Serzh Sargsyan Says Artsakh Is Established State With Its Structures

SERZH SARGSYAN SAYS ARTSAKH IS ESTABLISHED STATE WITH ITS STRUCTURES, ARMY AND CITIZENS

Panorama.am
13:18 02/09/2009

President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan addressed congratulatory message
to the people of Artsakh on the occasion of their independence,
President’s Cabinet reports.

"Dear compatriots, I congratulate us all on the occasion of Nagorno
Karabakh Independence Day.

The last eighteen years reaffirmed the unambiguousness of the historic
decision adopted in 1991. Today, the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh is
an established state with its structures, army and most importantly,
with the citizens who are the masters of their own destiny.

Today, for us and for the international community Artsakh is a
modern republic which embodies the ideals of freedom, sovereignty and
democracy, and which despite all the objective as well as artificially
created hindrances and hardships is progressing, developing its
economy and culture, and defending peace.

The Republic of Armenia and the entire Armenian nation all these
years have been and will continue to be Artsakh’s sturdy supporters. I
assure all the citizens of Artsakh and all Armenians that the peaceful
resolution to the NK conflict will be first and foremost based on
the consent and free will of the people of Artsakh.

Dear people of Artsakh, We owe this holiday first of all to those who
stepped into immortality putting their lives on the altar of motherland
and freedom. Bowing to their memory, I once again congratulate you
with this holiday and wish you all well being, happiness and valor."

Let Them Free Citizens

LET THEM FREE CITIZENS
Yeghisheh Metsarents

Lragir
php?id=society&pid=15015
14:53:47 – 31/08/2009

The Russian national TV channels showed Dimitri Medvedev in a fishing
boat struggling against poachers when he let the fish go from the
net. It is difficult to imagine a more heroic scene. Surprisingly,
the fish was very modest and did not jump into the boat to thank the
president. Moreover, the fish could have refused freedom and stated
ready to be killed for the table of such a president because it is
an honor. In this case, the propaganda would be perfect.

However, as long as there is the Russian president, propaganda
will be carried on and improved and one day we will see him hug the
fish. In Armenia, there are people who follow the Russian president’s
propaganda. This was common when Robert Kocharyan was in office and
the same continues under Serge Sargsyan. Any propaganda trick applied
in Russia is copied in Armenia if not by 100 but at least by 70-80
percent. This means that the day when the Armenian president liberates
the fish from the nets in Lake Sevan is drawing nearer. Who knows,
our fish may turn out to be cleverer and will not wait until the
day when those responsible of the propaganda will understand that
fish must jump into the boat to thank their liberator. Our fish may
present their own initiative, especially considering the fact that
the Armenian new government promotes initiatives so they will jump
into the boat to thank the Armenian president.

It would be good, touching, encouraging and maybe the citizens
too, like the fish, will wish to hug the president. But it would be
better for the presidents of those countries where there is so-called
"sovereign democracy" to govern so that to eliminate poaching and not
to take boats to struggle personally against it. There are a lot of
bodies engaged in this job and a lot of workers. And this goes for all
the propaganda tricks which the "fathers" of the "sovereign democracy"
use to appear like kind "tsars". If they are surrounded by idle and
corrupt people they had better release the citizens from these people
instead of planting flowers and freeing fish. It would be better for
both the citizens and the fish for the flora and fauna.

http://www.lragir.am/src/index.

Armenia, Turkey To Re-Open Border

ARMENIA, TURKEY TO RE-OPEN BORDER

ABC Online
01/2672903.htm?section=justin
Sept 1 2009
Australia

Armenia and Turkey have agreed on a plan to establish diplomatic
ties and re-open their border, seeking to end decades of distrust
and resentment on both sides.

The two countries have no diplomatic relations, a closed frontier and
a long history of hostility rooted in massacres of Armenians under
the Ottoman Turks during World War I.

The two countries said they would hold six weeks of domestic
consultations before signing two protocols on establishing diplomatic
ties and developing bilateral relations.

"The political consultations will be completed within six weeks,
following which the two protocols will be signed and submitted to
the respective parliaments for ratification," the countries’ foreign
ministries said in a joint statement with mediator Switzerland.

