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  • ASBAREZ Online [03-08-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    03/08/2006
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    1) Oskanian And Rice to Sign $235 Million Contract
    2) Pallone Calls for Parity in Armenia-Azerbaijan Military Assistance
    3) Azerbaijan Violates Cease Fire in Northeastern Armenia
    4) EU Says Turkey Must Show Progress on Cyprus in Membership Talks
    5) Istanbul University Organizes Armenian Conference
    6) Harvest Gallery Presents Rafael Atoyan Exhibit

    1) Oskanian And Rice to Sign $235 Million Contract

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--The United States will formalize later this month the
    release
    of $235.5 million in additional economic assistance to Armenia over the next
    five years under President George W. Bush's Millennium Challenge Account (MCA)
    program.
    Armenia's MCA compact, already agreed on by the two governments, will be
    signed in Washington on March 27.
    In a statement released on Tuesday, the Armenian Assembly of America said the
    signing ceremony will be attended by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian.
    The agreement will come nearly two years after Armenia was included on the
    list of 16 developing nations that are eligible for the plan designed to spur
    political and economic reforms around the world. The Millennium Challenge
    Corporation (MCC), a US government agency handling it, approved the Armenian
    government's MCA application late last year.
    Most of the MCA assistance, $146 million, will be spent on rebuilding and
    expanding Armenia's dilapidated irrigation networks. Another $67 million will
    go to pay for capital repairs on about 1,000 kilometers of rural roads that
    have fallen into disrepair since the Soviet collapse.

    2) Pallone Calls for Parity in Armenia-Azerbaijan Military Assistance

    WASHINGTON, DC--Congressman Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Co-Chairman of the Armenian
    Issues Caucus, took the floor of the US House of Representatives Tuesday to
    criticize the Administration's "breach of an agreement struck between the
    White
    House and Congress in 2001 to maintain parity in US military aid to Armenia
    and
    Azerbaijan," reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).
    The Bush Administration recommended last month, in its Fiscal Year 2007
    budget, that Azerbaijan receive significantly more military training and
    hardware than Armenia. The President also proposed cutting US economic aid to
    Armenia from last year's appropriation of $74.4 million to $50 million, a
    nearly 33% reduction.
    The New Jersey Congressman explained to his House colleagues that, "a lack of
    military parity would weaken ongoing peace negotiations regarding Nagorno
    Karabagh. Furthermore, I believe that any imbalance will contribute to further
    instability in the region if military parity is not achieved." He added that,
    "failing to respect the parity agreement undermines the role of the US as an
    impartial mediator of the Nagorno Karabagh conflict."
    Representative Pallone closed his remarks by noting that, "in the coming
    weeks
    I will advocate to the Foreign Operations Subcommittee to restore military
    parity, to increase economic assistance to Armenia, and to provide for
    humanitarian aid to the people of Nagorno Karabagh. It is incredibly important
    to reward our allies and to send a message to Azerbaijan and Turkey that
    ethnically charged genocides, illegal blockades of sovereign nations, and the
    constant harassment of the Armenian people will not be tolerated."
    "We want to thank Congressman Pallone for his longstanding leadership in
    educating his colleagues about the important US interests served by our
    assistance program to Armenia, direct aid to Nagorno Karabagh, and the other
    Armenia-related provisions in the Foreign Operations bill--most recently and
    notably--the need for maintaining parity in US military aid to Armenia and
    Azerbaijan," said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "We also want to
    express our appreciation to Congressman Knollenberg for his work, within the
    Foreign Operations Subcommittee itself, generating vital support for
    maintaining military parity and other key provisions of special concern to the
    Armenian American community."
    The President's proposal for Freedom Support Act aid is $50 million for
    Armenia, $28 million for Azerbaijan, and $58 million for Georgia. His Foreign
    Military Financing proposals are $3.5 million for Armenia, $4.5 million for
    Azerbaijan, and $10 million for Georgia. The White House's recommendation to
    Congress for International Military Education and Training is $790,000 for
    Armenia, $885,000 for Azerbaijan, and $1,235,000 for Georgia.
    The Foreign Operations Subcommittees of the Senate and House Appropriation
    Committees are currently reviewing the President's proposed budget and are
    each
    drafting their own versions of the FY 2007 foreign assistance bill.
    The agreement to maintain parity in US military aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan
    was struck between the White House and Congress in 2001, in the wake of
    Congressional action granting the President the authority to waive the Section
    907 restrictions on aid to Azerbaijan. The ANCA has vigorously defended this
    principle, stressing in correspondence, at senior level meetings, and through
    grassroots activism, that a tilt in military spending toward Azerbaijan would
    destabilize the region, emboldening the Azeri leadership to continue their
    threats to impose a military solution to the Nagorno Karabagh conflict. More
    broadly, the ANCA has underscored that breaching the parity agreement would
    reward the leadership of Azerbaijan for walking away from the OSCE's Key West
    peace talks, the most promising opportunity to resolve the Nagorno Karabagh
    conflict in nearly a decade. Finally, failing to respect the parity agreement
    undermines the role of the US as an impartial mediator of the Nagorno Karabagh
    conflict.

