TBILISI: Georgia And Armenia Possible Strategic Partners

GEORGIA AND ARMENIA POSSIBLE STRATEGIC PARTNERS

The Messenger
April 10 2009
Georgia

Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze has stated in his interview with
Rustavi 2 that in the near future a document will be prepared
harmonizing strategic cooperation between Armenia and Georgia. He
said these relations will become an essential component of the new
Georgian foreign policy strategy.

In the foreign policy document prepared three years ago Georgia’s
strategic partners were named as the USA, Ukraine, Turkey and
Azerbaijan. It now looks as if a new list of strategic partners will
be drawn up.

Easter Celebration Will Be Held In Hovhannes Tumanyan Yerevan Park

EASTER CELEBRATION WILL BE HELD IN HOVHANNES TUMANYAN YEREVAN PARK

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.04.2009 17:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Easter celebration will be held in Hovhannes Tumanyan
Yerevan Park on Apr. 11.

Great Easter celebration will feature street festivities, treats and
national Easter games.

The event is organized by Epygy Labs AM company, in charge of
Hovhannes Tumanyan Park located in Achapnyak District. The event
aims to increase population awareness towards reconstruction and
development of the park.

Turkish-Armenian Talks May Go Nowhere, Says Sarkisian

TURKISH-ARMENIAN TALKS MAY GO NOWHERE, SAYS SARKISIAN

41358_4/10/2009_1
Friday, April 10, 2009

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–The almost year-long negotiations between Armenia
and Turkey, which have brought the two neighbors close to normalizing
their strained relations, could end in failure because of renewed
Turkish preconditions, President Serzh Sarkisian said on Friday.

"Is it possible that we were mistaken in our calculations and
that the Turks will now adopt a different position and try to set
preconditions?" he said. "Of course it is possible. One cannot exclude
such a thing by 100 percent.

"But I think even in that case we would emerge from this process
stronger. With this process, we have once again emphasized — and the
international community has seen that — that we are really ready to
establish relations [with Turkey] without preconditions."

The remarks came amid growing indications that Ankara is again linking
the normalization of its relations with Yerevan with a resolution of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. The Turkish
government appeared ready to drop that linkage when it embarked on
an unprecedented dialogue with the Sarkisian administration last year.

However, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said twice
over the past week that his country cannot establish diplomatic
relations and reopen its border with Armenia as long as the Karabakh
conflict remains unresolved. President Abdullah Gul likewise
underscored the importance of Karabakh peace when he commented on
Turkish-Armenian ties in an interview with "The Financial Times"
newspaper published on Wednesday.

"The major problem in the Caucasus is the Karabakh question between
Armenia and Azerbaijan," said Gul. "We wish that this problem is
resolved so that a new climate emerges in the Caucasus."

The statements by the Turkish leaders followed an uproar in Azerbaijan
over reports that Ankara and Yerevan are poised to sign this month
an agreement envisaging an end to the 16-year Turkish blockade of
Armenia. Azerbaijani leaders publicly warned their Turkish counterparts
against lifting the embargo before a Karabakh settlement.

Like his foreign minister, Eduard Nalbandian, Sarkisian insisted that
the Karabakh dispute has not been on the agenda of the Turkish-Armenian
talks and that Armenia continues to stand for only an unconditional
deal with its neighbor. Speaking at a news conference on the first
anniversary of his inauguration, he said he still hopes that the
Turkish-Armenian border will be reopened by the time he attends a
football match in Turkey between the two countries in October. "But
my optimism may not prove right," the Armenian leader cautioned,
adding that the Turks could "walk away from our agreements."

The Armenian and Turkish soccer teams already played against each
other in Yerevan last September. Gul paid a historic visit to Armenia
to watch the game with Sarkisian. The so-called "football diplomacy"
raised high hopes for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

"In my opinion, the ball is now in Turkey’s court," said
Sarkisian. "And speaking of football diplomacy, we have to say that
the ball cannot remain in one court indefinitely. Every football game
has a time limit."

Turkish leaders said until recently that possible U.S. recognition
of the 1915-1923 genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
is the main obstacle to the success of the Turkish-Armenian
negotiations. U.S. President Barack Obama avoided publicly using the
word genocide during his visit to Turkey earlier this week, arguing
that those talks "could bear fruit very soon." Obama is under strong
pressure from Armenian advocacy groups in the United States to honor
his campaign pledge to officially recognize the genocide.

