[Sebouh Z Tashjian <[email protected]>: The resolution o

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From: Sebouh Z Tashjian <[email protected]>
Subject: The resolution of Woodrow Wilson – Our dream or an international
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AZG Armenian Daily #226, 07/12/2007

National Interest

THE RESOLUTION OF WOODROW WILSON ? OUR DREAM OR AN
INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENT

Ex-Ambassador of Armenia to Canada Ara Papian is
proceeding with his hard work to make the Resolution
by US President Woodrow Wilson to be recognized an
international legal document. A seminar on that
subject was held yesterday at the Museum of the
Armenian Genocide, Yerevan.

The seminar roused a great interest among the
listeners, and the lecturer was asked numerous
questions. The interest is quite natural, as the
Resolution, made November 22, 1920, defined the
Armenia-Turkey borders. Although its principles were
never put into practice, as the Sevres Treaty was
nullified and the Lausanne Treaty endorsed instead, it
never ceased being an international legal document,
which must be recognized at least by the USA.

The plans of Woodrow Wilson were canceled mainly be
the reason of liquidation of the Republic of Armenia,
but with the independence of Armenia restored, the
situation changes diametrically.

Ara Papian insists that modern Armenia has to stands
for its rights, as Wilson?s Resolution bears the Seal
of the United States of America and was signed by the
US President and the Secretary of State. Therefore it
has legal force, and Armenia must use it to defend its
rights, which are violated by Turkey.

However, the question, raised by Ex-Ambassador Ara
Papian, interested the experts and political
scientists. And although the subject includes a number
of uncertain and complicated questions, large-scale
discussions will only contribute developing new
approaches and apprehension of the problem.

Thus, the answer to the question, whether the
Resolution of Woodrow Wilson is the Armenians? dream
or an International legal document, for a large part
depends on Armenia itself. In case the initiative of
Ara Papian is supported by Armenian political and
diplomatic circles and becomes an issue of the foreign
policy of the Republic of Armenia, the chances of
restoring the historical truth will greatly increase.

By A. Manvelian, translated by A.M.

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AAM Is Ready To To Forget The Genocide And Turn Armenia Into Turkey’

AAM IS READY TO TO FORGET THE GENOCIDE AND TURN ARMENIA INTO TURKEY’S APPENDAGE

armradio.am
06.12.2007 13:30

RA President Robert Kocharyan declared in an interview with Golos
Armenii newspaper that he was intentionally giving no assessment to the
activity of the All-Armenian Movement (AAM) and the former authorities.

"I’ve really avoided giving any assessment, but I have explained
my position: I did not want to continue the Soviet traditions, when
every new leader was criticizing the former authorities. I thought
it was necessary to demonstrate results and the people would give
an evaluation seeing the outcome. No activist of the All-Armenian
Movement has been persecuted.

Otherwise, half of them would be imprisoned for robbery. Vano
Siradeghyan is under investigation for organization of murders. I
have avoided the topic for 9 years, until Levon Ter-Petrosyan and
AAM initiated these debates themselves," Robert Kocharyan said.

"Today I say openly that AAM has betrayed people’s confidence. AAM
destroyed the country’s economy, making Armenia one of the poorest
countries of the world. AAM came to power on the wave of the
Karabakh Movement and betrayed it. National ideology is alien to AAM,
it is ready to forget the Genocide and turn Armenia into Turkey’s
appendage. By the way, I’m not saying anything new. All this has been
said hundred times, I’ve simply avoided giving evaluations. Sure,
it does not concern everyone: sometimes specialists appointed to
different positions have tried to undertake something to simplify
the situation," RA President said.

Treaty back to life

RIA Novosti, Russia
Dec 5 2007

Treaty back to life
14:40 | 05/ 12/ 2007

MOSCOW. (Alexei Arbatov for RIA Novosti) – What does Moscow hope to
achieve by imposing a moratorium on the Treaty on Conventional Armed
Forces in Europe (CFE) on December 13?

