CoE Scrutinizes Rights Violations In Belarus, Armenia, Azerbaijan

Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
April 30 2004

Council Of Europe Scrutinizes Rights Violations In Belarus, Political
Situation In Armenia, Azerbaijan

By Jean-Christophe Peuch

Azerbaijani President Aliyev is under pressure over political
prisoners

The Strasbourg-based Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
today wraps up the second part of its 2004 spring session. The main
highlights of this week’s session included hearings on human rights
abuses in Belarus, an urgent debate on the political situation in
Armenia, and an address by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Prague, 30 April 2004 (RFE/RL) — The 45-member Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) voted this week to recommend
that the council’s Committee of Ministers considers suspending all
contacts with the Belarusian leadership until an independent
investigation is conducted into the disappearances of journalists and
political opponents.

In a separate resolution, PACE warned that failure to comply would
lead to maintaining sanctions against Belarus, or barring the
country’s parliamentarians from attending the assembly’s sessions
even informally.

The warning came just two weeks after the UN’s Human Rights
Commission censured Belarus over the disappearances and other rights
abuses.

Belarus had its special guest status in the Council of Europe
suspended in 1997, amid claims that its constitution was falling
short of democratic standards and handing too much power to President
Alyaksandr Lukashenka.

Since then, Belarus has been regularly criticized in Strasbourg for
its poor human rights record, including harassment of nongovernmental
media, restrictions of religious freedom, and reports of random
arrests.

“As a criminal lawyer, I have no doubt that these disappearances were
ordered at the highest possible level in the establishment of
Belarus.”This week’s PACE recommendation and resolution refer to the
disappearance and feared extra-judiciary execution of former Interior
Minister Yury Zakharanka, former parliament speaker Viktar Hanchar,
businessman Anatol Krasouski, and Dmitri Zavadsky, a cameraman for
the Russian private television channel NTV.

All four disappearances, which occurred in 1999 and 2000, are
believed to be politically motivated. Although Belarusian authorities
deny any wrongdoing, they have persistently ignored calls to conduct
independent investigations into the cases.

Greek Cypriot delegate Christos Pourgourides, who authored a report
on Belarus that was debated at the assembly before the 28 April vote,
said the people responsible for these disappearances should be
searched for among the country’s top leadership.

“As a criminal lawyer, I have no doubt that these disappearances were
ordered at the highest possible level in the establishment of
Belarus. I cannot be certain that the order was given by President
[Lukashenka] himself, but I am absolutely certain that the order for
their abduction was given by people very, very close to the
president,” Pourgourides said.

In another resolution adopted this week, the Strasbourg-based
assembly severely criticized Belarus for the “systematic harassment
and intimidations carried out by state officials…against
journalists, editors, and media outlets which are critical of the
president” or the government.

Russia, which is linked to Belarus by a union treaty, expressed its
disagreement over the resolutions and recommendations adopted by the
assembly.

Talking to journalists after the vote, Konstantin Kosachev, the
chairman of the State Duma’s Foreign Affairs Committee, criticized
the documents for being “too emotional.”

Russia itself has been criticized in the past in Strasbourg for human
rights violations in Chechnya.

Although the situation in the breakaway Northern Caucasus republic
was not on the assembly’s agenda this week, it was nonetheless
debated among members of PACE’s Political Affairs Committee.

In comments made to RFE/RL’s North Caucasus Service, PACE’s
rapporteur on Chechnya, Andreas Gross, said he plans to visit the
region in early June with other members of the Political Affairs
Committee. He said he will prepare a report to be debated at the
assembly’s next plenary session later that month.

“Since I was appointed rapporteur last July, I [have never been]
allowed to visit Chechnya, and [there] is no use to make a report
based only on journalists’ [accounts]. You have to go on a
[fact-finding] mission yourself. But now, after one year, I have the
impression that the Russian authorities — and especially the new
Russian delegation [here] — are much more cooperative, and we agreed
on a mission [so that] we could make a report,” Gross said.

Whether Russian authorities will allow the Swiss delegate to meet
Chechen separatist President Aslan Maskhadov — as he says he intends
to — remains unclear, however.

The situation in Armenia, where President Robert Kocharian and his
coalition cabinet are engaged in a bitter standoff with opponents,
was also debated this week in Strasbourg.

Armenia’s parliamentary opposition accuses Kocharian of rigging last
year’s presidential and legislative polls and insists his leadership
should to be put to a vote of national confidence.

The Armenian capital, Yerevan, has witnessed daily opposition rallies
for nearly three weeks now. Tensions bubbled over on 13 April when
police rounded up dozens of opposition activists and raided
opposition party offices.

