and Yabloko member. He talked, too, of an attack made on his paper’s
office in Ryazan, and it was events in that city which may have led
to his own death.

Shchekochikhin was working on two stories in the final weeks of his
life. One concerned possible tax fraud by a furniture company called
Tri Kita, linked to members of the Federal Security Service (FSB).
The other involved the apartment bombings attributed to Chechen
terrorists which killed almost 300 people in 1999 and which swung
public opinion in favour of a second Chechen war.

A strange incident occurred at that time in Ryazan, when members of
the FSB were reported to have been seen unloading white powder in
the basement of a block of flats. The FSB admitted responsibility,
but said its agents were merely engaged in a security drill, and the
powder was innocuous.

The fate of many of those who investigated this incident has been
unusual. Mikhail Trepashkin, a former lieutenant colonel in the KGB,
was due to issue a report on the incident in October on behalf of a
parliamentary commission. He was arrested, however, and sentenced to
four years in prison for “revealing state secrets”.

Trepashkin had identified Vladimir Romanovich, a former FSB man,
from a photo-fit picture as a suspect in the apartment bombings.
Romanovich was later killed in a car crash in Cyprus.

Two of the four Duma deputies looking into the bombings have since
died: Shchekochikhin from the disputed allergy, and another who was
shot dead outside his apartment building in spring of this year.

Physical attacks have been the most common method of murdering
politicians and journalists in Russia, Ukraine and other former
Soviet republics. In the case of Georgy Gongadze, the attack was
particularly brutal. His headless body was found near Kiev, and an
examination indicated that he had been decapitated while alive.

Tape recordings were released in which a voice sounding like that of
President Leonid Kuchma called for Gongadze to be removed.

But poison has also been regarded as a legitimate weapon by the KGB,
from which both the Russian and Ukrainian intelligence services
emerged. A former FSB agent, Alexander Litvinenko, told the New York
Times earlier this month that a secret laboratory for the study of
poisons was still operated by the FSB in Moscow.

The New York Times report pointed to the death of a Russian banker,
Ivan Kiviledi, who died after his phone was dosed with poison in
1995. The Saudi combatant known as Khattab, who fought alongside
insurgents in Chechnya, is believed to have died after opening a
poisoned letter.

More recently, Anna Politkovskaya of Shchekochikhin’s Novaya Gazeta,
a persistent critic of the war in Chechnya, became unconscious on
a flight to the northern Caucasus to cover the terrorist attack on
the school in Beslan. She was told by a nurse that there had been an
attempt to poison her.

There is little doubt that close links continue between the Russian
FSB and the Ukrainian SBU, both of which were part of the KGB,
and sharing of technology between eastern European intelligence
organisations has also been well documented in the past.

While there has been evidence of political compliance in the murder of
Gongadze in Ukraine, freelance activity by current and former security
agents is seen as the most likely cause for the murders in Russia.

Journalism and politics remain the most dangerous jobs in the former
Soviet Union. To ply both trades, as Shchekochikhin did, was to make
life perilous in the extreme.

* Seamus Martin is a member of the national executive of the National
Union of Journalists and a former international editor of The Irish
Times.

OSCE Yerevan Office Satisfied With Results Of First Stage OfActiviti

OSCE YEREVAN OFFICE SATISFIED WITH RESULTS OF FIRST STAGE OF ACTIVITIES
ENVISAGED BY AGREEMENT SIGNED WITH RA DEFENCE MINISTRY