Sarkisian said that Armenian-American lobbying efforts are not directed
from Yerevan. "It’s not we who are prodding the United States to
recognize the genocide," he said.

"Naturally, we constantly consult and discuss issues with leaders of
[Armenian-American] structures, but such a phenomenon cannot exist,"
added Sarkisian. "Those people are very good citizens of the United
States ; and it would not be right to issue instructions to them."

www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=

President Sargsyan Meets Members Of The EU-Armenia Parliamentary Coo

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN MEETS MEMBERS OF THE EU-ARMENIA PARLIAMENTARY COOPERATION COMMISSION

armradio.am
09.04.2009 10:46

President Serzh Sargsyan received representatives of the European
Parliament who arrived in Armenia to participate in the 10th session
of the EU-Armenia parliamentary cooperation commission.

The President of Armenia stressed the importance of parliamentary
cooperation for the enhancement of the Armenia-EU relations.

Noting that implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy Action
Plan is critically important for Armenia, President Sargsyan informed
that the interdepartmental commission on the coordination of works with
the European structures has developed the chart of priority issues
for 2009-2011, which envisages the modernization of the country’s
political and economic structures.

Reiterating Armenia’s desire to join the European family, the
President of Armenia underscored: "It is a deliberate choice for
us, we have assumed the responsibilities voluntarily, our goal is
to live in accordance with the rules of civilized societies and we
need the assistance of the European structures to make our country
more democratic, our economy – more competitive, and the future of
our children – more secure."

Serzh Sargsyan hailed also the Eastern Partnership project and noted
that Armenia would make utmost use of all the opportunities presented
by it.

The Co-Chair of the EU-Armenia commissio n on parliamentary
cooperation, Mrs. Marie Ann Izler Beginn, stressed that the South
Caucasus region was of a particular interest for the European
Parliament. Expressing gratitude for the five-year cooperation,
Mrs. Beginn informed that after the upcoming summer elections in Europe
the membership of the European Parliament would change and as a result
a new commission on the EU parliamentary cooperation would be formed.

The President of Armenia praised the five-year work of the commission
and expressed confidence that parliamentary cooperation would continue
to develop and acquire new meaning.

The President of Armenia provided also clarifications on the issues
of interest for the members of the commission. He presented once
again Yerevan’s position on the Armenian-Turkish relations and the
Karabakh peace process.

Azerbaijan Accuses Turkey Of Biting The Hand That Feeds It

AZERBAIJAN ACCUSES TURKEY OF BITING THE HAND THAT FEEDS IT

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.04.2009 21:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The working leadership of Turkey that intends to
open the state border with Armenia affects the interests of independent
Azerbaijan greatly, said head of the center for political innovations
and technologies Mubariz Ahmedoghlu at a press conference Wednesday

"All these years Azerbaijan has been building its external policy
for it to meet Turkey’s interests. Baku has not been developing its
relations with Moscow, did not build deep cooperation with Washington,
the priority for us was strategic cooperation with Ankara", said he.

According to him, in this connection Azerbaijan constantly faced
different pressures.

"We have long been not telling the decisive "Yes" to the Nabucco
project, striving for its being fixed clearly on the map for
Azerbaijani and Middle Asian energy sources to be transported to the
West, to Europe via Turkey, bypassing Armenia.

The wider discussions are currently under way around the following
route on which oil and gas from Azerbaijan go to Georgia and from
there by the Black Sea floor to Europe. We always protected Ankara’s
interests, attaining the supply of energy sources to the West by the
Turkish territory and for this Turkey bites the hand that feeds it",
noted Ahmedoghlu adding that Azerbaijan always repeatedly refused
mutually profitable proposals, coming from Moscow and Tehran,
Day.Az. reports.

Erdogan: Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Impossible Before Karabakh

ERDOGAN: TURKISH-ARMENIAN RECONCILIATION IMPOSSIBLE BEFORE KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.04.2009 12:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said
it would be difficult to overcome problems between Turkey and Armenia
unless Nagorno Karabakh conflict is resolved.

"We hope that the United Nations Security Council will acknowledge
Armenia as an occupier and will urge it to withdraw troops Nagorno
Karabakh," he said.

