25th Anniversary Of "Nairi" Armenian Cultural Union Marked In Tehran

25th ANNIVERSARY OF "NAIRI" ARMENIAN CULTURAL UNION MARKED IN TEHRAN

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 14 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 14, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The 25th anniversary
of foundation of the "Nairi" Armenian cultural union functioning
in Iran was recently marked in the "Sukerian" hall of the Majidie
district of Tehran.

Archbishop Sepuh Sargsian, the Tehran Armenian Diocese primate, RA
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the IRI Karen Nazarian,
Deputy of North Iranian Armenians at the Islamic Parliament Gevorg
Vardanian, representatives of national bodies, unions were present
at the celebration. The "Alik" (wave) daily states about it.

Armenia Is Not Planning To Join NATO Today – Mkrtchyan

ARMENIA IS NOT PLANNING TO JOIN NATO TODAY – MKRTCHYAN

ITAR-TASS, Russia
March 14 2007

YEREVAN, March 14 (Itar-Tass) – Head of the Armenian Mission to NATO
Samvel Lazarian has stated here that his republic was not planning
to join the Atlantic Alliance but would be compelled to reconsider
it stand if Georgia were to accede to NATO.

"We deem it necessary for our relations with NATO to fit into
the framework of the individual partnership plan. We regard this
voluminous document as a bulwark of our national security, Lazarian
stated, speaking on Wednesday at the "Urbat" (Friday) press club
here. "Partnership with NATO does not pursue the goal of membership
in the Alliance and it is country’s right to independently assess
the forms of its national security," he noted.

"It depends on the tendencies of regional development" whether Armenia
will be a member of the North Atlantic Alliance or not," Lazarian
believes. Georgia is in a hurry to join NATO, and if this happens,
"Armenia will have to reconsider its attitude" to membership to
the Alliance," he added. This is even more obvious "since we have
proclaimed the course of European integration as our foreign policy
priority," he noted.

"Armenia’s relations with NATO have notably developed in the past 2-3
years" and this is testified by the opening of an Armenian mission
at NATO," Lazarian stated.

BAKU: Azeri Interior Troops Meet NATO Standards Fully, Minister Says

AZERI INTERIOR TROOPS MEET NATO STANDARDS FULLY, MINISTER SAYS

Turan news agency
12 Mar 07

Baku, 12 March: Today Azerbaijan’s Interior Troops is a structure
that fully meets NATO standards, Interior Minister Ramil Usubov has
said, speaking at a ceremony dedicated to the 15th anniversary of
the Interior Troops.

Usubov said that the Interior Troops’ material and technical basis,
ranging from the equipment of its barracks to weapons, is in compliance
with NATO requirements. The Interior Troops are ready to implement
any tasks and protect the country’s public and political stability
and territorial integrity, the minister added.

Usubov stressed the Turkish Gendarmerie’s assistance in the
establishment and development of Azerbaijan’s Interior Troops.

[Passage omitted: Usubov speaks about the Interior Troops role in
the Karabakh war]

Fin Tragique Pour Une Fille D’Armenie

FIN TRAGIQUE POUR UNE FILLE D’ARMENIE

Le Temps, Suisse
13 mars 2007

HOMICIDE. Etudiante a Genève, elle se prostituait en secret jusqu’a
ce qu’un client la tue.

Elle se faisait appeler Olga. Partie de son Armenie natale pour faire
des etudes universitaires en Suisse, la jeune femme avait une vie
cachee dans la prostitution dont elle n’avait rien dit a ses amies.

Elle voulait reunir un maximum d’argent avant de rentrer au pays. Un
projet qui ne se concretisera jamais.

Son corps, plonge dans une baignoire remplie d’eau et en etat de
decomposition avance, a ete retrouve chez elle un soir de juillet
2005, mains et pieds attaches dans le dos, un sac en plastique sur la
tete. La scène est si horrible que la presidente de la Cour d’assises
de Genève, qui juge depuis lundi l’auteur presume de l’homicide,
a prefere ne pas soumettre les photos aux jures.