If Russia wanted the treaty to be abolished, it would simply withdraw
from it in accordance with the relevant article and notify the other
participants about its decision in advance. But Moscow prefers to
impose a moratorium on the CFE Treaty, which shows that it wants to
save it by encouraging NATO to ratify its adapted version as soon as
possible.

In this case, Russia will lift its moratorium and will resume
implementing the treaty, which it ratified in 2004.

Moscow is not satisfied with the response of its partners in the
treaty. The West keeps criticizing Russia for its failure to abide by
the 1999 Istanbul agreements. Russia has recently removed its
military bases from Georgia – ahead of schedule, but it still has
peacekeepers in Abkhasia and South Ossetia. It also has peacekeepers
in Transdnestr, as well as a small contingent guarding an ammunition
depot.

NATO keeps voicing its concern in this connection, pleading the
Istanbul agreements. Moscow replies that the Istanbul agreements did
not imply the withdrawal of troops by a certain date. They only
provide for a relevant agreement, for instance with Georgia, where
Russia only has peacekeepers rather than bases, which is a
fundamental difference. Withdrawal of peacekeepers is linked with the
settlement of the relevant conflicts rather than the CFE Treaty.

In general, Russia does not believe that NATO has serious grounds for
not ratifying the new draft of the CFE Treaty and considers its
adamant refusal to do so as an attempt to conduct policy from a
position of strength, all the more so since NATO is expanding
eastward, closer to Russia’s borders and increasing its conventional
forces superiority. So the CFE Treaty is only a hindrance to it.

In turn, Moscow does not find the CFE Treaty in its 1999 version
quite suitable. In its opinion, it is merely a step toward the
formation of a more stable and equitable system of confidence and
security in Europe. But Russia still ratified it in 2004 in the hope
that it will be supplemented by a number of important conditions,
which it advanced on a special CFE session last summer. If NATO
countries ratified the adapted treaty as it is, these conditions
could be discussed later.

What would happen if the West continues ignoring Moscow’s signals? In
this case, Russia will stop granting information on conventional
force deployment, receiving NATO inspections, and abiding by the
flank restrictions. If deemed necessary, additional troops will be
deployed in the Caucasus, say, in Armenia (exclusively as an
example). But we won’t violate the CFE-imposed limits on conventional
arms. We do not have such plans and we are not in a position to
surpass these limits, judging by the acquisition of conventional arms
by our forces.

Our primary concern is NATO’s eastward expansion. Russia also makes
wrong signals from time to time, which aggravates the situation, but
NATO is still the main problem. Its policy is making both the
original and the adapted CFE Treaty versions pointless. NATO could
ease Moscow’s concern by promising not to exceed, during its
expansion, the aggregate ceilings for arms imposed by the treaty in
1990 on its 16 members. But instead it is simply pocketing the arms
quotas, which were originally allocated to the Warsaw Pact and the
Soviet Union. This is the root of all the problems with the CFE
Treaty.

Russia has many more reasons to walk out of the treaty than the
United States had for withdrawing from the ABM Treaty in 2002. But
Moscow is not rushing to burn the bridges and hopes that the West
will display common sense.

Alexei Arbatov is a member of the research council of the Moscow
Carnegie Center

The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

Holbrooke: Kosovo Independence Declaration Could Spark Crisis

Council on Foreign Relations, NY
Dec 6 2007

Holbrooke: Kosovo Independence Declaration Could Spark Crisis

Interviewee: Richard C. Holbrooke, Vice Chairman, Perseus LLC
Interviewer: Bernard Gwertzman, Consulting Editor, The Council on
Foreign Relations

December 5, 2007

Richard C. Holbrooke, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations
who helped broker the Dayton Accords ending the Bosnian war, says a
lack of Russian cooperation may lead to a `huge diplomatic train
wreck’ when Kosovo declares its independence. The Russians helped end
the fighting in 1999 when the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) bombed Serbia on behalf of the persecuted ethnic Albanian
population in its province of Kosovo. Yet Holbrooke [a member of
CFR’s board of directors] says this time Moscow has been no help at
all, encouraging Serbia’s stubbornness and declining to help work out
an arrangement to allow Kosovo a peaceful transition to the
independence it has been promised by the international community.