"Turkey has proposed to form Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
Platform. But the dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia should
be resolved prior to our establishment of relations with Armenia,"
Erdogan said, Anatolian Agency reports.

Archbishop Derderian’s Easter Message

ARCHBISHOP DERDERIAN’S EASTER MESSAGE

319_4/10/2009_1
Thursday, April 9, 2009

Christ is Risen from the dead, Blessed is the Resurrection of Christ"
The Resurrection of Christ our Lord, which provides spiritual strength
in our lives as Christians, is the ultimate expression of Divine Love
for humanity. This glorious triumph of Christ over death graces us
continually with a renewed understanding of our Christian faith. This
biggest miracle of all enables us to transform our God-given life into
a renewed, deeper spiritual life. The Resurrection is the powerful
presence of Almighty God in our lives.

The glorious Resurrection of Christ our Lord is the reawakening of the
Church. Indeed, the ineffable divine power of Christ’s Resurrection
is difficult to understand in mere words or logic, but could be
experienced in the spiritual life of each and every faithful and the
life of the Church.

The Resurrection empowers us to live the Word of God in our daily
lives and come closer to God.

"Christ is Risen from the dead, Blessed is the Resurrection of Christ"

By proclaiming that Christ is Risen from the dead we reject the deeds
of darkness in our lives and turn our lives toward the empowering
Light of God. Our forefathers have lived with this Faith and have
taught us to live a life pleasing to God; a life that upholds the
Christian faith, protects the sanctity of family, builds houses of
worship and schools. This faith is complemented with our dedication
to the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin and Armenia, and above all,
our country the United States of America.

The mystery of the blessed Resurrection of Christ our Lord ought
to be reflected in the life of society. Inspired by the victorious
Resurrection we are called to become the good hands of Almighty
God with a strong vision. If humanity has lost the vision of peace,
the main reason is human greed and disrespect to our fellow human
beings. The global financial crisis that societies all over the world
are experience is but one dimension of this. As expressed by the newly
elected head of the Russian Orthodox Church, His Holiness Patriarch
Kyril: "Today, decisions have been affected by attributes such as
greed, loss of control over consumption, a bid to enrich oneself by
all means and have as much as possible; The crisis began when people
forgot true value."

The blessed Resurrection of Christ our Lord impels us to live a
miraculous life, to create and to illuminate the souls of humanity.

"Christ is Risen from the dead, Blessed is the Resurrection of Christ"

May the miracle of the Resurrection of Christ enrich our personal
and communal life, so that we may put on the new person in Christ and
walk with God, becoming co-helpers of God’s creation and to bring up
our children with the mystery of the sanctified life.

May the miracle of the Resurrection of Christ grant us the vision to
become the living Church through the preaching of the Word of God,
and working hard for the revitalization of the Church.

Our faith in the Resurrection of Christ implies that we all are the
living stones of the Church, thus we are challenged to begin a new life
in making God the destiny of our life and above all to see the new life
beyond the horizon, in the hand of God. Archbishop Hovnan Derderian

www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=41

Two States, One Capital: A Proposal For The Israeli/Palestinian Conf

TWO STATES, ONE CAPITAL: A PROPOSAL FOR THE ISRAELI/PALESTINIAN CONFLICT

Policy Innovations
s/data/000092
April 9 2009

The greatest tragedy of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is that
all reasonable parties know the contours of a final settlement,
yet such a settlement is not close at hand. Israel will retain large
settlement blocks close to the 1967 "Green Line" in exchange for an
equivalent amount of uninhabited Israeli land. The smaller, outlying
settlements will be dismantled. Palestinian refugees will be allowed
to return to a future Palestinian state and will be compensated by
the international community for the loss of their land in Israel.

The contentious status of Jerusalem as a capital for Israel and for
a Palestinian state is perhaps the one issue about which there is
little consensus for a specific plan. The Palestinians have long made
known their desire for (East?) Jerusalem to serve as the capital of
a Palestinian state. Israel’s desire to maintain Jerusalem as its
capital is no less strong; to quote the Forward, "Since 1967, every
Israeli government… has vowed that the city will remain the eternal
and indivisible capital of the Jewish people." To that end, Israel
annexed East Jerusalem after the 1967 Six Day War. Arab residents of
East Jerusalem carry Israeli identity cards, allowing them freedom
of movement throughout Israel, along with access to Israeli social
services including education and health care. Israel’s annexation
of East Jerusalem and claim of Jerusalem as its capital has been
disputed internationally and no countries maintain embassies in
Jerusalem (though many did prior to the 1980 passage of UN Security
Council Resolution 478, which called on "States that have established
diplomatic missions at Jerusalem to withdraw such missions from the
Holy City").