Pour le père d’Olga, medecin a Erevan, les enfants, il lui en reste
deux, sont source de fierte. Il parle de leurs etudes en droit ou en
sciences economiques et de son education sevère. Jamais il n’aurait
compris que sa fille aînee travaille dans un salon de massage. Sa
mort et les circonstances qui l’ont entouree ont constitue un "choc
inimaginable". "Je ne souhaite a personne d’entendre une nouvelle
pareille", a-t-il explique au procès. Au pays, la famille a prefere ne
pas ebruiter l’affaire. Olga, morte a 27 ans, est enterree au cimetière
de Carouge. "J’ai pris un peu de terre pour la faire benir chez nous",
ajoute le père.

Mise en scène

L’accuse, un mecanicien sur autos de 31 ans – appelons-le Felipe –
arrete après avoir imprudemment utilise le portable vole cette nuit-la
a sa victime, a presente ses regrets lors de l’audience. "Je n’ai
jamais voulu que cela arrive, c’etait un accident".

Telle est la thèse qu’il soutient depuis son arrestation. Le prevenu
a explique qu’il avait rendez-vous ce soir-la au domicile d’Olga pour
y passer une nuit tarifee. Lors de leurs ebats, celle-ci lui aurait
demande de l’etrangler. Il dit avoir presse ses mains autour du cou
de la jeune femme en fermant les yeux. Lorsqu’il les a rouverts,
elle etait morte. Selon ses collègues du salon de massage, Olga ne
faisait pourtant pas dans les specialites et n’avait aucune attirance
pour l’asphyxiophilie.

Après ce que son defenseur, Me Christian Luscher, soutient etre
un homicide par negligence, Felipe a mis le corps ligote dans la
baignoire, ferme la salle de bains a cle, ouvert la fenetre du
studio, efface toutes ses empreintes, pris les telephones et les
cartes bancaires de sa victime avec lesquelles il a effectue des
retraits. Pour effacer les traces, retarder la decouverte du cadavre,
faire croire a un crime crapuleux. Bref, brouiller les pistes.

Quelques heures après les faits, c’est un homme jovial, selon tous
ceux qui ont croise sa route, qui est alle prendre un aperitif avec
son père avant de poursuivre sur sa lancee a la Lake Parade et finir
au casino où il a la reputation d’etre un joueur compulsif.

Il faudra neuf jours pour qu’une amie d’Olga s’inquiète de sa
disparition au point d’alerter la police. L’eau et la chaleur ont
deploye leurs effets. L’alteration cadaverique est telle – le corps
a gonfle et change de couleur – que le medecin legiste ne peut que se
hasarder a des hypothèses. Entre la mort par submersion et celle par
asphyxie, le docteur Romano La Harpe opte plutôt pour la seconde. Il
n’y a pas trace de strangulation mais de petites taches qui font
penser a un etouffement dont l’origine reste floue. Congele, decongele,
le corps est a nouveau autopsie a Lausanne sans plus de certitude.

Retard mental

Accuse d’assassinat par le procureur Claudio Mascotto, Felipe a
presente un comportement anormal dès son enfance. Mal integre dans
la societe, il a toujours vecu chez ses parents et n’a jamais eu de
compagne. A l’expert psychiatre, le docteur Gerard Niveau, il a dit
qu’il etait fou amoureux d’Olga. Elle ne voyait au contraire en lui
qu’un client parfois trop insistant. Ce soir-la, elle avait fait une
entorse a la règle en le laissant venir a son domicile. Les 2500
francs promis allaient l’aider, se rejouissait-elle, a acheter un
cabriolet. La route a pris fin beaucoup plus tôt que prevu pour la
fille venue de l’Est. Quant a l’avenir de Felipe, il sera tranche
aujourd’hui.

–Boundary_(ID_RQhe/MEN0py2G XzkKH8icA)–

Cases Of Bubonic Rabbit-Fever Registered In Tsovagyugh Village Of Ge

CASES OF BUBONIC RABBIT-FEVER REGISTERED IN TSOVAGYUGH VILLAGE OF GEGHARKUNIK MARZ

Noyan Tapan
Mar 12 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 12, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA Ministry of Health on March
9 received an alarm call that cases of rabbit-fever were registered
among residents of Tsovagyugh village of Sevan region (Gegharkunik
marz). The sanitary and epidemiologic studies conducted by experts
of the ministry showed that 6 laboratory approved cases and 10
suspect cases of rabbit-fever were registered in the village. Ruslana
Gevorgian, advisor to the minister of health, told NT correspondent
that all necessary measures are being taken to prevent the spread of
this infection. Particularly, mass preventive vaccination of villagers
is being done, and possible ways of infection’s transmission are
being examined.

