"Georgian Authorities Are Used To Rigging Elections"

“GEORGIAN AUTHORITIES ARE USED TO RIGGING ELECTIONS”

A1+
31/05/10

Georgian authorities do not hurry to publicize the results of a
municipal election held in Javakhk on May 30 which was to be announced
earlier today.

“The silence means something is being plotted. Anyway, I do not think,
the elections results will be invalidated for that reason,” Armenian MP
Shirak Torosyan, President of the “Javakhk Patriotic Union” told A1+.

According to preliminary data, President Mikheil Saakashvili’s National
Movement Party had a crushing victory in the Sunday vote.

Shirak Torosyan says Georgian elections never reflected the genuine
moods in Javakhk. He is convinced that only 15% of eligible voters
participated in the vote.

“Surely, the authorities will present a high turnout and declare the
pro-government candidate as a winner,” said Torosyan.

According to Mr. Torosyan, the indifference of Javakh residents to
elections is conditioned by a few factors. One the one hand, people
have left abroad in search of better working conditions. On the other
hand, they do not have confidence in the state and authorities.

“A few candidates have come to power over the last years but none of
them has cared to better life I the region. None of the candidates
running in the municipal election presented his pre-election program
to the public. When asked about their programs, the candidates simply
said their work spoke of their activity,” said Mr. Torosyan.

“Georgian authorities always pretend to be concerned about minority
issues. In fact, Javakhi Armenians are displeased with the authorities’
policy. They frequently violate citizens’ rights.”

Does it mean that the Georgian authorities are used to rigging
elections in Javakh?

In reply to A1+, Mr. Torosyan gave a positive answer.

From: A. Papazian

Lyudmila Sargsyan Taken To Police Station

LYUDMILA SARGSYAN TAKEN TO POLICE STATION

Tert.am
18:35 31.05.10

Chairwoman of Social Democrat Hnchak Party Lyudmila Sargsyan was this
afternoon (approximately after 5:30 pm) taken to the police station
from Azatutyun Square.

Ironically, since May 28 the oppositionist Armenian National Congress
(HAK) young make activists hopeless attempts to enter Azatutyun
Square but the police denies them entry without providing any proper
explanation.

Currently there are no protesters on the Square, while there are
scores of policemen instead.

From: A. Papazian

Nagorno-Karabakh Will Not Be Azeri Unless The Last Ethnic Armenian L

NAGORNO-KARABAKH WILL NOT BE AZERI UNLESS THE LAST ETHNIC ARMENIAN LEAVES THE REGION

RIA Novosti
16:5628/05/2010

MultimediaVideo:Nagorno-Karabakh will not be Azeri unless the last
ethnic Armenian leaves the region Video:Nagorno-Karabakh compromise
needs new atmosphere between Armenia and Azerbaijan Hello. Our guest
is Grigory Anisonyan, the chief editor of the international Armenian
newspaper Noah’s Ark. Hello, Mr. Anisonyan.

Hello.

Q: There is an impression that all sides of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict are as close as never before to a compromise and that some
kind of agreement is possible. Do you think this is indeed the case?

A: You know, I do not think that Armenia and Azerbaijan are currently
ready for a compromise. Both sides have rather radical positions. And
this is understandable. One can understand the Armenian side. They
lived on their own land for centuries, and Karabakh became a part of
Azerbaijan during the Soviet period as a result of Stalin’s “national,
fraternal” decision.

However, the people continued to live all those years on their land,
and when the Soviet Union collapsed, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh
expressed their desire to live independently. But, as you know,
certain developments followed, pressure was exercised, and Soviet
troops were sent to crush the independence movement in the late
1980’s. As a result, people living on their own land were forced to
take up arms to defend their homes.

Eventually, a war broke out between Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan.

Of course, Armenia supported the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh and so
got involved in the conflict. In 1994, a peace agreement was signed
in Bishkek. In fact, if this agreement had not been signed in 1994,
I believe that all of Karabakh would have been liberated, not only the
mountainous part of Karabakh but also the lowlands that are populated
by Armenians as well.