YEREVAN, December 21 (Noyan Tapan). On December 20, Ambassador Vladimir
Pryakhin, Head of OSCE Yerevan office, met with Serge Sargsian,
Secretary of National Security Council attached to RA President, RA
Defence Minister. During the meeting Vladimir Pryakhin represented
the positive results of first stage of the activities envisaged by the
agreement signed between OSCE Yerevan Office and RA Defence Minsitry
on June 11 (on holding of a monitoring in Armed Forces and effective
cooperation between OSCE and RA Defence Ministry. “We are satisfied
with the results of the first stage and with assistance rendered
by you and the respective structures of the Defence Ministry,”
V.Pryakhin mentioned. The sides also touched upon the adoption of
the law on alternative military service and first group call-up (20
men called up for military service due for alternative labor service
and 1 alternative military service). According to the Spokesman of RA
Defence Ministry, Vladimir Pryakhin also represented the results of
surveys concerning military service held jointly with the “Soldier’s
Mother” NGO in a military detachment. He established that the work
done gave the desirable results, today the organization may freely
communicate with servicemen, reveal their problems and lead them up to
the RA Defence Minister. Serge Sargsian in his turn said that besides
the above-mentioned organization nearly 9 NGOs also cooperate with
the Defence Ministry and it’s possible to solve concrete problems
owing to the active mediation of these organizations. He also added
that not only NGOs but all creative unions acting in the republic
cooperate with the Ministry. The creative unions contribute to
spending of a more interesting leisure in the army owing to numerous
cultural events, visits to military units, concerts, meetings with
servicemen. Touching upon the Karabakh problem Ambassador Pryakhin
established that he isn’t acquainted with any significant textbook
on Nagorno Karabakh history of the latest period yet and displayed
willingness to obtain such literature. The Defence Minister established
that such textbooks are necessary for military-patriotic education of
young generation and added that the Armenian writers have certain
duties in this aspect. V. Pryakhin also represented the recent
program of socio-economic development implemented in Sunik, which
was discussed with the population and administration of the region
and was highly estimated. The Minister added that RA authorities
also worked out a program of Sunik development especially mentioning
road construction, development of tourism and protection of historic
and cultural monuments. The sides expressed hope that the bilateral
cooperation is on a good basis and will go on at the same rates.

Diocese raises funds to help victims of new genocide

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

December 21, 2004
___________________

ARMENAIN FAITHFUL URGE PROTECTION OF INNOCENTS

As survivors of Genocide, the Armenian voice has been strong in calling
for international action to end the genocide and violence being
committed in the Darfur region of Sudan.

The Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern) has been
especially active in calling for an international solution to the crisis
and in raising funds to aid the victims of that violence.

“The Armenian Church is very much involved in efforts to end this
genocide. We have raised the issue in international religious
organizations and called for action,” said Bishop Vicken Aykazian,
diocesan legate. “We have suffered as a people, so we don’t want other
people to suffer through genocide.”

As the Diocese’s ecumenical officer, Bishop Aykazian has been at the
forefront of pushing for peace in Sudan. Bishop Aykazian, who serves as
secretary to the executive committee of the National Council of Churches
(NCC), has discussed the issue with leaders of that ecumenical body. He
has also led protests outside the Sudanese embassy in Washington, D.C.,
and discussed the violence with politicians, including a recent
delegation from Saudi Arabia.

“Armenians know the lingering pain caused by genocide. It is not just
violence today, but the ripping apart of communities and an entire
culture which causes deep generational pain,” Bishop Aykazian said.
“That is why we, as Armenians, need to stand up and denounce all acts of
genocide. Genocide hurts not just the victims, but our entire moral
fabric.”

On Tuesday, December 14, 2004, Bishop Aykazian, diocesan legate,
presented $10,000 to Dr. Bob Edgar, the general secretary of the
National Council of Churches (NCC). The money, raised through a special
offering in local parishes and by donations made to the Diocesan
website, , will be used by the NCC international
aid arm to provide relief supplies to the thousands of refugees pouring
out of Sudan’s Darfur region and into neighboring Chad.

In the Sudan, the Janjaweed — a government-backed nomadic Arab tribe —
has raped, killed, and burnt the homes of black, non-Arab residents in
the nation’s Darfur region in attempt to get them to leave their lands,
which the Arab government has promised to the mercenaries. The fighting
has left 70,000 people dead and more than 1.5 million displaced.

