BAKU: Aliyev Outlines Key FP Issues in Meeting with Diplomats

AZERI LEADER OUTLINES KEY FOREIGN POLICY ISSUES IN MEETING WITH DIPLOMATS

Bilik Dunyasi news agency
27 Jul 04

BAKU

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met the heads of Azerbaijani
diplomatic missions abroad at the Foreign Ministry today.

During the meeting Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov informed the
president of the work of Azerbaijan’s diplomatic missions abroad. He
also spoke about new activities connected with the need for
coordination between diplomats in the modern world, as well as
structural changes due in the ministry.

In his remarks, President Ilham Aliyev said that the initiative to
hold this meeting was put forward by former Azerbaijani President
Heydar Aliyev a year ago. The head of state added that the foreign
political course adopted by Heydar Aliyev is being successfully
pursued today. Saying that the success of Azerbaijani diplomacy
depends on the work of Azerbaijani ambassadors abroad, Ilham Aliyev
stressed that the main objective of our diplomacy was to solve issues
of national importance at the international level.

Pointing to the fact that Azerbaijan has no problems in bilateral
relations, the president stated his position with regard to
Azerbaijan’s main strategic foreign political directions. The
president said that the main direction is to inform the world public
of the real essence of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagornyy
Karabakh and of Azerbaijan’s position based on a solution to the issue
on the basis of international legal norms.

“Azerbaijani diplomats must take a more active part in resolving the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. Azerbaijan supports peace. We want to
resolve the issue through negotiations. I hope the negotiations will
be successful. But at the same time, I have repeatedly stated that
Azerbaijan will never come to terms with the loss of its lands. If the
path of negotiations leads us nowhere, Azerbaijan will use all other
means available, including the military option. International law is
on our side. Economic potential and other issues are also in our
favour. I have no doubt that the issue will be resolved
fairly. Sometimes we hear recommendations about compromises. But I
have repeatedly said that there can be no compromise on the issue of
territorial integrity,” Ilham Aliyev said.

“Another key direction in Azerbaijan’s foreign policy is to inform the
world public and international organizations of the plight of
Azerbaijani refugees and forced migrants,” the president said,
disclosing the tasks of the diplomatic corps.

Aliyev instructed the ambassadors to expand cooperation with foreign
countries and influential international organizations in a move to
strengthen Azerbaijan’s positions in the region and to increase the
country’s authority.

Georgia: Frustration Grows Among Azeri Community

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
July 23 2004

Georgia: Frustration Grows Among Azeri Community
By Jean-Christophe Peuch

While Georgia is striving to restore control over its northern
separatist province of South Ossetia, tension is brewing in its
predominantly Azeri southern districts. Local residents blame the
Georgian president for failing to deliver on pre-election pledges to
improve social conditions in the region. The situation has sparked
concerns in neighboring Azerbaijan, where voices are rising in
defense of Georgia’s largest Muslim minority.

Prague, 23 July 2004 (RFE/RL) — Since they were elected a few months
ago, the two young leaders of Azerbaijan and Georgia have been vowing
mutual friendship and pledging to take neighborly ties to new
heights, while increasing bilateral trade to unprecedented levels.

Yet, concerns over the fate of Georgia’s sizable Azeri community have
cast a shadow over this idyllic picture.

Estimates generally put the number of Georgia’s Azeris at around
350,000. Most of them live in four of the six administrative
districts of the southwestern Kvemo Kartli region, an area that is
known as Borcali in Azeri. Azeris account for nearly 50 percent of
the Kvemo Kartli population.

Tensions began rising after Georgian security forces two months ago
raided Azeri border villages and arrested a number of residents as
part of what was officially presented as an attempt to put an end to
smuggling operations from Azerbaijan.

In recent weeks, Baku-based newspapers have been reporting on alleged
extortion, arbitrary detentions, and other forms of harassment
against Azeri community leaders. First among them has been the
Russian-language “Zerkalo” daily, which has been spearheading a
campaign of support to Kvemo Kartli Azeris.

