Armenian president raises pensions of disabled servicemen

Armenian president raises pensions of disabled servicemen

Arminfo
17 Jan 05

YEREVAN

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan signed a decree on 15 January on
making changes to the law on social security of servicemen and their
families, the Armenian president’s press service has told Arminfo.

The decree envisages a 20-per-cent rise in pensions of the servicemen
who incurred different degrees of disability while defending the
borders of the republic and of the families of killed servicemen.

The decree also suggests that the compensation paid to disabled
servicemen for public utilities be raised from 3,000 drams [6 dollars]
to 5,000 drams [10 dollars] starting from 1 January 2005 and funeral
expenses be covered by the state should they die. In connection with
the rise in servicemen’s social security payments, it is planned to
allocate another 350m drams [700,000 dollars] from the state budget.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian DM Urges Allies to Preserve Unified Military Training System

Russian defence minister urges allies to preserve unified military
training system

RIA news agency
17 Jan 05

MOSCOW

Russia intends to spare no effort to preserve the unified system of
military training both within the framework of the ODKB [Collective
Security Treaty Organization, comprising Russia, Belarus, Armenia,
Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan] and with Kazakhstan in
particular, Russian Defence Minister Sergey Ivanov told journalists
after the Kazakh Dostyk order was presented to him.

“This award is an advance recognition of my modest contribution to the
cause of strengthening military cooperation between Russia and
Kazakhstan,” he said. According to the minister, he often meets his
Kazakh counterpart [Mukhtar Altynbayev] to discuss ways to step up
security.

Sergey Ivanov said an ODKB treaty under which prices for arms
deliveries are determined by Russia’s domestic prices came into force
in January 2005. “Russia will spare no efforts to ensure that the
unified system of military training is preserved,” Sergey Ivanov said.

Ever Farther from Moscow

KOMMERSANT Dengi, JANUARY 17, 2005

Ever Farther from Moscow

Last year started with the presidential elections in Georgia and ended
with the third round of elections in Ukraine. Moscow looked at the CIS
with fixed attention all year and tried to prop up its waning
influence, while the former Soviet countries came closer and closer to
replacing their political elites.

Ukraine

The most important events for all of the CIS probably were those that
took place in Ukraine. The opposition, headed by Viktor Yushchenko,
accused the authorities of falsifying the results of the second round
of the presidential election on November 21, and called out hundreds
of thousands of people to the streets. The West backed the
opposition’s demands, as did all influential international
organizations. The Ukrainian government, which had already declared
its candidate, Viktor Yanukovich, the winner, was forced go to back on
its word. The Supreme Court nullified the second round of elections
and set a revote for December 26. At the moment when this went to
press, the results of that vote were not yet known, but we have
guessed it has opened the way for Yushchenko and marked the beginning
of a change in that country’s political elite.

The crisis in Ukraine was a serious setback for Russia’s position in
that country and all the CIS. Moscow had set all its hope on
government candidate Yanukovich. Putin himself even came to campaign
for him and had congratulated him twice on his victory. That has
complicated Moscow’s chances for normal relations with the new
political powers in Ukraine and alarmed the elite in all the former
Soviet republics.

Moldova

Russian-Moldovan relations took a heavy chill at the end of 2003 when
Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin refused to sign off on the
Kremlin’s proposal for regulating the internal conflicts in that
country. Their differences were not overcome in 2004. Voronin pointed
ignored almost all CIS activities and made efforts to improve his
country’s relations with the West. That course was also dictated by
Voronin’s attempts to withstand a quickly growing opposition that is
longing for a revolution of roses along the lines of Georgia’s.
Voronin’s westward turn has not strengthened his political position,
however, and the opposition sees big opportunities in this year’s
parliamentary elections.