On December 10, the three-man group – U.S. envoy Frank Wisner, Russian
representative Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko and EU envoy Wolfgang
Ischinger – that the United Nations set up last summer to bring about a
negotiated solution between Kosovo and Serbia ends its work in
failure. It’s widely expected that Kosovo, the autonomous province of
Serbia, will soon announce its independence. Do you have any idea
when that may happen?

To the best of my knowledge, the Kosovo Albanian leaders, who were
elected last month, will make a unilateral declaration of
independence about a month or so after December 10.

And they will ask all countries of the world to recognize them, as
well as the United Nations?

Yes.

Now the European Union, at the moment, from what I can tell, has
about five member states that are nervous about recognizing an
independent Kosovo.

The United States, Britain, France, and Germany have already said
they will recognize Kosovo. Most of the EU [European Union], but not
all, will recognize them. Some will recognize them on a slightly
slower time frame than others. Russia will not recognize them. Other
countries will be up for grabs. There will be a lot of pressure in
both directions. And I’m assuming the Islamic states will recognize
them.

This will leave the new country of Kosovo in somewhat of an awkward
position. UN membership will not be possible as long as the Russians
are prepared to veto their admission, and the Russians have indicated
that will be their policy. The EU will have to find ways of giving
them economic assistance, even when not all EU members recognize
them. Most importantly, a new basis for the continuation of
international security forces – the sixteen thousand NATO forces that
are now there – must be found. If those forces were to leave, the
chances of violence would be even greater.

How many Serbs still live in Kosovo?

There is no accurate census, but the best estimates are that there
are about two million Albanians, and somewhere between 100,000 and
200,000 Serbs left. But I stress, those are estimates.

Serbs have a majority in the most northern part of Kosovo that
borders on Serbia.

Around the town of Mitrovica in the north is a predominantly Serb
population and then there are Serb communities scattered throughout
other parts of Kosovo. It is my assumption that Serbian-populated
districts, which did not participate in the recent elections at all,
will announce that they do not accept the fact that they are part of
a newly declared independent state of Kosovo. They’ll say, `No, we’re
still part of Serbia.’ So you’ll have another one of these breakaway
conflicts, which have dotted Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union in the last fifteen years, such as in Nagorno-Karabakh [a de
facto independent republic within Azerbaijan but claimed by Armenia],
South Ossetia [a rebellious part of Georgia backed by Russia],
Abkhazia [an independent republic within Georgia that is not
recognized by any state but backed by Russia] and Trans-Dniester [a
breakaway part of Moldova also backed by Russia]. I suspect these
Serbian areas in Kosovo will fall into that category.

Talk a bit about the situation in Belgrade. The Serbian government is
supposedly pro-Western, right? And they’ve been talking about trying
to get in the EU.

Calling the Serbian government in Belgrade pro-Western is a bit of a
stretch. They are intensely nationalistic, particularly Prime
Minister Vojislav Kostunica. He is a real nationalist. Former Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic was a fake nationalist. He’s the real
deal. He has a mystical attachment to Kosovo as the birthplace of the
Serb people. Some of the greatest religious monuments in Europe are
these ancient Serb monasteries that are all over Kosovo – twelfth-,
thirteenth-, fourteenth-century monasteries. So the Serbs have been
there a long time, but over time this area has become overwhelmingly
Albanian.

A new basis for the continuation of international security forces – the
sixteen thousand NATO forces that are now there – must be found. If the
forces were to leave, the chances of violence would be even greater.
The Serbs suppressed the Albanians and denied them their political
rights, particularly under Milosevic, but ever since 1912, Serbs have
been the minority rulers of Kosovo and now the situation is about to
be reversed in the most dramatic manner imaginable.

