BAKU: Radio Liberty ‘Biased’ On Karabakh

RADIO LIBERTY ‘BIASED’ ON KARABAKH

news.az
March 5 2010
Azerbaijan

Jeyhun Osmanli News.Az interviews Jeyhun Osmanli, chairman of the
Ireli public union.

What does Ireli plan to do following its campaign in European cities?

Was the campaign effective?

We held events and actions in eight European countries. The actions
were organized by Azerbaijani students and representatives of
the younger generation in Azerbaijani diaspora organizations. The
actions were effective as a logical continuation of the protest at the
Euronews office in Lyon [about a biased programme on Karabakh]. After
26 February we received a great many positive comments both from
abroad and from Azerbaijan. This gives us strength for larger scale
events. I would also like to note that the events were covered by
the media of the country where they were held.

The Khojaly genocide cannot be forgotten and we will try to keep it
on the agenda of the world community.

What do you think of the decision of the US House of Representatives
committee on the Armenian issue?

This is not the first time that the Armenian lobby has attained the
passage of the resolution in the committee and I am sure it will
fail and the US president will not sign it. However, this example
demonstrates the opportunities presented to the lobby groups and shows
the imperfection of the US democratic system. You can see the cynical
speech before the vote, while the vote turned into a farce. Thanks to
the US Congressmen, the concept of double standards has become common.

It’s enough to look at the projects financed by Congress and their
activity in our states to see that everything is highly biased.

What do you mean?

For example, the website of Radio Liberty has not said a single word
about events held to commemorate Khojaly. How can this be understood?

As no order from the sponsor? Or does Khojaly not feature on the
list of issues that must be covered in Azerbaijan? Unfortunately,
Radio Liberty takes a biased position on Karabakh.

It is obvious that the US Congress, which does not want to accept real
history, is engaged in selling its votes to the Armenian diaspora
and other influence groups. Unfortunately, this is the reality and
we have to accept it and get on with it.

BOSTON: In Appeal, Lawyer Asserts Genocide Teaching Skewed

IN APPEAL, LAWYER ASSERTS GENOCIDE TEACHING SKEWED
By Jonathan Saltzman

Boston Globe
ts/articles/2010/03/03/in_appeal_lawyer_asserts_ge nocide_teaching_skewed/
March 3 2010
MA

A well-known Boston civil rights lawyer argued yesterday that state
educators violated the constitutional rights of Massachusetts public
school students and teachers by censoring legitimate arguments
disputing that the mass slaying of Armenians in the First World War
era was genocide.

Appearing before the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in a
closely watched legal challenge, Harvey A. Silverglate contended that
the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education bowed to pressure
from politicians sympathetic to the state’s Armenian community and
deleted "contra-genocide" views from an advisory curriculum guide in
June 1999.

"They were deprived of two sides of the controversy," Silverglate
said of students. "It was very irregular."

Silverglate is among a team of lawyers representing students and
teachers and the Assembly of Turkish American Associations, a nonprofit
group that disputes that the Muslim Turkish Ottoman Empire committed
genocide against its Christian Armenian minority population during
and immediately after World War I.

But Assistant Attorney General William W. Porter, who represented
the state education department, countered that Chief District Court
Judge Mark L. Wolf rightly dismissed the suit last June based partly
on Wolf’s conclusion that the plaintiffs failed to show that anyone’s
free speech rights were violated.

The curriculum guide, Porter argued, was a series of recommendations
that school systems could adopt or reject. "It’s purely advisory,"
he said, and does not even require school districts to include human
rights or genocide in lesson plans.

The three justices on the panel, which included retired US Supreme
Court Justice David Souter, peppered both sides with questions that
tended toward the legalistic but gave little indication how they
will rule.

The case revolves around the slaying of up to 1.5 million Armenians,
a matter of continuing international debate.

Just Monday, Turkey warned the United States that relations between
the two countries would be damaged if a congressional panel votes to
label the massacre of Armenians by Turkish forces as genocide.

Turkish activists have long maintained that although Armenians were
killed, it was not the result of a deliberate policy but of other
factors, including an Armenian revolt in alliance with Russia against
the Ottoman Empire.

In 1998, the Massachusetts Legislature ordered the state Board
of Education to prepare and distribute to all school districts an
advisory curriculum guide for teaching about genocide and human rights,
according to Wolf’s ruling.

A draft of the guide originally included a section on the "Armenian
Genocide," but a Turkish advocacy group pressured the commissioner
of education, David P. Driscoll, to include references to sources
that dispute that the massacre reflected a Turkish policy of genocide.

After officials filed the guide with legislators in March 1999,
the state’s Armenian community objected to the "contra-genocide"
viewpoint and complained to then-governor Paul Cellucci and other
prominent politicians.

