Baku And Ankara Likely To Fail "South Corridor" : Morningstar

BAKU AND ANKARA LIKELY TO FAIL "SOUTH CORRIDOR" : MORNINGSTAR

News.am
11:55 / 01/29/2010

Further delays in agreement between Turkey and Azerbaijan on gas
supply terms from the Shah Deniz field might shut the door upon
opportunities for South Corridor project, Richard Morningstar U.S.

Special Envoy for Eurasian Energy told the journalists yesterday,
Jan. 28.

He called disappointing the fact that no accord on gas supplies is
reached so far. Morningstar underlined that both states are U.S.

friends and the country does not back any negotiating party. According
to him, U.S. supports the idea of new corridor construction for gas
supply from Caspian region to Europe.

South energy corridor might unite Nabucco and gas main between Turkey,
Italy and Greece. Both directions are significant from strategy
viewpoint for diversification of gas resources and opening of new
energy routes to Europe, Morningstar stated. The official outlined
that south energy corridor will yield profit to the Caucasian and
Central Asian countries, as well as create long-term partnership
based on mutual interests with Europe.

According to Morningstar, presently Washington’s attention is focused
on two directions: Turkey-Azerbaijan agreement on Shah Deniz field and
provision of gas from the countries of Central Asia and Middle East.

South corridor concept will appear nonviable if countries getting major
preferences from its realization do not reach commercially rational and
mutually beneficial agreement on gas transportation terms, Morningstar
said, excluding Iran’s possible participation in the project.

5 Tips From The Soup Peddler To Improve Your Soup

5 TIPS FROM THE SOUP PEDDLER TO IMPROVE YOUR SOUP
By Addie Broyles

pureedsoup.jpg
Austin 360 (blog)
ed-gen/blogs/austin/food2/entries/2010/01/28/5_tip s_from_the_soup_peddler_t.html
Thursday, January 28, 2010, 11:53 AM

David Ansel, aka The Soup Peddler, knows that, in Austin, the soup
days ahead are limited. Within weeks, the days will be long and the
weather warm, which triggers something deep within our bellies to
crave food that isn’t made of hot liquid. But before we jump ahead
to spring salad days, we’ll certainly have a few more spells of cold
and rain that we’ll only get through with a bowl of steaming soup.

Just days ahead of the next cold front, the owner of the Austin soup
delivery company offered up 5 tips on how to be a better soup-maker.

"Making soup is like painting," he says. "When you start a painting,
you start with big brushes and broad strokes." This is the stock,
a background color that sets the mood for the whole soup. "As you go
along, you do less and use smaller brushes," and by the end, you’re
painting the smallest details, which for a soup is the finishing
notes of fresh herbs, sherry or acids like citrus or vinegar.

soupot.jpg

In this list, Ansel takes the painting metaphor even further and
explains why you should always keep a package of turkey necks in
your freezer:

1. Be like Bob Ross. "The Bob Ross School of Soup Making is not paint
by numbers. It’s encouraging people to develop a feel for soup and not
feel like you have to stick to a recipe," he says. "Soup is ill-suited
for recipes." For instance, "1 medium potato" and "1 medium carrot"
are not exactly precise measurements and every stock – just like the
palate of the person who made it – is unique.

"Relying on any recipe will generally leave you in a pinch," he says.

Look up at least three different recipes for the soup you want to
make to learn the traditional steps and the shortcuts. Combine the
recipes according to the amount of time and ingredients you have.

2. Make your own stock. "Don’t cut corners on the stock," he says.

"Even the best stock that you can buy sucks. It’s just smoke and
mirrors so that it tastes like chicken stock. It’s cheap and easy to
make it yourself."

This is where the turkey necks come in. To make a pot of versatile
and rich turkey stock, bring a pot of water and turkey necks to a
boil and simmer for as many hours as you have to spare. (The longer
both stock and soup are on the stove, the better, he says.) Strain
the stock and spread out the leftover meat and bones, which allows it
to cool faster so you can pick out the meat to add back to the stock.

What about onion, carrot and celery, the holy mirepoix that many
chefs refuse to leave out of any dish? "I find that (it) just gets
in the way. It takes up space where you could have more chicken backs."

Add aromatics along with noodles or rice after you’ve already made
the stock, and you’re in for a spectacular soup. "I’ve eaten soup
all over the world, but that turkey rice soup is super wow."