But Armenians would have been forced to leave the lowlands, as these
areas remained part of Azerbaijan. As a result, a buffer zone of
sorts emerged, consisting of seven regions and providing a viability
guarantee to Nagorno-Karabakh. Today, Azerbaijan demands the return
of these lands, the seven regions which surround Nagorno-Karabakh,
without making any concessions in return. That is, they will not
accept the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh or recognize that it
belongs to the native people of this land.

Q: Don’t you think that some countries in the West (we are not going
to name them here) are to a certain degree guilty of dragging out the
resolution of this conflict? Isn’t it in their interest to maintain
some level of instability in the region and to put pressure on these
countries, primarily on Azerbaijan and Armenia?

A: Of course, there is some truth to this. Each of these Western
European countries and the U.S. can benefit from this conflict.

Depending on the development of their economic and political relations
with Azerbaijan and Armenia, they put pressure on either side. But on
the other hand, the West has recently embraced a different position and
wants to see the conflict resolved. The continuation of the conflict
is no longer in the interest of the big Western corporations that
are involved in the construction of gas and oil pipelines from Baku
to Turkey.

Q: Do you think people on both sides are ready for reconciliation? As
an editor-in-chief and as a human being, what do you do to promote
the swift resolution of the conflict? I mentioned earlier that this
is an international Armenian newspaper, does this mean that it is a
mouthpiece for Armenian propaganda?

A: Of course, this is true to a certain degree. We are an Armenian
publication, and it would be strange if we did not support the
Armenian position. But my colleagues and I understand that for the
newspaper to be interesting, it needs to be truthful, as truthful
as possible. And that is what we aspire to. Our newspaper has been
published for 13 years, and we have a page permanently dedicated to
Azerbaijan, the fifth page, and the fourth page covers Georgia. In
general, our newspaper covers the entire southern region (the South
Caucasus and the neighboring states of Turkey and Iran).

Q: Do Azerbaijanis read your newspaper?

A: They do read and even study it carefully.

Q: They probably use it as a source for an alternative opinion.

A: Yes, we invite leading Armenian and sometimes Azerbaijani experts
to contribute. Russian political analysts are often published in our
newspaper. Therefore, reading our content should be quite interesting.

Q: On this subject I have the following question: Just as it is
impossible to discuss the conflict without Russian political analysts,
it is also impossible to settle it without Russia and Russian
policymakers. And what role has Russia been playing over the past
years in trying to reach a peaceful resolution of the conflict? Has
that role changed in recent years, if at all?

A: Following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the emergence of
post-Soviet states, Russia certainly supported Armenia which was its
main strategic partner and ally in the South Caucasus. This was the
case until recently. Today, Russia has a more balanced position.

Perhaps this stems from Russia’s national interests; most likely the
Turkish factor (the active rapprochement between Russia and Turkey
that has been taking place recently) has also played a role here. All
of this affects the course of the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.

Turkey agreed to open borders with Armenia, but made the resolution
of the Karabakh conflict, an issue that does not directly apply to
Armenian-Turkish relations, a precondition for going through with
the agreement. This was unacceptable to Armenia. So it turns out that
it was a set-up on Turkey’s side. In general, Turkish diplomats have
been known to be rather shrewd.

And it is well known that depending too much on relations with Turkey
is dangerous. This applies not only to Armenia, but also to Russia.

Russia’s role in the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
has become more balanced, and currently Moscow does not have any
privileges in the resolution process. I cannot say that Russia is
directly backing either the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic or Azerbaijan.

In other words, Russia has become more neutral. Still, I believe
that Russia has always played, continues to play, and should play a
primary role in the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Q: What do you think should happen? Under what conditions would the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and Armenia agree to have this territory
returned to Azerbaijan? Is this even possible?