The education commissioner jettisoned the dissenting viewpoint. Six
years later, several students and teachers and the Assembly of Turkish
American Associations filed suit.

>From the beginning of Silverglate’s argument yesterday, Souter focused
on the issue that Wolf had bored in on: whether the guide violated
any students’ rights.

"I thought the teachers don’t have to use this guide," he said. "So
how are the students injured?"

Silverglate said that educational officials had allowed political
concerns to trump research by academics who question the genocide
designation, including Bernard Lewis of Princeton University and
Guenter Lewy of the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

In contrast, he said, the guide featured differing interpretations of
the Irish potato famine rather than treat the massive starvation in
Ireland as, say, a deliberate genocidal act of the British government.

Silverglate, who often takes up controversial causes, has angered
many supporters of the genocide label.

Van Z. Krikorian, a professor at Pace University Law School in New
York who helped file a brief supporting the designation on behalf
of the Armenian Assembly of America Inc., said after the arguments
that Silverglate claims to support free speech but really wants to
suppress it by banning the use of the term genocide.

"This case was only brought for public relations purposes on behalf
of Turkish denialists," he said.

Andrew M. Fischer, the president of the Jewish Alliance for Law and
Social Action, said those who oppose labeling the massive Armenian
slayings as genocide "have no more credibility than Holocaust deniers."

Silverglate said in an interview that evidence of the Holocaust was
overwhelming, but that there is bona fide dissent about whether the
slayings of Armenians was genocide.

"I took this case because I don’t think there are issues you can’t
discuss," he said.

Jonathan Saltzman can be reached at [email protected]

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachuset

EuroVision Song Contest: Eva Rivas In Ukrainian National Final

EVA RIVAS IN UKRAINIAN NATIONAL FINAL

esctoday.com
March 2 2010

Eva Rivas, the Armenian hopeful in Eurovision Song Contest 2010,
starts her promo tours. She is currently planning various promo tours
in different countries and she wants to visit as many countries as
possible with the symbolic message of planting apricot trees, which
will symbolise the piece of Armenia in different parts of Europe.

Eva Rivas will also perform in the Ukrainian national final which
will be held on 6th of March. After the national final she will be
heading to Sweden and Russia, where she will hold concerts. She will
also be present during the draw of the running order in Oslo. After
the draw she will come back to Yerevan in order to decide the next
routes of her promo tours.

Eva Rivas will perform Apricot stone in the second semi-final of the
Eurovision Song Contest on 27th May.

Turkey Looks For Pretext Not To Ratify Protocols: Zaman

TURKEY LOOKS FOR PRETEXT NOT TO RATIFY PROTOCOLS: ZAMAN

news.am
March 2 2010
Armenia

April 24 will be a sort of test for stability of the U.S.-Turkey
relations, Turkish Zaman daily reports referring to current
processes. According to the source, two different delegations arrived
in U.S. to prevent the adoption of Armenian Genocide Resolution by
the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee on March 4.

Moreover, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu sent a warning
message to U.S., that reads: "Turkey expects that U.S. will not place
the resolution on the agenda. Particularly, Turkish Foreign Ministry
Spokesman Burak Ozugergin said the approval of â~D-252 resolution will
bring to deadlock the efforts to normalize Armenia-Turkey relations
and harm U.S.-Turkey relations significantly.

Depending on the decision by the House of Representatives, Turkish FM
Ahmet Davutoglu will arrive in the U.S. in March end or early April,
the source says.

Turkey does not accept the allegations about Armenian Genocide,
meanwhile looking for a pretext not to ratify Armenia-Turkey
Protocols. Turkish PM repeatedly stated that he is determined on the
matter and it is impossible to achieve a lasting peace in the region
without Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement.

Turkey Warns US Over Armenia Genocide Bill

TURKEY WARNS US OVER ARMENIA GENOCIDE BILL

Raw Story
_over_Armenia_genoci_03012010.html
March 1 2010

Turkey warned US lawmakers Monday against passing a bill that brands
World War One-era massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks "genocide,"
saying ties between Washington and Ankara would suffer.

The Turkish foreign ministry, which also said Turkey-Armenia
reconciliation efforts would be damaged, delivered its tough message
three days before a key US House of Representatives panel is due to
take up the non-binding measure.

The US House Foreign Affairs Committee was scheduled to vote Thursday
on the symbolic resolution, and approval would send the bill to the
full House for consideration.

"We expect the committee to reject the resolution which will harm
Turkish-US ties and impede efforts on normalizing ties between Turkey
and Armenia," the ministry said in a statement.

"We would like to believe that the members of the committee are aware
of the damage… the endorsement of the resolution will bring and,
in this context, act responsibly," it added.