But Georgian authorities deny any wrongdoing.

Kvemo Kartli Governor Soso Mamzishvili tells our correspondent that
such accusations are unfounded:

“All these reports about alleged violations of ethnic Azeris’ rights
are out of place. What [these people in Baku] say or write is sheer
provocation. Neither I nor any other Georgian has had any conflict
[with ethnic Azeris]. There can be no talk of rights violations
against [Georgia’s] Azeris,” Mamzishvili said.

Azeris are Georgia’s second-largest ethnic minority group after the
Armenians.

They are also among the least integrated — a circumstance that
officials in Tbilisi generally ascribe to the fact that 90 percent of
them reportedly do not speak Georgian.

Azeris, in turn, blame the successive Georgian governments that took
over from Soviet rule.

When the Soviet Union collapsed, collective property was abolished
throughout Georgia. But as Azerbaijani poet Eyvaz Borcali tells
RFE/RL, the then government of hard-line nationalist President Zviad
Gamsakhurdia denied Kvemo Kartli Azeris the right to purchase land.

Borcali is a native from Kvemo Kartli who runs a Baku-based
nongovernmental group known as the Borcali Society. He says most
Azeris continued to be denied land ownership rights after former
Georgian Communist Party head Eduard Shevardnadze returned to power
following Gamsakhurdia’s ouster.

“Shevardnadze has done nothing good [for the Azeris]. He made only
empty pledges, and he did nothing [to correct his predecessor’s
policy]. Many Azeris are denied access to lands that belonged to
their ancestors. Those lands have been taken by Georgians and are
being given to Azeris for temporary use. [Sometimes] the Georgian
owners are not even from the region. There are cases of urban
Georgians who own lands in villages that have been Azeri since the
dawn of time and let them to local residents,” Borcali said.

Unofficial figures show up to 70 percent of Kvemo Kartli’s
predominantly rural Azeris are still denied access to land and are
forced either to rent plots or hire themselves to Georgian farmers.

Georgia’s Azeris are now showing signs of impatience.

Earlier this year, Azeri demonstrators picketed Saakashvili’s office
in Tbilisi to request that land be redistributed fairly among Kvemo
Kartli residents. They also demanded that steps be taken to restore
Turkic village names that were
“Georgianized” under Gamsakhurdia and that Azeris be better
represented in local administrations.

Observers generally agree that simmering tension in Kvemo Kartli
partly stems from the high expectations raised by the recent change
of political leadership in Tbilisi.

During his election campaign in December 2003, Saakashvili promised
Kvemo Kartli residents that he would meet their political and social
demands, vowing to grant all citizens equal rights regardless of
their ethnicity.

As other Georgian regions, Kvemo Kartli voted massively for
Saakashvili’s National Movement-led coalition in the 28 March
legislative elections. But now local Azeris are demanding action.

Unlike many in Baku, Azerbaijani lawyer Isaxan Asurov — another
native of Kvemo Kartli — does not believe the situation of Georgia’s
Azeris has significantly deteriorated under the new Georgian
leadership. Yet, neither has it improved, he says.

“One cannot say that the situation has worsened. Simply it remains
unchanged, and that worries people. During his election campaign,
Saakashvili himself raised such issues as the land reform or the
under-representation of local Azeris in official structures. But he
has still to fulfill his promises. That explains why we are unhappy,”
Asurov said.

Kvemo Kartli Governor Mamzishvili denies Georgia’s new leaders have
remained idle in the past seven months and says measures are being
taken to address the land issue.

“We are taking steps. We are currently reviewing all land contracts.
With respect to land, Georgians and Azeris alike face problems. We
are taking back all lands that have been purchased without being put
up for auction and we will organize new tenders. We are
redistributing land according to the existing legislation,”
Mamzishvili said.

Mamzishvili is the third governor to run the region since
Shevardnadze’s ousting. He claims that, since he was appointed last
February, he has managed to bring gas and electricity supplies in the
region to near nationwide standards.