A: This is not possible, unless, of course, there were no
Armenians left in Nagorno-Karabakh. If, however, the independence
of Nagorno-Karabakh is recognized, the issue of returning the seven
regions will be resolved. Yet, this would not include the Lachin
corridor, which links Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh.

Q: Azerbaijan’s position is the exact opposite. I do not see a
compromise here.

A: You know, there is also a human factor. People live on their land
and they want to live independently. So, you would have to completely
exterminate them, which is not so easy. And the Karabakh people have
such a mentality that they would successfully resist this. Therefore,
Azerbaijan should sit down with them to negotiate, and specifically
with them and not with Armenia. And Armenia will just act as the
guarantor of the independence and stability of Nagorno-Karabakh. Just
as Turkey today is the guarantor of security for Azerbaijan.

Thank you very much for your time and comments.

From: A. Papazian

Ataturk’s statue placed in Wakayama town

Ataturk’s statue placed in Wakayama town

Friday 21st May, 2010

WAKAYAMA –
A bronze statue of modern Turkey’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was placed
Thursday in the Wakayama Prefecture town of Kushimoto, which has maintained
relations with the country since a Turkish warship sank near the Pacific
coast town in western Japan in 1890.

The 4.2-meter-high, 4-ton statue of Ataturk on a horse was installed at a
plaza near a lighthouse overlooking the wreck site of the Ertugrul, whose
surviving crew members received hospitality from local residents. The statue
was initially given to the Kashiwazaki Turkish Cultural Village in Niigata
Prefecture by the Turkish Embassy in 1996. But it was returned to the
embassy after the park was closed after less than 10 years of operation.

© 2010 Kyodo News

From: A. Papazian

Turkish Foreign Ministry Recalls Ambassador To Israel Upon Military

TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTRY RECALLS AMBASSADOR TO ISRAEL UPON MILITARY ASSAULT

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 31, 2010 – 16:51 AMT 11:51 GMT

Turkey on Monday warned Israel of “irreparable consequences” to
bilateral ties after more than 10 people died in an Israeli operation
on aid-carrying ships bound for Gaza, among them Turkish vessels.

Turkish Foreign Ministry recalled the ambassador to Israel upon the
military assault, reported broadcaster Haberturk.

The Israeli envoy was summoned to the Foreign Ministry as hundreds
gathered outside Israeli missions to protest the assault that came
atop already badly worsened ties between the two former allies.

“By targeting civilians, Israel has once again shown its disregard for
human life and peaceful initiatives. We strongly condemn these inhumane
practices of Israel,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“This deplorable incident, which took place in open seas and
constitutes a fragrant breach of international law, may lead to
irreparable consequences in our bilateral relations,” it said.

“Israel will have to bear the consequences of this behaviour, which
constitutes a violation of international law,” it said.

Israeli Ambassador Gabby Levy held a 20-minute meeting with a senior
Foreign Ministry official and left the ministry without making
a statement.

He was told that “Turkey retains all its rights under international
law concerning this assault,” a Turkish diplomat, who asked not to
be named, told AFP.

“We are considering the actions that we may take under international
law,” he said.

Turkey also asked for a detailed report on the fate of all people who
were aboard the vessels, he said, adding that they included nationals
from a total of 33 countries.

Levy was also told that the Turkish passengers and the wounded should
be repatriated to Turkey in the shortest possible time and the vessels
released, he said.

The Israeli navy stormed the flotilla of six vessels early Monday as
it sailed to Gaza in a bid to break the blockade of the impoverished
enclave, in place since 2007, and deliver some 10,000 tons of supplies.

The Israeli army said more than 10 passengers were killed, while
Turkish charity IHH, which was part of the campaign, said at least
15 people were dead, most of them Turks, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

From: A. Papazian

Turkey Equals Israel’s Actions To Piracy

TURKEY EQUALS ISRAEL’S ACTIONS TO PIRACY

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 31, 2010 – 17:39 AMT 12:39 GMT

Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc said Turkey is withdrawing
its ambassador to Israel, canceling three joint military drills and
calling on the UN Security Council to convene in an emergency session
about Israel.