According to R. Gevorgian, rabbit-fever is transmitted to humans via
rodents, while in 2006 the number of rodents grew in Tsovagyugh, so
epizootic studies are being conducted in the village and in adjacent
areas. The cases registered in the village are bubonic forms of the
disease, which proceed without hospitalization. Preventive measures
will continue in Tsovagyugh.

Armenian Foreign Minister Hails Opening Of NATO Information Centre I

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER HAILS OPENING OF NATO INFORMATION CENTRE IN YEREVAN

Mediamax news agency
12 Mar 07

Yerevan, 12 March: The ceremony of the official opening of the NATO
Information Centre in Yerevan took place in Yerevan today. Armenian
Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan and NATO Assistant Secretary-General
for Public Diplomacy Jean Fournet participated in the ceremony.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, Jean Fournet stated that the process
of informing the public on the North-Atlantic Alliance, trends in its
activities and its tasks is "absolutely essential, if we want to get
the right idea about NATO’s agenda".

Jean Fournet noted that NATO is in the process of constant
transformation to be able to react to the new challenges and security
threats, and important steps in this direction is the establishment of
the Partnership for Peace programme and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership
Council.

"Our special partnership with Armenia is steadily developing," Jean
Fournet stated, noting that one of the tasks of the NATO Information
Centre is to inform the public on the various aspects of cooperation
between Armenia and the alliance.

"This centre will also be a place for debates and dialogue on issues
of security and new challenges," the NATO assistant secretary-general
stated.

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan spoke today about the
important role of the NATO Information Centre in Yerevan.

The Armenian foreign minister stated that "we are very happy to
officially open the centre today".

"The centre has been functioning for some time now and has already
proven that there is a need for it. The establishment of such a
centre is one of the items in the IPAP [Individual Partnership Action
Plan] and I am very pleased that we implemented the item during the
first year of the implementation of this document. This is a very
significant step, as by means of the centre, together with NATO, we
will be providing true information on the alliance, its activities
and cooperation with Armenia," the Armenian foreign minister stated.

Vardan Oskanyan noted that "for some understandable reasons, the
perception of the alliance in our society does not to its fullest
correspond to the new, transformed NATO".

"NATO today is not the bloc that existed during the ‘cold war’. Many
things have changed in international activities, and NATO has managed
to adapt to the new realities. However, in our society there are
still some elements of a way of thinking peculiar to the ‘cold war’,
and thus there arises the need to provide truthful information,"
Vardan Oskanyan stated.

According to the foreign minister, this is of special importance
to Armenia, which, as opposed to other post-Soviet states, conducts
complementary foreign policy, closely cooperates on security issues
with Russia, is a member of the CSTO [Collective Security Treaty
Organization that unites Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan] and deepens its relations with
the NATO within the framework of the IPAP.

"Our policy in recent years is evidence that there are no
contradictions between these trends," Vardan Oskanyan stressed.

[Mediamax news agency, Yerevan, in English 1112 gmt 12 Mar 07 quoted
Oskanyan as telling a briefing at the NATO Information Centre that
membership of NATO is not on Armenia’s foreign policy agenda.

Mediamax news agency, Yerevan, in English 1116 gmt 12 Mar 07 quoted
Fournet as telling the briefing that Azerbaijan’s membership of NATO
is not on the agenda.]

ANKARA: Turkish Party Leader Fined Because He did not Accept Claims

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
March 9 2007

Turkish Party Leader Fined Because He did not Accept the Armenian
Claims

Friday , 09 March 2007

A Swiss district court has found a Turkish politician, Dogu Perincek,
guilty because he just expressed his ideas about the Armenian
historical claims. Mr. Perincek is a party leader in Turkey and, like
millions of Turks, does not accept the Armenian ‘genocide’
accusations.

The court in Lausanne agreed with the prosecutor’s demand and handed
Perincek a suspended fine of SFr9,000 ($7,336) as well as a one-off
financial penalty of SFr3,000.

The court also ruled that Perincek would have to pay SFr1,000 to the
Swiss-Armenian Association as a symbolic gesture.