For chicken stock, rotisserie carcasses are fine, but thighs or wings,
the cheapest and most flavorful parts of the bird, are even better.

You can leave the skins on, but you’ll have to skim the fat, so
Ansel recommends removing the skin before boiling. For fish stock,
freeze the shrimp shells that you peel at home and ask the staff at
your grocery store seafood counter if they have fish bones for sale.

3. Plant your own herbs. Rosemary, oregano, thyme, mint and cilantro
are easy to grow in the ground or in pots, Ansel says. Having fresh
herbs handy will automatically improve your soups.

4. Use what you have. "Soup has always been a food of necessity,
of emptying the fridge," he says. "Designing a soup around what you
have is more in the tradition than going out and buying ingredients."

If a recipe calls for parsley, for instance, and you only have cilantro
or mint, go with what you’ve got. Don’t have shallots and leeks? Use
garlic and onions instead.

Look at seafood soups such as bouillabaisse: "The best ones were
developed in poor cultures by fishermen who were left with unsellable
stuff." If you shop for ingredients, you’re also more likely to use
too many ingredients. Less is more: "You should be able to taste what
you’re putting in or else you shouldn’t bother putting it in."

5. Add salt and herbs or acids toward the end. Lemon juice, parsley,
cilantro or scallion will brighten any soup, and adding salt too early
in the process can interfere with cooking legumes and potatoes. Salt
should be added after the vegetables and starches are cooked, but
not well-cooked. "You want the chunks to be able to absorb salt."

If you are going to make a pureed soup, like this Armenian Apricot Soup
from Ansel’s book "Slow and Difficult Soups" that 101 Cookbooks blogger
Heidi Swanson wrote about in 2005, process it in small batches in a
regular blender instead of an immersion blender for a finer texture.

Photos by SonicWalker and Alexik on Flickr.

http://www.austin360.com/blogs/content/shar

ARF Slams U.S. Pressure On Armenia

ARF SLAMS U.S. PRESSURE ON ARMENIA

Asbarez
Jan 26th, 2010

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-The opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation
denounced on Monday the U.S. State Department for welcoming an Armenian
Constitutional Court ruling on Turkey that has sparked a diplomatic
dispute between Yerevan and Ankara, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
reported.

ARF leaders said the United States is interfering in Armenia’s
internal affairs and pressuring Yerevan to unconditionally implement
the controversial Turkish-Armenian agreements which is considers by
Armenian in the homeland and Diaspora to be a sellout to Turkey.

While upholding the constitutionality of the two "protocols,"
the Constitutional Court ruled on January 12 that they place no
obligations on Armenia with regard to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
and cannot inhibit its pursuit of greater international recognition
of the Armenian genocide.

The ARF welcomed this court’s interpretation of the U.S.-backed
protocols, saying that the Armenian parliament should include the
corresponding reservations if it were to ratify the agreements. Its
top representatives said in particular that the court effectively
invalidated a protocol clause that commits Armenia to explicitly
recognizing the existing border with Turkey.

The Turkish government has likewise claimed that the ruling runs
counter to the letter and spirit of the deal and jeopardizes its
implementation by Turkey. Armenia’s leadership has brushed aside
these claims, accusing Ankara of seeking "artificial pretexts" for
delaying its parliamentary ratification.

U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Philip Gordon said on
Friday that Washington regards the judgment as a "positive step
forward in the ratification process of the normalization protocols"
that "does not appear to limit or qualify them in any way." Armenian
pro-government politicians and media were quick to welcome the U.S.

reaction as a crucial endorsement of Yerevan’s position in the dispute.

"This U.S. statement is an unacceptable interference in Armenia’s
internal affairs," said Giro Manoyan, the party’s chief foreign
policy spokesman, accusing Washington of pressuring Yerevan into
signing the agreements.

The Constitutional Court ruling is an effective disagreement between
the Executive and the Judicial branches, which requires the court’s
reservations to be submitted with the agreements, Manoyan said. He
described Washington’s assertion that the court ruling paves the way
for an unconditional ratification as "a flagrant disregard towards
the Armenian Constitutional Court’s decision."

"When a representative of a foreign state tries to teach us some
lessons I don’t think that is acceptable," Manoyan told RFE/RL.