Will the Serbs in the north make some declaration to definitely be
part of Serbia itself?

It’s very possible that the northern districts will do the same thing
which the Serb portions of Bosnia did in 1992, when the Bosnian
Muslims declared Bosnia an independent country. You’ll recall that
the Bosnian Serbs refused to accept it, and instead started the
terrible civil war, which was so costly.

The difference between Kosovo in 2007 and Bosnia in 1992, however, is
twofold: One, the overwhelming majority of the people in Kosovo – over
90 percent are Albanian, where as in Bosnia there was a relatively
even balance between the three groups, Bosnians, Serbs and Croats.
Secondly, there just isn’t the appetite anymore for the kind of
all-out, brutal, genocidal war, which took place in that area for so
long.

Still, there’s a real threat of violence as this escalates, and for
that reason I have called, in my recent column in the Washington
Post, for the United States and NATO to put additional troops into
both Kosovo and Bosnia as quickly as possible. Not an enormous amount
of troops, because those aren’t available anyway, but enough to let
both sides know that a slide back into violence is not acceptable to
the international community.

NATO is stretched to the hilt with its troop obligations in
Afghanistan right now.

They’re stretched very thin, but they have troops. And I’m just
talking about a couple of companies, a battalion or so, and it
doesn’t have to be primarily American. We have two choices here: You
send troops in beforehand, to prevent the violence, or you rush
troops in after it breaks out and the social fabric has been further
torn apart.

We always talk about `preventative diplomacy.’ The Council on Foreign
Relations has a Center for Preventive Action. Everyone talks about
it, but no one ever does anything about it. Here is a classic case
where a few troops now might prevent the need for more troops later,
and we have to try to get some additional troops in fast. I am very
pessimistic that the suggestion I just made for more troops will be
acted on, because of the problem you just raised: Iraq, Afghanistan.
Also the passivity of the European Union, the mistakes that the U.S.
government has made in the last few years, and the opportunistic
actions of the Russians have been a poisonous combination.

On the Russian side, has the United States pressed President Vladimir
Putin on this at all?

Not adequately. It’s been discussed at lower levels, but President
Bush has not brought it up with Putin in a firm, determined way that
would indicate to Moscow that this really matters. And the
U.S.-Russia relationship is not a very good one anyway. This
administration misjudged Putin from the beginning. In effect this
administration gave Putin complimentary words, which he didn’t
deserve. And he just kept taking advantage of it – not just in Kosovo,
but all over the place.

So you think there’s about a month between the end of the UN mission
and some declaration of independence. Do you think Kosovo can work
out any kind of deal with the Serbs on their own?

No. The only chance for a deal was if the Russians had joined the EU
and the U.S. in the search for a solution. They did this in 1999,
while the United States and NATO were bombing Serbia for
seventy-seven days, and that group, run by former Finnish President
Martti Ahtisaari for the EU, Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott
for the U.S., and Russian envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin, produced UN
Resolution 1244, which ended the bombing and created the UN
trusteeship over Kosovo, which has lasted eight years. That was a
pretty successful operation, because when the Serbs, Milosevic
specifically, realized that there was no more chance for him to get
Russian help, that’s when he came around. But this time around, Putin
is playing a very different game. He is in effect enabling the Serbs.
He’s put no pressure on them at all to reach an agreement. On the
contrary he’s become their encourager, and that is the reason we’re
headed towards such a huge diplomatic train wreck.

Is there any chance the Serbs will try to send troops into Kosovo?

There’s a chance, and the only way to prevent that is twofold: One,
the international community must prevent Albanians from taking
vengeance against the Serbs. That’s a real danger and it’s a big one.
Secondly, the presence of additional international troops, NATO
troops in particular, is the best guarantee to reduce the chances of
that happening. Serb troops moving into Kosovo would be such a
provocation that it’s hard to imagine, but this year everything has
gone wrong in the region because of the Russian encouragement of the
Serbs.

