TEHRAN: Armenian President Pays Tribute To The Founder Of Islamic Re

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE FOUNDER OF ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN

Islamic Republic News Agency, Iran
July 5 2006

Visiting Armenian President Robert Kocharian attended Imam Khomeini
Mausoleum here on Wednesday afternoon and by laying a wreath paid
tribute to the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Deputy Foreign Minister Mehdi Safari accompanied President Kocharian
and his entourage in the ceremony.

Armenian president at the head of a high-ranking politico-economic
delegation arrived in Tehran airport on Wednesday morning for a 2-day
official visit.

BAKU: Armenians Living In Georgia Began To Speak About Their Rights

ARMENIANS LIVING IN GEORGIA BEGAN TO SPEAK ABOUT THEIR RIGHTS

§±§â§Ñ§ Ó§a §£§í§Ò§a§& #xE2;§Ñ, Azerbaijan
Democratic Azerbaijan
July 4 2006

The regular congress of "The United Javakhk" Organization of
Armenians living in Samtskhe district ended with demands to Georgian
Government. As before, the congress made anti-Georgian slogans, and
also demand to grant the status of autonomy and the special status
to Armenian language. Such requirements, including protection of
the rights of Armenians living in Javakhetia, at times more radical
statements were made repeatedly. But this time the Georgian authorities
did not give any reaction.

In connection with that the Georgian community perceives negatively
an indifferent position of Georgian authorities to Armenian
separatists. At last, the Georgian authorities seem to be liberal
towards Armenians. Georgian mass media remarks that they should be
careful towards Armenians flow to Adjaria in connection with beginning
of holiday season and accentuate particularly the signboards of names
of caf¨¦-bars in the Black Sea resorts of the country are already
written in Armenian language.

Georgian intelligentsia put a fair question: who can guarantee that
Armenians, giving the oldest Georgian songs as their songs in Germany,
won’t call Batumi and Akhalkalaki as Armenian cities?

–Boundary_(ID_bHI8a21UxLmKnS5z91a3vQ)–

Cheap gas comes at a high price for Belarus

Times Online, UK
July 1 2006

Cheap gas comes at a high price for Belarus
By Christopher Granville

SPEAKING in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius last month, Dick Cheney,
the US Vice-President, accused Russia of being an energy blackmailer.
The unspoken grounds for this criticism were clearly Russia’s
decision last January to stop supplying natural gas to Ukraine to
secure a higher price.
In reply to such criticism that Russia is using energy supplies for
political ends, Russian officials have argued that, on the contrary,
the highly subsidised gas prices which Ukraine and other former
Soviet states had previously enjoyed were inherently political. By
contrast, the new policy of asking customers in the former Soviet
Union to pay for gas at the current European market price is the best
way to de-politicise the region’s energy markets.

In principle, Russia’s shift to market pricing of gas rather than
government price-setting makes sense. Back in January, Condoleeza
Rice, the US Secretary of State, said that it behoved Russia as a G8
member to continue subsidising the Ukrainian economy for a
transitional period of several years. This was an interesting
addition to the qualifications for G8 membership.

The real weakness in the Russian `pro-market’ position is the
impression that it remains selective. Ukraine is required to pay the
market price for gas, while other former Soviet states continue to
enjoy cheap gas in return for political loyalty to Russia.

But Moscow has an answer to that too. Several former Soviet countries
have been able to buy Russian gas at a 50 per cent discount to the
European market gas price in return for letting Gazprom, the Russian
gas monopolist, into the local gas distribution business. In this
`downstream’ segment of the gas market, suppliers mark up the price
paid for gas at the border before selling it on to local end users.

Russia has been quite consistent in offering a discounted price for
gas in return for giving Gazprom a share in local markets. Such
arrangements are in place in countries ranging from traditional
Russian allies such as Armenia to the Baltic States, which have a
difficult and often tense relationship with Russia as the former
colonial power. The gas price rise from $50 to $95 per thousand cubic
metres which Ukraine finally agreed to last January was also
consistent with this broader picture.