“The thought that humans could do this to other humans is immensely
saddening,” said Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern
Diocese. “We must pray that God gives our political leaders strength to
prevent more pointless slaughter of innocent lives. We all must do our
own part to amplify the victims’ cries to bring about peace and safety
and justice.”

— 12/21/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Bishop Vicken Aykazian, legate of the Diocese of the
Armenian Church of America (Eastern), presents a check for $10,000 to
National Council of Churches General Secretary Bob Edgar to help fund
relief operations for victims of the ongoing genocide in the Darfur
region of Sudan.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

ARKA News Agency – 12/21/2004

ARKA News Agency
Dec 21 2004

70% of citizens of Armenia are against sending armenian servicemen to
Iraq

RA President orders to form a work group of experts in the sphere of
social security

Freedom house research states that Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh are
“partially free states

Armenian Genocide and Territorial losses on Russian State TV

*********************************************************************

70% OF CITIZENS OF ARMENIA ARE AGAINST SENDING ARMENIAN SERVICEMEN TO
IRAQ

YEREVAN, December 21. /ARKA/. 70% of citizens of Armenia are against
sending Armenian servicemen to Iraq for them to participate in
reconstruction work, as stated Hovsep Khurshudyan, the expert of
Armenian Centre for National and International Studies (ACNIS).
According to him, only 15,6% of the respondents were for sending
Armenian peacekeeping forces to Iraq, 13,9% found the question
difficult to answer. 24% of 100 experts who participated in the
survey were for sending, 67% were against it, and 9% found the
question difficult to answer.
100 experts and 2002 respondents from Yerevan and all 10 marzes of
Armenia participated in the study of ACNIS. The main objective was to
study the public opinion concerning 5 issues: Eurointegration,
Armenia-Diaspora cooperation, tolerance, problems of minorities and
situation in educational system.
The Armenian Centre for National and International Studies (ACNIS)
NGO was founded in 1994 by the former RA Foreign Minister Raffi
Hovhannisyan. A.H. –0–

*********************************************************************

RA PRESIDENT ORDERS TO FORM A WORK GROUP OF EXPERTS IN THE SPHERE OF
SOCIAL SECURITY

YEREVAN, December 21. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharyan ordered
to form a work group of experts in the sphere of social security.
According to RA President’s Press Service Department, Kocharyan noted
at today’s session that the government lacks full-fledged program on
social security system reformation. “The reforms imply coordinated
work which will concern not only the RA Ministry of Social Affairs.
Some other departments will be involved in it”, he said.
According to the President, on the base of several measures taken by
various departments, a single program can be developed, which may be
implemented already next year. Kocharyan ordered that the work group
submits in a month the common conception of reforms.
RA Prime-Minister Andranik Margaryan, RA Minister of Labour and
Social Affairs Aghvan Vardanyan, Chairmen of the State Fund of Social
Insurance and of CBA participated in the session. A.H. –0–

*********************************************************************

FREEDOM HOUSE RESEARCH STATES THAT ARMENIA AND NAGORNO-KARABAKH ARE
“PARTIALLY FREE STATES

YEREVAN, December 21. /ARKA/ Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh are
“partially free states”, according to the results of 2004 global
research conducted by Freedom House, which is American rights
advocacy organization. According to the annual report of the
organization, human rights in Armenia get worse. “Suppression of
peaceful civil demonstrations by the authorities testifies to the
fact that non-democratic ruling prevails in the country”, according
to the research.
Freedom House gives evaluation by 7 point scale, where one point is
awarded for the best results. According to the scale, Armenia was
awarded 4 points in the sphere of civil freedoms and 5 –in political
freedoms. Nagorno-Karabakh was awarded 5 points for each category.
In East Europe positive growth is recorded in Georgia and the
Ukraine, where all national protests caused the change of the results
of the falsified elections. Russia is the only of the countries which
lowered its rating in 2004, having become a “not free” from
“partially free” country. Of the free countries of the West Europe
only Turkey is recognized as “partially free”.
On the whole, according to the research, the level of freedoms in the
world increased in 2004: 26 countries had positive results, and 11
countries worsened their results. Out of 192 countries of the world
46% are free, 26% are not free, and the rest are partially free. The
most regressive countries are called 8 countries like Burma, Cuba,
Libya, North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Turkmenistan. A.H. –0–