Borcali says that, even if that were true, that would not be enough
to alleviate the plight of Kvemo Kartli Azeris. “When one is supplied
with gas and electricity,” he says, “that does not mean that one’s
problems are solved.”

Building costs for Armenian gas pipeline section $140 mln

Interfax
July 21 2004

Building costs for Armenian gas pipeline section $140 mln

Yerevan. (Interfax) – Russian gas giant Gazprom has completed
feasibility study preparations for the Armenian section of the
Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, which indicate a work cost of roughly $140
million, senior Gazprom executive Alexander Ryazanov said in an
interview with an Armenian media company.

Gazprom is one of the main stockholders in Armrosgazprom, which
intends to be involved in the building and operation of this
pipeline.

The construction work includes laying a 41-kilomenter section of
pipeline from the Iranian border to the two of Kajaran (320 km from
Yerevan in southeastern Armenia), as well as overhauling and replace
parts of the Kajaran-Yerevan gas pipeline.

The project recoupment period is an estimated nine years, Ryazanov
noted.

“Financial sources for the project need to be found now, after which
there will be no other problems for construction,” he said.
Possibilities are inter-governmental loans and “the involvement of
Russia,” he said. The Armenian section of the pipeline might also be
built with “Gazprom funds,” he added.

This pipeline is of great strategic value to Armenia in terms of gas
supply and energy security, Ryazanov said. An inter-governmental gas
cooperation agreement is being readied for Armenia and Russia to
sign, he added.

BAKU: Azeri Opp urges government to refuse OSCE’s Karabakh mediation

Azeri opposition urges government to refuse OSCE’s Karabakh mediation

Interfax news agency, Moscow
20 Jul 04

BAKU

The Democratic Azerbaijan opposition bloc has called on the country’s
authorities to refuse the mediation of the OSCE Minsk Group in
settling the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, Samir Asadli, a
representative of the Civic Solidarity Party, which is part of the
bloc, told Interfax.

“We think the position of the OSCE Minsk Group is pro-Armenian. At the
same time, it is widely known that it was Armenia that occupied 20 per
cent of Azerbaijan’s territories,” says a statement from Democratic
Azerbaijan.

“The OSCE Minsk Group is supposed to take action, not make
statements. The co-chairmen are not doing anything to settle the
Karabakh conflict. It should be noted that one of the Minsk Group’s
co-chairmen is a representative of France, a country that recognized
the so-called Armenian genocide,” the statement says.

“This is why the Azerbaijani authorities should refuse the OSCE’s
services and attempt to resolve the problem on their own,” the
statement says.

Baku lost control of Nagornyy Karabakh and seven adjoining districts
in a conflict with Armenia in the 1990s. The UN Security Council has
denounced the occupation of Azerbaijani lands and has demanded that
Armenia withdraw its forces. The US, Russian and French co-chairmen of
the OSCE’s Minsk Group are working to settle the conflict.

Chirac backs Turkey’s EU entry in talks with Erdogan

Agence France Presse — English
July 20, 2004 Tuesday 4:09 PM Eastern Time

Chirac backs Turkey’s EU entry in talks with Erdogan

by HUGH SCHOFIELD

PARIS

French President Jacques Chirac on Tuesday reaffirmed his support for
Turkey’s eventual membership of the European Union during talks with
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

That was a political victory for Erdogan, but the prime minister was
irked at a news conference by questions whether Turkey intended to
apologize for the alleged genocide of Armenians under the Ottoman
empire in 1915.

Erdogan said membership of the EU “does not imply the recognition of
an Armenian genocide” and suggested this was a matter best left to
historians.

However, the French Socialist party says such recognition is
necessary, even if it supports Turkey’s entry into the EU. Turkey was
particularly irritated in 2001 when the French National Assembly
formally recognized that genocide had taken place.

According to a Chirac aide, the president said that “Turkey’s
integration into the EU is welcome as soon as it becomes possible…
Turkey has made considerable progress. It must continue and intensify
the implementation of democratic and economic reforms.”