    The full text of Congressman Pallone's remarks are provided below.

    Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr.'s Floor Statement

    Foreign Operations Request: March 7, 2006

    Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Speaker, the President's budget request for fiscal year 2007
    proposes 20 percent more military aid to Azerbaijan than to Armenia. This
    request is a clear breach of an agreement struck between the White House and
    the Congress in 2001 to maintain parity in U.S. military aid to Armenia and
    Azerbaijan.
    Mr. Speaker, the parity agreement is unfortunately a battle that the Armenian
    people have had to fight in the past. The fiscal year 2005 Presidential
    request
    was similar in that it called for more military funding to Azerbaijan.
    However, the Congress reversed the President to ensure military parity in the
    fiscal year 2005 Foreign Operations Appropriations Act. After that battle and
    the President's 2006 budget request that
    included parity , I thought the President's fiscal year 2007 budget would
    continue that policy. But unfortunately that was not the case. A lack of
    military parity would, in my opinion, weaken ongoing peace negotiations
    regarding Nagorno Karabagh, among other things.
    It will also contribute to further instability in the region, and it
    undermines the role of the United States as an impartial mediator of the
    Nagorno Karabagh conflict. Mr. Speaker, the government should not be rewarding
    the Government of Azerbaijan for walking away from the organization for
    security and cooperation in Europe's Key West peace talks, the most promising
    opportunity to resolve the Nagorno Karabagh conflict in nearly a decade.
    Mr. Speaker, unfortunately, the administration's budget also calls for
    drastic
    cuts in economic assistance to Armenia. I was discouraged to see that the
    President requested a 33 percent decrease in economic aid from $74.4 million
    last year to $50 million this year. Technical and developmental assistance and
    investment is essential to Armenia. This funding is key to democratic
    stability
    and economic reform in the country.
    Mr. Speaker, is this the message we want to send to our friends in
    Armenia? Do
    we want to cut economic aid to a country that is terrorized by its neighbors
    and is shut off on its eastern and western borders due to an illegal blockade
    by Turkey and Azerbaijan?
    Mr. Speaker, in the coming weeks I will advocate to the Foreign Operations
    Subcommittee to restore military parity , to increase economic assistance to
    Armenia and to provide for humanitarian aid
    to the people of Nagorno Karabagh. It is incredibly important to reward our
    allies and to send a message to Azerbaijan and Turkey that ethnically charged
    genocides, illegal blockades of sovereign nations, and the constant harassment
    of the Armenian people will not be tolerated.