The United States has traditionally condemned the 1915-1918 mass
killings of Armenians, but refrained from dubbing them a "genocide",
wary not to strain relations with Turkey, a NATO member and a key
ally in the Middle East.

US President Barack Obama pledged during his election campaign
that he would recognise the killings as genocide, but disappointed
Armenian-American supporters when he refrained from using the term
in his message last year to commemorate the killings.

"His view of that history has not changed," said US National Security
Council spokesman Mike Hammer. "Our interest remains the achievement
of a full, frank, and just acknowledgement of the facts."

"The best way to advance that goal is for the Armenian and Turkish
people to address the facts of the past as a part of their ongoing
efforts to normalize relations," said Hammer.

"We will continue to support these efforts vigorously in the months
ahead," said the spokesman.

The resolution, which does not have force of law, calls on Obama
to ensure that US foreign policy reflects an understanding of the
"genocide" and to label the mass killings as such in his annual
statement on the issue.

Washington is a firm supporter of a tentative process between Turkey
and Armenia to normalise bilateral ties and overcome decades of
hostility.

The two countries signed a deal in October to establish diplomatic
relations and open their border.

But the process has hit the rocks amid Turkish accusations that
Yerevan is trying to rewrite the terms of the agreement and Armenian
frustration at the Turkish parliament’s failure to ratify the accord.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed as the
Ottoman Empire, Turkey’s predecessor, fell apart, a claim supported
by several other countries.

Turkey rejects the genocide label and says the number of Armenians
who died is grossly inflated.

The border between the two countries has been closed since 1993
when Turkey ordered it shut in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan,
then at war with Armenia over the Nagorny-Karabakh enclave.

http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Turkey_warns_US

Russia to appoint new ambassador to Karabakh peace talks

Interfax, Russia
Feb 26 2010

Russia to appoint new ambassador to Karabakh peace talks

MOSCOW Feb 26

Russia will replace its envoy for negotiations aimed at settling the
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrei
Nesterenko said at a press briefing in Moscow.

Yury Merzlyakov, who held the post until recently, "has been given a
new diplomatic mission," Nesterenko said.

The ministry spokesman neither confirmed nor denied reports claiming
that Yury Popov, Russia’s former representative to the now- extinct
mixed commission in charge of resolving the Georgian-South Ossetian
conflict, could be appointed to this post.

Nesterenko said he was confident that the new ambassador’s work would
be "as extensive and energetic" as his predecessor’s.

"Our country’s position [on the Karabakh peace process] is determined
by the president and is realized by the Foreign Ministry," he said.

Deputy General Director: SCR Will Make Proposals Of Changes In The L

DEPUTY GENERAL DIRECTOR: SCR WILL MAKE PROPOSALS OF CHANGES IN THE LAW ON RAILWAY TRANSPORT

ARKA
Feb 26, 2010

YEREVAN, February 26. /ARKA/. SCR will make proposals on changes
in the law "On railway transport", said Marat Khakov, First Deputy
General Director of SCR during the press-tour "One day in SCR".

Khakov said that they observed the facilities in the section Yerevan
-Araks where cycle movement of electric trains is needed.

"Cycle movement is one of the programs which we develop this year. The
route will be Yerevan-Ararat", he said.

SCR and the Ministry of Transport and Communications of Armenia
discussed issues of interrelation with regions and organization of
transportation.

"We also discussed security issues related to railway crossing which
is very important", he said.

Armenian Ministry of Transport and Communications is ready to cooperate
with SCR in this issue and work with car owners and owners of fleet
in the regions.

"I think that we will regularly conduct meetings. Ararat direction
will be opened in the nearest future", said Khakov.

During the press-tour, SCR management, representatives of National
Assembly and Ministry of Transport and Communications visited
stations Masis (where they got introduced to the railway machine
station and process of technical education), Armavir (process of
station reconstruction), Dalarik (work of the station and railway
haul Dalarik-Karakert).

Concession management of "Armenian railway" is implemented by CJSC
"South Caucasian Railway" which is 100% affiliate of Open JSC "Russian
Railway". SCR accepted the railway stock of CJSC "Armenian railway"
on its balance from June 1, 2008 according to Concession Agreement
signed on February 13, 2008. The terms of concession management is
for 30 years with the right of prolongation for another 10 years
($1 – 381.58 drams).

ANKARA: Davutoglu Meets With Sarksyan In Kiev

DAVUTOGLU MEETS WITH SARKSYAN IN KIEV

Today’s Zaman
Feb 26 2010
Turkey

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and Armenian President Serzh
Sarksyan comprehensively discussed developments in the Caucasus and
the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations during their meeting
in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, the Anatolia news agency reported
on Thursday.

