AAA: Rep. Smith Joins Armenian Caucus

Armenian Assembly of America
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PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 17, 2004
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]

CONGRESSMAN SMITH JOINS ARMENIAN CAUCUS

Seattle, WA – At the urging of Armenian Assembly activists, Congressman
Adam Smith (D-WA) on September 13 joined the Congressional Caucus
on Armenian Issues, bringing the total Caucus membership to 140.
Smith, who announced his decision during an Assembly-led meeting in
Tacoma, WA, will become the second lawmaker from the state to serve
on the Caucus.

“I enjoyed our conversation and the opportunity to meet with some
of the various members of the local Armenian community,” said
Smith, who serves on the House International Relations Committee.
“The information you shared was very useful and I look forward to
the opportunity to learn more about the issues affecting this part
of the world.”

Assembly Western Office Chairman Richard Mushegain said he welcomes
Smith’s membership to the Caucus and commended activists for raising
the issue with him as well and others.

“Assembly activists, in meetings across the country, have successfully
utilized the congressional summer recess to articulate the community’s
concerns and encourage membership to the Armenian Caucus,” said
Mushegain. “We look forward to working with Congressman Smith and
his colleagues in securing trade benefits and U.S. assistance that
are so critical to Armenia and Nagorno Karbakh’s ongoing development.”

The district meeting, led by Western Office Director Lena Kaimian,
included Reverend Father Yeghia Isayan of the Armenian Apostolic
Church-Seattle, Affiliate Zareh Kevorkian and activists Razmik
Keutelian and Sonya Tanielian. Later that day, the group also met
with Congressman Norman Dicks’ (D-WA) District Director Tom Luce.
Talks centered on U.S. aid to Armenia, the Azeri war rhetoric and the
U.S.-Armenia trade bill. Through Luce, activists also urged Dicks to
join the Armenian Caucus.

Prior to the congressional meetings, Assembly Board of Directors
Member Lisa Kalustian joined Kaimian for a community briefing at the
Armenian Apostolic Church-Seattle. Kalustian and Kaimian discussed the
Assembly’s legislative agenda, providing a status report on the Foreign
Operations bill as well as the trade measure. Kaimian also discussed
the Assembly’s Washington and Yerevan internship programs, explaining
the opportunities available for college students of Armenian descent.

“The Assembly extends it thanks to Church officials for providing
a venue for our event,” said Kalustian. “We also thank community
members for their participation and interest in the Assembly.”

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness of
Armenian issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

NR#2004-084

Photograph available on the Assembly’s Web site at the following link:

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ctivists%209

Caption: (L to R) Reverend Father Yeghia Isayan of the Armenian
Apostolic Church-Seattle, Assembly Affiliate Member Zareh Kevorkian,
Congressman Adam Smith (D-WA), activists Sonya Tanielian and Razmik
Keutelian and Assembly Western Office Director Lena Kaimian in Tacoma,
WA on September 13.

http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2004-084/2004-084-1.%20Smith
www.armenianassembly.org

Armenian president arrives in Kazakh capital for CIS summit

Armenian president arrives in Kazakh capital for CIS summit

Interfax-Kazakhstan news agency, Almaty
15 Sep 04

Astana, 15 September: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan arrived in
Astana today to take part in the CIS summit.

Kazakh Foreign Minister Kasymzhomart Tokayev, Health Minister Yerbolat
Dosayev, Astana Mayor Umirzak Shukeyev and the chairman of the CIS
Executive Committee and CIS executive secretary, Vladimir Rushaylo,
welcomed Robert Kocharyan at Astana airport.

The Georgian, Uzbek, Tajik and Kyrgyz presidents are expected to
arrive in Astana today.

[Passage omitted: Known details]

Washington supports S. Caucasus development – U.S. ambassador

Washington supports S. Caucasus development – U.S. ambassador

Interfax
Sept 15 2004

YEREVAN. Sept 15 (Interfax) – Washington supports further democratic
development of the South Caucasus republics, newly-appointed U.S.
Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans, said at a press conference in
Yerevan on Wednesday.

