Nagorno Karabakh status primary, Lennmarker says

Nagorno Karabakh status primary, Lennmarker says

21.03.2005  

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – The OSCE rapporteur on Karabakh has reaffirmed
that the region’s status is primary, National Assembly Vice Speaker
Vahan Hovhannissian told a news conference on Monday.

According to Hovhannisian, Goran Lennmarker has also said that the
Azeri arguments regarding the refugees and territories are secondary.
Hovhannisian briefed the reporters about the Armenian delegation’s
meetings with the Azeris in Brussels.

He also indicated that during the discussion of the issue, the Azeris
unsuccessfully tried to include “Atkinson provisions” in the report.
They also tried to set the next meeting in London, probably hoping
to get backing from the British.

This proposal was also denied, Hovhannisian said. The Armenian
delegation has also met with the NATO Secretary General’s special
representative in the Caucasus and the regional director of the
“Wider Europe: New Neighborhood” project to discuss joint projects.

–Boundary_(ID_xo6vqtS3d3jNM/LGdY9tFg)–

Events dedicated to Armenian Genocide 90th in Kaliningrad town

PanArmenian News
March 18 2005

EVENTS DEDICATED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE 90-TH ANNIVERSARY TO BE HELD IN
KALININGRAD RUSSIAN TOWN

18.03.2005 05:04

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ April 23-24 on the initiative of the Armenian
regional national-cultural autonomy of the Kaliningrad Oblast,
Russia, events dedicated to the 90-th anniversary of the Armenian
genocide will be held in Kaliningrad, Nairi newspaper issued in
Kalingrad reports. An exhibition of Armenian painter Gagik Parsamian
will open in the Historical Art Museum April 23. On April 24 people
will lay wreaths to the Armenian Khach Kar and participate in a
commemoration evening to the Armenian Genocide victims.

Hugo Chavez and red heat

Agency WPS
What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
March 17, 2005, Thursday

HUGO CHAVEZ AND RED HEAT

SOURCE: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, March 17, 2005, pp. 1, 4

Andrei Terekhov, Vladimir Ivanov

The United States is once again claiming that Russian weapons may end
up in the wrong hands. General Ben Craddock has expressed concern
about Russian-Venezuelan cooperation in the military sphere, and
doubts that 100,000 Kalashnikov assault rifles and other weapons will
end up in the Venezuelan military. “If Venezuela is importing weapons
to defend its sovereignty and borders, it is of course free to do so,
like any other country. If it is exporting instability, then the
matter is different,” Craddock told the Armed Forces Committee of the
Senate last Tuesday. In fact, Craddock essentially repeated the
statement the US State Department released in February, the ones
purporting that weapons from Russia “may have a destabilizing effect”
on the situation in the region. Craddock made his statement several
days after the announcement that Moscow was selling 10 helicopters to
Venezuela. Venezuelan Defense Minister Jorje Louis Garcia Carneiro
and Sergei Chemezov of Rosoboroneksport signed the contract on March
10.

Washington has been raising the matter of Russia’s military
cooperation with Syria and Venezuela for months already. The
Americans are concerned that Russian weapons may end up in the hands
of Hezbollah via Syria or Colombian revolutionaries via Venezuela.
Moscow in its turn claims that it doesn’t plan to sell Iglas to Syria
and that the Strelets complexes whose sale to Damascus is being
discussed at this point pose no threat to Israel, Washington’s ally
in the region.

The same goes for Venezuela. Mikhail Troyansky of the Foreign
Ministry describes Washington’s concerns as “artificial and
groundless.” He said: “We explained our position clearly in the
February 11 memorandum. These suspicions apply to absolutely all
weapons sold in the international market.” Troyansky emphasizes that
Venezuela’s neighbors are not at all concerned about the prospect,
and that Russia is operating within the framework of the
international rules for arms exports. “The claims that the arms
deliveries will destabilize the situation are ridiculous, since
America is selling many more weapons to some of Venezuela’s
neighbors,” Troyansky said.

In the meantime, new operations of the so-called “Russian mafia” are
feeding Washington’s anxiety. Yesterday, the American media reported
arrests of 18 members of an international criminal group charged with
an attempt to smuggle $500,000 worth of military hardware into the
country. The detainees claim that the weapons they expected from
Russia allegedly included air defense systems, grenade launchers,
machine guns, and so on. NY DA David Kelly says that the United
States is working together with foreign governments to locate the
shipment. “It seems that we are dealing with people from Eastern
European military circles,” said Kelly.