The politician, whose left-wing Turkish Workers’ Party has no seats
in the Turkish parliament, was brought to court after calling the
genocide "an international lie" during a public speech in Lausanne in
July 2005.

TURKISH PROF.S HAVE TO ACCEPT WHAT ARMENIANS SAY IN SWITZERLAND

Swiss prosecutor Andrej Gnehm, who has opened up a case against the
President of the Turkish History Society, Professor Yusuf Halacoglu,
has said last year "Let him come and testify. If he doesn’t, the
moment Professor Halacoglu steps into Switzerland, we will arrest
him".

Though the Swiss Ambassador in Ankara, Walter Gyger, said that no
such arrest would be made, Prosecutor Gnehm has repeated the intent
to arrest Halacoglu if he should so much as set foot in Switzerland.

And Lausanne is the capital of canton Vaud, one of two Swiss cantons
along with Geneva where the parliaments have voted in recent years to
recognise the Armenian so-called genocide claims.

When the Armenians rioted against the Ottoman State and joined the
Russian occupying armies, the caos caused a civil war. As a result of
civil war and the war many Armenians, Kurds and Turks were killed.
More than 520.000 Turkish and Kurdish were massacred by the Armenian
nationalists during the First World War.

Turkish PM Erdogan leaves for Turkish diaspora meeting

The New Anatolian, Turkey
March 9 2007

Turkish PM Erdogan leaves for Turkish diaspora meeting

Friday , 09 March 2007

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is to leave for
Azerbaijan today to attend the "First Forum of World Azerbaijani and
Turkish Diaspora Organizations," which is to be held tomorrow.

The forum aims at forms and methods of cooperation of Turkish and
Azeri communities in Europe, the U.S. and Canada, Asia and Australia,
and Central and South America and also to note the main directions of
cooperation between Turkish diaspora groups.

State Committee for Azerbaijanis Living Abroad head Nazim Ibrahimov
told a press conference that a joint statement on Armenia’s
aggression against Azerbaijan and Armenians’ terror and genocide acts
against Azerbaijanis, as well as protests of countries recognizing
the false Armenian genocide allegations, are to be adopted in the
forum.

The forum also aims to discuss the Cyprus problem and the situation
of the Turkmens in northern Iraq. A Baku declaration is to be adopted
at the end of the forum.

Ibrahimov stated that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev and Turkish Republic of Northern
Cyprus (TRNC) President Mehmet Ali Talat will participate in the
forum.

Erdogan is to deliver the second opening speech after Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev at the forum. He is also expected to hold
several bilateral meetings during his stay in Baku.

Deep-rooted ties

"The world feels jealous of Azerbaijan’s and Turkey’s sharing both
the grief and the happiness," Erdogan told the Azeri Press Agency
before his visit to Azerbaijan.

Asked to comment on the relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan, he
said that relations are growing in all spheres on the basis of
deep-rooted cultural brotherhood.

"One of the architects of these relations, the great leader Haydar
Aliyev, said Azerbaijan and Turkey are one nation in two independent
states. This slogan came true," Erdogan said.

Underlining that Azerbaijan’s energy wealth, fast developing economy,
and reforms for democracy and human rights are elevating it to its
deserved place, Erdogan said that implementation of
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum projects
shoulder-to-shoulder with Turkey’s’s brother Azerbaijan and neighbor
Georgia will be followed by the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railroad project.

Asked about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Erdogan said that Turkey
will not forsake this cause, adding "Turkey supports ending the
occupation, which is in violation of international law. With its
potential, Turkey is giving all possible support for Azerbaijan in
its fair fight."

Erdogan went on to say that if Armenia gives up its current policy
and takes a friendly stance, it will take a significant step toward
the normalization of relations with Turkey.

"It seems to me, this move would lead to the settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and improving relations between Azerbaijan
and Armenia," Erdogan told the agency.

Stating that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipelines
and Baku-Tbilisi-Kars-Akhalkalaki railway project are building a
strategic bridge between Central Asia’s Turkic Republics, Azerbaijan
and Turkey, Erdogan said, "I have no doubt that all sides will show
the political will to develop relations on the basis of respect,
equality and mutual advantage."