Until recently, the one glaring exception to this picture has been
Belarus. Aleksander Lukashenko, the President and effective dictator
of that country, has managed to keep the price of Russian gas
supplies down to $50 per thousand cubic metres, on the grounds that
Belarus is building an ever closer union with Russia. But President
Putin now seems tired of exchanging subsidies for vague friendship.
For the past few months, Belarus has been put on notice that it too
will have to pay more for gas. Mr Lukashenko’s priority is to keep
the cash price low, since this essentially finances his dictatorship.
Instead he is offering Gazprom a 50 per cent equity stake in his
country’s gas pipeline company which ships gas westwards into the EU.
Similar such offers in the past have come to nothing over valuation
disagreements. But the fact that Mr Putin is sending in western banks
to do the valuation work shows that this time, he means business.

Christopher Granville is editor of Trusted Sources, a new online
analytical service focused on China, Russia, Brazil, India and other
emerging markets.

www.trustedsources.co.uk

NGOs For Refugees

NGOs FOR REFUGEES

Lragir.am
30 June 06

The NGOs protecting the interests of Armenian refugees from Soviet
Azerbaijan and Nakhidjevan made a statement June 30 on joining in an
effort to protect the rights of the Armenian refugees and recovering
moral and material losses. The authors of the statement signed an
agreement on establishing acivil society network `Refugees and the
International Law’.

The organizations inside the network report that the international
community ignores the rights of 500 thousand Armenian refugees from
Soviet Azerbaijan and Nakhidjevan. There is no adequate assistance
from the Armenian government either.

Considering that the talks for Karabakh are considering the return of
some regions controlled by the NKR Defense Army and resettlement of
Azerbaijanis in this region, the NGOs invite the Armenian and the
international community to include the question of refugees from
Soviet Azerbaijan and Nakhidjevan in the talks. Moreover, considering
the fact that Armenians comprised about 8 percent of the population of
Soviet Azerbaijan (excluding the Armenians ofNKR), the founders of the
new civil network think 8 percent of the territory of the Azerbaijani
Republic should be given to them as compensation for their
homes. Hence, the members of the network are against returning the
territories.

Adding that since 1988 400 thousand Armenian refugees from Soviet
Azerbaijan and Nakhidjevan have been sheltered in Armenia and NKR, in
the parliamentary election 2007 they are going to support the parties,
which will uphold the interests of refugees from Soviet Azerbaijan and
Nakhidjevan.

G-8 FMs call for prompt resolution of Balkans

Serbianna.com, Michigan
June 30 2006

G-8 FMs call for prompt resolution of Balkans
Thursday, June 29, 2006 10:26 AM

MOSCOW-Foreign ministers from the Group of Eight major industrialized
nations on Thursday called for a prompt resolution to regional
conflicts that continue to plague some ex-Soviet territories and
Balkan countries.

In a joint statement, diplomats called for the ex-Soviet South
Caucasus states of Armenia and Azerbaijan to reach an agreement this
year on the long and bitterly disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

"We call on Azerbaijan and Armenia to show political will with the
aim to reach an agreement this year and prepare their peoples for
peace and not for war," the document said.

Nagorno-Karabakh is inside Azerbaijan, but is populated mostly by
ethnic Armenians, who have run it and seven contiguous districts
since an uneasy 1994 cease-fire ended six years of full-scale war.
Sporadic border clashes regularly break out. The unresolved conflict
has held up development in the strategic region.

The ministers also urged a solution for the Serbian province, Kosovo.
The ethnic Albanian majority want to become independent, but the Serb
minority wants it to remain part of Serbia.

"We welcomed the launch of direct Belgrade-Pristina talks and in this
regard we urge the parties, including the Kosovo Serbs, to negotiate
in good faith and make every effort to reach a negotiated agreement,"
the ministers said.