Erdogan on Wednesday wraps up three-day visit to France to lobby for
support ahead of a crucial decision by EU heads of government in
December whether to grant Turkey the right to accession talks.

Chirac has previously said he believes the path to Turkish membership
is “irreversible,” but he is at odds with many in his own Union for a
Popular Movement (UMP) party and the public who believe the
predominantly Muslim and Asian country has no place in the club of
25.

Speaking to reporters after his lunch with Chirac, Erdogan appeared
keen to reassure a dubious French population, saying that any
decision “would not be on Turkish membership of the EU, but on the
beginning of negotiations on membership.”

He later thanked the president for his “constructive approach” and
positive attititude concerning the prospective Turkish EU membership.

Earlier French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier warned that even if
the talks are given the go-ahead Turkey’s accession would not be
automatic.

“We have to tell the truth. It is not tomorrow that Turkey will be
entering the EU. The road ahead is still long. It has been on this
road for some time preparing itself and making progress,” he told
Europe 1 radio.

The governing majority was not united on the issue. Francois Bayrou,
the leader of Chirac’s coalition partner, the Union for French
Democracy, reiterated his opposition to Turkey’s EU bid, saying that
allowing the bloc to take in “countries that belong to other
continents and other cultures” would create “a weak Europe that will
be incapable of taking action.”

Erdogan met early Tuesday with French business leaders and urged them
to use their weight to argue Turkey’s case for entry. France’s
business elite sides with Ankara, seeing the country as a major
economic opportunity.

“I am convinced that French economic circles can make a contribution
to the diplomatic process, and we await it,” he said.

The debate over Turkey’s right to join the EU has been particularly
robust in France, where there is strong opposition both from those
who fear its implications for immigration and Europe’s cultural
heritage, and those who say it will mean the end of their vision for
a politically integrated continent.

The nationalist leader Philippe de Villiers on Tuesday condemned
Erdogan’s visit and what he described as Chirac’s “determination” to
see Turkey join the EU. He said he would ensure Turkey’s membership
is at the “heart of the debate” ahead of next year’s planned
referendum on the EU constitution.

Meanwhile Chirac’s office confirmed that negotiations to sell mid-
and long-range Airbus passenger aircraft to Turkish Airlines were in
their final stages.

Central African Rep. Begins Participation in IMF’s Data System

allAfrica.com

The Central African Republic Formally Begins Participation in the IMF’s
General Data Dissemination System

International Monetary Fund (Washington, DC)

July 16, 2004
Posted to the web July 19, 2004

Washington, DC

The Central African Republic has begun participating in the International
Monetary Fund’s General Data Dissemination System (GDDS), marking an
important step forward in the development of the country’s statistical
system. Comprehensive information on its statistical production and
dissemination practices were published on the IMF’s Dissemination Standards
Bulletin Board (DSBB) on
June 14, 2004.

The GDDS, established by the IMF in 1997, provides a framework to assist IMF
member countries to develop their statistical systems with the objective of
producing comprehensive and accurate statistics for policy-making and
analysis. It addresses the quality and the dissemination of data. In
addition, the DSBB for the Central African Republic shows the country’s
plans for improvements in its statistical infrastructure and its related
technical assistance needs. This information provides the international
community with useful information to develop and coordinate their technical
cooperation projects in the Central African Republic.

Since its inception, 78 countries have participated in GDDS and have had
their metadata published in the IMF’s DSBB. Of this total, four countries
(Armenia, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, and the Kyrgyz Republic) have graduated to
the Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS).

Mrs. Carol S. Carson, Director of the IMF’s Statistics Department, noted
that GDDS participation was a milestone for these countries. “I am pleased
to note that the Central African Republic has joined the large number of
countries already participating in the GDDS. The commitment being made by
the Central African Republic to improve statistics is an important one,
allowing the country to take full advantage of this framework for developing
their economic, financial, and socio-demographic data.”

http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/gdds/gddshome/

Schiff’s genocide amendment threatened

Pasadena Star-News, CA
Los Angeles Daily News, CA
July 17 2004

Measure on Armenian killings fought by GOP leaders

Schiff’s genocide amendment threatened

By Lisa Friedman
Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — A provision deploring the massacre of Armenians in the
Ottoman Empire after World War I has run afoul of Republican leaders
and the Bush administration, who are demanding it be stripped from a
foreign aid bill.
The largely symbolic amendment by Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, would
forbid Turkey from using U.S. funds to lobby against a resolution
designating the killing of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and
1923 as a genocide.