According to copies of the protocols released by the Armenian foreign
ministry, the two countries have agreed to re-open their common border
"within two months" of the deal taking effect.

The agreement also calls for the creation of a joint commission
to examine the "historical dimension" of their disagreements,
"including an impartial scientific examination of the historical
records and archives".

The two countries said in April that they had agreed to a road map
for normalising diplomatic ties after years of enmity.

Turkey has long refused to establish diplomatic links with Armenia over
Yerevan’s efforts to have World War I-era massacres of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks recognised as genocide – a label Turkey strongly rejects.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were systematically killed
between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, Turkey’s predecessor,
was falling apart.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says between
300,000 and 500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil
strife when Armenians took up arms in eastern Anatolia and sided with
invading Russian troops.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/09/

Gul’s First Two Years At Cankaya: Embracing Turkey And The World

GUL’S FIRST TWO YEARS AT CANKAYA: EMBRACING TURKEY AND THE WORLD

Today’s Zaman
Aug 29 2009
Turkey

Two years have passed since Parliament elected Abdullah Gul as the
11th president of the Republic of Turkey on Aug. 29, 2007.

As head of state, Gul has been trying to reactivate Turkey’s foreign
policy, coming together at important summits with world leaders and
receiving many foreign dignitaries, including US President Barack
Obama, at the Cankaya presidential palace.

During his term in office, Gul has traveled abroad 47 times, visiting
35 countries. The president has been active in efforts to mediate the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and between Afghanistan and Pakistan,
representing Turkey all over the globe. Gul is met with great shows of
love from the people when he visits various provinces of Turkey and
has at every opportunity voiced messages of unity and togetherness,
emphasizing the richness to be found in diversity.

President Gul, who has demonstrated intense effort to bring different
state institutions into harmony, has also taken history-making steps
in the ongoing Kurdish initiative. During the Gul presidency, Cankaya
has hosted a number of important events, from the world of sports to
education and from history to the rights of disabled persons.

The path to foreign policy runs through Cankaya President Gul has
accomplished many of his foreign policy goals. Under the heading of
balanced and close relations with major powers, he has paid visits to
the US, Russia, China and Japan. He greeted US President Obama during
his visit to Turkey on April 5-7. The visit stood out for its focus
on the concept of a "model partnership" and was one of Obama’s first
official overseas visits.

Philadelphia To Host Exhibition Of Arshile Gorky’s Paintings

PHILADELPHIA TO HOST EXHIBITION OF ARSHILE GORKY’S PAINTINGS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
24.08.2009 21:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Philadelphia Museum of Art has organized a traveling
exhibition displaying the works of Arshile Gorky, the founder of
Armenian abstract art. A Retrospective will premier at the Museum
and present 180 paintings, sculptures and works on paper reflecting
the full scope of Gorky’s prolific career.

The Retrospective is the first major exhibition of its type since 1981
and the first to benefit from the publication of three biographies
of the artist. This will be the first major museum exhibition to
highlight the artist’s Armenian heritage and examine the impact of
Gorky’s experience of the Armenian Genocide on his life and work.

Philadelphia exhibition titled "Arshile Gorky. Retrospective" will
be organized from October 21, 2009 till January 10, 2010. It will
then travel to Tate Modern, London (February 10 – May 3, 2010) and
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (June 6 – September 20,
2010) following its debut in Philadelphia.

Arshile Gorky (Vosdanig Adoian) was born in 1904 in the Western
Armenian village of Khork, near Lake Van. During the 1915 Armenian
Genocide, Turkish troops drove Gorky’s family and thousands of
others out of Van on a death march to the frontier of Caucasian
Armenia. Suffering from starvation in 1919, during a time of severe
deprivation for the Armenian refugees, Gorky’s mother died in his
arms. The artist later left for United States where he changed his
name to Arshile Gorky.

Samvel Mkrtchyan Met Anders Fogh Rasmussen On Friday In NATO

SAMVEL MKRTCHYAN MET ANDERS FOGH RASMUSSEN ON FRIDAY IN NATO

Aysor
Aug 24 2009
Armenia

Samvel Lazarian, the head of the Armenian Mission met the newly
appointed Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

Samvel Lazarian passed the congratulations of the Armenian President,
the Minister of RA MFA and the Defense Minister to the NATO Secretary
General on the occasion of taking the office.

