Armenia Rejects Claims of Financing War with Diamonds

IDEX Online, Israel
June 28 2005

Armenia Rejects Claims of Financing War with Diamonds

(June 28, ’05, 6:39 Edahn Golan)

In a letter to the Chair of the Kimberley Process, Armenian Minister
of Trade and Economic Development, Karen Chshmaritian, has rejected
claims that his country is financing its conflict against neighboring
Azerbaijan by selling rough diamonds outside the Kimberley Process
Certification Scheme.

The claim, made recently in a report by the Civil Research Council in
Russia, says growing illegal trade between Armenia, Russia and the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is financing military hardware purchasers
by the Government of Armenia.

Calling the report “scurrilous”, Chshmaritian said the Armenian
government “carefully scrutinizes any requests for the issuance of
Kimberly Certificates for the exportation of rough, and is rigorous
in policing the importation and manufacturing of rough diamonds within
its boundaries.”

He went on to categorically deny “defamatory rumors” in the report
and criticized “politically patterned researches directed to the
discrediting [of] both businesses and Governments, but also Kimberly
Process in the whole.”

BEIRUT: Time for the second phase of the Cedar Revolution

The Daily Star, Lebanon
June 27 2005

Time for the second phase of the Cedar Revolution

By Kamal Dib
Commentary by
Monday, June 27, 2005

The world community will be surprised that the revolution that
occurred in Lebanon on March 14, 2005, did not simply dissipate with
the advent of the Parliamentary election as each warlord looked
inward after his own clan. While this could be true of the
traditional leadership that rode the wave of protest and took on the
“Opposition” tag, the civil society continued the march and will soon
impose new demands on the elected Parliament. Such popular demands
include transparency, political cleanliness, accountability, modern
good governance, investigation into corruption, civil rights and
freedoms, and secular legislation.

Now that the 2005 Lebanese Parliamentary election is completed, the
choice of leaders for the executive arm of government that meets the
ambitions of post-March 14 Lebanon is crucial. So is the choice of
individuals who run the public sector. The world community will
indeed be watching the next step in the Cedar Revolution, as the
post-election Lebanon will be a test for the entire Middle East
region. For the United States, it will be a almost a costless
peaceful transformation of a Middle-Eastern society without Norman
Schwarzkopf and the Marines.

Why, the Lebanese are modern and educated people who travel the
world, and whose civil society organizations are as strong and
advanced as what one gets in France or the United Kingdom.

So far, Lebanon has been cursed with outdated leadership based on
sectarian and regional constituencies. This conservative class
believes that the global situation exerts only a secondary influence
on Lebanon’s archaic politics and economy, and then only slowly.
Still, many believe that talk about a new leadership is something for
the next generation to handle, and that things in Lebanon will be as
usual: de facto cantons and mini-states along largely sectarian lines
complete with media establishments, social services, and even
paramilitary security.

The reality is that Lebanon has already absorbed globalization
influences in many aspects of daily life: business, the media,
education, social customs, travel, etc., and that a new citizenry has
emerged from the womb of the civil movement of “the Beirut Spring”
(similar to the 1968 Prague Spring that defied the Soviet invasion).

In a world of new technologies, converging international markets and
trading arrangements, and world scrutiny of oppressive regimes, the
external impact on the political and economic environment of Lebanon
can no longer be ignored.

The increasing democratization of Lebanon, away from the archaic
absolutist politicians of the past (the Begs and the emirs), is
bringing forward concepts like transparency, respect, secularization,
pluralism, and universal social services.

Yes, it will be the duty of the new leadership to secure electricity
around the clock, and to establish environmentally sound public
utilities and sewage treatment – matters that are taken for granted
in most countries. It is the nitty-gritty of everyday needs that
Lebanon wants, not Don Quixotes who discuss regional and
international politics and behave like world leaders in a tiny
country with slightly over 3 million people.

Both government and business in Lebanon have a joint responsibility
in adjusting to the information age and in supporting young people in
knowledge acquisition, skills development and innovation. The vision
of government and business should focus on what is currently needed
to achieve better social services for citizens and better
productivity conditions for business, and a willingness to examine
new models for learning and development.