There have been a few potential solutions to the Jerusalem question
discussed over the years. In the days before Israeli statehood,
the United Nations considered making Jerusalem an "international
trusteeship" governed by and belonging to the international
community. More recently the Israeli right has considered rezoning East
Jerusalem to include the Palestinian town of Abu Dis, then allowing
the Palestinians to claim (far) East Jerusalem (née Abu Dis) as their
capital. Another somewhat obvious, though politically and logistically
difficult, solution would be to simply divide the city, probably along
the lines of Nicosia (or even Jerusalem circa. 1948-1967 but with the
Old City and other Jewish holy sites retained by Israel). Transferring
sovereignty over any part of Jerusalem is often claimed to be a
red line for Israel, but Israeli prime ministers have alluded to
the possibility of negotiating a solution for Jerusalem. On a rare
occasion, the idea of dual-sovereignty for Jerusalem is brought
up, despite the fact that the very term "dual-sovereignty" is a
contradiction.

I propose a solution that would allow both sides to claim an undivided
Jerusalem as their capital: a customs union for Jerusalem. Under
this plan, entrance to and exit from Jerusalem would be subject to
passport control and customs procedures not dissimilar from what you
would find in an international airport. Entrances from the West Bank
into Jerusalem and exits from Jerusalem into the West Bank would be
controlled by a third party agreeable to both sides with a token
Palestinian presence. The third party would automatically allow
Palestinian passport holders to return to the West Bank, but would
have total control of screening people entering into Jerusalem. The
Palestinians could observe the process to be sure their citizens
are treated fairly, but would not have ultimate authority over the
West Bank-Jerusalem border. The Israeli border police would control
entrances from the rest of Israel into Jerusalem and from Jerusalem
into the rest of Israel.

These checkpoints (and what are passport control and customs crossings
if not checkpoints?) would presumably be less strict for people
entering Jerusalem than for non-Israelis exiting Jerusalem. There would
be no need to wall off the western border, as there is no history of
Israelis mounting terrorist attacks in Jerusalem.

Both Israelis and Palestinians would have freedom of movement within
Jerusalem. But it is important to note that Palestinians could not
automatically enter Israel and Israelis could not automatically
enter the Palestinian state. They would each be subject to the same
procedures as at any international border crossing. This arrangement
has the added benefit of an additional layer of security screening
for Palestinians and other foreign nationals exiting Jerusalem. The
separation barrier that Israel has constructed around much of East
Jerusalem would actually make this process easier by making it more
difficult to avoid customs and border control. Obvious locations
for crossings from the West Bank would include Routes 1, 60, 404,
and 417. Permanent border crossings could be made much larger, more
efficient, and faster than the current system of Israeli checkpoints,
something more akin to the U.S.-Canadian border crossing on I-87.

Inside Jerusalem, Israel would cede sovereign control and
responsibility for East Jerusalem along a border that roughly follows
the 1949 armistice line, with alterations made for the demographic
realities on the ground. Israel would retain sovereignty over Mount
Scopus, the Mount of Olives, Jewish majority neighborhoods in East
Jerusalem, and the Jewish Quarter of the Old City, including the
Western Wall tunnels, and the status quo would prevail on the Temple
Mount. The Armenian and Christian Quarters could vote on which state to
join. The Palestinians would then be fully responsible for the mundane
aspects of sovereignty, such as garbage collection, policing, and
road maintenance. The division between East and West, Palestinian and
Israeli sovereignty, would be visible and well marked, but not guarded
or blocked. This aspect of the plan finds precedent in Articles 20 and
22 of the Schengen Borders Agreement, which eliminated border checks
and removed "obstacles to fluid traffic flow at road crossing points,"
between the 25 European countries subject to the agreement. These
(non-)border crossings have visible signs marking the border.