*********************************************************************

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND TERRITORIAL LOSSES ON RUSSIAN STATE TV

YEREVAN, December 21. /ARKA/. The Russian Cultural Fund and Rossia
State TV Channel in association with the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation’s (ARF) Moscow office, have produced a documentary called
“Who Had Paid Lenin?”. As the Press Service of ARF told ARKA, the
documentary tells the truth about the 1917 October coup. Based on
rich documentary material, the film shows for the first time that the
Bolsheviks seized the power using Kaiser Germany’s funding under the
plan offered by Parvus. The fact is that the October coup was the
result of the cooperation between Parvus and Lenin. As a reward for
the assistance to seize the power, the Bolsheviks signed the
Brest-Litovsk Treaty with Germany, getting out of the war and making
vast concessions to Germany and its allies. In the film, ARF Bureau
member and Armenian National Assembly vice speaker Vahan Hovhannisian
speaks of the October coup impact on the fate of the Armenian people.
He speaks of the devastating consequences the Bolshevik coup for the
Armenians. By the Brest-Litovsk Treaty, not only the Russian troops
— so close to a victory — were withdrawn from Western Armenia, but
also the Kars and Ardahan regions of Eastern Armenia were surrendered
to Turkey. Later on, the concessions made by the Bolshevik government
to Turkey, were sustained in the 1921 Moscow and Kars treaties.
Also, the film contains documentary footage of the Genocide. “Who Had
Paid Lenin?” will debut on the Rossia Channel no December 22 at 11:35
p.m. Moscow time. L.V. –0–

–Boundary_(ID_sH1ac+VyU/qiz10dSmgd/g)–

Botulism kills five people, affects 43 others this year

BOTULISM KILLS FIVE PEOPLE, AFFECTS 43 OTHERS THIS YEAR

ArmenPress
Dec 21 2004

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, ARMENPRESS: Forty-nine cases of a rare disease
known as botulism were registered in Armenia this year, killing
five and causing a great deal of suffering to 43 others, including
8 children below the age of 14.

Though most of these cases involve babies whose immune systems aren’t
as strong as older kids and adults, so they can’t fight off the
bacteria, botulism usually occurs after eating improperly cooked or
preserved foods. The botulism bacteria release a poison, also called
a toxin, which travels through the blood to attach to the nerves that
control your muscles.

This year’s cases outnumbered 13 botulism cases reported last year
with 17 people affected three of whom died.

Botulism cases in Armenia occur usually in winter when many families
start eating home-made preserves, despite the health ministry’s warning
against using such food or its instructions to at least thorough cook
such food by boiling it for ten minutes to destroy the botulism toxin.

Choice for Turkey or Europe?

Choice for Turkey or Europe?

Yerkir
17 Dec 04

Today Europe is making a crucial choice: it will vote to approve or
deny Turkey a membership in the European Union. Today’s decision,
indeed, is a critical one for the future of Turkey, its neighbors,
including Armenia, and the region.

But most of all the decision will influence Europe’s future. If Turkey
gets a green light, it would be hard to predict whether or not that
country — with its present standards, civilization approaches, the
burden of its internal problems and attitude toward its neighbors —
would become a nation of European values, but one thing is apparent:
the Europe we — and the Europeans — knew will never exist any more.

Because Europe is not just about geography, it is a first of all a
certain civilization. And Turkey does not belong in there especially
because it denies the measures and conditions on the road to Europe.

That makes us make certain conclusions, like urging those who give
us lessons and advice on European standards, to respect those values
themselves.