The ambassador said stability and security, economic growth,
and development of democratic institutions are the main areas of
Washington’s activity in South Caucasus, and Armenia has made certain
success in all of them.

The ambassador admitted that some difficulties remain in the
stability and security sphere, which results from the fact that the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has still not been resolved.

Evans maintained that the final resolution of the problem is for the
conflicting parties to achieve, while the U.S., Russia, and France,
as the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group, are continuing their
mediating efforts to help settle the conflict.

Evans said the U.S. is also continuing to work on opening the
Armenian-Turkish border, which is in the focus of the U.S. attention
and which is in the interests of both Yerevan and Ankara.

The ambassador also welcomed an initiative by the Armenian government
to send a team of military doctors, drivers, and sappers to Iraq.

BAKU: Rapporteur on affiars of refugees & IDPs in S.Caucasus appoint

RAPPORTEUR ON AFFAIRS OF THE REFUGEES AND IDPs IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS APPOINTED
[September 14, 2004, 17:10:49]

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Sept 14 2004

Regular sitting of the PACE Committee on the affairs of migration,
refugees and the population was held in Paris on 13 September. At
the sitting, discussed were the issues of plight of the IDPs from
the Chechen Republic; the people looking for a refuge, and illegal
immigrants in Turkey; the children who have been torn off parents;
appointment of the rapporteur on refugees and the IDPs in Azerbaijan,
Georgia and Armenia; fundamental rights of illegal immigrants and
other questions.

Deputy of Milli Majlis Bakhtiyar Aliyev has told to correspondent
AzerTAj: “This discussion was more important for our country. As
a result of occupation by Armenia, pursuing aggressive policy,
20 percent of our territories, our country has faced the problem
of more than one million refugees and IDPs. Appointment of the new
rapporteur on the affairs of refugees and the IDPs in Azerbaijan,
Georgia and Armenia fully complies with interests of our country.

During the discussions, rapporteur on the affairs of refugees and
IDPs in the countries of Southern Caucasus, the majority has voiced
for the Latvian deputy Boris Chilevich. I believe that visit of
the rapporteur to the region will take place in the near future. We
shall render all-round assistance for preparation of the new report
on this painful problem for our country. Therefore, as recently,
it is possible to tell, there is no help to Azerbaijan on the part
of the international organizations.

It has to be reminded that I have been appointed as rapporteur
concerning the people looking for a refuge, and illegal immigrants
in Turkey. The report has been seriously discussed and positively
recognized by deputies. The speakers have noted that Turkey has carried
out all obligations taken before the Council of Europe, has achieved
in this area appreciable successes, and was suspended the monitoring
on Turkey. With feeling of regret it has been underlined that the
international organizations, stating that will render this country
the all-round financial help for prevention of transition of the
people looking for a refuge, and illegal immigrants in the countries
of Europe through territory of Turkey, have not fulfilled the promise”.

BAKU: Protest action to be held in Russia

Protest action to be held in Russia

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 10 2004

Baku, September 9, AssA-Irada — The Movement for Azerbaijan will
hold a sanctioned action in Moscow on September 25 in protest against
Armenia’s unfair policy toward Azerbaijan.

Along with Azeris living in Russia, the rally, aimed at conveying
Armenia’s policy of occupation to the international community,
will be joined by intellectuals of Russian and other nationalities.
A resolution to be adopted by the protesters will be forwarded to
diplomatic representations of the UN Security Council permanent
members and the Armenian embassy in Moscow.*

BAKU: Bill “on state secret” passed

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Sept 8 2004

BILL “ON STATE SECRET” PASSED
[September 08, 2004, 13:01:59]

At the sitting of the Milli Majlis held on 7 October, as
correspondent of AzerTAj informs, the deputies have made protest
against participation of the Armenian officers in the forthcoming
action of NATO in Baku and have demanded, that Milli Majlis has
expressed attitude to the mentioned question.