The crackdown was strongly criticized by Council of Europe
Secretary-General Walter Schwimmer, who regretted the absence of
democratic debate in Armenia.

In a resolution adopted this week, PACE urged the Armenian leadership
to refrain from any actions that could be seen as attempts at
curtailing freedom of expression and movement. It also called for an
investigation into the recent incidents.

While reiterating its “profound disappointment” at last year’s
“flawed” elections, the assembly also urged Kocharian’s opponents to
strive to achieve their goals “within the constitutional framework”
and called upon both sides to enter into a dialogue “without
preconditions.”

Armenia was admitted into the Council of Europe in January 2001,
along with its neighbor Azerbaijan.

Although neither country met democracy standards, the
Strasbourg-based body hoped that opening its ranks simultaneously to
the rival nations would help them reach a solution to their
territorial dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Despite a 1994 cease-fire, Yerevan and Baku remain technically at war
over the predominantly ethnic Armenian enclave. For various reasons,
both sides have rejected successive settlement blueprints drafted by
the Minsk Group, the 13-member group of nations mandated by the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to mediate in the
talks.

Addressing the PACE assembly yesterday, Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev reiterated his country’s traditional stance, which consists of
demanding that ethnic Armenian troops withdraw from all Azerbaijani
lands they have been occupying since 1993, prior to any discussion on
the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Aliyev succeeded his then ailing father last October following a
controversial presidential election marred by irregularities, street
violence and the subsequent arrest of opposition activists.

During his three-year tenure as his country’s chief PACE delegate,
Aliyev often had to adopt a defensive position amid criticism of
Baku’s poor human rights record. Yesterday, however, his first
address to the assembly as Azerbaijani president was delivered in a
much more cordial atmosphere.

Aliyev hinted that he might release all inmates that the Council of
Europe insists are political prisoners. However, when asked whether
he thought he could do so before PACE’s September session, the
Azerbaijani leader remained noncommittal.

“When I was elected, in my first speech after my inauguration, I said
I would be the president of all Azerbaijanis — and that is what I am
doing. The policy of putting an end to the dramatic history of the
past will continue, but it is very difficult to do that alone. All
political forces must take an active part in doing that. The steps
that I have taken in pardoning prisoners show that intention and that
policy, and I think that that policy will continue,” Aliyev said.

Last month, Aliyev signed a decree amnestying nearly 130 prisoners,
including Suret Huseynov, a former prime minister who had been
sentenced to life imprisonment in 1999 on charges of plotting against
the state.

Huseynov’s release brought down to five the number of political
prisoners that the Council of Europe wants Azerbaijan to release in
the coming months.

In the meantime, an estimated 100 opposition activists detained last
October have been charged over their alleged participation in
postelection violence. Some of them have already been convicted,
while others are still awaiting trial.

Aliyev yesterday justified the crackdown on the opposition,
describing it as protection against the “hostility” that he says
continues to exist in Azerbaijani society.

BAKU: Iran police arrests Azerbaijanis in clashes with Armenians

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
April 27 2004

Iran police arrests Azerbaijanis in clashes with Armenians

Baku Today 27/04/2004 01:07

Ten ethnic Azerbaijanis were injured in the clashes with ethnic
Armenians in Iran according to Turan News Agency. The incident came
after Azerbaijanis tried to prevent Armenians from burning Turkish
flag in front of the Turkish Embassy in Tehran.
At the time Armenians were protesting against mass killings of
Armenians in 1915 by the Ottoman Empire.
Iranian police have arrested about forty Azerbaijanis who are the
activists of South Azerbaijani Revival Movement.

Meanwhile many Azerbaijani organizations in Iran have condemned
Iranian authorities for supporting Armenians and called Iranian
police to arrest those Armenians who wounded Azerbaijanis during the
clash.

Estonian ambassador to Armenia presents credentials

Baltic News Service
April 22, 2004

ESTONIAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA PRESENTS CREDENTIALS

YEREVAN, Apr 2

Estonia’s Ambassador to Armenia Andres Unga on Tuesday presented his
credentials to President Robert Kocharian.

After the ceremony the president and Unga talked about bilateral
relations and Estonia’s accession to the European Union, spokespeople
for the Foreign Ministry told BNS.

Kocharian acknowledged Estonia’s progress in information technology,
underlining that the Baltic state’s e-governance system serves as an
example to his country. Unga and the president exchanged views about
future IT cooperation projects. They discussed also high-level visits
to intensify bilateral relations.