The vision of government and business should also influence the
Lebanese society to take a fresh look at the prospects of the future
and not be buried in the tragedies and taboos of the past. While it
is easy to blame the traditional leaders, it is a cruel reminder that
the public sectarian mindset is the one responsible for the
perpetuation of the political folklore. Whither Totalitarianism
Empowerment of the citizen to make choices is the current trend
around the world; having more gadgets in the hands of dictatorships
to oppress their peoples is not. Saddam Hussein used oil revenues to
acquire the latest weaponry and intelligence equipment, but the
Iraqis were made worse off; the Lebanese government in the mid-1990
purchased telecommunication equipment to eavesdrop on phone calls;
and many Arab governments control Internet content and build barriers
in the airspace and land borders to prevent entry of critical TV
channels, radio stations, and newspapers.

Lebanese leaders cannot control people anymore and will have to deal
with different mindsets and new psychologies. For example, the
Parliamentary election was a lesson to Hizbullah, when its leaders
called on the Shiites of Beirut to vote for the Hariri list, but the
outcome was a massive vote to Hariri’s opponent Najah Wakim. Analysts
saw this as a rebuff to Hizbullah from an urbane and educated Shiite
Muslim community who will not be told how to vote en masse. Many
traditional leaders lost their Parliamentary seat to new faces, and
the non-traditionalist Michel Aoun won a respectable number of seats
among the Christian population although his primary mover is the call
for a secular Lebanon. The Challenges To be successful, the new
Lebanese leadership will have to deal with these challenges that will
have a profound impact on the future of the country:

(1) Women’s rights: the rising number and quality of women in
Lebanese society requires opening the door in a male-dominated
political system. While the current ratio of women to men in labour
market participation is 7 against 13, it is expected that the ratio
will be equal in a generation, considering health, education, and
life expectancy. Can it be acceptable that women make up only 27
percent of the employed workforce and 2 percent of Parliament, while
over 50 percent of university graduates in Lebanon are women? Is it
acceptable that women have no civil rights before the law and still
have to abide by middle-age rules of the clergy that favor men at all
times?

(2) Sectarianism and Diversity: there is a need to stress positive
outcomes in an ethnically and religiously diverse Lebanon. With
slightly over 3 million people, Lebanon is one of the most diverse
countries in the world. Arab and western media can poke fun at the
antics of the Lebanese conflict (e.g., how the Lebanese were “at each
other’s throat”), but one can only point at other countries in the
Arab world and Europe where homogenous religious and ethnic
populations are the norm, hence no explosive demographic mixture.
What is happening in Lebanon is a test-case for humanity and for the
dialogue of civilizations between Muslims and Christians and between
East and West.

The Arabic character is one of many manifestations of Lebanese
society as visitors to Beirut notice the western air of the
Mediterranean city, the multilingual abilities of the people, the
myriad of religions and sects, the prospering Armenian and Kurdish
communities, and the presence of half a million guest workers and
Palestinian refugees. Lebanon has lost much energy and talent in the
past due to religious discrimination and the lack of appreciation and
respect to diversity. In fact, one could calculate the economic cost
of the Lebanese war (1975-1990) due to the fanaticism and
discrimination in the labor market, where Beirut was split in half
and employers would not hire or do business with members of other
communities.

(3) Youth: the role of young Lebanese in globalization and its impact
on the local economy and on Lebanese society and culture, especially
to stem the brain drain. Lebanon suffers from emigration and brain
drain. Almost a million Lebanese have left Lebanon since 1975, most
of them never returned. These include thousands of professionals,
graduates, skilled workers, and tradesmen. Measuring the opportunity
cost of this loss against remittances sent back by these emigrants
shows that the gap between cost and benefit is huge.

The shift from the traditional leader to the leader of the future
entails moving from controlling to empowerment and offer of choice,
and from creating conformity with each religious group to valuing
diversity among all Lebanese, and from working through the chain of
command to making decisions at the lowest levels, and from a domestic
to an international focus. The new crop of politicians in Lebanon
should move from resisting change to becoming leaders of change.

Kamal Dib is a Canadian economist of Lebanese descent, and author of
several books on Lebanon and the Middle East, most recently “Warlords
and Merchants.” He is a frequent contributor to The Daily Star.