    3) Azerbaijan Violates Cease Fire in Northeastern Armenia

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--The Armenian military accused Azeri forces on Wednesday of
    continuing to violate the cease fire regime in the westernmost section of the
    heavily militarized border between the two South Caucasus states.
    Echoing statements by the Defense Ministry in Yerevan, military commanders in
    Armenia's northeastern Tavush province said their border posts have been under
    daily gunfire from Azeri positions for more than a week.
    The spokesman for Armenia's Defense Ministry, Seyran Shahsuvarian, said
    Armenian such incidents were until now registered only once or twice a month.
    The Defense Ministry said that their troops are not returning fire to prevent
    the situation from escalating further.
    "I have just been informed that our positions were again fired upon," said
    Major Tigran Gevorgian, chief of staff of an Armenian army regiment stationed
    in the regional capital Ijevan. "We registered five such incidents
    yesterday."
    "There have been no cases of truce violation from our side," he said. "We
    haven't even returned fire. But we have increased our vigilance and are ready
    to defend our land at any moment."
    One of Gevorgian's soldiers, 19-year-old Arsen Zakevosian, was wounded and
    died while being transported to a military hospital in Ijevan on Friday from
    his unit's positions just outside the border village of Kayan. The Armenian
    military says it has not suffered any other casualties so far.
    The Azeri Defense Ministry has not reported any fighting in the area close to
    eastern Georgia and denies the Armenian accusations. It said on Monday that
    the
    Armenians themselves breached the truce by killing an Azeri army conscript
    in a
    section of the frontline east of Karabagh. Karabagh Armenian forces dismissed
    the claims.
    Residents of Kayan, meanwhile, confirmed that gunshots on the border have
    been
    more frequent in recent days. "We are all used to shootings," said Arsen
    Ghazarian whose family house is located on the edge of the village, just
    meters
    from an army roadblock.
    "The Azerbaijanis shoot all the time," said one of his neighbors, Telman
    Pirumian. "Even small children are not quite scared of that."
    Susanna, an elderly villager, harked back to the pre-war Soviet years when
    local residents lived in peace with their Azeri neighbors and took pride in
    Kayan's status as the main gateway to Armenia. "We could go to Tbilisi and any
    other place from here. But now the road [running through Kayan] is closed. We
    are in quarantine."

    4) EU Says Turkey Must Show Progress on Cyprus in Membership Talks

    (Bloomberg)--The commissioner in charge of the European Union's expansion said
    Turkey must live up to its promises regarding the Republic of Cyprus to avoid
    "negative repercussions" on talks over Turkish membership in the EU.
    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn met with Turkish Foreign Minister
    Abdullah Gul and Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik Wednesday in
    Vienna.
    Austria holds the rotating presidency of the European Union.
    "There is a clear necessity to make progress on Cyprus in 2006 in order to
    avoid negative repercussions on the process,'' Rehn said. "Turkey has made
    commitments including Cyprus, and Turkey is expected to meet these
    conditions.''
    The 25-nation EU started membership negotiations with Turkey in October.
    Talks
    are expected to last a decade or more. EU leaders have said they reserve the
    right to suspend negotiations with Turkey if the government doesn't allow
    Greek
    Cypriot ships and planes access to its ports and airports under the trade
    accord.
    Foreign Minister Gul said today he believes that a solution to the Cyprus
    question should come from the United Nations.

    5) Istanbul University Organizes Armenian Conference

    Istanbul University is planning to hold a conference March 15-17 about the
    Armenian "relocation." The goal of the conference is to discuss the events of
    1915, evaluate the reasons they happened, and their consequences all without
    using the word genocide.
    The conference will feature speakers of various viewpoints, including Halil
    Berktay, a historian who contradicts the official Turkish government
    position.

    6) Harvest Gallery Presents Rafael Atoyan Exhibit

    GLENDALE--A rare solo exhibition of internationally acclaimed artist Rafael
    Atoyan's works will be held March 10-22 at Harvest Gallery in Glendale.
    The opening reception will be held Friday, March 10 from 7:00 - 10:00 PM.
    For general information about the exhibit, call Harvest Gallery at
    (818)546-1000 or visit <http://www.harvestgallery.com/>www.harvestg allery.com.

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