Artsvik Minasian, a senior ARF member, agreed with Manoyan. "It was
a statement made a bit prematurely, and I don’t think that it is
only aimed at somehow benefiting Armenia," he said, commenting on
Gordon’s remarks. "What is more, I think that was a form of pressure
on Armenia aimed at making sure that we don’t ratify the protocols
with reservations," he told RFE/RL.

Minasian said the ARF has drafted legal amendments that would empower
Armenia’s parliament to ratify international treaties and agreements
signed by the executive branch with conditions or reservations. He said
they will be presented this week to 13 other mostly small opposition
groups aligned in an ARF-led coalition opposed to the protocols.

Leaders of those parties met at the ARF headquarters in Yerevan over
the weekend to discuss their further actions. One of them, Armen
Martirosian of the Heritage party said he believed that the parliament
majority loyal to President Serzh Sarkisian will unconditionally
endorse the protocols should they be put to the vote and would not
respect the legislation.

A deputy chairman of Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia, which
has a clear majority in the National Assembly, confirmed that. "If
we add reservations to the protocols, the Turks will never ratify
them," Razmik Zohrabian told RFE/RL. "We should therefore avoid any
reservations."

We Live In A Country Of Distorting Mirrors, Former Chairman Of CBA S

WE LIVE IN A COUNTRY OF DISTORTING MIRRORS, FORMER CHAIRMAN OF CBA SAYS

Noyan Tapan
Jan 27, 2010

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27, NOYAN TAPAN. The recently published official
statistics on the Armenian economy in 2009 show those negative
developments that economists forecast long ago. Bagrat Asatrian,
former Chairman of the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA), made this
statement at a debate on January 27. He said that in 2008 GDP amounted
to billlion, whereas in 2009 it amounted to .1 billion, which means
that the economic decline made 30-32%. In the words of B. Asatrian,
the outside world judges Armenia by this index, however, according to
him, the quality of Armenian citizens’ life did not decline by 30%,
from which a contradiction arises. "It means that we live in a country
of distorting mirrors," B. Asatrian noted.

Another participant of the debate – member of "Prosperous Armenia"
parliamentary faction Vardan Bostanjian said that the opposition
should always express negative opinions about the state of the country,
while the authorities should praise it. However, he added, it is weak
opposition that sees everything in a bad light, whereas the authorities
would welcome constructive proposals from opposition members.

Objecting to him, B. Asatrian said that the Armenian authorities
are ignoring the opposition’s proposals, and in general there is
political intolerance in Armenia. As regards the expected rise in the
gas tariff, he said that throughout the world the gas price has fallen
to 0 per thousand cubic meters, whereas in Armenia it will soon pass
the 200 dollar mark. In his words, in fact the Russian state company
receives gas on preferential terms and then it sells it to Armenian
consumers at a price which is several times as much. He said that
the RA State Commission for the Protection of Economic Competition
"should not allow this company to rob the population".

V. Bostanjian declared that mankind has existed from time immemorial
and people have lived without gas for millenniums. "Is it mandatory to
use gas now? Let them go to their villages and burn dry dung there,"
the member of "Prosperous Armenia" faction said.

Armenia, Azerbaijan Agree On ‘Preamble’ To Nagorno-Karabakh Deal

ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN AGREE ON ‘PREAMBLE’ TO NAGORNO-KARABAKH DEAL

Today’s Zaman
27 January 2010, Wednesday

The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed on a preamble
to an updated version of the 2007 Madrid document, which includes
the latest changes to the settlement’s basic principles concerning
the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev were hosted by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in the
Krasnaya Polyana ski resort near Sochi on Monday for talks on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a territorial dispute between Baku and
Yerevan.

With mediation by Medvedev, Sarksyan and Aliyev reached a "general
understanding on the preamble" that would precede the main body
of an agreement on the basic principles of the settlement to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
was quoted as saying by Russian media following the meeting.

"There is a general understanding on the preamble of the document,"
Lavrov said, as quoted in media reports. He noted that the preamble
revised and updated the Madrid principles of the Minsk Group of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

The Madrid principles envisage a stage-by-stage resolution of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict that should start with the gradual
liberation of parts of Azerbaijan bordering Nagorno-Karabakh that
were partly or fully occupied by Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh
during the 1991-94 war. In return, Nagorno-Karabakh should retain a
corridor to Armenia and be able to determine its final status in a
future referendum.