Chairman of Milli Majlis Murtuz Alaskarov has noted, that the
Azerbaijan state cooperates with the NATO within the framework of
a number of programs. The organizer of action to be carried out in
September of this year in Baku is the NATO and consequently, official
Baku cannot interfere with the given question. Murtuz Alaskarov has
stated that in this connection the question will discuss with the
head of state and heads of other corresponding organizations.

Further, have been discussed and accepted the bills “On state secret”
(in the third reading) and “On protection and development of the
Azerbaijan carpet art”.

National rankings of economic security

Associated Press Worldstream
September 1, 2004 Wednesday 12:51 PM Eastern Time

National rankings of economic security

Countries ranked according the International Labor Organization’s
Economic Security Index, which combines seven different measures of
individual economic security, with the highest score being 1.000.

1. Sweden 0.977
2. Finland 0.947
3. Norway 0.926
4. Denmark 0.910
5. Netherlands 0.865
6. Belgium 0.829
7. France 0.829
8. Luxembourg 0.813
9. Germany 0.793
10. Canada 0.785
11. Ireland 0.782
12. Austria 0.782
13. Spain 0.756
14. Portugal 0.738
15. United Kingdom 0.736
16. Switzerland 0.727
17. Australia 0.724
18. Japan 0.718
19. Israel 0.695
20. Italy 0.681
21. Hungary 0.635
22. Slovakia 0.626
23. Czech Republic 0.622
24. New Zealand 0.614
25. United States 0.612
26. Greece 0.592
27. Latvia 0.587
28. Bulgaria 0.582
29. Barbados 0.574
30. Lithuania 0.556
31. Croatia 0.546
32. South Korea 0.545
33. Mauritius 0.536
34. Estonia 0.525
35. Ukraine 0.524
36. Costa Rica 0.521
37. Argentina 0.521
38. South Africa 0.519
39. Brazil 0.517
40. Panama 0.515
41. Russia 0.503
42. Belarus 0.499
43. Moldova 0.495
44. Romania 0.456
45. Philippines 0.455
46. Chile 0.447
47. Azerbaijan 0.425
48. Mexico 0.418
49. Tunisia 0.412
50. Algeria 0.409
51. Tajikistan 0.404
52. Ecuador 0.395
53. Venezuela 0.393
54. Lebanon 0.390
55. Georgia 0.389
56. Turkey 0.381
57. Kyrgyzstan 0.380
58. China 0.356
59. Egypt 0.339
60. Albania 0.339
61. Peru 0.339
62. Sri Lanka 0.330
63. Kazakhstan 0.320
64. Uzbekistan 0.312
65. Thailand 0.287
66. Armenia 0.285
67. Honduras 0.276
68. Burkina Faso 0.266
69. Colombia 0.258
70. Nigeria 0.254
71. Zimbabwe 0.254
72. Madagascar 0.249
73. Ivory Coast 0.247
74. India 0.246
75. Morocco 0.237
76. Turkmenistan 0.230
77. Indonesia 0.228
78. Ghana 0.227
79. Congo 0.226
80. Senegal 0.223
81. Benin 0.215
82. Congo 0.148
83. Ethiopia 0.142
84. Pakistan 0.136
85. Mauritania 0.128
86. Burundi 0.098
87. Rwanda 0.073
88. Bangladesh 0.070
89. Sierra Leone 0.060
90. Nepal 0.051

Armenian leader’s aides want him to run for third presidential term

Armenian leader’s aides want him to run for third presidential term – paper

SOURCE: Iravunk, Yerevan
27 Aug 04

Text of article by I.H. Iravunk entitled “Waiting for Putin’s
decision” and published in Armenian newspaper Iravunk on 27 August

Maybe the fact that Belarusian President Alyaksadr Lukashenka has
decided to run for presidency for the third time is the reason why
talk has begun in Armenia of President Robert Kocharyan doing the
same. It is clear that such a desire is unconstitutional, but it is
also obvious that in Robert Kocharyan’s inner circle they never pay
attention to such trifles.