Christian Spice of the South African Republic and Arthur Solomonjan
of Armenia are the main suspects in a case the FBI has been working
on since last March. According to Solomonjan, the weapons were
expected by ship from Russia (Chechnya). Spice claims that he has
contacts with the Russian mafia in New York. In fact, there are even
the reports that along with the conventional weapons the suspects
planned to import enriched uranium, allegedly for a dirty bomb. The
criminal network was exposed by the FBI that infiltrated it and whose
agent posed as the buyer.

Vitaly Shlykov formerly of the GRU (army intelligence) maintains that
control over Russian arms export is somewhat more effective nowadays
than it was in the 1990s. According to some estimates, more than $1
billion worth of weapons were illegitimately sold then. Shlykov says
that these weapons are usually sold again by the countries that buy
it from Russia openly and legitimately. Unlike America, Russia lacks
an effective mechanism of monitoring the routes the weapons it is
selling take. “This is the task that has to be handled by the Foreign
Ministry,” Shlykov explained. “Unfortunately, it doesn’t include a
special intelligence service keeping an eye on the sale of weapons to
the third countries. The US State Department has a service like
that.”

Emil Dabagjan of the Latin America Institute at the Russian Academy
of Sciences says that Washington is annoyed to see that Venezuela,
which used to buy only American weapons, is looking for alternative
suppliers. Dabagjan says that even president of Venezuela admits that
the United States itself would like to sell weapon to Caracas – but
at a higher price.

Translated by A. Ignatkin

Iran studies center opened in Russian-Armenian University

PanArmenian News
March 16 2005

IRAN STUDIES CENTER OPENED IN RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN UNIVERSITY

16.03.2005 05:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ March 15 the opening of the Center for Iranian
Studies was held at Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University (RAU). The
Center is founded on the initiative of RAU and the Iranian Embassy in
Armenia. It has a library containing of text-books, books, methodic
manuals in Persian, disks, video materials. In the words, of Iranian
Ambassador to Armenia Ali Reza Haqiqian, `the opening of the Center
for Iranian Studies will promote cooperation between our countries
and will further make our two peoples closer.’

Azerbaijan says Armenia broke cease-fire again

Interfax
March 14 2005

Azerbaijan says Armenia broke cease-fire again

BAKU. March 14 (Interfax-Azerbaijan) – Armenia again violated the
Armenian-Azerbaijani cease-fire, Azerbaijan said on Monday, accusing
Armenian forces deployed on occupied Azerbaijani territory of opening
fire against Azerbaijani army units on two occasions on Sunday.

The Armenians used machineguns and assault rifles in the attacks, the
Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said.

The fire came from Agdam district, 240 kilometers from Baku, and “was
suppressed” by Azerbaijani units, the ministry said.

Georgia to support ferry service with Russia

Georgia to support ferry service with Russia

ITAR-TASS
12.03.2005, 19.32

YEREVAN, March 12 (Itar-Tass) — Georgian Prime Minister Zurab
Nogaideli said his government would give “every support” to a new ferry
service from the Russian port of Kavkaz to the Georgian port of Poti.

Speaking at the end of his two-day visit to Armenia on Saturday,
Nogaideli said, “In addition to a treaty we need concrete decisions
to make sure that the ferry is suitable and technical problems are
solved.”

He stressed that Georgia would seek to “attract Russian commercial
structures into the project” to make it “much more effective”.

Armenia, which does not have a common border with Russia, attaches
great significance to the ferry service between the port of Kavkaz
and Poti.

Armenian president, Georgian premier discusses relations

Armenian president, Georgian premier discusses relations

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
12 Mar 05

[Presenter] Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli is in Armenia
for a two-day official visit. Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
has stressed that Armenian-Georgian relations have always been within
the framework of issues of mutual interests.

Kocharyan also expressed his satisfaction that the prime ministers
of two countries will continue to head the Armenian-Georgian
intergovernmental commission. The meeting particularly discussed
issues concerning the spheres of energy and cargo transportation,
as well as the organization of cross-border trade.