Turk convicted of genocide denial

MWC News, Canada
March 9 2007

Turk convicted of genocide denial

By Agencies

Perincek called the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in
1915 ‘an international lie’ [AFP]

A court in Switzerland has found Dogu Perincek, head of the Turkish
Workers’ Party, guilty of denying that mass killings of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks in 1915 amounted to genocide.

Perincek was given a 90-day suspended jail sentence and fined 3,000
Swiss francs ($2,461) on Friday in the first such conviction in the
country.

The 65-year-old politician, whose party has no seats in the Turkish
parliament, called the Armenian genocide "an international lie"
during a speech in the Swiss city of Lausanne in July 2005.

He was convicted under a 1995 law which bans denying, belittling or
justifying any genocide.

Perincek, who submitted 90kg of historical documents in his defence,
argued there had been no genocide against the Armenians, but that
there had been "reciprocal massacres".

Armenian deaths

Armenia says about 1.5 million Armenians died in the killings, while
Turkey says the deaths were the result of inter-ethnic fighting,
disease and famine in which both sides suffered.

"This decision that was taken by the tribunal … is a racist
decision, an imperialist decision. This decision is against our
country our history and our nation," Memet Bedri, vice-president of
the Turkish Workers’ Party, told Al Jazeera.

It was the first time that Switzerland’s 1995 anti-racism law has
been applied to the massacre of Armenians, Doris Angst of
Switzerland’s official anti-racism watchdog, said.

Tamar Hacoyan of Switzerland’s Armenian association, welcomed the
court’s verdict.

"We feel very relieved with this decision because this is the first
time, at a world level, that a court has decided that the Armenian
genocide is without doubt," she said.

In 2001, a court in the capital Bern acquitted 12 Turks facing
similar charges.

However, two years later the Swiss lower house of parliament formally
recognised the massacre of Armenians during the First World War as
genocide, despite fierce protests from Turkey.