The ambassador Lazarian mentioned that Armenian is inflexible
in developing the cooperation relations with the Alliance and the
Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP) will serve that purpose. The
ambassador underlined that the Armenian side attaches importance
to the participation of the peacekeeping actions realized by NATO:
in the future the Armenian soldiers will be involved also in the
international forces of Afghanistan Security support.

The Secretary General of NATO has estimated positively the cooperation
with Armenia in the acting frameworks. Anders Fogh Rasmussen has
attached importance to the participation of Armenia in the actions
managed by the Alliance, he has underlined that the cooperation with
the Southern Caucuses will continue, informed the information and
public relations department of RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

New Deputy Ministers Of Transport And Agriculture Appointed In Armen

NEW DEPUTY MINISTERS OF TRANSPORT AND AGRICULTURE APPOINTED IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.08.2009 11:16 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ By decision of RA Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian
Ruben Sinoyan was appointed to the post of deputy minister of transport
and communications, press service of the RA government reports. By
another decision of the RA prime minister Vardan Karapetyan assigned
the office of deputy minister of agriculture.

Arm-Twisting

WPS Agency, Russia
What the Papers Say (Russia)
August 19, 2009 Wednesday

ARM-TWISTING

BYLINE: Yuri Simonjan

THE GEORGIAN REGIME STIFFENS ACTING LEGISLATION; The Georgian
authorities stiffen the law "On meetings and manifestations".

New law "On meetings and manifestations" came into force in Georgia
this Tuesday. The legislation stiffened the rules of mass protests as
well as penalty for infraction and broadened the already impressive
powers of the police. Condemned by the opposition as a "law against
democracy and protests", the law was adopted on the eve of the new
political season in Georgia. Enemies of the regime scheduled renewal
of mass protests for autumn.

The parliament amended the acting law "On meetings and manifestations"
at the emergency meeting on July 17, the day when mass protests were
taking place all over Tbilisi. Propresident majority easily overruled
the Christian Democratic Party faction that suggested consultations
with the Venetian Commission of the Council of Europe first. It is
fair to add here that when the authorities of Armenia nearby crushed a
rally of the opposition protesting against the outcome of the
presidential election and promptly adopted analogous restrictions on
organization of protests, official Yerevan immediately found itself
under pressure from the Western community. It was eventually forced to
recede from its position. Tbilisi, however, was permitted to get away
with it. No pressure in connection with the amended legislation is
applied to Mikhail Saakashvili’s regime even though the law permits
the use of "nonlethal weapons" and other suchlike means against
protesters.

The term "nonlethal weapons" is ambiguous in itself. Is it possible to
kill a man with a banal truncheon? It certainly is. As for "nonlethal
bullets", Georgian opposition has firsthand experience with
them. Attending a protest rally in front of the police department in
Tbilisi on May 6, opposition leaders suddenly found themselves under
fire. Using plastic bullets, a sniper finally sent them all to doctors
specializing in brain injuries. And a reference to "other suchlike"
means leaves little to imagination, considering what the Georgian
powers-that-be deploy against their political adversaries. Teargas,
water cannons, and other mob control means were successfully used
against the opposition on November 7, 2007.

Investing new powers in the police, the amended legislation stiffened
protest organization rules and penalty for their violation. The
opposition assumes, not unreasonably, that the authorities go to these
extremes to prevent new mass protests scheduled for the
autumn. "Everything is clear. Nothing to comment on," lawyer Eka
Barselia said. All the same, opposition activists are resolved to
resume street protests soon, stiffer prosecution or not.

It seems, however, that chances of the opposition to win the
confrontation are smaller now than they have ever been – unless the
powers-that-be make some fatal error, of course. Attempts to
consolidate the opposition failed. Irakly Alasania, formerly
representative of Georgia to the UN, seems bent on the talks with the
regime. His political allies (the Republican Party) pin their hopes on
the presidential election in 2013, as if recognizing pointlessness of
the confrontation at this time. Nino Burdzhanadze formerly of the
parliament of Georgia has her hands full with the court proceedings
concerning the mansion once received as a gift from Saakashvili (tax
services demand colossal sums for it now). Led by Gubaz Sanikidze and
Kaja Shartava, the National Forum launched a propagandistic campaign
in the provinces that have always been firmly pro-Saakashvili.
Ex-candidate for president Levan Gachechiladze founded the Movement
for Salvation of Georgia without saying what for or what he intended
to do with it. Konstantin Gamsakhurdia, the son of the first president
of Georgia, went public to say that he distrusted the opposition.
Shalva Natelashvili’s Laborites had announced earlier that they
distrusted both the authorities and the opposition.

