Minsk Group Co-Chairs: Sargsyan-Aliyev Meeting Marks Significant Pro

MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS: SARGSYAN-ALIYEV MEETING MARKS SIGNIFICANT PROGRESS

armradio.am
08.05.2009 11:57

The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Ambassador Yury Merzlyakov of
Russia, Ambassador Bernard Fassier of France, and Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State Matthew Bryza of the United States – have issued
the following statement:

"The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs organized a meeting of Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan,
with their Foreign Ministers, on 7 May at the residence of the
U.S. Ambassador in Prague. This meeting of the two Presidents is
the fourth in less than a year. The Co-Chairs are of the opinion
that each of these meetings has brought the sides closer to a
breakthrough. Today’s meeting marks significant progress in that
regard.

The Presidents welcomed the Co-Chairs’ plan to intensify further
their shuttle diplomacy to assemble all the elements required for
a breakthrough.

The Co-Chairs look forward to their next trip to the region and
to prepare a further summit, as proposed to the Presidents, in
St. Petersburg in early June. The Co-Chairs expect that these coming
meetings will allow for the concrete realization of a breakthrough
on the Basic Principles by the end of the year."

Armenia Negotiates With Band Deep Purple, Paul McCartney On Organizi

ARMENIA NEGOTIATES WITH BAND DEEP PURPLE, PAUL MCCARTNEY ON ORGANIZING CONCERTS IN ARMENIA

ARKA
May 6, 2009

YEREVAN, May 6. /ARKA/. Negotiations are held with managers of Deep
Purple band and Paul McCartney on organizing concerts in Armenia,
said President of company VIBROGRAPHUS Gagik Gyulbudaghyan.

"They express readiness to come and have a concert in Armenia, the
only question is matching the schedules of the musicians and meeting
their technical requirements for equipment for organizing concerts,"
he said on International Press-Center Novosti on Wednesday.

Gulbudaghyan added sides discuss also the financial issues but refused
to announce any figures.

President of VIBROGRAPHUS stated negotiations on holding concerts in
Yerevan are being held with some Russian rock-bands and performers
as well, namely with "DDT", "Mashina Vremeni" and Grigoriy Leps.

Legendary British rock-band Jethro Tull will have a concert in the
Yerevan Sport and Concert Complex after Karen Demirchyan on May 22.

The concert is organized by company VIBROGRAPHUS and sponsored by
"Luys" Foundation and Ameriabank. Information sponsors are Agency
of International Information "Novosti-Armenia", HAI FM 105.5 radio
station and Public television of Armenia.

Yerevan Municipal Election Campaign Begins

YEREVAN MUNICIPAL ELECTION CAMPAIGN BEGINS

42_5/4/2009_1
Monday, May 4, 2009

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–Campaigning has officially begun for the first
mayoral elections in Yerevan in nearly two decades. Residents of the
Armenian capital will go to the polls on May 31 to elect a municipal
assembly empowered to choose the city’s next mayors.

Yerevan’s municipal assembly has been appointed by the president of
the republic ever since Armenia adopted its post-Soviet constitution
in 1995. One of the amendments to that constitution enacted in late
2005 allowed indirect elections of Yerevan mayors by universal
suffrage. President Serzh Sarkisian and his predecessor Robert
Kocharian controversially delayed the conduct of those polls.

Under a relevant law adopted by parliament late last year, all 65
seats in the municipal Council of Elders will be up for grabs under
the system of proportional representation. The law stipulates that
parties and blocs need to win at least 7 and 9 percent of the vote
respectively in order to be represented in the assembly. The party
or bloc getting more than 40 percent of the vote would be able to
single-handedly appoint the next mayor

The election campaign got underway on Saturday after the Central
Election Commission (CEC) formally registered six parties and one
alliance for the polls. Those include the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation.

The ARF, a major election contender, held its first campaign rally at
Yerevan’s largest cinema on Monday, one week after it pulled out of the
ruling coalition in protest against Sarkisian’s conciliatory policy on
Turkey. The ARF’s top candidate, Artsvik Minasian, pledged, among other
things, to end serious restrictions on gatherings and demonstrations
in Yerevan that were put in place following Armenia’s February 2008
presidential election."We would make every effort to ensure that
those restrictions are not undue and ludicrous," said Minasian.