"We underline that Kosovo must remain multiethnic. The Kosovo
leadership should

G8 Presses Armenia, Azerbaijan For Nagorny Karabakh Settlement

G8 PRESSES ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN FOR NAGORNY KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

RIA Novosti, Russia
June 29 2006

MOSCOW, June 29 (RIA Novosti) – Foreign ministers from the Group of
Eight industrialized nations called on Armenia and Azerbaijan Thursday
to outline principles for resolving a long-running territorial dispute
this year.

The conflict between the two former Soviet republics over Nagorny
Karabakh, a region in Azerbaijan with a largely Armenian population,
first erupted in 1988, when the region claimed independence from
Azerbaijan to join Armenia.

A statement by the G8 ministers following talks Thursday in Moscow
stressed the need to draft the main principles to solve the conflict
peacefully so that agreement could be reached in 2006, and urged
Azerbaijan and Armenia to display political will and reach an agreement
on the issue this year, while preparing their nations for peace and
not for war.

Over 30,000 people were reported dead on both sides between 1988
and 1994, and over 100 others died after a ceasefire was concluded
in 1994, leaving Nagorno-Karabakh in Armenian hands, but tensions
between Azerbaijan and Armenia have persisted.

Monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe,
the world’s largest regional security body, carried out monitoring
of a section of the border between the countries that has been at the
center of recent accusations from both sides of ceasefire violations.

Pictures Worth A Thousand Words

PICTURES WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS
By Mick Oxley, The Journal

THE JOURNAL (Newcastle, UK)
June 27, 2006 Tuesday
Edition 1

Armenia still bears the scars of a terrible earthquake and the Soviet
withdrawal. But artist Mick Oxley found redeeming features on a
recent trip.

Mick Oxley, an artist from Craster, recently returned from Armenia
where he was working at the Veratsnund Art School in the Italian
Village in Spitak.

In 1988, Armenia was devastated by an earthquake which killed more
than 45,000 people and left 500,000 homeless. Spitak, home to 25,000,
was all but levelled.

Some countries supplied temporary accommodation and much of it is
still in use – hence Italian Village.

Mick’s trip was organised by Italian charity Family Care, which is
supported by churches in the Alnwick area. Recently they raised £1,700
to buy materials for the art school and to fly Mick out to teach and
inspire the people who use the place.

A wheelchair-user, Mick found attitudes to disabled people in Armenia
less sympathetic than in Britain.

These are extracts from the diary he kept during the trip

:May 6

We arrived on bumpy Tarmac at Yerevan at 11.45pm. As I started to
re-assemble my wheelchair, I was surrounded by uniformed guards. "We
need your passport and dollars for a visa." Welcome to Armenia!

The guards were dressed in drab Soviet-style uniforms with enormous
peaked caps. They kept saying: "You need ambulance!"

I replied: "I don’t need an ambulance" and promptly wheeled off to find
myself at a flight of 20 stairs. I hopped out of the chair and scuttled
down the steps on my backside. By now, the reception committee had
grown to about 15, gawping at this nutter bouncing down the staircase.

We piled our cases into two cars and made the 15-minute journey to
our lodgings in central Yerevan.

May 7

After breakfast, we journeyed by car to Italian Village Spitak,
the Lada Niva packed with cases and wheelchair.

Last night on the plane, a steward asked: "Where are you getting off,
Yerevan or Tashkent?"

"Yerevan," I replied.

"On holiday?"

"A working holiday," said I.

"Are you collecting scrap metal then?" he said in jest.

The significance of his remark hit home on the journey. Piles
of rusty metal lay by the road, old cars and contorted pieces of
machinery. Buildings which were being constructed by the Russians
are as they were in 1991 when they left. The road was deeply potholed
and vehicles wove in and out, often at high speed.

Travelling over the high ground to Spitak, we passed ugly, Soviet-built
housing blocks, stranded from the city. The hardness of life up here
screamed out at you.

In total contrast was the majestic beauty of the countryside: soaring,
snow-capped peaks, verdant valleys, eagles gliding on the thermals.

Another massive plus is the warmth of the people, especially out of
the capital. There a wheelchair invites trance-like stares.

We went to Arsen and Arusiak’s house in Uzbekistan Village to celebrate
their son’s birthday.