Although some parts of the document have yet to be harmonized, "the
sides will prepare their concrete proposals, their concrete wording,
which will be worked into the text," Lavrov said.

"We are sure that this will help the co-chairs in their future work,"
he said, referring to the three co-chairs of the Minsk Group —
France, Russia and the United States — which have striven to resolve
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for more than 17 years.

"The presidents have agreed to continue it [the work]," Lavrov said.

The considerably positive sign from the Sochi meeting is expected
to be welcomed by Ankara, which hopes that concrete progress in the
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan will enable
Turkey to pass a so-called threshold to move ahead in its ongoing
efforts to normalize ties with its estranged neighbor Armenia.

27 January 2010, Wednesday TODAY’S ZAMAN WITH WIRES ANKARA

Azerbaijani Film Market Closed For Turkish Soap Operas Because Of Ar

AZERBAIJANI FILM MARKET CLOSED FOR TURKISH SOAP OPERAS BECAUSE OF ARMENIAN CAUSE: TURKISH FILMMAKER

Tert.am
14:03 26.01.10

It’s been one-and-a-half years that the Azerbaijani film market has
been closed for Turkish soap operas because of the Armenian Cause,
said Turkish film director and screenwriter Fırat Gulgen, reports
Turkish daily Milliyet.

"At this moment there is a unofficial ruling not to air
Turkish-language soap operas. That problem is not yet resolved,"
Gulgen said, emphasizing that, in this matter, they need the
government’s support.

According to Gulgen, they are in a serious conflict with Russia over
soap operas. The Turkish film director said that Russia wants to put
its soap operas in first place in order to increase its political
influence on Turkey.

BAKU: Azerbaijan upbeat on forthcoming round of Karabakh talks

Turan news agency, Azerbaijan
Jan 22 2010

Azerbaijan upbeat on forthcoming round of Karabakh talks in south Russia

Baku, 22 January: Baku reckons that the forthcoming [25 January]
trilateral meeting between the Azerbaijan, Armenian and Russian
presidents in Sochi will be a step forward in settlement of the
Karabakh conflict, Novruz Mammadov, head of the foreign relations
department of the presidential administration, has said in an
interview with Turan.

"We hope that the meeting will prepare the ground for further
progress. However, we have had other trilateral meetings at the
initiative of the Russian president and they failed to yield any
concrete results," Mammadov said.

Speaking about the basic principles of settlement, Mammadov repeated
[Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev’s remarks that the conflict is to
be resolved within the framework of Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. "We will not budge from this position," he said.

When asked if a document is to be signed in Sochi, Mammadov pointed
out that this will be up to the results of the meeting.

In comments on Armenian-Turkish protocols, Mammadov said that Ankara
saw for itself that Baku’s "warnings" concerning Yerevan proved
correct. "Armenia proved unable to take normal steps for addressing
its national interests and security issues," Mammadov said.

On the balancing of Azerbaijan’s foreign policy, Mammadov made an
important note. "The Azerbaijani authorities build their relations
with other countries based on how they treat Azerbaijan. This
treatment has to be fair and we are very sensitive on this matter. We
accept criticism when it is balanced," Mammadov said.

What is the role of Russia in ensuring Azerbaijan’s national security
and in resolving the Karabakh conflict? The issue of national security
is the paramount task of the Azerbaijani authorities , Mammadov said
when he responded to this question. As for the Karabakh conflict, no
effort is being spared to tackle it. "This allowed us to intensify the
process of settlement," Mammadov said.

Ilham Aliyev’s objective is tackling security issues of not only
Azerbaijan, but of the entire South Caucasus, Novruz Mammadov said.

"From this point of view, the role of Russia is crucial. The security
issue can be resolved when Russia’s interests are taken into account.
In this sense, Russia can play a major role in resolving conflicts. I
believe that Russia is currently making these steps and therefore we
await positive results from the meeting in Sochi," he said.
[translated from Russian]

Relations Armenie-Turquie : la question du genocide sur la table

Le Matin, Suisse
20 Jan 2010

Relations Arménie-Turquie : la question du génocide de nouveau sur la table

L’Arménie et la Turquie s’opposent à nouveau sur les massacres
d’Arméniens perpétrés en 1915 sous le régime ottoman, Ankara accusant
Erevan de tenter de profiter du processus de réconciliation en cours
entre les deux pays pour remettre la question sur la table.