Kazakhstan

Although relations between Moscow and Astana remain superficially
cheerful, Russian for the first time last year addressed lengthy
criticism to its key ally. This happened during Putin’s visit to
Astana in January. The main complaint from Moscow was about
Kazakhstan’s increasingly pro-Western orientation, especially in the
military and fuel realms, and the exclusion of the Russian-speaking
population of Kazakhstan from political and public life. Putin made it
clear to his Kazakh counterpart Nursultan Nazarbaev that relations
between their countries would be seriously complicated if those
problems continued.

A change of the political elite is Kazakhstan is looking ever more
likely. In spite of the seemingly solid victory of the
pro-presidential Otan party in September’s parliamentary elections,
Nazarbaev cannot feel completely secure. Western pressure to create
true democratic conditions is growing, the opposition is uniting and
the ruling party is divided. This last fact became glaringly obvious
when speaker Zharmkhan Tuyakbay mutinied, accusing the government of
falsifying the vote and becoming the leader of the opposition.

Belarus

Moscow’s discontent with Aleksandr Lukashenko’s Belarus is mounting as
well. The discord is mainly economic. Last fall, Lukashenko publicly
confirmed that there would be no common Russian-Belarusian currency,
which Moscow was pushing for. Lukashenko has still not ratified
documents passed by his parliament to give Russia property rights to
oil pipelines crossing Belarusian territory and he hasn’t been
cooperative about gas lines either.

There are been talk recently to the effect that Moscow has begun
examining Belarusian politicians in search of a successor to Poppa
Lukashenko, one more pliable and less repulsive. So, even though
Lukashenko was given the right to hold a third, fourth, fifth (and so
on) term in the referendum held in October, his future is still less
than rosy. This is even more so since the United States stated openly
for the first time at the end of the summer that it will make efforts
to remove the authoritarian Belarusian from power.

Georgia

The year 2004 began with presidential elections in Georgia, in which
Mikhail Saakashvili rode the tide of change to a victory with more
than 90 percent of the vote.

Relations between Moscow and the new powers in Tbilisi had overcome
their initial tension by the end of the year, but remain
unsatisfactory nonetheless. And they are far from any agreement on the
conditions under which they can normalize their relations. In Tbilisi,
they are insisting on absolute equality between partners in deciding
what compromises to make about what. Moscow agrees in general that
compromise should be mutual, but wants to make them with a view to the
actual situation: Georgia has more problems than Russia has, it should
be the more cooperative. Moscow’s hope for the destabilization of the
new government in Tbilisi didn’t pan out. Saakashvili is holding fast.

Moscow informed Tbilisi of its views on their bilateral problems in
the first half of last year. In October, Tbilisi responded, much to
Moscow’s displeasure. The Kremlin was especially annoyed with two
points: the demand that Russia close its military bases in Georgia by
January 1, 2006, and that the peacekeeping operations in South Ossetia
and Abkhazia be transferred to UN or OSCE control. Those operations
are now being overseen by Russia. These key issues that are holding up
the signing of an agreement on relations between the two states.

Armenia

Russia has been taking advantage of Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan’s need for its support. After the affairs in Georgian took
the course they did, the opposition in Armenia was vitiated. In April,
Kocharyan faced the most serious challenge from the opposition that he
has seen while in office. The government had to use force to break up
protests. Even though the situation was brought under control, the
president’s associates are concerned that that is not the last move by
the opposition.

In exchange for Russian support, Kocharyan has expressed his readiness
to increase that country’s economic presence in Armenia. Russia
received the bigger part of the Armenian energy sector in an agreement
to write off Armenian debt and now controls about 80 percent of
Armenia’s electricity production. Armrosgazprom, the Armenian natural
gas monopoly is also controlled by Russian structures. And Russia has
received stock packages in a number of Armenian defense enterprises.
However, Armenia’s significance as Russia’s strategic ally in the
Transcaucasus will be substantially diminished if Russia loses its
influence in Georgia.