[Passage omitted: reported details of the meeting with Armenian Prime
Minister Andranik Markaryan]

[Video showed the meeting]

You’re needed at home, expat New Zealanders told

You’re needed at home, expat New Zealanders told
By Sarah Catherall

New Zealand Herald, New Zealand
March 13 2005

Diana Cook expected to stay away from New Zealand for only a year.
After growing up in the small Northland town of Kaikohe, the
Treasury-trained economist left a Wellington job for a position in
Ukraine six years ago. That job led to a role as an economic
consultant in Oxford, and now, as a consultant in London, she is part
of an international team providing expenditure advice to governments
in Serbia, Armenia and Bosnia.

The small-town girl is one of hundreds of thousands of skilled New
Zealanders the Government wants to lure home. But the 34-year-old has
bigger plans. She is about to start a new job in Britain, analysing
housing shortages in southeast England.

Asked if she would heed the call to return home, she says: “I do miss
family and friends and I think there would be interesting career
opportunities for me in New Zealand. The downside for me is New
Zealand’s isolation. It feels so small and so far away. Travel is
pretty expensive and I’d really miss the theatres and galleries, and
other entertainment options in London. So it’s more of a lifestyle
than a career choice for me to stay here.”

After calling mothers to the workforce to plug skill gaps, the
Government will soon launch a campaign targeting expats, focusing on
Kiwis’ emotional links to their homeland. We’re up against other
Western countries also campaigning for our skilled workers. And our
Government has an even bigger job than such countries as Australia –
with at least 14 per cent of working New Zealanders offshore
(Treasury’s estimate), we are first in the OECD in losing our
residents abroad.

Immigration Minister Paul Swain says the campaign will involve
“creative ways” of target-ing expats. He thinks many offshore Kiwis
have no idea that unemployment here is now the lowest in the OECD and
there are jobs to fill.

Says Swain: “When these people left in the 1990s, New Zealand would
have been a completely different place. Unemployment was still quite
high and there were too many people and not enough jobs. We now have
the complete reverse of that, with too many jobs and not enough
people. There are now opportunities for them that may not have been
around when they left. We’ll be saying we need them to give us a
hand.”

There are two types of expats overseas and one is possibly out of
reach. According to a Massey University “talent flow” study, there
are expats who expect to stay away, mainly driven by money, influence
and achievement; then there are those who plan to come home, who are
lured back by family, lifestyle and friends. About half of the 2201
expats surveyed last year described themselves as “permanently
settled” and 27 per cent of those were certain or likely to stay
overseas. A further 29 per cent were – like Cook – torn about where
they would end up.

Typically university-educated, many were working in the financial
sector. Just under half had been away from New Zealand for one to
five years, while half had been away for six years-plus. Asked what
needed to change for them to return home, most cited career
opportunities, higher pay and a better cost of living, along with
improved tax incentives for business.

But it is the emotional attractions likely to be highlighted in the
Government’s campaign: ageing parents and relatives, a yearning to
bring up children back home, safety, security, and lifestyle.

“Return to New Zealand apparently provides more of an attraction to
the family-oriented, the sociable and the presumably humanistic
medical staff, but repels those seeking career success and money, and
the successful … entrepreneurs,” the report says.

One of the researchers, Massey University business lecturer Duncan
Jackson, is not sure how easy it will be to entice Kiwis home. “We’ve
found that careers are pushing people overseas – both my brothers
went to London and they’ve found they could make astoundingly more
money over there and also enjoy career progression.”

When looking for carrots to dangle, we should look at countries like
Singapore, he says, which reduces student loans for those who agree
to stay home.

“There are schemes operating to hold people in other countries. Here
we have the student loan scheme which is unfair and punitive, and if
you have a massive loan and can earn three times more in the UK,
where would you go?”

The Massey study found only 10 per cent of participants had a student
loan, mainly because the mean age was 30-plus. “[The student loan]
can be expected to increase in importance as more and more young
qualified people go offshore,” it said.

One of those paying off his student loan is Mark Hotton, the
London-based editor of a newspaper for expat New Zealanders, New
Zealand News UK. Hotton is waiting for a highly skilled migrant visa
which will allow him to stay in London for at least another year and
possibly up to four. Student loans “are a major sticking point,” he
says. “The Government needs to address this or a whole generation of
Kiwis will take out loans and not come back to pay them off.”