May 8

I headed for the Veratsnund Art School at 9am. With two groups coming
every afternoon for the next six days, I felt acutely in need of
preparation. By 6pm, I had tried five styles of painting with the
materials at hand, with differing results. At least I had something
to show the students.

May 9

In the art school by nine.

After lunch, the first of two groups arrived. Not speaking Armenian,
I couldn’t really fire them up. Maybe the students, aged six to 14,
were fazed by the odd-looking bloke in a wheelchair who used sign
language. Later, Arsen called round. Like me, Arsen is in a wheelchair,
having broken his back in the earthquake. Also like me, he is trying
to establish himself as an artist. Arsen rarely leaves his immediate
environment, especially in a wheelchair. The terrain makes life hard
and there are stares and comments from some locals.

May 10

I painted a landscape, the road outside, weaving its way through the
mountains. Arsen painted a view of a neighbouring snow-capped mountain
in a more rapid style which was also new to him.

After lunch, the same children reappeared. Happier with the subject
and more comfortable with the teacher, they produced some pleasing
work in pastel.

I visited the orphanage. The kids range from babies to young adults
and have a range of mental and physical disabilities.

Many of the children are not orphans; they have been handed over to
the nuns because they are disabled.

May 12

Invited to the house of Juliette, her son Hovannes and daughter Hamest.

Every time we get in a car it causes comment when I put a seatbelt
on. Having the front seat (for ease of transfer from wheelchair),
it is always noted. Seatbelt wearing is not just optional but almost
frowned upon, taken as a slight against the driver.

With their house destroyed by the earthquake, their home has been
two steel shipping containers bolted together. With the rusting metal
sides, it is very dark and cramped. On the wall is a poignant photo
of Juliette’s other daughter, who died in the earthquake. Just before
our visit, the family received their compensation for the loss of
their house – £15.

May 14

The day started with the sound of a cuckoo! We headed to Spitak to
attend Sunday Mass at the new Armenian Apostolic church. In many ways
it was similar to a Roman Catholic Mass; the layout inside was similar,
the incense, the organ and the choir.

Afterwards, we headed up to Venadzor. It was previously a heavily
industrialised town. Now it looks fairly desolate.

The people remain, as do the factories. Sadly, though, for mile after
mile we passed ghost factories.

We journeyed back to Yerevan to view the venue for the exhibition,
the Artbridge in Abovian Street. Set in a pleasant avenue, the gallery
had a good ambience, with tasteful decor and cool music. The only
drawback again was access – two steps up and two down to get in and
inaccessible toilets.

May 15

Some of the children’s work is progressing well.

One girl, Piruz, was so cheerful and helpful, constantly translating
for me. Another student, Susan, consistently achieved pleasing
results. Arsen, too, was well into his stride, working happily in his
new-found style. Previously, he had concentrated on religious icons
and very traditional still-lifes.

May 16

I went into the art school early and started on a mountain view.

After 30 minutes, I was visited by three children from the orphanage,
Elizabeth, Igneas and Rosa. All were keen to paint. Within minutes
my picture was transformed into a more abstract representation! All
three left, pleased to have put me right!

We had arranged transport from Spitak to Yerevan for the exhibition
and many of the children were keen to attend with their parents.

May 17

I worked until 2.30pm, ringing and stringing 25 canvases and seven
framed pictures.

All but the framed work had been completed during our six working
days together. There were nine canvases from the children and eight
apiece from Arsen and me.

May 18

We arrived at the Gallery by 5pm and met Arsen and his family. It was
a big event for Arsen to venture out in his wheelchair after years of
ridicule and rude stares. Soon after, the bus from Spitak arrived;
the looks of wonderment on the children’s faces as they entered the
gallery and saw their work made everything so worthwhile. The Mayor
of Spitak made a speech, Arsen and I sold a canvas each and were
interviewed by Armenian TV.

May 19

We said our farewells. Arsen and his family had become good friends.

Would I visit again?

I would like to – if someone could help me manoeuvre the wheelchair
over the rough ground and monstrously high kerbstones.