The ambassador is to meet in Yerevan also with Prime Minister
Andranik Markarian, Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian and parliament
Speaker Artur Bagdasarian.

Unga, 38, is a graduate of the Tallinn Technical University and the
Estonian School of Diplomacy. After graduating from the university in
1991, he worked till 1996 in the protocol department of the Foreign
Ministry, rising from deputy head to director general.

In 1996-2000 Unga headed the Estonian diplomatic mission in Sweden
and then returned to the ministry as head of the personnel
department. He has been serving as ambassador to Greece since April
2001.

Unga is married with two children.

Tennis: Moya through after Sargsian test

sportinglife.com, UK
April 20 2004

MOYA THROUGH AFTER SARGSIAN TEST

Spain’s world number five Carlos Moya moved through to the second
round of the Monte Carlo Open after coming out on top in a tough
three-set battle with Armenia’s Sargis Sargsian to register a 7-6
(7-5) 1-6 6-3 victory.

Moya was due to meet Jarkko Nieminen in the next round but the Finn
suffered a broken right wrist at the end of his first-round victory
over Italian qualifier Uros Vico and had to withdraw.

The 27-year-old, who earlier this month returned to the island of his
birth to help Spain register a Davis Cup quarter-final win over
Holland in Mallorca, fared better than his Davis Cup team mate Juan
Carlos Ferrero, who suffered a 6-2 6-3 defeat to Alex Corretja.

Romania’s Andrei Pavel beat the Czech Republic’s Radek Stepanek 6-3
6-3, while Germany’s Tommy Haas overcame Belgian Xavier Malisse 6-3
6-4.

Corretja, who lost to Marcelo Rios in the 1997 final, was delighted
after registering his second win in six meetings against Ferrero, who
has one the tournament twice before.

“I’m not surprised, I’m happy,” he told the event’s official website,

Corretja, who received a wild card entry into the tournament, added:
“When you play a guy that you know is probably the best player on
clay – for sure the best player on clay last season – you always know
it’s going to be tough.

“If you look at everyone’s career right now, you’re pretty much
expecting it to be the other way around, you know, Ferrero beating
Corretja 6-2 6-3. So for me it’s a great win.

“I think I played pretty solidly, attacking very well, and of course
I took advantage of his errors. He made some mistakes with his
forehand trying to attack.”

www.montecarlo.masters-series.com.

Arménie : l’opposition appelle le gouvernement au dialogue

Le Monde, France
14 Avril 2004

Arménie : l’opposition appelle le gouvernement au dialogue

Les Etats-Unis et l’OSCE se sont inquiétés des méthodes violentes du
gouvernement arménien pour mettre fin à une semaine de manifestations
de l’opposition réclamant la démission du président Robert
Kotcharian.
Au lendemain d’une semaine de tensions en Arménie entre l’opposition
et le gouvernement, Artaches Guégamian, l’un des chefs de
l’opposition et leader du parti Entente nationale, a appelé le
gouvernement au dialogue. Le président Robert Kotcharian et le
ministre de la défense, Serge Sarkissian, “sont responsables de ce
qui s’est passé et je suis prêt à commencer un dialogue avec eux pour
étudier la situation explosive dans le pays et trouver une éventuelle
issue” à cette crise, a-t-il déclaré.

M. Guégamian a souligné qu’il n’y avait pas de divergences entre les
leaders de l’opposition qui étaient en réunion mercredi pour analyser
la situation. “Le programme de l’opposition reste le même: changer de
pouvoir par la voie uniquement constitutionnelle”, a-t-il ajouté. “Le
président est pour le dialogue avec tous les partis politiques”, a
pour sa part déclaré Tigran Torossian, l’un des chefs du Parti
Républicain, membre de la coalition gouvernementale, ayant participé
à la rencontre mardi du chef d’Etat arménien avec les représentants
des partis pro-gouvernementaux.

Plusieurs personnes ont été interpellées dans la nuit de lundi à
mardi après des affrontements entre la police et les opposants
arméniens au centre de Erevan. L’opposition conteste l’élection de M.
Kotcharian en mars 2003 pour un deuxième mandat et demande un
référendum pour tester la confiance dont jouit le chef de l’Etat.

Quelques heures auparavant, les Etats-Unis et l’OSCE ont fait état de
leurs inquiétudes lors des violences à Erevan et ont appelé toutes
les parties au dialogue pour rétablir le calme dans cette république
sud-caucasienne. Ces réactions interviennent au moment où la
communauté internationale fait pression sur la Turquie, candidate à
la candidature à l’UE, pour rouvrir la frontière arméno-turque, et
alors que le processus de paix au Karabakh – théâtre d’une guerre
entre l’Arménie et l’Azerbaïdjan de 1988 à 1994 – est au point mort.