Azerbaijan

Moscow made efforts to establish relations with Azerbaijan’s new
president Ilkham Aliev last year. The Kremlin is concerned that Aliev
Junior will lean further toward the West than his father had in order
to make Azerbaijan a regional leader. Moscow is unhappy that
Azerbaijan has avoided making a long-term on oil transit with it and
will in the future send its oil down the Baky – Tbilisi – Ceyhan
pipeline, that is, across Georgia to Turkey. Moscow is also concerned
about the lack of progress in military and technical cooperation with
Baku and suspects the new leadership of secret intentions to go over
to Western armament standards. These suspicions were confirmed by
Azerbiajan’s announcement of its plans to step up its integration into
NATO and its willingness to allow NATO military bases on its territory.

During Ilkham Aliev’s visit to Moscow in February, he was offered the
alternative of strengthening military ties with Russia, with close
ties with Russian forces and a place in the CIS Antiterrorism Center.
Baku has yet to give a firm answer. That is partially because Ilkham
Aliev has yet to consolidate his forces fully within the country.

Tajikistan

Russia was able to establish satisfactory relations with this
strategic CIS ally only at the end of the year. Before Putin’s visit
to Dushanbe in October, Tajikistani President Emomali Rakhmonov had
been hinting that Russia’s rent-free military base in Tajikistan was
no longer acceptable and that the Russians needed to open up their
wallet according to the example set by the generous Americans.
Dushanbe further demanded ownership of the Nurek space tracking
station, so that it could then rent it back to Russia. Moscow got the
picture. Tajikistan had decided to make some money off the Russian
military’s presence there, and good money at that. The Kremlin reacted
badly to that and began to think up strong countermeasures.

Setbacks in trade with the United States and fear of facing his
American-backed opposition alone made Rakhmonov think again about
relations with Moscow. During Putin’s visit to Dushanbe, an agreement
was signed giving the Russian military base legal status, turning
Nurek over to Russia in exchange for a debt write-off, finishing the
Sangtudin Hydroelectric Plant (with Tajikistan’s $50 million state
debt to Russia reinvested in the plant in the form of Russian-owned
stock) and the introduction of Russian border guards into Tajikistan.

Kyrgyzstan

Russian relations with this Central Asian state, like everything else
there, passed the year without strong jolts. The Kyrgyzstani
opposition is preparing for the presidential elections scheduled for
2005, and Kyrgyzstani President Askar Akaev has repeatedly stated that
he will not run for another term in office. During Akaev’s November
visit to Moscow, Akaev agreed to turn the most profitable parts of his
country’s military-industrial complex to Russia against its
$180-million debt to Russia. About the only stumbling block left in
Russian-Kyrgyz relations is the American plan to station several
American Air Force AWACs near Manas Airport. Moscow sees that as a
violation of Bishkek’s military and political obligations to it as
part of the Collective Security Agreement Organization.

Uzbekistan

Uzbekistani President Islam Karimov was badly shaken by the major
terrorist acts there in March and July 2004. He broke up his moderate,
liberal opposition several years ago, only to see a radical opposition
fill the vacuum. Karimov remains true to his motto, Better a hundred
arrested than a thousand killed. His intelligence agents conduct mass
arrests. It’s either me or the terrorists, and if I go, the Islamists
come in, the argument goes, although it is not too convincing. That is
why his position is looking shakier.

Karimov is reserved in his relations with Moscow. He doesn’t want to
spoil them, although he is also playing making advance to Washington,
which is interested in strengthening its position in Central Asia.

Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan, headed by Saparmurat Niyazov, is a model of stability.
Two years ago, Turkmenbashi crushed the opposition. But Niyazov is
still not completely calm. In February, a book appeared in the stores
of Turkmenistan entitled My Accomplices and I Are Terrorists, written
by former minister of foreign affairs Boris Shikhuradov, who has been
sentenced to life imprisonment for attempting a coup d’etat. In the
book, the former opposition leader tells how a a bunch of renegades
organized an assassination attempt on the great Turkmenbashi. Many in
Ashkhabad, and in the West too, have doubts about the authenticity of
the authorship of the strange confessional. Turkmenbashi has also
taken steps toward liberalization. In January, exit visas were
eliminated in Turkmenistan. That was seen as a gesture to Moscow,
whose support he is counting on if the United States should turn up
its pressure on Niyazov. Making it easier to leave the country is most
of all to the advantage of the ethnic Russians living there.

by Evegeny Sysoev

Russian Article as of Jan. 10, 2005

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian president amends law on parties

Armenian president amends law on parties

Arminfo
17 Jan 05

YEREVAN

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan signed a decree on 15 January on
making changes to the law on political parties, the Armenian
president’s press service has told Arminfo.

The decree is aimed at stimulating the process of enlarging
parties. In particular, it says that a party should have no less than
2,000 members, including no less than 100 members in every district.

Under the law, the currently functioning parties should meet the
requirements outlined in the amendments to the law within a year after
they take effect.

Sixty-five parties have been registered with Armenia’s Ministry of
Justice so far.

Wholesale petrol prices rise in Armenia

Wholesale petrol prices rise in Armenia

Arminfo
17 Jan 05

YEREVAN

One of Armenia’s largest companies trading in oil, Flash, has raised
wholesale petrol prices by five points and reduced wholesale diesel
prices by the same amount.

The Flash limited liability company told Arminfo today that a litre of
Regular-91 petrol is being offered for 275-280 drams [55-56 cents],
Premium-95 for 285-290 drams [57-58 cents], Super-98 for 305-310 drams
[61-62 cents] and diesel oil for 238-245 drams [48 cents] at its
wholesale points.

Petrol and diesel fuel prices at Flash’s filling stations have not
changed. In particular, a litre of Regular-91 costs 290 drams [58
cents], Premium-95 320 drams [64 cents] and diesel oil 250 drams [50
cents].

BAKU: Azeri politician says forthcoming elections to be democratic

Azeri politician says forthcoming elections to be democratic

Yeni Musavat, Baku
17 Jan 05

I can see no progress in Azerbaijani-Armenian talks on the Nagornyy
Karabakh settlement, Eldar Namazov, president of the public forum For
Azerbaijan, has said.

“I believe that the continuing negotiations are a well-thought-out
game of the authorities of the two sides. Azerbaijan and Armenia have
always intensified talks ahead of elections,” Namazov said in an
interview with Azerbaijani Yeni Musavat newspaper.

They want others to believe that they are close to striking a peace
deal. But after elections are rigged, it emerges that there was no
deal whatsoever, the politician said.

But Namazov said he could see very serious positive changes in
society. I am confident that democratic forces will unite ahead of the
parliamentary elections this year, he noted.

“Opposition parties, NGOs, business people and the intelligentsia
agree that democratic changes are inevitable. Everyone understands
that the only way out of the current situation in the country is to
establish democratic principles and hold free and fair elections,” the
politician told the newspaper.

Namazov stressed that the processes in Georgia and Ukraine were not
accidental. He said he believed that democratic elections would be
eventually conducted in all former Soviet republics, including
Azerbaijan.

Vatican says archbishop kidnapped in Iraq

The Associated Press
Jan 17 2005

Vatican says archbishop kidnapped in Iraq

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY — A Catholic archbishop in Mosul, Iraq, has been
kidnapped, the Vatican said Monday.

It identified the kidnapped man as Archbishop Basile Georges
Casmoussa, 66, of the Syrian Catholic Church, one of the branches of
the Roman Catholic Church.

“The Holy See deplores in the firmest way such a terrorist act,” a
Vatican statement said, demanding that he be freed immediately.

A priest in Iraq said on condition of anonymity that the archbishop
was walking in front of the Al-Bishara church in Mosul’s eastern
neighborhood of Muhandeseen when gunmen forced him into a car and
drove away.