This sort of division would be difficult in its technical aspects,
but not impossible or unprecedented. Residents would pay their
taxes to their respective governments, but the city would be a
free trade zone with no tariffs for goods crossing between West and
East Jerusalem. Joint agreements on policing, the ability to pursue
criminals across the East-West Jerusalem border for example, could
be negotiated just as they are between adjoining American cities
and states.

Differences in Israeli and Palestinian law may complicate these
matters, as laws might be somewhat more different between the Israelis
and Palestinians than they are between New York and New Jersey. This
situation is precisely why the border between East and West Jerusalem
must be clearly marked, just as it is within the Schengen Group. I
also propose that the legal status quo remain in place for all of
Jerusalem for a period of at least ten years.

Utility arrangements between sovereign states are also possible. For
example, the United States and Canada share power grids and use
the same telephone exchange system. Over time, one might expect
(hope?) that a variety of joint Israeli-Palestinian ventures, both
governmental and private-sector, would develop, just as we have seen
in the Israeli-Jordanian and Israeli-Egyptian "Qualified Industrial
Zones."

It is important to note that under this plan Jerusalem would not be
an "international city" or even a "bi-national city." Technically,
it would function as two separate cities that abut each other. It
would be a "free city," fully open to Israeli and Palestinian passport
holders and to whomever is granted a visa by either state. Regardless
of residence in East or West, Jewish and Arab Israeli citizens would
vote in Israeli elections, and Arab Muslims who are not Israeli
citizens would vote in Palestinian elections. Druze, Christians,
Samaritans, and other groups would vote strictly based on residency.

There are likely to be at least two major objections to this
proposal. On the Israeli side, there will be extreme reluctance
to concede sovereignty over any part of Jerusalem to the
Palestinians. Indeed Nir Barkat, the mayor of Jerusalem, recently
reiterated his desire to maintain Israeli sovereignty over the entirety
of Jerusalem. As sympathetic as I am to his desires, I believe that
this is the only way for Jerusalem to both remain undivided and to
be recognized internationally as the capital of Israel. There is
little to gain politically or strategically from continued Israeli
control of East Jerusalem other than a marginal increase in safety
from attack. By placing entrance into East Jerusalem from the West
Bank in the hands of a third party, the security threat is greatly
reduced; the lifting of responsibility for the administration of
East Jerusalem could be a cost-saving measure; and, as shown below,
there are long-term demographic benefits as well.

The other major objection will come from the Arab residents of
East Jerusalem, who have historically, and quietly, supported East
Jerusalem remaining part of Israel. They do not want to give up the
Israeli identity cards that grant them access to Israeli medical care,
schools, and other social services. This issue is difficult, but I
propose that all Arab residents of East Jerusalem with Israeli identity
cards be allowed to keep those cards, even as they gain Palestinian
passports. Those Palestinian Jerusalemites born after this agreement
is signed would not have access to Israeli social services or be
granted Israeli identity cards; they would be Palestinian passport
holders with the same rights as any other Palestinian in Jerusalem.

To make this plan work would require a considerable investment by
the international community. To start, it would require that those
states that recognize Israel move their embassies to Jerusalem (which
for many states can be done rather cheaply by changing the signs from
consulate to embassy). As part of this agreement, the international
community should agree that no single embassy could handle relations
with both states. Though this is common practice for smaller states
all over the world, in this context it is too politically charged to
be tenable in this situation. States that can afford it should be
encouraged to maintain consulates in both Tel Aviv and Ramallah to
handle situations and issues that arise outside of the customs union.

This plan also requires the ongoing commitment of armed personnel to
staff customs and border control on the West Bank-Jerusalem border. It
requires financial and technical support to complete some of the
technical aspects of untangling Israeli and Palestinian sovereignty,
and to adjudicate disputes. The international community’s financial
support for projects that benefit the Palestinians seems to know no
limits and I do not believe it would be difficult to secure support
for this plan if both sides signed on. The staffing issues are more
difficult. The customs and border control should be staffed by states
that have a commitment to peace between Israel and the Palestinians, as
well as a fear of Islamic extremism and terrorism in their own states:
Egypt, Jordan, and Turkey are obvious choices. Other international
positions should be staffed by states that have little stake in the
conflict and are not publicly perceived to be hopelessly biased
toward either side. Those states seem to be few and far between,
but I might suggest Fiji, which has a great deal of experience in
peacekeeping missions in the Middle East and maintains good relations
with both sides.