Speaking at the campaign kickoff on Monday, Armen Rustamian, the
chairman of the ARF Supreme Body of Armenia, stressed the need for
a healthy and democratic election environment that does not use the
municipal pole as a means to force regime change.

"We must realize that it is wrong to say that by winning [control over]
the municipality we can create a state within a state and that the
next step, regime change, will not be long in coming: the president
of the republic will resign and these authorities will go," said
Armen Rustamian, the chairman of the ARF’s supreme body in Armenia.

The message was clearly addressed to the main opposition Armenian
National Congress that has pledged to turn the municipal polls into
a "second round" of the disputed presidential election and use its
possible victory for toppling Sarkisian. The opposition group rallied
thousands of supporters in downtown Yerevan on Friday.

Its top leader, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian, described proper
conduct of the May 31 vote as Sarkisian’s "last chance to gain some
authority with Armenian society and the international community."

Ter-Petrosian did not say, though, what his 18-party alliance will
do if it considers the vote to have been fraudulent.

Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia was scheduled to hold its first
campaign event late on Monday. The ruling party’s list of candidates
is headed by the incumbent Mayor Gagik Beglarian, controversially
appointed to the post by the President only a few months ahead of
the polls.

The Republican Party has already been facing opposition allegations
that the Yerevan municipality is pressuring public sector employees
to pledge to vote for the Beglarian-led list.

The Republican Party’s two junior partners in the governing coalition
kicked off their own campaigns on Saturday with indoor presentations
of their platforms. "We mean business," Gagik Tsarukian, the leader
of the Prosperous Armenia Party, told hundreds of supporters, summing
up the party’s main message to Yerevan voters.

The Prosperous Armenia electoral list is topped by Health Minister
Harutiun Kushkian. "I am a Yerevantsi and know Yerevantsis’ concerns
well," he said during the presentation.

The other coalition party, Orinats Yerkir, also claimed to be aiming
for victory in the upcoming polls.

"Orinats Yerkir is participating in these elections with a resolve
to win," its leader, Artur Baghdasarian, said as he outlined its
campaign manifesto.

The party’s mayoral candidate, Heghine Bisharian, said "kindness"
will be the main feature of her campaign speeches. "But if there
are people who will say wicked things, especially about us, we will
definitely respond," she told RFE/RL.

www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=420

Historical step of Swiss Mediation on eve of Genocide commemoration

La Stampa, Italia
24 aprile 2009 venerdì

PASSO STORICO MEDIATO DALLA SVIZZERA ALLA VIGILIA DELLA COMMEMORAZIONE
DEL MASSACRO PERPETRATO DALLE TRUPPE OTTOMANE Turchia-Armenia, prove
di disgelo Una road map in tre punti per riallacciare i rapporti
diplomatici interrotti nel 1993

MARTA OTTAVIANI

ANKARA La Turchia e l’Armenia hanno trovato un accordo per un percorso
che porti alla normalizzazione dei loro rapporti. Lo ha annunciato il
ministero degli Esteri turco nella tarda serata di mercoledì, con un
comunicato ufficiale congiunto, a due giorni da oggi, data in cui si
commemora il massacro della popolazione armena da parte delle truppe
ottomane. Un eccidio che la comunità internazionale e la Diaspora
armena vorrebbero veder dichiarato "genocidio", anche nel discorso che
il presidente Obama pronuncerà negli Usa, e che la Turchia si rifiuta
di dichiarare tale, contrapponendo la propria versione dei fatti: non
un milione di vittime sterminate metodicamente, ma 300 mila morte per
tragiche fatalità e non secondo una strategia precisa.

L’accordo fra i due Paesi, mediato dalla Svizzera, è un passo storico
per le loro relazioni. Nel 1993 i turchi decisero di chiudere il
confine, anche a causa del conflitto fra Armenia e Azerbaigian per il
controllo della regione del Nagorno-Karabakh, in territorio azero,
invasa dalle truppe armene e teatro di un sanguinoso conflitto, dove
Ankara ha sempre preso le difese di Baku. Nella dichiarazione
congiunta turco-armena si legge che "Turchia e Armenia hanno lavorato
intensamente per normalizzare le relazioni bilaterali e intendono
svilupparle in uno spirito di buon vicinato e mutuo rispetto, per
promuovere pace, sicurezza e stabilità in tutta la regione. In questo
contesto è stata definita una road-map". Fonti di stampa turca hanno
reso noti i contenuti del percorso, che si concentrano su tre punti:
apertura e riconoscimento dei confini, soluzione condivisa sui fatti
del 1915, accordo sul Nagorno-Karabakh. L’Armenia non intende opporre
resistenze sul riconoscimento dei confini turchi, ma trovare un
accordo sul massacro del secolo scorso e sul Nagorno potrebbe causare
più di un problema. La Arf, la Federazione armena rivoluzionaria, una
delle formazioni più nazionaliste, ha espresso parole di apprezzamento
per la ripresa del dialogo e promesso che oggi, durante le
commemorazioni ufficiali del genocidio a Erevan, non verranno compiuti
atti oltraggiosi contro le bandiere turche, a differenza di quanto
successo gli anni precedenti.