The moves come after 10 pro-Palestinian activists on an aid flotilla
were reported killed and dozens wounded by Israeli forces.

Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc says Turkey is withdrawing its
ambassador on Monday and also calling back a youth soccer team from
Israel. He equates Israel’s actions with “piracy.”

He rules out deploying Turkish warships in the Mediterranean but
severely condemns Israel, AP reported.

From: A. Papazian

Turkish PM Cancels Visit to Argentina

Turkish PM Cancels Visit to Argentina

May 31, 2010

BUENOS AIRES – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan cancelled his
official trip to Argentina because he “felt offended” by the decision of
Buenos Aires Mayor Mauricio Macri to cancel the inauguration of a monument
paying homage to the founder of the Republic of Turkey, officials said.

“He suspended his visit bothered by the unfulfilled promises of the city
government regarding the inauguration of a monument in homage to the founder
of the Republic of Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, which was scheduled for
Monday, Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana said Saturday.

“The Turkish foreign minister told me at noon (Saturday) that his government
made the decision to cancel the visit because of the displeasure the Macri
government’s decision caused them,” the organizer of the event, Taiana, told
the official Telam news agency.

The foreign minister lamented the fact that “the marches and countermarches
of the city government caused this situation” because “it was a good
opportunity to have the presence of a prime minister (from a country) making
up the G-20,” Taiana said.

The Buenos Aires city government has been battling President Cristina
Fernandez’s administration, with the conflict intensifying over the past two
weeks because of the indictment of Macri in a case where the judiciary is
investigating illegal telephone tapping of politicians and businessmen.

The Turkish government issued a statement Sunday in which it blamed
Argentina’s Armenian community for the cancellation of Erdogan’s visit to
Buenos Aires.

“The reason for the cancellation of the visit to Argentina is that the
Environment and Public Works Ministry of the autonomous government of Buenos
Aires cancelled the permit to unveil a bust in honor of Ataturk in Jorge
Newbury park because of the opposition of Armenian sectors,” the Turkish
Foreign Ministry said.

Fernandez called Erdogan to apologize for the incident and to assure him
that his government could not do anything more because of the municipal
government’s autonomy, the ministry said.

Erdogan was scheduled to arrive Sunday in Buenos Aires from Santiago, Chile.

Argentina is home to some 130,000 Armenians, the majority of them
descendents of those expelled by the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor to
Turkey, at the beginning of the 20th century.

The Ottoman Empire ordered the deportation of about 1 million Armenians to
the deserts of Syria at the start of World War 1 because it felt that they
were fifth columnists for the enemy nation of Russia and the majority died
there of hunger, disease or in massacres, deeds that Armenia and other
countries refer to as the Armenian Genocide.

Turkey, however, refuses to call those events genocide, contending that the
Armenians also killed thousands of Muslims and out of fear that
acknowledging the Turkish role in the situation would lead to economic and
territorial claims.

Most historians agree that Ataturk, who was an Ottoman general during World
War I and led the 1919-1923 Turkish War for Independence, did not
participate in the genocide.

Copyright Latin American Herald Tribune – 2009 ©

From: A. Papazian

Azerbaijani President Submitted Draft Military Doctrine To Parliamen

AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT SUBMITTED DRAFT MILITARY DOCTRINE TO PARLIAMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 31, 2010 – 15:54 AMT 10:54 GMT

Member of Milli Mejlis committee of defense and security Zakhid Orudj
said that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev submitted a draft military
doctrine to the parliament.

“The parliamentary committee on defense and security will discuss the
draft military doctrine sent by the Azerbaijani President on June 3,”
he said, adding that the document will be debated in Milli Mejlis
during an extraordinary session in June.