Kasparov, Building Opposition to Putin

The New York Times
March 10, 2007
The Saturday Profile

Kasparov, Building Opposition to Putin

ope/10kasparov.html?hp=&pagewanted=all

By STEVEN LEE MYERS

MOSCOW

GARRY KASPAROV, the former world chess champion, took a pen and notebook and
diagramed the protesters’ march through St. Petersburg on March 3. Like a
general reliving a battle or a player analyzing a winning combination, he
sketched Uprising Square and showed where the police had gathered in
strength, blocking the street leading to the governor’s office.
A tactical mistake! "This is typical for this government," he explained.
"They protect themselves."
As a result, only a few police officers guarded St. Petersburg’s main
commercial street, Nevsky Prospekt. And that was where Mr. Kasparov and
thousands of others – as many as 5,000 by some estimates – poured through a
barricade and marched into the city’s historic center, defying the
government’s ban on the event and the country’s recent history of political
apathy.
The whole thing lasted only two hours, ending with brief clashes with the
police and more than 130 arrests, including those of several opposition
leaders, though not Mr. Kasparov. Still, it was one of the largest protests
against President Vladimir V. Putin’s Russia.
And to Mr. Kasparov, it was a first crack in the authoritarian political
system Mr. Putin has created, one that he has committed himself to
dismantling as presidential elections approach next March.
"We never saw such a protest," he said. "Everybody recognizes it is a new
page."
Mr. Kasparov, 43, is not Mr. Putin’s only critic, but he may be the most
prominent. And he has brought to oppositional politics the same energy and
aggression that characterized his chess, attacking Mr. Putin and the
Kremlin – or the regime, as he repeatedly calls it – with language rarely
spoken so bluntly in Russia.
"This regime is getting out of touch with the real world," he said. "It’s a
deadly combination of money, power and blood – and impunity."
Such attacks have drawn the scrutiny of the authorities, though so far
nothing worse; someone who sounded angry that Mr. Kasparov had given up
chess for politics attacked him with a chessboard in 2005. ("I am lucky," he
said at the time, "that the popular sport in the Soviet Union was chess and
not baseball.")
He now travels with bodyguards. He hired them out of concern for hooligans,
he said, not because other Kremlin critics have been killed, like the
journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who was shot to death in Moscow last October.
"If the state goes after you," he said, "there’s no stopping them."
THIS is not the place Mr. Kasparov expected to be when he resigned from the
world of professional chess two years ago, quitting while still the
highest-ranked player, if no longer the world champion. He is a famous man
and a wealthy one, the author of numerous books on chess and its lessons for
life, who is now leading acts of civil disobedience in an uphill battle to
protest Mr. Putin’s policies.
"I am absolutely objective," he said. "I think we can lose badly, because
the regime is still very powerful, but the only beauty of our situation is
that we don’t have much choice."
Mr. Kasparov is the chairman of the United Civil Front, an organization he
formed in 2005 to promote activism in a country where it has steadily
disappeared, though for reasons that are fiercely debated.
He is also the guiding strategist behind the Other Russia, a collection of
groups from across the political spectrum united by their marginalization by
authorities loyal to Mr. Putin.
The Other Russia has held conferences, including one on the eve of last year’s
meeting of the Group of 8 countries, and staged rallies like the one in St.
Petersburg.
"It was not a protest against a concrete measure," he said. "It was not,
‘give us more money, salaries’ or ‘stop raising prices.’ It was a protest
against the regime."
Mr. Kasparov has always been something of an outsider. He is half Jewish and
half Armenian, born in Baku, the capital of mostly Muslim Azerbaijan. He
moved to Moscow in 1990 when tensions between Armenians and Azeris
intensified.
By then he was already world champion, a title he won in 1985 as a brash
upstart against Anatoly Karpov, the champion considered a favorite of the
Soviet establishment. Mr. Kasparov became a strong advocate of glasnost and
perestroika, Mikhail S. Gorbachev’s policies of opening up the Soviet Union
in the 1980s.
When a coup against Mr. Gorbachev failed in August 1991, Mr. Kasparov threw
his support behind Boris N. Yeltsin and the other new democrats. For a time,
he was a leader of the Democratic Party of Russia. He broke from Mr. Yeltsin
to support a challenger, Aleksandr I. Lebed, in the 1996 elections.
One criticism against him has been political fickleness: that he has drifted
from project to project, even as he continued to compete, mostly abroad.
A constant, however, has been his opposition to Mr. Putin. After an initial
grace period, he began to fulminate against the new president, reaching a
broad international audience as a contributor to The Wall Street Journal.
One column, published in January 2001, barely a year after Mr. Putin became
president, was titled, "I Was Wrong About Putin."
"Unfortunately, my forecast, based on an assumption that a young pragmatic
leader would strengthen democracy inside Russia, fight corruption and level
the curves of Mr. Yeltsin’s foreign policy, was wishful thinking," he wrote.
He has not let up since. He rails against Mr. Putin’s foreign policy,
accusing him of intimidating former Soviet republics that should be close
allies, while fostering ties with Iran, North Korea and China. He accuses
Mr. Putin of having neutered the news media, stifled political opponents and
independent businesspeople, and undercut the essential institution of
democracy: free and fair elections.
HIS biggest challenge may be being ignored. The state’s control of
television ensures that his views never reach the public en masse. News
reports of the St. Petersburg march on national channels described the
protesters generally, not Mr. Kasparov specifically, as "all manner of
radicals, from fascists to lefties."
His willingness to include all Kremlin critics in the Other Russia,
including radical ones like the National Bolsheviks, has left him vulnerable
to guilt by association. In December, counterterrorist police officers
raided the United Civil Front’s office, seizing books and printed materials
advertising a protest march a few days later.
A question that hovers over him is whether he will run against the person
who emerges as Mr. Putin’s chosen successor. He demurs, but does not deny
the possibility. He said there were other potential candidates, including
the former prime minister, Mikhail M. Kasyanov, adding that the more
pressing issue was building and maintaining a united opposition.
Mr. Kasparov is arguing for political freedoms at a time when Mr. Putin’s
approval rating hovers around a stratospheric 80 percent. The economy,
fueled by high energy prices, is growing. A retail binge is under way,
especially in Moscow and even outside of it.
But he contends that Mr. Putin’s control of all levers of power has obscured
the fundamental weaknesses in the system: the corruption, the vast gap
between rich and poor, the declining standards of health care, education and
living conditions.
"At the end of the day," Mr. Kasparov said, referring to his campaign ahead
of the 2008 election, "it will depend on whether people care. You can’t
invent public protest. It either exists or it doesn’t exist."

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/10/world/eur