Il dialogo fra i due Paesi è iniziato nel 2007, dopo l’assassinio a
Istanbul del giornalista armeno Hrant Dink. La Turchia in questi due
anni ha compiuto passi significativi. All’inizio di aprile sono
iniziate trasmissioni in lingua armena e l’anno prossimo si apriranno
facoltà in armeno nelle università. Anche la società civile ha fatto
la sua parte. A ottobre un gruppo di 300 intellettuali, seguito da
altri 29 mila esponenti della società civile, ha sottoscritto una
petizione in cui chiedeva scusa "ai fratelli armeni" per gli
avvenimenti del 1915.

Dal punto di vista diplomatico ed economico la normalizzazione delle
relazioni serve a tutti: alla Turchia per dimostrare a Bruxelles che
si lavora per l’ingresso nell’Ue; agli Usa, che dimostrano di essere
un partner affidabile e capace di mediare in conflitti nevralgici come
quello caucasico; all’Armenia per uscire dal suo isolamento e venire
coinvolta nelle rotte commerciali ed energetiche della regione. A
guastare l’idillio potrebbe essere proprio lo storico alleato di
Ankara: l’Azerbaigian. Che proprio ieri ha fatto sapere che una
normalizzazione è impossibile senza prima una soluzione per il
Nagorno-Karabakh, la regione del Caucaso che contende all’Armenia.

ANKARA: New Turkish FM says seeks greater regional role

Hürriyet, Turkey
May 2 2009

New Turkish foreign minister says seeks greater regional role

ANKARA – Turkey’s new foreign minister said on Saturday he wants the
country to play a bigger role in the Middle East and Balkans but its
relations with the West would continue to be its main foreign policy
focus.

Middle East expert Ahmet Davutoglu was appointed as Turkey’s new
foreign minister on Friday in the largest cabinet change since the
Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party, or AKP, first swept to
power in 2002.

Davutoglu, a respected but controversial diplomat who expanded
Turkey’s foreign policy beyond its traditional Western-orientated
focus, takes charge as the country seeks to improve regional security,
from Armenia to Iraq and Iran.

Taking office on Saturday from Ali Babacan, who was named as the new
deputy prime minister in charge of the economy, Davutoglu said Turkey
now had a stronger foreign policy vision towards the Middle East,
Balkans and the Caucasus region.

"It has to take on the role of an order-instituting country in all
these regions," Davutoglu said.

"Turkey is no longer a country which only reacts to crises, but
notices the crises before their emergence and intervenes in the crises
effectively and gives shape to the order of its surrounding region."

Davutoglu, who has assumed an active role in NATO member Turkey’s
Middle East mediation efforts between Israel and Arab countries and in
solving conflicts in the neighboring Caucasus, said relations with the
West would remain Turkey’s main focus.

"The European Union and NATO are the most important pillars of the
policy of setting a balance between security and freedom," he said.

Turkey began EU membership negotiations in 2005 but progress has since
largely ground to a halt because of disagreements over the divided
island of Cyprus and strong opposition in some members like France and
Austria.

Hirair Hovnanian In His Letter Expresses Disappointment To Obama For

HIRAIR HOVNANIAN IN HIS LETTER EXPRESSES DISAPPOINTMENT TO OBAMA FOR NOT USING WORD "GENOCIDE"

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
APRIL 28, 2009
LOS ANGELES

On April 24, 2009, Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) Chairman
Hirair Hovnanian sent a letter to President Barack Obama expressing
profound disappointment that the President had omitted the word
Genocide in his commemorative statement on the occasion of the 94th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. In his letter to President
Obama Mr. Hovnanian reminded the President of his repeated promises to
recognize the Armenian Genocide. Hovnanian in his letter mentioned:
"Your use of Mets Yehern [Great Catastrophe] was an inadequate
substitute for Armenian Genocide."