Les Etats-Unis, qui coprésident avec la France et la Russie le groupe
de Minsk de l’OSCE, chargé de régler la question du Haut-Karabakh,
suivent de près l’évolution de la région, de plus en plus tournée
vers l’Occident. L’Arménie, considérée comme un bastion stratégique
de la Russie dans la région, est ouverte à une plus grande
coopération avec les Etats-Unis, notamment dans l’OTAN. Cette semaine
de manifestation rompt avec l’image d’une Arménie stable, préalable
indispensable aux investissements étrangers dans cette république
enclavée.

La manifestation, commencée dans la journée, s’était achevée par un
sit-in devant le Parlement, non loin de la présidence. Les
manifestants ont été empêchés de se diriger vers la résidence de M.
Kotcharian par des barbelés installés en travers de la chaussée et
gardés par un cordon de forces de l’ordre. “Ils ont posé des barbelés
et peuvent utiliser le gaz lacrymogène. Mais ils n’arriveront pas à
nous intimider. Nous avons toujours les mêmes revendications”, a
déclaré Albert Bazeïan, l’un des leaders de la coalition Justice,
organisatrice de la manifestation aux côtés du parti Unité nationale.
“A bas le président illégitime !”, “Robert, va-t-en !”, clamaient les
pancartes brandies par les manifestants de ce mouvement de
protestation non autorisé.

Les deux principaux adversaires de M. Kotcharian lors de l’élection
présidentielle de mars 2003, Stepan Demirtchian et Artaches
Guegamian, étaient là. Stepan Demirtchian, l’un des leaders du bloc
Justice, avait recueilli 32,5 % des voix face à M. Kotcharian, réélu
avec 67,5 % lors d’un scrutin contesté par l’opposition et critiqué
par les observateurs internationaux. Il est le fils de l’ancien
président du Parlement, Karen Demirtchian, assassiné lors d’une
tuerie au Parlement en novembre 1999. Le leader d’Unité nationale,
Artaches Guegamian, lui aussi candidat malheureux face à M.
Kotcharian, a appelé les opposants à passer la nuit devant le
Parlement.

Le mouvement de manifestation commencé la semaine dernière avait pour
revendication initiale la tenue d’un référendum sur la confiance au
président, dont le pouvoir a rejeté le principe. L’opposition
arménienne, incapable de désigner un candidat unique lors de la
dernière élection présidentielle, reste très divisée, laissant les
analystes sceptiques quant à ses chances de suivre le modèle de la
Géorgie voisine.

“Supreme Soviet” Pretending To Be Neutral

A1 Plus | 17:10:23 | 20-04-2004 | Politics |

“SUPREME SOVIET” PRETENDING TO BE NEUTRAL

Ruben Torosyan, Chair of “Supreme Soviet” MP Club, does not agree to power
change as the way for solution to the problems. He thinks the legislative
field is to be regulated thus making the superiors act within law.

It is to state this organization has been reminding Authorities since 1997
that numerous vote frauds were committed during both presidential and
parliamentary elections. It now announces that the body called “Political
Coalition” is anti-constitutional etc.

“Supreme Soviet” has put more than 100 claims to Court. But Court set only
one of them going.

Organization Chair confessed his club doesn’t manage to achieve something.
But he also said his club won’t join Opposition considering its activity
beyond law.

Again Arresting

A1 Plus | 16:14:44 | 20-04-2004 | Politics |

AGAIN ARRESTING

Norq Commune policemen have today visited the house of Colonel Gegham
Harutyunyan, ex Deputy Defense Minister and member of “Republic” Party
political board, and summoned him to the police department. Then he was
accused of ribaldry. {BR}

Law-enforcement bodies tried to take Harutyunyan to Court to subject him to
administrative amenability. He refused to go to Court without an advocate.
Gegham Harutyunyan is now in Norq Police Department.

It is to remind that at April 13 night Harutyunyan was arrested in
“Republic” Party Office and taken to temporary cell.

But then he was released. His party-men call today’s arrest as a preventive
measure for the rally to be held tomorrow.

US names new special envoy for Nagorno-Karabakh, Caucasus

US names new special envoy for Nagorno-Karabakh, Caucasus

AFP
WASHINGTON, April 16

The United States on Friday named a new special envoy for the
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan and other
conflicts in the Caucasus region, the State Department said.