May 20

After breakfast, I sauntered around the city centre. At one point,
I got stranded in the middle of the road while on a crossing with a
green man flashing. A marshrutka (taxicab) stopped and as I turned
to thank him, he was sitting shaking his fists at me!

May 21

Headed for Zvartnots airport. Yerevan was serene at that time of
morning.

The plane arrived late from Tashkent but we boarded without hassle –
only to meet some women from Seahouses.

PS

This was a trip I won’t forget. I feel we met our aims. We introduced
Arsen and the students to new ways of working. We also left a legacy
in terms of materials. I hope being there in a wheelchair might
have encouraged Arsen and others to venture out. If by wheeling
around Yerevan I changed one person’s view of the disabled, I would
be satisfied.

j Mick is participating in The Art Tour. See his work at the Village
Hall, Whin Hill, Craster, every Sunday in July from 11am to 5pm. Tel.

–Boundary_(ID_8ghcJ8dgveCmyzvFg8z7zA)–

Germany Disputes Over Turkey’s Accession To EU

GERMANY DISPUTES OVER TURKEY’S ACCESSION TO EU

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.06.2006 15:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Federal Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
called not to question the talks on Turkey’s accession to the EU. In an
interview with Bild newspaper he said the goal of the talks is Turkey’s
full membership in the EU. These comments were caused by the recent
statement made by Bavarian Prime Minister Edmund Stoiber, who excluded
such possibility. Mr Stoiber pointed out to the economic situation
in Turkey and the difference in social and cultural traditions,
reported Deutsche Welle.

Editor Of A Newspaper "Invited" To Prosecutor’s Office

EDITOR OF A NEWSPAPER "INVITED" TO PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE

Panorama.am
18:46 26/06/06

Some ten people entered the editorial office of Jamanak Yerevan
newspaper at about 11:00-11:30 am taking the editor-in-chief Arman
Babajanyan with them.

Later the employees were informed that Babajanyan is in the Armenian
chief prosecutor’s office, Liza Jagharyan, responsible editor of the
newspaper told Panorama.am.

Later reports from prosecutor’s office say that Babajanyan was invited
to prosecutor’s office "within the framework of a concrete criminal
case which has nothing to do with his reporting activity."

The prosecutor’s office promised to explain more of the case
later.

HH Karekin II in Istanbul: Genocide is Not a Matter for Debate

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address: Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel: (374 10) 517 163
Fax: (374 10) 517 301
E-Mail: [email protected]
Website:
June 27, 2006

His Holiness Karekin II in Istanbul: Genocide is Not a Matter for Debate

On Sunday, June 25, following a Pontifical Divine Liturgy in the Cathedral
of St. Astvatsatsin of the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople, His
Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians,
participated in a press conference organized on the occasion of his visit to
Istanbul.

Present for the press conference were both Armenian and Turkish
journalists. During the conference, a number of questions were asked
regarding the pontifical and inter-church visit of His Holiness.

In response to a question by a Turkish journalist regarding the Genocide of
the Armenians, the Catholicos of All Armenians stated, `The Armenian
Genocide is a reality that happened and can never be an item for debate’.
Regarding a follow-up question about how relations between the Armenian and
Turkish peoples could be improved, the Pontiff of All Armenians stressed the
necessity for the Republic of Turkey to come to terms with its past and
recognize the Armenian Genocide.

Responding to another question regarding the convening of conferences about
the events that occurred in the final days of the Ottoman Empire during the
First World War, His Holiness noted, `It shall be possible to welcome
similar initiatives if they are intended to present the actuality of the
Genocide to Turkish society’.

During the press conference, His Holiness Karekin II also reflected on his
impressions of his visit to Istanbul, and highly appreciated the warm and
brotherly spirit of Ecumenical Patriarch His All Holiness Bartholomew I, as
well as expressed his contentment with the Armenian Patriarchate of
Constantinople and the faithful Armenian sons and daughters who live and
work under her spiritual authority.

www.armenianchurch.org