But it is interesting that according to our sources close to Robert
Kocharyan, the incumbent president does not yet have the intention to
run for presidency for a third term. They also say that Robert
Kocharyan is not in a hurry to take the decision. He will watch
attentively his “strategic partner” Vladimir Putin’s next steps
because the latter is in some sense in the same situation. Putin also
seems not to be making any efforts to extend his presidency, although
he said that it would be better if the presidential term in Russia was
five instead of four years. Time will show if the incumbent Russian
president’s recommendation is taken into account or not. Unlike in
Russia, in Armenia this issue is not even relevant since in spring
2008, fortunately or unfortunately, Kocharyan will have been in power
for 10 years.

Anyway, as Lukashenka’s example and Putin’s “improvement” on it show,
Robert Kocharyan’s third presidential term does not seem
improbable. Moreover, according to our source, Kocharyan’s inner
circle headed by his first aide has already adopted a decision, in
spite of anything to persuade their “boss” to stand in the elections
for the third time.

Hung out to die?

The South African Star , South Africa
Aug 24 2004

Hung out to die?
August 24, 2004

By Beauregard Tromp and Sapa-AFP

Nick du Toit has admitted that he recruited personnel and took charge
of logistics for an attempted coup bid in Equatorial Guinea.

The South African’s admission came on the first day of his trial in
Malabo, the capital of the small central African state, along with 17
other alleged putschists who have been charged with plotting to oust
President Teodoro Obiang Nguema.

“I wasn’t part of the operational group because my task was
logistics; that’s to say, getting vehicles (to the airport),” Du Toit
said yesterday when he was returned to the courtroom on his own after
an adjournment.

Du Toit – on trial with seven other South Africans, six Armenians and
four Equatorial Guinean defendants – said he agreed to take part in
the scheme because he was promised “a large amount of money”.

Questioned by Attorney-General José Olo Obono, the South African said
he had accepted the job at the request of Simon Mann, the alleged
leader of 70 other suspected mercenaries arrested in Zimbabwe. This
group was allegedly due to join those in Equatorial Guinea to carry
out the coup.

In a shock announcement yesterday, the state prosecutor sought the
death penalty for Du Toit and prison terms ranging from 26 to 86
years for the other defendants.

The head of the official South African observer mission to the trial,
Moketedi Mpshe, said he was shocked at the call for the death
penalty, which seemed to contradict assurances given by Obiang to
President Thabo Mbeki that none of the accused would be executed.

Obiang had also told the French magazine Jeune Afrique Intelligent:
“The death penalty can be applied here only if a crime has been
carried out, not if the accused was stopped when he was only in the
planning stage.”

Mbeki’s spokesperson, Bheki Khumalo, said last night: “Let us allow
the due process of the law to take its course, reach its logical
conclusion and take it from there.”

Legal watchdogs have, however, expressed fears that if the government
decides to intervene only after the death penalty has been passed, it
might be too late to prevent its being carried out.

South African officials have been told that the trial would be
completed and sentence passed this week, leaving little time for
reaction.

Handcuffed and in leg-irons, the accused were brought by military
vehicles to a conference hall in Banapa, a suburb of Malabo, which
has been turned into a makeshift courtroom for the trial.

About 100 people, including two of the suspected South African
mercenaries’ wives, human rights activists and foreign diplomats,
were in the public gallery for the trial.

Although Du Toit’s wife, Belinda, had complained before that the
mercenaries were in bad shape, an American diplomat present, Dan
Vernon, told Voice of America that the accused “appear to be
healthy”.

“All 14 of the expatriates have beards at this point, but they appear
to be in good health,” Vernon said.

“I noticed that Nick du Toit, the alleged leader of the group,
appeared extremely composed and chatted with the accused sitting on
either side of himself on occasion.”

The South African government’s observer mission, which was originally
to be eight-strong but dwindled to four, missed the opening of the
trial and spent yesterday in Libreville, Gabon, because of delays in
flights from Johannesburg.

“We will only be able to get a flight to Malabo at 7am tomorrow
morning,” Mpshe said yesterday.