NKR Prez Receives Program Director of Tufenkian Benevolent Fund

NKR PRESIDENT RECEIVES PROGRAM DIRECTOR OF TUFEBKIAN BENEVOLENT FUND
(USA) ANDRANIK GASPARYAN

STEPANAKERT, June 24. /ARKA/. The President of Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic Arkady Ghukasyan received Andranik Gasparyan, the Director of
“Tufenkian Benevolent Fund” (USA) projects in Nagorno Karabakh.
According to the Chief Information Department adjunct to NKR
President, the interlocutors discussed issues of implementation of
benevolent programs funded by the Fund in NKR, as well as a number of
promising investment projects.

In his turn, Arkady Ghukasyan expressed appreciation to “Tufenkian
Benevolent Fund” of the rendered assistance and expressed readiness to
promote expansion of cooperation. L.V.-0–

Amd 812,537 Mln To Restore Highways Having Govt & DM Importance

AMD 812,537 MLN TO BE SPENT TO RESTORE HIGHWAYS HAVING GOVERNMENT
IMPORTANCE AND ASPHALT PARADE -GROUNDS OF RA MINISTRY OF DEFENSE

YEREVAN, June 23. /ARKA/. AMD 812,537 mln will be spent to restore
highways having government importance and asphalt parade -grounds of
RA Ministry of Defense. According to RA Government’s Press Service
Department, the corresponding decision was taken at the session of the
government. The funds will be assigned for the RA Ministry of
Transport and Communications. ($1 = AMD 444,42). A.H. –0–

Some NKR Parties Denounce Violence Against Dashnak MP Pavel Manukyan

SOME PARTIES IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH REPUBLIC ISSUE JOINT STATEMENT
DENOUNCING VIOLENCE COMMITTED AGAINST DASHNAK CANDIDATE PAVEL MANUKYAN
AS MAJOR CRIME

STEPANAKERT, June 24. /ARKA/. Some parties in Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic – Dashnaktsutyun, Movement 88, Our Home is Armenia and
Communist Party – whose candidates run in for NKR National Assembly’s
seat, issued a joint statement denouncing violence committed against
Dashnak candidate, Pavel Manukyan, as major crime. The political
parties find pressure upon freedom of speech and free thinking
unacceptable and view it as human rights violation and dignity
humiliation. The statement’s authors are urging NKR’s President Arkady
Ghulassyan to take drastic steps to prevent situation destabilization
in the republic. “The situation prompts concern, as such a conduct of
Karabakh’s Defence Minister arouses fear that the country can lapse
into authoritarian regime again”, the statement says. On June 21,
Pavel Manukyan, candidate put up by Dashnaktsutyun party in
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic’s parliamentary elections, was bitten up by
NKR Defence Ministry’s high-ranking officials. Manukyan accuses the
republic’s Defence Minister Seyran Ohanyan in reprisals against
him. M.V. -0–

New mobile phone operator to get in on July 1

AZG Armenian Daily #116, 24/06/2005

Telecommunication

NEW MOBILE PHONE OPERATOR TO GET IN ON JULY 1

President of the Shareholders’ Board of Kh-Telecom, Pier Fatush, Board
member Hussein Rifayi and Lebanese ambassador to Armenia Gabriel Shahra
answered journalists’ questions at a press conference yesterday.

Hussein Rifayi stated, speaking on behalf of the board, that the company
will start operating from 1 July. He said that the new mobile operator’s
service will surpass all expectations. He emphasized the high-quality
connection and the company’s resolution to set competitive fare. He also
mentioned that the company’s investments by now amount to $75 million.

Executive director of Kh-Telecom, Ralf Yirikian, provided details on the
prospects of new mobile operator. “Today, Armenia has got a new voice and
it’s called Viva Cell”, Yirikian said explaining that Kh-Telecom will be
called Viva Cell from now on. The new trademark symbolizes life, freedom and
fervor. The company will also add a motto — Your Family.

>From the first day of its operation the company will fully cover the
territories of Yerevan, Armavir and Ararat, and partially Aragatsotn, Kotayk
and Gegharqunik. In 3 months the company will supply 300.000 subscribers.