New Zealand’s campaign comes as Australia also tries to keep its best
and brightest on home soil and increases its skilled migrant quota.
New Zealand shares a common job market with Australia, and both
countries are battling to find enough trades and technical staff.

Treasury policy manager Geoff Lewis says we suffer a similar problem
to countries such as Canada and Ireland, which lose talent to bigger
neighbours. Australia, which worries that it is bleeding talent, has
only 2.1 per cent of its nationals offshore. “We would like to have
lots of highly skilled people but we need the wages to attract them,”
he says.

That’s a point echoed by recruitment firms struggling to fill job
vacancies. Rob Young, a partner with Swann Recruitment, which fills
senior executive positions, says the strength of the Kiwi dollar and
low wages are turn-offs about returning to New Zealand. And while
there are jobs, career opportunities can be limited – take the senior
manager in Bahrain who was offered a $120,000 job to return to New
Zealand but was already earning double that.

At Phoenix Recruitment in Auckland, Jenny Durno has 150 chartered
accountancy vacancies to fill. Accountants are one profession the
country is short of, and Durno says Kiwis can earn between $75,000
and $108,000 in Australia for a job that would pay between $55,000
and $75,000 here.

On a recent trip home, Diana Cook found New Zealand “a bit insular”.
But in London she fights the crowds on her hour-long train journey to
and from work, then returns to her costly rental property with a tiny
garden. “A campaign should focus on the lifestyle benefits of New
Zealand,” she says.

However: “There’s not much a Government campaign could do to
encourage me to return really. It’s more of a personal trade-off that
I have to make.”

BAKU: Three Azeri Soldiers Imprisoned In Karabakh Feel Good – Report

Three Azeri Soldiers Imprisoned In Karabakh Feel Good – Report

Baku Today

Turan 11/03/2005 10:32

Albert Voskanian, coordinator of international working group searching
for missed, hostages and POWs in the Karabakh conflict zone, visited
yesterday three Azerbaijani POWs Hayal Abdullayev, Khikmet Tagiyev
and Ruslan Bakirov.

After the meeting Voskanian told journalists that he was interested
in psychological and physical condition of prisoners, conditions
of their holding, quality of food and etc. “POWs did not lodge
any complaints. They are in a good mood and want to go back home,”
said Voskanian.

Azeri army soldiers were taken hostage on February 15, 2005 on
the northeastern section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani front. The
circumstances of their imprisonment are unclear.

Russian Bases In Georgia As Factor Of Stability In Caucasus

RUSSIAN BASES IN GEORGIA AS FACTOR OF STABILITY IN CAUCASUS

2005-03-09 17:10   

MOSCOW, March 9 (RIA Novosti) – Russian military bases in Georgia
are a factor of stability in the Caucasus as a whole, Dmitry Ragozin,
state Duma’s Rodina faction leader, opined.

“The military bases [in Georgia] is a guarantee for Russia that the
situation will not be destabilized in the Caucasus on the doorstep of
Russia and near three hotbeds of tension – South Ossetia, Abkhazia
(both are self-proclaimed independent states) and Nagorno-Karabakh
(a region in Azerbaijan populated by Armenians) – and that no foreign
troops will crop up to pursue unfriendly policies,” Mr. Ragozin told
RIA Novosti.

The Russian-Georgian conflict boils down to Georgia unwilling to see
Russian military bases on its soil and “Russian leaders distrusting
their Georgian counterparts and not believing that Georgia will stay
neutral”, he noted.

Security cannot be ensured unilaterally.

“Our Georgian colleagues should not hiss [in anger], rather realize
that security can be only mutual,” Mr. Ragozin said.

“If the Georgian leaders can guarantee that there will not be any
foreign troops in the country, we can reconsider our stance on the
bases pullout from Georgia,” he said in the corridors of the State
Duma, commenting on Georgia’s statement on outlawing the Russian
military bases in Georgia.

Mr. Ragozin added that as far as the withdrawal of the bases is
concerned, the parties should get down to the meat of the problem.

“We are hampered by the lack of understanding. Georgia equates the
Russian bases on its soil to a foreign military presence, while Russia
regards Georgia’s striving to get rid of those bases as an unfriendly
act,” he said.

–Boundary_(ID_mtCmxiZRuuR7uxzWHeT4kg)–