But Department of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Ronnie Mamoepa said
another team of officials, led by South Africa’s ambas- sador to
Gabon, Samuel Monaisi, was monitoring the trial to ensure it was
“transparent, fair and just”.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma is on record as
saying she would intervene diplomatically if a death sentence is
announced.

Meanwhile the Equatorial Guinean government seems to have reneged on
a promise to the South African government to allow South African
journalists and international lawyers to attend the trial.

The International Bar Association, based in London, said last night
that one of its observers had been allowed to travel to Malabo but
another had been refused entry.

Equatorial Guinea’s attorney-general outlined the role of each of the
accused in the coup plot, also citing the names of exiled opposition
leader Severo Moto, accused of masterminding the coup, and British
businessmen Elie Khalil, Greg Wales and David Hurt, accused of
funding it, but he did not say what sentences they faced.

Spain has refused to extradite Moto, leading Malabo to recall its
ambassador to Madrid and threaten to break off diplomatic relations.

Du Toit’s lawyer, Fernando Mico, called for seven years’ prison for
his client, saying: “There was no conspiracy, given that no weapons
were found in their possession.”

Lawyer Polciano Mbomio, pleading on behalf of six Armenian
defendants, asked for charges against them to be dropped, and called
Obono’s summary “narrative fiction”.

The four Equatorial Guineans were not implicated in the alleged coup
plot until the court case got under way yesterday.

The South African and Armenian suspects have been held at Malabo’s
notorious Black Beach prison since March.

Why observers are worried

The trial judges report to President Teodoro Obiang Nguema.

The government appointed legal representation for the accused at the
last minute, and did not allow them to have their own lawyers.

The prosecution is allowed to use confessions extracted by torture.

Court proceedings are held in Spanish, charges are put in Spanish and
there is no translation.

The trial started even though a South African government delegation
sent to make sure that it was free and fair had not arrived.

The South African government says it will allow the case to reach its
conclusion before it will act. However, its policy to intervene only
after the imposition of the death penalty proved to be ill-timed in
the case of Mariette Bosch, who was executed in secret by Botswana in
1999.

The Equatorial Guinean attorney-general called for the death penalty
despite earlier assurances by Nguema that the men would not be
executed.

SA’s Constitutional Court regards the right to life, as contained in
the constitution, as so important that it has ruled that even a
non-South African may not be extradited to another country to face
capital charges, unless an undertaking is given by that country that
the death sentence will not be imposed.

What Amnesty says of the country

German Eugen Nershz, one of the 15 foreigners arrested in connection
with the coup attempt, died on March 17, supposedly of cerebral
malaria. But Amnesty International has said he died “apparently as a
result of torture”.

The trial of 67 men sentenced to long jail terms after being
convicted of involvement in a previous alleged coup was unfair and
their convictions were based on statements made under torture.

They are being held in harsh conditions at the Black Beach prison,
crammed together in small, dangerously overcrowded cells. In March,
two prisoners were transferred to hospital. One had a broken rib as a
result of being beaten.

Amnesty International further noted that it had happened before that
the Equatorial Guinean government had “invented” plots to clamp down
on the opposition. In 2002, several members of political parties were
held for exercising their right to freedom of expression or for
membership of opposition groups.

Despite a partial amnesty in August 2002, more than 30 prisoners are
being held in conditions tantamount to torture after being convicted
on the basis of confessions extracted under torture.

School-Children of Yerevan Will Not Have Problems With Text-Books

SCHOOL-CHILDREN OF YEREVAN WILL NOT HAVE PROBLEMS WITH TEXT-BOOKS

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23. ARMINFO. The school-children of Yerevan unlike the
pupils of the regions, will not have problems with text-books. Head of
the department of education of Yerevan’s municipality Onik Vatyan
informed journalists today.

According to him, except several text-books, the pupils of first form
will receive text-books free of charge. To avoid the problems
frequently arousing in connection with payment for text-books, there
will be price-lists, as well as the names of the text-books which are
given free of charge, in every school. According to Vatyan, the
municipality of Yerevan has given an opportunity the pupils to pay for
the books during the whole school year.