Viva Cell’s cards will be called ALO and classic. Ralf Yirikian was slow to
tell the price of the cards and while asked to compare the future price with
those functioning in Nagorno Karabakh, said that the prices in Karabakh are
no yardstick for Armenia.

Viva Cell will spare no effort to occupy the position of leading mobile
phone operator in Armenia. The company now employs 140 workers but the staff
will gradually enlarge.

Lebanese ambassador to Armenia introduced Pier Fatush saying that he is a
great beneficent of Artsakh as no one wanted to take the risk of investing
in the region, but he ventured.

By Ara Martirosian

Armenia Does Not See its Future Without Atomic Power Plant

ARMENIA DOES NOT SEE ITS FUTURE WITHOUT ATOMIC POWER PLANT:
ARMENIAN DEPUTY MINISTER OF ENERGY

YEREVAN, JUNE 23. ARMINFO. Armenia does not see its future without
atomic power plant, Armenian Deputy Minister of Energy Areg Galstyan
made this statement presenting the strategy of energy development for
2025 adopted by the Government today.

Galstyan says the country has a good infrastructure for development
of atomic energy today, however, training of specialists in the
sphere will take Armenia long years. In the meantime, there are good
specialists in Armenia who have created a perfect school. “Even the
Greens currently understand the ecological privileges of atomic
energy as compared with thermal one,” the minister said. According to
optimistic forecasts, reserves of hydrocarbon raw-materials in the
world will be exhausted before 2070, according to pessimistic data –
by 2050. At the same time, a stable rise in prices for the given type
of fuel is observed, Galstyan says. In such situation, atomic energy
must undoubtedly develop in Armenia, he thinks. Earlier Armenian
Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan did not rule out a possibility of
construction of a new up-to-date APP in the country, which would
require $1 bln.

The first unit was put into exploitation in 1976, the second in 1980.
At the beginning of 1989, the plant was closed down for political
ideas, and then the second 404 megawatt power unit was reactivated.
The resource of the power unit is limited. The Armenian APP is under
financial management of the Inter RJSC UES of Russia for 5 years.

Georgia: Presentation of Council of Religions

Press Center
Office of the Ombudsman of Georgia
11 Machabeli Street,
Tbilisi 0105, Georgia
Tel: (995 32) 92 24 79/80
Fax: (995 32) 92 24 70
Mobile: (995 77) 50 52 30
E-mail: [email protected]

21 June 2005

Presentation of the Council of Religions

Today, on June 21, presentation of the Council of Religions was held in
Courtyard Marriott Hotel. A memorandum was signed at the presentation.
According to the memorandum, representatives of different confession
undertake the responsibility to cooperate and coordinate in the filed of
social, ecological and human rights issues. Leaders of almost all religions
represented in Georgia, Tbilisi Mayor Zurab Tchiaberashvili, Chairman of the
Parliamentary Committee of Internal Affairs Kote Gabashvili and Minister of
Education and Science Kakha Lomaia welcomed the establishment of the
Council.

Representative of the Office of the Patriarch of Georgia archpriest Mikael
Botkoveli addressed the gathered society and underlined the positive impacts
of the establishment of the Council.

Ombudsman of Georgia congratulated everyone with this day and expressed the
hope, that establishment of the Religions Council significantly increased
the level of tolerance and religious freedom of Georgia.