Are there problems in Bosnia, too?

In Bosnia, after twelve years in which the Dayton Accords [which
Holbrooke helped broker] have worked pretty well, and there have been
no casualties, a very serious dilemma has now arisen. In the Serb
portion of Bosnia, the Serb leader, Milorad Dodik, has previously
been pro-Western and worked with the United States and the EU quite
well, but he now seems to have been turned into something of an
anti-Western, pro-Russian, pro-separatist leader. I believe it’s
because the Russians have been showering petrodollars on him and he’s
under intense pressure.

Here is a classic case where a few troops now might prevent the need
for more troops later, and we have to try to get some additional
troops in fast.
When I wrote this in the Washington Post last week, he wrote a very
angry letter back to the Post, in which he said the Dayton agreement
was still `sacrosanct.’ I wrote a letter saying, `Well, I’m glad
things are sacrosanct, but I’m not sure we interpret it the same way
and, besides which, some of his words have undermined it.’ So that’s
the problem, but it’s also true that some of the Muslim politicians
in Sarajevo have been provocative lately as well. Bosnia is a federal
state. It has to be structured as a federal state. You cannot have a
unitary government, because then the country would go back into
fighting. And that’s the reason that the Dayton agreement has been
probably the most successful peace agreement in the world in the last
generation, because it recognized the reality.

I’ll conclude on Kosovo. You were talking about the possibility again
of the Albanians seeking retribution against the Serbs. They already
had a kind of brief massacre a couple years ago, right?

Yes. Very serious.

I would have thought by now things had calmed down, but I guess not.

Who knows? Most people hate each other, really hate each other, much
more than in Bosnia. In Kosovo, there was almost no intermarriage,
there are completely different languages, different cultures sitting
in the same land – it’s much more like Arabs and Israelis. Bosnians,
Croats, and Serbs all spoke the same language, all went to the same
schools, all lived together – it wasn’t the kind of apartheid that
you’ve got in Kosovo. And there’s so much history there. Even in the
Middle East, you will not find people who hate each other as much as
these people.

rooke.html?breadcrumb=%2F

http://www.cfr.org/publication/14968/holb

AAA: House Genocide Vote Paves Way For Armenian Genocide Resolution

Armenian Assembly of America
1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
December 6, 2007
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]

HOUSE GENOCIDE VOTE PAVES THE WAY FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Assembly Praises House Action This Week and Encourages Lawmakers Not
to Lose Sight of the 20th Century’s First Genocide

Washington, DC – The Armenian Assembly of America welcomed the passage
of the Genocide Accountability Act (S. 888) yesterday as a crucial
step forward in closing a legal loophole that prevents the Justice
Department from punishing perpetrators of genocide who find safe haven
in the United States.

The vote in the House of Representatives allows non-U.S. nationals who
have entered the United States to be prosecuted for genocide committed
outside the country. Under current law, genocide is only a crime if
it is committed within the United States or by a U.S. national outside
of the country. Conversely, laws regarding torture, material support
for terrorism, terrorism financing, hostage taking and other federal
crimes allow for extraterritorial jurisdiction for crimes committed
outside of the United States by non-U.S. nationals.

"The Genocide Accountability Act is an effort to ensure that our
United States’ laws provide adequate authority to prosecute acts of
genocide," said Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee. "We should not have a situation where
perpetrators of genocide are allowed to enter, or reside in the United
States and use this country as a safe haven from prosecution."

"This cannot be the last step," Conyers added. "If we’re going to
fulfill our role in the world as the beacon for basic human rights and
freedom from persecution we must continue to develop the humble
legislative beginning we have begun today."

"We are proud to have supported this legislation through the process
and concur with Chairman Conyers that this is not the last step," said
Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. "The next critical step is
to confront denial of genocide by approving H. Res. 106, which
reaffirms the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide."