It is important both to the Israeli and to the Jewish psyche that
Jerusalem remains the eternal undivided capital of Israel. It is also
important to Palestinian national pride that Jerusalem be the capital
of a future Palestinian state. This proposal provides a workable
plan that allows both sides to claim an undivided Jerusalem as their
capital, while avoiding the dual-sovereignty contradiction. Israel
would gain both international recognition of Jerusalem as its national
capital, and an increase in the Jewish majority of the state when the
Israeli residency of the East Jerusalem Arabs expires at the end of
the current generation. The Palestinians would gain both Jerusalem as
their capital as well as access to jobs and the economic benefit of
free trade with West Jerusalem. It is a plan that will almost certainly
not fully satisfy anyone, but will enrage only the extremists on both
sides. If enough interest is shown, a future iteration of this proposal
will provide further details on the locations of the border, and on
the logistical challenges of managing two separate but interconnected
municipalities.

http://www.policyinnovations.org/ideas/innovation

Amalya Kostanyan: Politics And Economy Fusion On The Principle Of Si

AMALYA KOSTANYAN: POLITICS AND ECONOMY FUSION ON THE PRINCIPLE OF SIAMESE TWINS

LRAGIR.AM
15:10:44 – 08/04/2009

On April 8, at the conference on the perspectives for the Millennium
Challenges Account Armenia project implementation at the Business
centre of the American University of Armenia initiated by the
Co-operation for open society, addressing the conference the president
of the Transparency International anti-crisis centre Amalya Kostanyan
noted that the axis problems present in Armenia are caused by the
system, and added that dwelling on the just government she has to
touch upon these fields as well. Amalya Kostanyan attached great
importance to the Millennium Corporation not only from social,
economic and financial points of view, but also considered it the
first international assistance which was based on concrete criterion
and mechanisms to assess the progress in different spheres. "This
program encouraged the civil society to take part and to control its
implementation", said Amalya Kostanyan. Dwelling on the criterion
of the just government Amalya Kostanyan presented the indexes of
political rights, civil freedom, supervision of the corruption,
effective government, the changed indexes of the superiority of the law
after 2004, which she assessed as worrying and called for a serious
intervention. According to Kostanyan, nowadays, the Armenian economy
and politics are united as Siamese twins and only their separation
may suppose a just government.

BEIRUT: Siniora Enters Race For Sidon Parliament Seat

SINIORA ENTERS RACE FOR SIDON PARLIAMENT SEAT
By Therese Sfeir

Daily Star
April 8 2009
Lebanon

Total of 676 candidates to compete in June elections

BEIRUT: President Michel Sleiman, Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime
Minister Fouad Siniora were expected to inspect early Wednesday, as The
Daily Star went to press, the special premises the Interior Ministry
will be using to monitor the June 7 parliamentary elections. Half an
hour before the midnight deadline for registering to run in the vote,
676 people had submitted their candidacies for the spring polls. The
deadline for withdrawing candidacies is on April 21.

Earlier Tuesday, Premier Siniora announced that he would run for the
Sunni seat in the coastal city of Sidon.

Addressing reporters ahead of a parliamentary session, Siniora pledged
to work for Lebanon’s "coexistence, social and economic development
and the improvement of living conditions." He added that he would
seek to "defend the freedom and sovereignty of Lebanon, protect
state institutions and preserve the country’s right to liberate
its territory."

"I rely on God and the Lebanese people who participated in the March
14 uprising," Siniora said.

Well-informed sources had earlier told The Daily Star that Siniora
would announce that he would not run in the elections. However,
the sources added that the prime minister was asked to postpone his
announcement until further discussions were conducted.

As-Safir newspaper said on Tuesday that Siniora was waiting for MP
Saad Hariri’s final say on whether he should enter the race.

In response to Siniora’s candidacy, opposition MP Osama Saad, Siniora’s
electoral opponent in the coastal city, said on Monday that the
electoral battle in Sidon had "political and patriotic dimensions,"
stressing that he would win the contest.

In remarks to reporters at Nejmeh Square, Saad said that his movement’s
victory would be "a victory for all patriotic Lebanese," adding that
he was ready for the electoral battle.