L’Arménie et la Turquie s’opposent à nouveau sur les massacres
d’Arméniens perpétrés en 1915 sous le régime ottoman, Ankara accusant
Erevan de tenter de profiter du processus de réconciliation en cours
entre les deux pays pour remettre la question sur la table.

"L’Arménie a essayé d’altérer le texte" des accords historiques de
normalisation des relations signés en octobre 2009 à Zurich, a estimé
mercredi le Premier ministre turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, cité par
l’agence turque Anatolia.

La Cour constitutionnelle arménienne a jugé le 12 janvier que les deux
protocoles d’accord alors signés, prévoyant l’établissement de
relations diplomatiques et l’ouverture de la frontière commune entre
l’Arménie et la Turquie, était conforme à la Constitution.

Mais elle a souligné qu’ils ne pouvaient contredire un article de la
déclaration d’indépendance de l’Arménie qui fait référence au
"génocide de 1915", un terme récusé par la Turquie.

L’interprétation de la Cour arménienne ne pourra "jamais être
acceptée", a souligné le Premier ministre turc. "Il faut rectifier ça,
faute de quoi cela nuira au processus" de réconciliation, a ajouté M.
Erdogan, lors d’une visite en Arabie Saoudite.

De son côté, le ministre arménien des Affaires étrangères, Edouard
Nalbandian, a téléphoné à son homologue turc, Ahmet Davutoglu, pour
exprimer sa "perplexité" après les déclarations de la Turquie.

Le ministre turc a répondu qu’il voyait des "conditions préalables"
dans la décision de la Cour constitutionnelle arménienne, qui a
suscité de "l’étonnement" en Turquie, selon un communiqué du ministère
arménien des Affaires étrangères.

M. Nalbandian a par ailleurs indiqué que depuis la signature des
accords historiques en octobre 2009, "on n’observait en Turquie aucune
progression dans le processus de ratification des protocoles", qui
doivent encore être approuvés par les parlements des deux pays.

En outre, "la partie turque continue d’évoquer publiquement des
conditions préalables qui mettent en danger tout le processus de
normalisation des relations arméno-turques", a ajouté M. Nalbandian,
sans préciser lesquelles.

Les deux pays entretiennent des relations hostiles depuis des
décennies en raison des massacres et déportations d’Arméniens pendant
les dernières années de l’empire ottoman, de 1915 à 1917.

La Turquie reconnaît qu’entre 300.000 et 500.000 personnes ont péri,
non pas victimes d’une campagne d’extermination selon elle, mais dans
le chaos des dernières années de l’Empire ottoman.

Des responsables turcs ont précédemment répété que les accords ne
seraient par ratifiés si aucun progrès n’était constaté côté arménien
dans le conflit avec l’Azerbaïdjan sur le Nagorny Karabakh.

L’Arménie et l’Azerbaïdjan entretiennent des relations très tendues
depuis depuis leur indépendance de l’URSS et une guerre au début des
années 1990 pour le contrôle du Nagorny Karabakh.

relations-armenie-turquie-question-genocide-nouvea u-table

http://www.lematin.ch/flash-info/monde/

Aztag: The Fourth Pre-condition

Aztag Daily, Lebanon
Jan 21 2010

The Fourth Pre-condition

by Shahan Kandaharian, Editor-in-chief

International, Turkish and Armenian media outlets are
over-flooded by the Turkish newest campaign which is suggesting to
declare a stalemate in the Armenian-Turkish Protocols and accuses the
Armenian side as being responsible for that situation. In some reports
the issue has been further specified as the responsibility of official
Yerevan that has succumbed to the demands of the Diaspora and
particularly the Tashnag party.

The official statement of the Turkish Foreign Ministry and
Prime Minister Erdogan’s echos of it speak about the Protocols being
jeopardized and underline that the decisions made by the
Constitutional Court contain statements that oppose the soul and the
essence of the Protocols. There’s more: Turkey is trying to create new
rules to the game as well as abruptly come out of its current
situation, accusing the Armenian side of having a pre-conditional
approach. Ankara declares that by the decision of the Constitutional
Court Yerevan is forcing pre-conditions for Armenian-Turkish
relations.