Representative Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) said the 20th century has
been called "the Age of Genocide," adding that the genocides in
Rwanda, the former Yugoslavia, Cambodia, Germany, and the Ottoman
Empire have shown the world "the monstrous potential of totalitarian
regimes determined to annihilate entire ethnic, racial and religious
groups."

Rep. Howard Berman (D-CA), who introduced the House version
(H.R. 2489) of the Genocide Accountability Act, said that the purpose
of the measure is to ensure that the perpetrators of genocide are
accountable under U.S. law.

"S. 888 will strengthen the reach of U.S. laws to prosecute any
individuals found in our country, who have taken part in acts of
genocide, in Darfur or anywhere else," Berman said.

"Genocide continues to be a threat in the world and we should attack
it wherever we find it," said Congressman Robert C. "Bobby" Scott
(D-VA).

Others who spoke in favor of S. 888 on the House floor yesterday
included Representatives Stephen Cohen (D-TN), Randy Forbes (R-VA),
Mike Pence (R-IN) and Christopher Shays (R-CT).

The Senate bill, introduced by Senators Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Tom
Coburn (R-OK), is the first piece of legislation produced by the
Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law. In
February, the Assembly called on Congress to strengthen international
legal protection against genocide and its denial in testimony
submitted for the Subcommittee’s hearing on "Genocide and the Rule of
Law."

Ardouny also commended Durbin, along with Senator John Ensign (R-NV),
for spearheading legislation in the U.S. Senate (S. Res. 106) that
would reaffirm the historical fact of the Armenian Genocide.

In addition to the Assembly, the Genocide Accountability Act has been
endorsed by numerous organizations including African Action, the
American Jewish World Service, Amnesty International USA, the Armenian
National Committee of America, the Genocide Intervention Network,
Human Rights First, Human Rights Watch, Physicians for Human Rights,
Refugees International and the Save Darfur Coalition.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3)
tax-exempt membership organization.

NR#2007-139

www.aaainc.org

Karabakh Presidential Aide Set To Contest Armenian Presidential Poll

KARABAKH PRESIDENTIAL AIDE SET TO CONTEST ARMENIAN PRESIDENTIAL POLLS

Mediamax Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2007

Yerevan, 28 November: Arman Melikyan, an aide to the Nagornyy Karabakh
republic’s [NKR] president, announced in Yerevan today that he would
nominate his candidacy for president in the [2008] election.

Melikyan said he had already sent his resignation application to
NKR president Bako Sahakyan. Melikyan, 44, said he had made up his
mind to run back in October. "I don’t consider myself an alternative
candidate; however, I have my own vision of pulling the country out
of this situation," he said. He added that with the actual start of
the presidential race, a real risk of civil unrest had surfaced that
might harm Armenia’s positions in the Karabakh conflict settlement.

Melikyan said that the "return of the liberated territories
[Armenia-controlled districts around Nagornyy Karabakh] voiced by both
[Armenian Prime Minister] Serzh Sargsyan and [former President] Levon
Ter-Petrosyan may lead to emptying of Nagornyy Karabakh in the future".

"There are no real preconditions for returning those territories,
and Armenia should never get involved in the issue instead of Nagornyy
Karabakh," he said.

Prior to his appointment as an aide to the NKR president, Melikyan was
the NKR envoy to Armenia and worked for the Armenian Foreign Ministry.

4 Candidates For Presidency Officially Nominated As Of November 30

4 CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENCY OFFICIALLY NOMINATED AS OF NOVEMBER 30

Noyan Tapan
Nov 30, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, NOYAN TAPAN. Documents necessary for nomination
of candidatures of RA Prime Minister, RPA Chairman Serge Sargsian and
NDU Chairman Vazgen Manukian were submitted to the Central Electoral
Commission on November 30. Both of them have been nominated by the
decisions of the respective parties. Noyan Tapan correspondent was
informed about it by CEC Spokesperson Tatev Ohanian.