That same afternoon, Vice-President Joseph Biden, Jr. telephoned
Chairman Hovnanian and they exchanged views on the history and status
of Armenian-American community efforts to obtain affirmation by the
U.S. government of the Armenian Genocide.

Armenian Genocide Commemorated In Estonia

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATED IN ESTONIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.04.2009 15:34 GMT+04:00

Representatives of Armenian Community of Estonia commemorated
victims of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. On April
27, an exposition dedicated to mass killings of Armenians opened in
National library of Estonia. A literary and artistic event took place
at conference hall of the library, DELFI reported.

Azerbaijani Political Expert: Minedorf Declaration Is Perceived In A

AZERBAIJANI POLITICAL EXPERT: MINEDORF DECLARATION IS PERCEIVED IN AZERBAIJAN AS A DOCUMENT SAYING ABOUT WORSENING OF RELATIONS BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE WEST

ArmInfo
2009-04-28 16:04:00

The Minedorf Declaration is perceived in Azerbaijan as a document
saying about worsening of relations between Russia and the West,
representative of Azerbaijani Peace and Democracy Institute, Arif
Yunusov, said at today’s scientific conference ‘Caucasus-2008’ held
in Yerevan.

‘Not a simple attitude to the Minedorf Declaration has been established
in Azerbaijan. On the one hand, there were pluses for Azerbaijan
in the document. But the fact, that only peaceful settlement of the
conflict was emphasized in the document, is minus for Azerbaijan, as
despite statements sounding in Armenia that the military rhetoric of
Azerbaijan fell after the August war, the first shock disappeared by
the end of September in Azerbaijan and the bellicose rhetoric resumed’,
– Yunusov said.

He also added the Azerbaijani society does not much believe that the
Karabakh negotiations will lead to the concrete result. ‘There is a
view that our diplomates simply meet, negotiate, discuss something,
but this will not have a concrete result’, – Yunusov said.

To recall, the Minedorf Declaration on Nagornyy Karabakh was signed
by presidents of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan on 2 November 2008.

Living With The Contradiction

LIVING WITH THE CONTRADICTION
Uri Avnery

Ha’aretz
es/1081740.html
April 28 2009
Israel

I didn’t read the Haaretz editorial of May 14, 1948, on the day it
appeared. In fact, I saw no newspapers at all then.

My unit – B Company of the 54th Battalion of the Givati infantry
brigade, later to become the "Samson’s Foxes" company – was stationed
at Kibbutz Hulda, near the dining hall, which was off-limits to us. On
that Friday, the ban was lifted for a few hours so we could listen
to David Ben-Gurion’s speech declaring the establishment of the state.

The truth is that we, the soldiers on the front, couldn’t have cared
less. To us it seemed an insignificant event. The state had existed
in practice for some time and existed everywhere we won. We knew that
if we won the war, there would be a state and that if we were defeated
there would be no state – and that we would not be around, either.

Advertisement

We were told we would be going into action that night. Our mission:
to conquer the village of Al-Qubab, between Ramle and Latrun. It
looked like a tough operation. We were immersed in preparations,
such as cleaning our rifles.

Still, I went to the dining room. I was curious about one thing: the
name of the new state. Judea? Hebrew State? State of Jerusalem? When
Ben-Gurion reached the words "which is the State of Israel," I left. I
knew the rest would be blah blah.

The truth is that the Haaretz editorial also now strikes me as blah
blah. It’s a collection of all the cliches of the time. Still, it’s
touching, because it reminds us of what we believed in then. For
many of us, the article generates a so-called cognitive dissonance:
on the one hand, what we felt then; on the other, the truth as we
know it today.

For the combatants and the entire Yishuv, as the Jewish community
in Palestine was known until 1948, it was an existential war, pure
and simple. The slogan was "No alternative," and we all believed
this without question. We fought with our backs to the wall. The
enemy attacked us from all sides and our families’ lives were in
danger. We believed that we were few, very few, and poorly armed,
facing a sea of Arabs.