Secretary of State Colin Powell appointed veteran diplomat Steven
Mann, who delivered the note establishing US relations with Armenia in
1992, to be “special negotiator for Nagorno-Karabakh and Eurasian
Conflicts,” it said.

Mann, who is currently US pointman in dealing with Caspian Sea energy
issues, including construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,
replaces Rudolf Perina as the special envoy for Nagorno-Karabakh, the
department said.

Mann will retain his responsibilities for the pipeline in his new
position, it said.

Mainly because of energy issues, Washington has taken a keen interest
in Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly ethnic Armenian enclave claimed by
Azerbaijan but which is currently ruled by a self-styled independent
government recognized only by Armenia.

Azerbaijan and neighboring Armenia went to war in the early 1990s when
Nagorno-Karabakh, mainly populated by Armenians, seceded from
Azerbaijan at the time of the Soviet Union’s collapse, and the two
Soviet Caucasian republics became independent.

More than 30,000 people were killed before a ceasefire was agreed in
1994 but Azerbaijan and Armenia remain in an undeclared state of war
over the enclave.

The United States, along with France and Russia, is a co-chair of the
Minsk Group, a 13-nation within the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) that has been seeking to mediate between
Armenia and Azerbaijan.

One of US President George W. Bush’s first diplomatic initiatives
after taking office was to bring the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan
to the United States for Minsk Group negotiations in Key West, Florida
and Washington in April 2001.

Armenia’s Opposition Has a Bloody Baptism

The Moscow Times
Thursday, Apr. 15, 2004. Page 7

Armenia’s Opposition Has a Bloody Baptism

By Kim Iskyan

Until a few weeks ago, Armenia was a bedrock of stability compared to its
neighbors Georgia and Azerbaijan. But now Armenia is trying to join Georgia
in throwing off a corrupt and repressive regime.

A bit more than a year ago, Armenian President Robert Kocharyan followed up
a fraudulent presidential election victory with a correspondingly
counterfeit parliamentary poll a few weeks later. Subsequent opposition
protests sputtered, but a call by the country’s otherwise pro-presidential
Constitutional Court for a “referendum of confidence” within a year provided
a shred of hope.

Twelve months later, with no referendum in sight, and naively inspired by
last autumn’s “Rose Revolution” in Georgia, the Armenian opposition dusted
off its placards and focused on forcing Kocharyan and Co. to move forward
with the referendum or else just quit.

But Armenia isn’t Georgia. Demonstrations in Yerevan were initially
postponed in part due to a chill in the air. Many of the 15,000 people
ostensibly attending an opposition rally last week were more intent on
chomping on sunflower seeds in the sunshine than on change. Subsequent
protests intimated a deep revolutionary spirit in a hardened core, but the
sentiment was not widespread.

Part of the problem is that Armenia’s opposition hasn’t convinced the
cynical electorate that it is more interested in bringing about real change
than in having a turn at the feeding trough. And for all his government’s
incompetence and corruption, Kocharyan has kept most Armenians supplied with
heat, electricity and water most of the time.

Kocharyan, though, took no chances. Vehicles trying to enter Yerevan over
the past few days have been forced to turn around for fear that their
occupants were potential protesters. In the brutally bloody climax to recent
protests, government troops blasted a few thousand demonstrators with water
cannons and stun grenades at 2 a.m. in front of the country’s parliamentary
building. The next day, opposition offices were seized by police, and
opposition leaders went into hiding to avoid arrest. Now that constitutional
and peaceful means of bringing about change have been met with barbed wire
and a kick in the head, watch for the opposition to explore other means.

Meanwhile, much of the head-in-the-sand Armenian diaspora theorizes aloud
that foreign governments must be behind the unrest, since things really
aren’t that bad in the homeland — the 50 percent poverty rate
notwithstanding. So don’t look to them to argue with Kocharyan’s message of
power through fear, as Armenia slides down the slippery former-Soviet slope
toward dictatorship, and not even a benign one at that.

Kim Iskyan, a freelance journalist and consultant in Yerevan, contributed
this comment to The Moscow Times.

NKR President Meets with Representatives of “Karitas” Organization

NKR PRESIDENT MEETS WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF “KARITAS” ORGANIZATION

STEPANAKERT, APRIL 12. ARMINFO. NKR President Arkady Ghukassian held a
meeting yesterday with representatives of the Swiss “Karitas”
humanitarian organization, Gido Kappeli, Project Executive in Armenia
and Ruben Khalatyan, Director of the Project. The sides discussed the
possibility of the organization’s humanitarian assistance to the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR).

The NKR presidential press service reports that during the meeting the
NKR President informed the guests of the priorities of the NKR’s
socio-economic development.