Memorandum of the Council of Religions at the Public Defender’s Office

I
As the representatives of the religious communities in Georgia we feel
responsibility to respect the dignity, freedom and human rights of each
person; we remain faithful to the experience of tolerance which is the
beauty of the historical past of our country. With this respect, we
acknowledge the local and global tasks and challenges of modernity which our
past and future required to be resolved.
The Soviet Union has collapsed, but there were offences against human
rights in Georgia for many years. Religious intolerance, extremism and
xenophobia became common practices. State policy openly showed
discrimination in its attitude towards religious minorities.
Corruption reached a peak. Drugs, trafficking, and robbery became
widespread; the criminal world became more influential.
Military conflicts have made many of our fellow Georgians refugees and
homeless. Economic crisis, a difficult social environment, and unemployment
have made many citizens leave their homeland and find their refuge abroad.
The most alarming aspect of the situation is to see so many homeless,
hungry, helpless and suffering people, especially the elderly and children.
Alienation and aggression became a hallmark of our own attitude towards
each-other and the world outside us.
The Rose Revolution appeared to be succeeded by notable improvements but
there still remain much to be done. The real freedom and prosperity of each
citizen, society and the State requires the consolidation of our efforts.
We should feel that we must support building a democratic and legitimate
state; we ought to be actively involved in the process of setting up civil
rights and a tolerant environment; to seek the peaceful solutions for
existing conflicts; to take up social, moral and ecological
responsibilities.
We can see the significance of directing our united efforts towards
defending international norms of human freedom and rights and the principles
of the Georgian Constitution.

II
As the representatives of the different confessions in Georgia, we express
our solidarity to each person, members of the Government and organizations
in resolving the above mentioned tasks and challenges and declare our will
to co-operate.
At the same time we take into consideration those tragic consequences which
were brought about by abolishing of boundaries between politics and religion
and also by the persecution of religion by the state which brought into
being totalitarian regimes, fundamentalist ideologies, terror,
discrimination, censorship, and nihilism. We oppose any attempt for use
religion as an instrument of political interest and controversies.
We regret that hatred, intolerance, extremism, terrorism, and wars have
been waged on a religious basis. We declare that religions must undertake
the mission of peacemaking, and instead of deepening opposition they must
unite people in collaboration around the eternal common values for all
humanity.
As the representatives of religions and confessions in Georgia, we are
ready to contribute to this mission and to support triumph over the local
and global crises and conflicts through the way of reconciliation and
peaceful coexistence.

III
We support the Public Defender’s initiative in establishing the Council of
Religions in order to resolve the mentioned tasks as far as they are
acceptable to all. The institution of a public defender, its significance
and authority is a precise resource which can serve as an effective
intermediary between the state and individuals, majorities and minorities
and unite them around basic values.
As a result of all of these factors we establish the Council of Religions
at the Public Defender of Georgia and we adopt the responsibility of holding
dialogue between each-other and society to respond to problems and events,
make proposals to the Public Defender and Government bodies, to bring
together the social, cultural, humanitarian, peacemaking, protection of
human rights and ecology without abusing our cultural and religious values,
defending the Georgian Constitution and the International norms of human
freedom and rights in an atmosphere of collaboration, respect, and
solidarity.
Despite the fact that religious differences between the members of the
Council are often almost diametrically opposed, we take responsibility to
avoid creating an arena for religious opposition in our work. The basis of
our participation in the Council first of all is to protect the personal
dignity and freedom of human beings and to give confidence to the spirit of
tolerance in our society.
We are united in one common principle: ‘Communicate with the other in a way
that you would like the others to communicate with you’.

The memorandum was signed by :

1. Baha’i Community in Georgia – Eiman Rohani
2. Evangelical Church – Pastor Zaal Tkeshelashvili
3. Evangelical Baptist Church of Georgia – Presiding Bishop Malkhaz
Songulashvili
4. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Georgia – Bishop Andreas Stoekle
5. Pentecostal Church – Russian Community – Nikoloz Kalutski
6. Pentecostal Church – Georgian Community – Oleg Khubashvili
7. Evangelical Church – the Word of Life – Shmagi Chankvetadze
8. Roman Catholic Church in Georgia – Bishop Guizeppe Pazzotto
9. Hare Krishna Temple of Consciousness – Antimoz Natsvlishvili
10. Church of Seventh Day Adventists – Emzar Chrikishvili
11. Acting Chief Rabbi of Georgia – Abimileq Rosenblatt
12. Church of Latter Day Saints – Viktor Khatsevich
13. Representative of Chief Rabbi of Lubovich Khabad in Georgia Abraham
Mikhelashvili – Rafael Messingisser
14. Salvation Army – Giorgi Salarishvili
15. Sozar Subari – Ombudsman of Georgia.