Following the meeting, Davutoglu told reporters that he had conveyed
the Turkish side’s concerns to Sarksyan during the meeting. "We also
discussed what should be done in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. I
had the chance to convey our concerns, views and our vision for the
region to Sarksyan," he said.

Speaking about the ideal Caucasus that Turkey would like to see,
Davutoglu said Turkey wants a Caucasus which does not suffer from
obstacles, occupation and prejudice, but which has peace, prosperity
and stability. "There must be dialogue to realize this vision,"
he added.

Davutoglu participated in the inauguration of Ukrainian President
Viktor Yanukovich in Kiev. Yanukovich was elected president following
a second round of elections held in Ukraine on Feb. 7.

Communication Without Settlement

COMMUNICATION WITHOUT SETTLEMENT
Naira Hayrumyan

ahos16983.html
16:39:55 – 26/02/2010

Settlement of conflicts gives up being the objective of geopolitics
if those conflicts are not obstacles for geopolitical communications.

World superpowers take up the settlement of this or that conflict
only in case it hinders their geopolitical plans. However, apparently,
a new approach appeared in geopolitics: to decide the communicational
and logistical tasks without getting involved in the conflict.

In this sense, Serge Sargsyan’s statement that Turkey could open the
Armenian and Turkish border without the ratification of the protocols
is quite symptomatic. Evidently, no one cares for the establishment
of political relations if the border opens, everything will leave
both Armenia and Turkey in peace, says Serge Sargsyan tired of tension.

A number of other facts prove the existence of a new method in
geopolitics. Say, the statement of the French foreign minister Barnard
Kouchner that the French government may recognize the independence of
Palestine before the definition of the future borders of the country.

Communicational issues between Russia and Georgia are also settled.

The Georgian foreign ministry has already informed that on March 1,
an official opening of the Upper Lars checkpoint is planned. Political
issues are again not settled, but the border will be opened.

The boundary between Georgia and Abkhazia remains. In today’s The
Guardian an article which noted that "Western friends of Georgia
are to persuade Saakashvili to return to real life and recognize
the lost territories" was published. "Only in this way a solution
to stabilize the situation in the Caucasus can be found, that is,
to achieve what is a common interest for all", the article runs.

Serbia got adapted with the existence of Kosovo and is going to open
the communication. Again proceeding from common interest.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics-lr

Karabakh State Commission On Prisoners Of War, Missing Persons, And

KARABAKH STATE COMMISSION ON PRISONERS OF WAR, MISSING PERSONS, AND HOSTAGES ISSUES STATEMENT CRITICIZING AZERBAIJANI PROPAGANDA

Yerkir
25.02.2010 13:08

Yerevan (Yerkir) – Nagorno Karabakh Republic State Commission on
prisoners of war, missing persons, and hostages has issued a statement
criticizing Azerbaijani propaganda. Below is the text of the statement.

To get doubtful propagandistic dividends, the Azerbaijani authorities
keep cashing in on the humanitarian issues of prisoners of war,
manipulating impudently Armenian citizens in the Azerbaijani prisons.

The last more than obvious sample of this is the video-reel promoted at
the Azerbaijani websites, where the personages assert "the unbearable
conditions in the Armenian army and comfortable life in Azerbaijan".

Surely, even those in Azerbaijan realize that similar "revelations"
are the results of the local special services’ activity and quite a
clumsy attempt to lay the blame at somebody else’s door.

However, we cannot but worry about another side of this fact.

Manipulating cynically the Armenian prisoners of war and actually
making a laughingstock of them, the Azerbaijani authorities violate
the principles of international humanitarian law, in particular,
the Geneva Conventions providing certain rules of treatment of this
category of persons.

In this regard, we consider it suitable to remind that during the
Karabakh war the Azerbaijani party violated regularly the Geneva
Conventions canons, in particular, refusing to provide the NKR with
corresponding information about the prisoners, creating unbearable
conditions for the prisoners of war and hostages, exposing them to
mockeries and tortures, as a result of which the majority of them
deceased.

At the same time, already in the spring of 1992, the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic stated their full acknowledgement of the additional protocols
to the Geneva Conventions and unconditional implementation of their
provisions. The unconditional observance of the Geneva Conventions by
the NKR authorities was repeatedly confirmed by international human
rights and humanitarian organizations, including the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Considering the abovementioned, the NKR State Commission on
Prisoners of War, Missing Persons, and Hostages condemns strongly
the politicization of the purely humanitarian issue of prisoners of
war and hostages by official Baku.

At the same time, we call on the international structures concerned,
and first of all the ICRC, to react correspondingly to similar actions
of the Azerbaijani party and recommend it strongly to respect the
fundamental human rights.