We are already speaking about a diplomatic version of war.
Turkey who leads a pre-conditional policy is accusing the Armenian
side by forcing pre-conditions. The strategy is simple. Drag the
process, suspend the ratification, hinder the relations and at the
same time throw the responsibility of its actions on the other side.
Drag until when? Until the expected breakthrough is achieved in the
Gharapagh negotiations. Until the realization of Turkey’s first
pre-condition. It’s simple that this policy of dragging is related
more to the Artsakh portfolio than the US President’s April address.

The Turkish Prime Minister who is currently in Saudi Arabia
has announced that if the Armenian side doesn’t change the
Constitutional Court’s decision, then the Armenian-Turkish relations
will be freezed. This style of political threat adopted by the Turkish
Prime Minister is not a novelty; it’s a standard practice in the
Turkish policy. The issue here lies not in the style but elsewhere.

The Turkish Prime Minister is surely familiar with the
Constitutional Court’s decision, it’s corresponding arguments and all
the details related to it. There it is stated clearly that the
decision is final, not subject to change, not subject to objection. Of
course this explanation is given on an inner-state level. Nevertheless
it makes clear that the decision of untouchable.

So, now what it is that Prime Minister Erdogan is after? A
change in Armenia’s inner-state orders? A restriction in the
Constitutional Court’s authorization? Of course the plan follows one
explicit line. The continuous announcements by official Ankara about
pre-conditions have self-restrained the Turkish side preventing it
from making any forward move on this platform until a satisfactory
point is reached in the Gharapagh negotiations. Geopolitical centers
one after the other announced that Armenian-Turkish relations and
Armenian-Azerbeidjani negotiations are not related processes. In the
present political situation no breakthrough appears on the corner in
the Gharapagh portfolio.

The process, therefore, must be hindered, taken to a
stalemate and for all that the Armenian side be accused demanding
before all else that the Constitutional Court of Armenia breaks its
decision. On the list of its previous three preconditions: the
withdrawal of Armenian troops from Gharapagh, the halting of efforts
for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide and the recognition of
the territorial integrity of Turkey, here comes the fourth one: the
breaking of the decision taken by the Constitutional Court of Armenia.

We are already talking about the fourth pre-condition of Turkey.

Detainees Are Tortured In Advance

DETAINEES ARE TORTURED IN ADVANCE

A1Plus.am
21/01/10

Torture cases have moved from the Site for Keeping Prisoners to the
police divisions. This was the conclusion by head of the group of
observers at the Sites for Keeping Prisoners of the RA Police, Suren
Iskandaryan. According to him, there were only 2-3 cases of torture
at Sites for Keeping Prisoners in 2009. However, that is not because
there Is no more torture in prison, but because: "The detainees tell
us that they were kept at the division for two days and then moved
to the prison. Keeping somebody in a room for two days is torture."

The independent group has been around since 2006. It makes planned
and unplanned visits to the Sits for Keeping Prisoners. The group
includes representatives of non-governmental organizations. During
the visits, the representatives register facts, prepare protocols,
send surveys to the RA Chief of Police and then prepare a year-end
report and disseminate to the society.

Suren Iskandaryan told "A1+" that they receive 10-12 calls a month.

People are interested in their rights, complain about prohibitions for
visits and more. The group head is convinced that many employees of the
Sites for Keeping Prisoners are not aware of the law. For instance,
somebody from Kapan called and complained that he was not allowed to
see his son at the Site for Keeping Prisoners based on the reason
that there is no such thing as visiting. "When the parent was at
the division, we asked to pass the phone. We were told that we don’t
know the law and that there is a confidential order. We went after
him and found out that there was no prohibition in the prisoners’
personal files," said Suren Iskandaryan, adding that they also
witnessed another interesting case. "It turned out that the mother
was her son’s advocate and had the right to visit her son without any
limitations. This was ignorance.The on-duty officer said that I had
prepared a form. I told him that he had no right to prepare a form
because there is already a form by law."

The Sites for Keeping Prisoners also face domestic issues. There are
sites where there are no clinics, nutrition remains an issue, there is
no heating, etc. "We can say that the situation is uncontrolled. True,
it is very good compared to before, but when we traveled to Austria,
we were surprised to see the sites there. The conditions were totally
different and it was like a rest house compared to our sites," says
Suren Iskandaryan, mentioning that they have suggestions and will
present them in the 2009 report.