Head of Muslim Mufti Division of the Autonomous Republic of Adjara Mufti
Bezhan ( Berik) Bolkvadze of the Autonomous Republic of Adjara sent the
Council a letter of congratulation and called the establishment of the
Religions Council a very worthwhile initiative and noted, that the aim of
the of the Council is to foster the dialogue among the peoples of different
faiths residing in Georgia, to protect human rights and freedoms guaranteed
by the Georgian Constitution, to establish such way of life by respecting
religions and traditions of each others as to eliminate hostility and
intolerance, killing of people and terrorism, adultery and trafficking,
stealing and brigandage.

Despite the support, the Office of the Patriarch of Georgia abstained from
signing the memorandum.

Eparchy of Armenian Apostolic Church in Georgia also refrained from signing
the memorandum as the archbishop Vazgen Mirzakhanian is not in Tbilisi right
now.

Negotiations are carried on with the religious leaders of the New Apostolic
Church and Yezidi Kurds.

“I hurry to sum up my feelings”

AZG Armenian Daily #114, 22/06/2005

Bookshelf

‘I HURRY TO SUM UP MY FEELINGS’

Lawyer-Humorist Grigor Melik-Sargsian Says

Lawyer and humorist Grigor Melik-Sargsian has published his last humorous
books recently. They are titled “The Adventures of Usta Sano”, “Life and
Death of Crazy Hamlet” and “Anthology of Folly and Craze”.

Grigor Melik-Sargsian is a member of the Writers’ Unions of Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh, he began the literary path in 1997 with “The Ascension”
book and won a number awards. During this short period the lawyer-humorist
has written 15 books, both dealing with jural issues or purely humoristic
essays.

Asked what it means to be a writer and a lawyer in the meantime,
Melik-Sargsian said, “Writing is a demand, it’s a haste. I hurry to sum up
my feelings”. Feelings of this sensitive writer, meanwhile, come down as a
storm.

In his “Life and Death of Crazy Hamlet” the author depicts an ordinary loony
from our life who goes mad of love and eventually dies of unrequited love.
In the “Anthology of Folly and Craze” Melik-Sargsian analyzes the idea that
the great and talented people of the universe are the same fools and
crazies.

By Gohar Gevorgian

Police, National Security Officers Awarded Medals, Diplomas

POLICE, NATIONAL SECURITY OFFICERS AWARDED MEDALS, DIPLOMAS

YEREVAN, June 21. /ARKA/. Police, national security and prosecutorial
officers have been awarded medals and diplomas on the occasion of the
13th anniversary of the internal troops of Armenia. RA President
Robert Kocharyan issued a decree awarding the Battle Service Medal to
the police officers: Captain Valery Khoderyan, Major Shavalla
Karopyan, Lieutenant-Colonel Leva Vardoyev, Colonel Mikael Khachatryan
(posthumously). Vice-Chief of the RA Police, Major-General Grigor
Grigoryan received diplomas from RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan.

RA minister of Defense Serge Sargsyan issued an order awarding the
Marshal Baghramyan Medal to Vice-Chief of the Internal Troops
Department, RA Police, Ashot Nalbandyan. The Andranik Ozanyan Medal
has been awarded to Vice-Chief of the RA Police, Commander of the RA
Police Troops, Major-General Grigor Grigoryan. The Drastamat Kanayan
Medal was awarded to Colonel Merjabar Abramyan. The Garegin Mzhde
Medal was awarded to Colonel Artur Mkrtichyan.

The Medal for Combat Collaboration has been awarded to Colonel Hamlet
Mkrtichyan for contributing to Armenia’s security and to cooperation
between the RA national security bodies and the RA Police.

Chief of the RA Police Hayk Harutyunyan issued an order awarding the
Medal of the RA Police for Cooperation to Major-General Artush
Harutyunyan for cooperation and assistance to various police
structures. A Breastplate First Class for Excellent Service in Police
Troops has been awarded to RA Military Prosecutor Gagik Jhangiryan,
Chief of the Department of Military Counterintelligence, Ra National
Security Service, Major-General Rafael Zagharyan and to his assistant
Colonel Mnatsakan Bazikyan.

A personal pistol was presented to Commander of a special battalion,
RA Police Troops, guarding the Armenian nuclear power plant,
Lieutenant-Colonel Karen Kuibyshev Stepanyan. P.T. -0–