Orudj noted that the document reflects strategic tasks of military
construction and system of formation of Baku armed forces. Besides,
the main risks that Azerbaijan faces in the region, as well as
preventive measures for their elimination are mentioned in it.

He also said that the draft military doctrine contains principles
for the Azerbaijani armed forces to eliminate the so-called “fact of
Azerbaijani territories occupation by Armenia,” 1news.az reported.

From: A. Papazian

Seminar on the 1915 Genocide

PRESS RELEASE
31 May 2010
Stockholm, Sweden
[email protected]

Seminar: Genocide in the Ottoman Empire 1915: Living History, Legal
Issues, Prescription or Responsibility.

The Swedish branch of the International Law Association held a seminar on
the topic of the legal aspects of the Armenian Genocide. The seminar was
in the wake of the Swedish Riksdag’s recognition of the 1915 Genocide.
The seminar was chaired by Professor Ove Bring, expert in International
Law and the Chairman on the Swedish ILA. The panel consisted of Armenia’s
Ambassador to Sweden, Mr. Ara Aivazian, Mr. Kaj Hobér, Professor in
International Law at University of Dundee, and Mr. Vahagn Avedian,
Historian and Chief Editor of Armenica.org. The seminar was attended by
more the 50 participants, encompassed of representatives from the Swedish
Foreign Department, members of the Swedish ILA, scholars, as wells as
members of the Armenian, Turkish, and Assyrian communities.

Ambassador Aivazian, presenting a historical review of the events, touched
upon the normalization process and the issue of the Turkish-Armenian
protocols, briefly mentioning their content and why they have come to a
halt. Professor Hobér gave a brief summary of his doctoral thesis on the
subject of extinctive prescription in international law. Explaining that
it would be very difficult to predict the possibility or the outcome of a
theoretical case in regard to the Armenian Genocide, the Professor pointed
out that due to the nature of the events, the issue could still be brought
to an international judicial instance, e.g. the ICJ for further
examination. Mr. Avedian gave a brief presentation of his working article
on State Identity, Continuity, and Responsibility. According to his
presentation, there are reasonable grounds for tracing the denialist
policy of the Turkish Republic to the possible liability charges which an
official Turkish recognition of the genocide would imply.

The Turkish Embassy had been invited to the seminar, but had declined
participation at the last moment, arguing that similar discussions would
increase the tension between the affected minority groups in Sweden. The
representatives of the Armenian and Assyrian organizations present at the
seminar were totally unaware of the alleged tensions referred by the
Turkish Embassy.

From: A. Papazian

Around 4,000 Computers Are Sold In Armenia Under Computers For Every

AROUND 4,000 COMPUTERS ARE SOLD IN ARMENIA UNDER COMPUTERS FOR EVERYONE PROGRAM

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 31, 2010 – 16:38 AMT 11:38 GMT

Around 4,000 computers were sold in Armenia under the pilot project
of Computers for Everyone program during the first quarter of 2010.

The program has already influenced the number of computer users in
Armenia, the press service of the Armenian Ministry of Economy told
to PanARMENIAN.Net

According to preliminary data of a research on use of Internet and
computer equipment in Armenia (as of March 2010), the number of
computer users totaled 18% that is three times higher as compared
with the last similar index recorded in Armenia (6%). The research
conducted by Enterprise Incubator Foundation is scheduled to be
finished within several months.

Computer for Everyone program is implemented by the Armenian
government, Enterprise Incubator Foundation, Hewlett-Packard and
Microsoft corporations in partnership with Unicomp company and
ACBA-Credit Agricole bank. The pilot project of the program has started
since September 22, 2009. $5-7mln will be allocated for the program,
which has provided the population with the opportunity to purchase
computers at market prices. The program aims to increase the level
of households’ computerization from 6% to 30%.

Seven models of HP computers, including 6 notebooks, are available for
Armenian consumers in 7 shops of Yerevan (4), Vanadzor (2) and Gyumri
(1).

From: A. Papazian