Indeed, the Palestinians (who were called "the gangs") controlled all
the roads in the first half of the war, and in the second half the
Arab armies reached the Jewish population centers, encircled Jewish
Jerusalem and approached Tel Aviv. The Yishuv lost 6,000 young people,
out of a population of 635,000. Entire age groups were almost wiped
out. Countless acts of heroism were performed.

We left no Arabs behind our front line, and the Arabs did likewise. In
the circumstances of the time, that seemed an obvious military
need. Soldiers in those days didn’t think in terms of "ethnic
cleansing," a term that didn’t yet exist. We had no understanding about
the true balance of forces between us and the other side. The Arabs
seemed to be a vast force. We didn’t know that the Palestinians were
split internally, that they were incapable of uniting and creating
a countrywide defense force, that they had no leadership and lacked
serious arms. Afterward, when the Arab armies entered the war, we
didn’t know they were incapable of cooperating among themselves and
that it was more important for them to beat one another to the punch
than to strike at us.

More and more people now understand the full implications of the
Nakba, the huge tragedy of the Palestinian people, and of all the
individuals who lost their homes, land and most of their homeland. The
war songs from the period evoke what we felt and thought as the events
unfolded. A vast chasm stretches between the emotional reality of
that time and the objective truth we know today.

There are people who see the war of 1948 as a diabolical scheme by the
Zionist leadership, which intended all along to expel the Palestinians
from the entire country and turn it into the Jewish state. Those who
subscribe to this opinion compare it to the actions of the present-day
settlers, who are dispossessing the Palestinians of the remainder of
their land, and whose actions besmirch the pioneer past. Religious
zealots and fascist hooligans, self-styled successors to the pioneers,
are twisting the true intentions of that generation, and the actions
of the Israeli army in the Gaza war besmirched the deeds of the 1948
fighters. As a member of the Givati Brigade of the time, I am unable to
feel any sense of belonging to or identification with today’s Givati.

How then is it possible to reconcile the contradiction between our
intentions and feelings at the time, when we established the state
and paid for it with our blood, pure and simple, and the historic
injustice we inflicted on the other side? How is it possible to sing
about the hopes and dreams of our youth, and at the same time recognize
the terrible wrongs? How can we sing wholeheartedly the battle songs
of that war without disavowing the cruel tragedy of the Palestinian
people we fomented?

A few weeks ago, Barack Obama told the Turks they must come to terms
with the massacre of the Armenians by their forebears, and in the
same context noted that the Americans, too, must acknowledge the
murder of the Indians by their ancestors.

I think the same is possible in regard to the disaster we brought
on the Palestinians. It is necessary for our mental health as a
nation and as human beings, and it is the first step toward future
reconciliation. We must admit and recognize the consequences of our
actions and repair what can be repaired, without disavowing our past
and youthful innocence.

We have to live with the contradiction, because it is the truth of
our lives.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spag

European Direction Is One Of Priority Directions In RA Foreign Polic

EUROPEAN DIRECTION IS ONE OF PRIORITY DIRECTIONS IN RA FOREIGN POLICY

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.04.2009 18:24 GMT+04:00

RA President Serzh Sargsyan met NATO Deputy Secretary General,
Ambassador Claudio Bisogniero on Apr. 28 in Yerevan. RA President
stated that European direction is one of priority directions in RA
foreign policy, with Armenia -NATO cooperation as is one of its
most important elements. Serzh Sargsyan added that Armenia-NATO
cooperation within "Partnership in the name of peace" Program
framework is a constituent part of RA national security. In his
turn, Claudio Bisogniero noted that his visit to Armenia testifies
to the importance NATO attaches to bilateral relations. According
to Alliance representative, NATO is satisfied with collaboration
development process with Armenia in different spheres. Claudio
Bisogniero gave high assessment to realization defense sphere
reforms, as well as participation in peacemaking missions, struggle
against international terrorism, and elimination of natural disaster
consequences. The parties agreed that Independent Procurement Alliance
Program is a perfect tool for strengthening bilateral cooperation and
exchanged views on regional security. Claudio Bisogniero expressed his
satisfaction with progress in Armenian Turkish negotiations. Dwelling
on NKR conflict settlement, Claudio Bisogniero emphasized though not
involved in conflict settlement, the Alliance is closely following the
development of events and approves of efforts directed at peaceful
settlement of conflict. The parties agreed that NKR conflict should
be settled in accordance with international legislation principles,
RA President Press Service reported.