Meanwhile, the Armenian Ramgavar party announced on Tuesday Minister
of State Jean Ogassapian’s candidacy for the Armenian Orthodox seat
in Beirut’s third district on the March 14 alliance’s electoral list
for the upcoming elections.

A statement issued by the party said that "the country will either
regain its role of linking the West with the East or will remain an
arena of wars."

Also on Tuesday, former Prime Minister Omar Karami announced his
candidacy for a Sunni parliamentary seat in the Tripoli district.

Meanwhile, media reports on Tuesday said that disagreements between
Speaker Berri and Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun over
the Jezzine and Baabda districts would be resolved soon. The sources
said negotiations aimed at finding a solution to the deadlock were
ongoing.

The reports added that Berri and Aoun were still at loggerheads over
the districts of Jezzine and Baabda.

As-Safir newspaper said indirect contacts between Berri and Aoun
through Hizbullah had hit snares over the past few days. The report
said Aoun refused to have MP Samir Azar on Jezzine’s consensus list
unless he got the Catholic seat in Zahrani.

"If Speaker Berri wants to have a battle; then let it be an open-ended
battle between me and him," As-Safir quoted Aoun as telling his
supporters and allies.

As for the Baabda district, the problem between Berri and Aoun revolves
around the second Shiite name on the list, according to As-Safir.

The daily said Aoun refused to include Berri-backed Talal Hatoum
on the list and gave priority to his FPM’s candidate Ramzi Kanj or
another candidate who would be decided by Aoun and Hizbullah.

In a separate development, Progressive Socialist Party leader MP
Walid Jumblatt announced on Tuesday his candidates for the different
districts.

During a news conference held at his residence in Clemenceau,
Jumblatt announced the candidacy of MPs Ghazi Aridi for the
Druze seat in Beirut, Wael Abu Faour for the Druze seat in western
Bekaa-Rashaya and Antoine Saad for the Greek Orthodox seat in western
Bekaa-Rashaya. Jumblatt added that the PSP’s electoral program would
be announced on the anniversary of the establishment of the group on
May 1.

Meanwhile, a possible election compromise between President Sleiman
and Aoun in Kesrouan failed to materialize, as Nehmat Frem, who was
said to be running as a consensus candidate, announced that he would
not run in the upcoming parliamentary elections.

In a statement issued on Tuesday, Frem said that becoming a deputy
"has never been an objective" he wanted to achieve.

He added that he had put his candidacy at the service of a consensus in
Kesrouan. "I made efforts for consensus which haven’t been successful
yet. But I hope that this happens at a later time," Frem said. Other
reports said on Tuesday that Frem’s decision implicated the failure
of the Sleiman-Aoun equation.

Meanwhile, former MP Fares Boueiz, who is running for the Maronite
seat in Kesrouan, told As-Safir daily that negotiations with the Free
Patriotic Movement have reached an advanced stage. However, Boueiz said
he was still in contact with parties that might run against the FPM.

A possible alliance "with independents would be only an electoral
alliance … As for politics, each one of us has his own choices and
views," the former MP said.

Sources from the Lebanese Forces said on Tuesday that the party would
not have a candidate in Keserouan and would support Sejaan Azzi, the
Phalange party’s candidate. "We will put all our efforts to back the
list that is running against Aoun’s list," an LF source was quoted
as saying.

Meanwhile, media reports said Tuesday that the formation of a coalition
list in the northern city of Tripoli needed further contacts and
negotiations.

According to the daily Al-Liwaa, the obstacles facing the establishment
of a tripartite alliance between MP Saad Hariri, former Prime Minister
Najib Mikati and Economy and Trade Minister Mohammad Safadi focused
on three parliamentary seats, the Maronite, Greek Orthodox and the
Alawite seats.

As-Safir newspaper also reported that the Future Movement would most
probably replace MP Qassem Abdul Aziz in Dinniyeh with former MP Ahmad
Karami, who was previously agreed upon with Mikati. Hariri’s movement,
the report said, also favored including MP Mosbah Ahdab in the Tripoli
coalition list despite an earlier agreement on Karami.

Meanwhile, sources quoted by the Central News Agency said that Sleiman
would tackle the issue of elections at the beginning of a Cabinet
session scheduled for Wednesday at Baabda Palace.