Mosul is a northern Iraqi city that in recent months has been a
hotspot of violent insurgency.

The reason for the kidnapping was unclear, but Christians — tens of
thousands of whom live in and around Mosul — have been subjected to
attacks in the past.

Christians make up just 3 percent of Iraq’s 26 million people. The
major Christian groups in Iraq include Chaldean-Assyrians and
Armenians. There are small numbers of Roman Catholics.

Officials estimate that as many as 15,000 Iraqi Christians have left
the country since August, when four churches in Baghdad and one in
Mosul were attacked in a coordinated series of car bombings. The
attacks killed 12 people and injured 61 others.

Another church was bombed in Baghdad in September.

BAKU: Positions of Baku, Yerevan getting closer – Russian Foreign

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 17 2005

Positions of Baku, Yerevan getting closer – Russian Foreign Ministry

Russian Foreign Ministry says that certain progress is observed in
the positions of Baku and Yerevan getting closer and their approaches
to the Upper Garabagh conflict, the Ministry said in a statement.
On January 10-11 Prague hosted another meeting of Azerbaijani and
Armenian foreign ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanian,
attended by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs (Russia, United States and
France).
`Moscow welcomes the fact that the meetings of the two sides on
different levels, including those between Presidents and in the
`Prague format’, have become regular’, the Russian Ministry said.
Representatives of Azerbaijan and Armenia are considering literally
all aspects of the situation with the Garabagh conflict in their
internationally mediated talks, the same source said.
`These include such thorny issues as withdrawal of armed forces,
demilitarization of the territory, international guarantees and the
status of Upper Garabagh.’*

BAKU: Armenia faces energy crisis

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 17 2005

Armenia faces energy crisis

Armenia is facing energy and fuel crisis, as prices for automobile
gasoline have doubled, diesel fuel increased 1.5 times, while those
on stove heating oil and liquid gas 1.6 times.
Today, AI-95 brand gasoline sells in Armenia for $1.6, while AI-93
and AI-72 brands for $1.2 and $1 respectively.
Experts explain Armenia’s energy crises with the detention of trains
with transit cargoes which are transported to Armenia through
Azerbaijan and Georgia, on the Azeri-Georgian border and a relevant
investigation being carried out by the Azerbaijan State Customs
Committee.
An official from Armenian Energy Ministry Bagam Terbekian told the
local press that the country’s fuel reserves are getting exhausted.
Whereas 20,000 tons of gasoline was daily imported from Georgia, the
figure is currently 3,000 tons, he said.
Amidst the crisis, Iran has reduced the export of fuel to Armenia.
Terbekian said the reasons for the move are uncertain and that the
government will seriously examine the situation.
A new agreement on cargo transportation will be signed by the
Azerbaijani and Georgian customs agencies shortly. The agreement
includes a special provision which bans transporting cargoes going
through Azerbaijan to Armenia through Georgia.*

Armenia sends troops to Iraq on January 18

ArmenPress
Jan 17 2005

ARMENIA SENDS TROOPS TO IRAQ ON JANUARY 18

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS: A 46-member unit of Armenian
non-combat troops are leaving for Iraq on January 18 to join US-led
multinational force there. Seyran Shahsuvarian, a spokesman for the
defense ministry, told Armenpress that Armenia will dispatch three
doctors, three officers, ten demining experts and 30 military truck
drivers. The decision was sanctioned by the Armenian parliament late
last month, despite strong protests by Armenia’s opposition forces.
An opinion poll released earlier in December revealed also that the
overwhelming majority of Armenians were likewise against the
deployment.
The Armenian troops will be placed under the command of Polish
contingent and all relevant expenses, including Armenian personnel’s
salaries will be paid by the US and Poland.
Armenian servicemen will wear blue berets to underline that their
mission is of “humanitarian” nature. Armenian defense minister said
earlier that the contingent will not take part in combat operations.