The law already prohibits foreign governments from using American
foreign aid to lobby. Schiff, however, acknowledged his real goal was
to put the House on record as recognizing the Armenian genocide.

His amendment passed by voice vote late Thursday.

House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill, reacted angrily Friday, issuing
a statement belittling Schiff’s provision. He and House Majority
Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, and Majority Whip Roy Blunt, R-Mo., vowed
the resolution will never see the light of day.

“Our relationship with Turkey is too important to us to allow it to
be in any way damaged by a poorly crafted and ultimately meaningless
amendment,” Hastert said.

Eliminating the amendment will likely avert a diplomatic crisis with
Turkey, a NATO ally that is home to the strategic Incirlik Air Base.
But the dispute also has provoked a furor in Southern California,
home to more than 54,000 Armenian-Americans.

“We find it deeply offensive that these officials would let a foreign
nation impose its dictates on Congress,” said Armen Carapethian,
spokesman for the Glendale-based Armenian National Committee of
America-Western Region.

“If we don’t recognize past genocides, then future genocides will
occur.”

Armenians estimate more than 1.5 million died in a planned genocide
campaign. Turkey has consistently denied the assertions, putting the
number at about 300,000 and contending that thousands of Turks also
died in what was a multi-party conflict during the last years of the
Ottoman Empire.

Hastert also was responsible for shelving an Armenian genocide
resolution in 2000. At the time, Turkey threatened not to renew the
mandate for U.S. forces using the Incirlik Air Base to patrol what
was then the no-fly zone in northern Iraq.

Schiff noted Friday that Turkey’s threats to France and other
European nations that have recognized the genocide have not
materialized, and said he isn’t worried about retaliation.

“Our relationship with Turkey will survive recognition of the
Armenian genocide,” Schiff said.

Schiff said supporters of the amendment will fight to keep the
language in the bill, which will be negotiated by House and Senate
leaders.

Sydney: D-Day for accused Olympic athletes

Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
The Age, Australia
July 15 2004

D-Day for accused Olympic athletes

Friday is D-Day for two Australian Olympic athletes accused of drug
offences.

Weightlifter Caroline Pileggi will learn whether her appeal against
being dumped from the Athens Games is successful, and cyclist Jobie
Dajka is expecting to learn the outcome of police investigations into
him.

Accused cyclist Sean Eadie, meanwhile, will have a nervous weekend.

His appeal against a drugs infraction notice for allegedly importing
banned human growth hormones will be heard in the Court of
Arbitration for Sport in Sydney on Monday evening.

Pileggi, who was to have been Australia’s first Olympic female
weightlifter, was dropped from the Athens team after refusing a drugs
test in Fiji in June.

But she told the Administrative Appeals Tribunal in Melbourne that
she fled from two drug testing officials in Sigatoka, Fiji, because
she did not know who they were.

“I didn’t feel safe,” she told the tribunal.

One of the New Zealand testing officials, acting on behalf of the
Australian Sports Drug Agency (ASDA), later admitted that he was not
familiar with the regulations and had not correctly identified
himself at their first meeting.

He also said he had not followed the correct procedure for signing
the form.

“The circumstances were less than ideal,” Vaughan Jones told senior
Tribunal member Narelle Bell.

Dajka expects to know the outcome of police investigations into his
case, including possible links with an Adelaide veterinarian.

Dajka, 22, has had his nomination for the Athens team suspended
pending police inquiries and continuing investigations by former WA
Supreme Court judge Robert Anderson, QC.