Thus, as of November 30, four candidates for presidency have been
nominated in CEC: besides the above mentioned two candidates, National
Unity party Chairman Artashes Geghamian had been nominated by the
party decision and first RA President Levon Ter-Petrosian by the
order of self-nomination. The deadline of nomination of candidates
for February 19, 2008 elections is December 6, 18:00.

Among the nominated candidates, Vazgen Manukian has the largest
experience of running for presidential elections. He has taken part
in three out of four presidential elections held since 1991 up to
present. L. Ter-Petrosian and A. Geghamian have taken part in two
elections: the first in 1991 and in 1996 and the second in 1998 and
in 2003. S. Sargsian had never been nominated as a candidate for
presidency so far.

New OSCE CiO To Support MG Efforts For Karabakh Resolution

NEW OSCE CIO TO SUPPORT MG EFFORTS FOR KARABAKH RESOLUTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.11.2007 15:40 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Unfortunately, the process of settlement of
conflicts in Moldova and Georgia has produced no effect so far. We
should call on the sides to energize dialogue and I, as a new
Chairman-in-Office, will support the international mediators’
efforts for resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict," OSCE
Chairman-in-Office, Finnish Foreign Minister Ilkka Kanerva said during
the session of the OSCE Council of Foreign Ministers.

For his part, Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg emphasized
that "conflicts in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Moldova distract attention
of heads of state from social and economic development and the OSCE
should spare no effort for promote settlement of these conflicts,"
APA reports.

TEHRAN: Ilkhanid-Era Christian Cemetery Discovered Near Islamic Site

ILKHANID-ERA CHRISTIAN CEMETERY DISCOVERED NEAR ISLAMIC SITE OF SOLTANIEH DOME

Tehran Times
de=158486
Dec 4 2007
Iran

TEHRAN — A Christian cemetery dating back to the Mongol era has
recently been discovered near the Soltanieh Dome, an Islamic monument
registered on the UNESCO World Cultural Heritage List.

A single gravestone bearing ancient Armenian script led a team of
experts from the Soltanieh Dome Cultural Heritage Center to the
discovery of the burial ground, the Persian service of CHN reported
on Monday.

The artifact was unearthed by the team about two years ago during a
demarcation operation for the dome site.

"We were assisted in the deciphering of the script by a number of
Christian historians. After examining the relic, they informed us
that the artifact dates back to the Mongol era and that it was highly
likely that a cemetery dating back to that time would be located in the
vicinity," the center executive manager Mohammadreza Qorbanzadeh said.

A translation of the inscription reads as follows: "Jesus, the only
son of the father, when it is time to return, the sleeping soul of
the late…"

Other parts of the inscription are illegible due to erosion.

"The cemetery, which is located near the Abbasabad region of the
Soltanieh Dome and the ancient city of Soltanieh will add to our
knowledge of the history of these sites," Qorbanzadeh said.

The Mongol ruler Hulegu Khan (c. 1217-1265), who founded the Ilkhanid
dynasty in Iran, selected the north central region of Iran for his
center of government. Hulegu’s mother showed an inclination towards
the Christian religion and as a result many Christian residents
of Tabriz emigrated to Soltanieh (location of present day Zanjan),
being an area over which he ruled.

In addition, Marco Giovanni Brambilla, an Italian professor at
Tehran’s Shahid Beheshti University, during his studies on the city
of Soltanieh, had previously surmised the existence of a Christian
Mongol era cemetery in the region

http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?co

BAKU: PKK Terrorist Organization Buys Arms From Armenia

PKK TERRORIST ORGANIZATION BUYS ARMS FROM ARMENIA

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Nov 15 2007

PKK terrorist organization has bought arms from Iraq and Armenia in
the amont of $ 1 million 800 thousand within a year, APA’s Turkey
bureau reports.

This information was reflected in the rapport prepared by Turkish
intelligence bodies. There are guns, submachine guns, machine guns,
snipers, grenade cup dischargers, sniper rifles, even missiles
"Stringer" and "Strela". Moreover, terrorist organization bought
modern transmitters from Netherlands.