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Agitator

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  1. Blasts on Russian gas pipeline hit supplies to Georgia, Armenia VLADIKAVKAZ, Russia (AFP) - Two explosions have ripped through Russia's main natural gas supply pipeline to Armenia and Georgia, halting supplies at a time of freezing temperatures and sparking accusations of sabotage from Georgian President Mikhael Saakashvili. The explosions occurred on the main branch and a reserve branch of the Mozdok-Tbilisi pipeline close to the border with Georgia in the early hours of Sunday morning, Russian officials said. Following initial investigation at the site in the Russian province of North Ossetia, investigators are treating the incident as sabotage, but not terrorism, said a spokesman for Russia's deputy prosecutor general. "An expert group is working at the site. According to preliminary information they have already found the remains of improvised explosive devices. If this explanation is confirmed then we are talking about sabotage," said the spokesman, Sergei Prokopov. A criminal case of causing intentional damage to property has been opened, Prokopov told AFP. Other officials said it could take up to four days to prepare the damage due to the difficult mountain conditions. Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili meanwhile accused Russia of being behind the blasts, which Georgian officials said could leave households without gas as soon as Sunday evening. "The explanation we have received from the Russian side is absolutely inadequate and contradictory. ... Georgia has been subjected to serious sabotage from the side of the Russian Federation," Saakashvili said in a live television broadcast. "We have long heard threats from Russian politicians that we could be left without light and gas ... and now this has happened, when Georgia is experiencing its coldest winter," Saakashvili said. Meanwhile Georgia's deputy energy minister, Aleko Khetagurov, said a main electricity supply line from Russia had also failed around the same time as the gas pipeline explosions. "The import of gas has been completely halted.... Talks are under way on supplies of gas from Azerbaijan and Iran, but this will take several days," Khetagurov said. Both Armenia and Georgia are experiencing cold winters, with temperatures in Georgia expected to fall as low as minus four degrees Celsius (25 degrees Fahrenheit) in the coming days. In the mountain republic of Armenia, officials from the gas distribution utility Armrosgazprom called on the population to conserve supplies and said they were cutting supplies to non-essential consumers. "We've started using gas from storage facilities. Due to this Armrosgazprom calls on the population to use gas economically and if necessary to use alternative sources of warmth," the company's spokeswoman, Shushan Sardaryan, told AFP. Georgia's relations with Moscow have been tense since Saakashvili was swept to power by a "rose revolution" in late 2003 and promised integration with the West, including a bid to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation ( NATO). In his comments on Sunday, Saakashvili said the gas cut-off was linked to Russia's decision to nearly double the price it charges Georgia for natural gas from January 1 to 110 dollars (91 euros) per 1,000 cubic meters. That move is part of a major rise in the gas prices Russia charges several former Soviet republics that long received discounts on gas from Moscow. Russia's relations with Armenia have also come under unusual strain recently as Moscow has raised the price of gas it supplies to Armenia, a long-time ally. Armenian President Robert Kocharian was scheduled to arrive in Moscow later Sunday to open an Armenian-Russian cultural event and hold talks with President http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060122/bs_af...de_060122132723
  2. Agitator

    Hayer jan

    I am beeing deported from England to Armenia after 17 years!!!
  3. Turkish Mercenary Detained in Russia’s Caucasus Region Created: 30.12.2005 11:57 MSK (GMT +3), Updated: 11:57 MSK, 5 hours 47 minutes ago MosNews A 28-year-old Turkish national from the city of Sakarya has been arrested by police in Russia’s internal republic of Dagestan bordering breakaway Chechnya, Itar-Tass reported. Investigators established that the he fought against the federal forces in Chechnya in 2002-2004 as a member of an illegal armed formation headed by Ruslan Gelayev, the former defense minister of the Chechen rebel government killed in early 2004, as well as with Saudi mercenary Abu-Havs who reportedly sponsored the Beslan school seizure. A man in whose house the foreigner was hiding, has also been arrested. Both are currently being questioned in order to specify their involvement in terrorist activities. __________________
  4. TURKEY BRINGS ANOTHER CASE AGAINST AN ETHNIC ARMENIAN YEREVAN, DECEMBER 26. ARMINFO. A Turkish court has opened a case against an Armenian-Turkish journalist for his comments on a six-month sentence it gave him earlier for denigrating Turkish identity, lawyers involved in bringing the case said Sunday. The Istanbul court was acting after a group of nationalist lawyers asked the court to file a case against Hrant Dink, editor in chief of the bilingual Turkish and Armenian weekly Agos, and three Agos journalists, saying that the journalists "tried to influence the judiciary" through their editorials. Reuters reports, Mr. Dink, an Armenian who was born in Turkey, was sentenced to six months in jail by an Istanbul court in October for comments in an article he wrote against Article 301 of a revised penal code, which allows prosecutors to pursue cases against writers and scholars for "insulting Turkish identity." The case is now before the Court of Appeals, one of several such freedom of speech cases that have highlighted European Union concerns about Turkey's efforts to become a member. European officials say that such court cases are likely to hinder Turkey's progress toward full membership. About 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks in 1915 during World War I. While historians are widely agreed that the 1915 massacres constituted genocide, the subject remains taboo in Turkey, which says the killings were related to World War I clashes after Armenian militants joined forces with Russia. The nationalist Lawyers Unity Association asked the court to bring the case against the four journalists, who face jail terms of nine months to 4? years, if convicted. "The case has been opened because Dink and the other writers of the Armenian Agos publication have criticized a former sentence of the court in an effort to prevent a just lawsuit, which is against Article 288 of the code," said the leader of the association, Kemal Kerincsiz. Mr. Dink told the Anka news agency that it was his right to criticize the earlier verdict, adding he would take the case to the European Court of Human Rights if the Court of Appeals upholds the court ruling. Orhan Pamuk, a best-selling Turkish novelist, is also facing a jail term of six months to three years from the same court for violating Article 301 for his comments in February to a Swiss magazine on the 1915 killings and on the deaths of Kurds in last two decades in Turkey. The case against Mr. Pamuk was filed at the request of the same lawyers group. Last Thursday, the Istanbul court fined a writer for breaching Article 301 in a book on the evacuation of Kurdish, Armenian and Syriac Christian villages in the past 100 years, and a publisher for an article on Turkey's Iraq policy.
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