The clock is ticking on a number of other matters which need to be
resolved before the July 21 deadline for finalising Australia’s
Athens team, expected to number 475.

These include:

+ A Customs check on all potential Athens team members to determine
whether any of them may have been involved in importing banned
substances. The Australian Sports Commission expects results on
Friday. These will be forwarded to the Australian Olympic Committee,
which is waiting to finalise the team.

+ The result of a drugs test on former Armenian weightlifter Sergo
Chakhoyan. Chakhoyan, who served a two-year suspension after testing
positive at the Goodwill Games in Brisbane in 2001, was recently
tested in Armenia. A spokesman for the ASDA said the outcome was
expected in the next few days.

+ The outcome of four appeals by track and field athletes who missed
out on selection – Patrick Johnson (100m, 200m), Tim Williams (4x100m
relay), Annabelle Smith (400m), and Paul Pearce (4x400m relay). The
appeal will be heard in Sydney on Friday and the results are expected
on the day.

Mountain biker Josh Fleming was added to the Athens team after
successfully appealing his original non-selection.

Cycling Australia’s appeals tribunal found that the selection
criteria had been incorrectly applied.

Fleming, 28, replaces South Australian Chris Jongewaard, 24.

McIver dies at 95

Sierra Sun, CA
July 15 2004

McIver dies at 95

Azad “Victoria” McIver, possibly one of Truckee’s most local locals,
passed away Tuesday, July 13 at the age of 95.

Born Azad Josepian in Harpoot, Armenia, in 1908, McIver survived the
Armenian genocide and left her homeland at age 6. In 1922 she came to
Truckee at age 14 with her older sister, Roxie, to meet up with their
brother, Richard, who came to town in 1916.

McIver attended grammar school at the old school house on Church
Street. She worked as a waitress at the Pastime in downtown Truckee
for nine years. McIver’s brother owned the Pastime, Manstyle Barbers
and the Donner Hotel, in addition to many acres of land in Truckee at
the time.

While working at the Pastime, McIver met her late husband, Jim
McIver, a local blacksmith who delivered mail to Tahoe City. They
were married Aug. 10, 1944 in Reno.

In 1949, McIver’s brother donated land and resources to help build
Tahoe Forest Hospital. As the beneficiary of her since-deceased
brother’s estate, McIver donated land for the hospital’s expansion in
1997.

McIver was preceded in death by her sister, Roxie, brother, Richard,
husband, Jim, and many other Truckee locals whom she called friends
and family. McIver is survived by many friends and family in Truckee
and surrounding areas.

Services for McIver were held Thursday, July 15. See Sierra Sun’s
July 21 midweek edition for more on the life of Azad “Victoria”
McIver.

New Iranian Ambassador Hands Credential to Kocharian

NEW IRANIAN AMBASSADOR HANDS CREDENTIAL TO KOCHARIAN

YEREVAN, JULY 14, ARMENPRESS: Ali Reza Haqiqian, the newly
appointed ambassador of Iran to Armenia, handed today his credentials
over to president Kocharian. Kocharian’s press office said the new
ambassador conveyed the warm greetings of Iranian president Mohammad
Khatami to Kocharian. The ambassador was quoted as saying that Iran
appreciates highly Armenian president for keeping the bilateral
relations in the focus of his attention. He also added that
Kocharian’s visit to Iran in 2001 is perceived in Iran as a turning
point in mutually beneficial cooperation.
Congratulating the ambassador on taking a new tenure president
Kocharian said the ambassador received a serious legacy. He also
assessed the current level of diverse Iranian-Armenian relations
positively, saying they should be developed further. He said
concurrently with active political contacts economic interaction is
moving towards a qualitatively new phase, encompassing infrastructure
development with several major projects underway.
The new ambassador said he will exert all efforts to see all
majorjoint projects materialized. The two men also said the upcoming
visit of Iranian president to Armenia in autumn will give a serious
boost to bilateral relations. Also regional issues, the Karabagh
conflict regulation were discussed. Iran-Armenia relations were
considered a weighty factor for regional stability and peace.