So, the Georgian opposition on the eve of the new political season is
split into autonomous parties and movements often working at cross
purposes. The regime in the meantime consolidates its positions. And
what about the Georgians? The Georgians are fed up – with the promises
of the powers-that-be to put things right and with the threats of the
opposition to make "Saakashvili’s lying regime" history.

Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No 173, August 19, 2009, p. 7

From the crusaders on, contempt for the Arabs is written in stone

The Independent

Robert Fisk’s World: From the crusaders on, contempt for the Arabs is
written in stone

What was it that bestowed upon our ancestors such ill-will towards the
Arabs?

Saturday, 22 August 2009

ators/fisk/robert-fiskrsquos-world-from-the-crusad ers-on-contempt-for-the-arabs-is-written-in-stone- 1775845.html

Not long ago, the owner of a Majorcan palace found 13th-century
graffiti on his basement wall. It was scrawled there by a knight en
route to the Crusades. Translated, it read: "Sod the Arabs."

I owe this sublime quotation to last Saturday’s Financial Times
property section – the only FT worth reading during the week, only to
be perused, of course, after purchasing Saturday’s Independent – but
it coincided with a whole series of bons mots on the Arab world which
I’ve been hoovering up from a collection of letters and books of the
1920s and 1930s.
Many turn up in letters to Lawrence of Arabia after the 1914-18 war –
although my favourite is a remark by Charles Doughty (of Arabia
Deserta fame) to Lawrence himself. According to Robert Graves (Goodbye
to All That), Lawrence told him that he had once asked Doughty why he
had undertaken his Arabian adventure. "His answer," Lawrence told
Graves, "was that he had gone there ‘to redeem the English language
from the slough into which it had fallen since the time of Spencer’."
Poor old Arabs, it’s as well that Gertrude Bell had some sympathy with
them, albeit heavy with cynicism. Here she is, writing to Lawrence in
1920, advocating the creation of Arab governments before signing a
peace with the Turks. "I took the example of Syria; Palestine is even
better but we hadn’t appointed a King of the Jews when I first began
the campaign here. We’ve paid for our failure to make good our
promises. We had a terrific Ramadhan [sic] with big religio-political
meetings in the mosques 3 or 4 times a week, Sunnis and Shiahs [sic]
falling into one another’s arms & swearing eternal alliance (against
us of course) & finally a serious outbreak in Diwaniyah …"
And here’s the governor of Bombay, Sir George Lloyd, writing to
Lawrence of the same region and in the same year. "Was there ever so
fatal and disastrous a muddle over Egypt, Syria, Palestine and
Mesopotamia … If we had taken and kept the Basra-Kurna bit, & taken
& kept Alexandretta and told the Franks that it was not Syria & stuck
to that and let the rest rip we should have had the peoples inside all
on our side against everyone outside – Now what?" The same cynicism
again. Tell the French to get stuffed (Syria came under the post-Great
War French mandate, which then included the Turkish – once Armenian –
port of Alexandretta) and sod the Arabs.
Ten years later, Frederic Manning – who wrote the wonderful First
World War novel of the Somme, Her Privates We – was writing a note of
praise for Lawrence’s Seven Pillars of Wisdom and at least tried to
enter the Arab mind (as Lawrence himself had done). Manning described
the wartime Arab revolt, led by Lawrence, as "so ambiguous, a racial
movement striving to assume a national character, the nomad entering
into possessions, arresting his own movement by prescribing a boundary
to it. You took me right back to Genesis and Job … Job, of course,
was an Arab, and his present day progeny stand in the same relation to
Allah as he stood in relation to Jahveh, so passionately asserting his
own individuality against that engulphing [sic] one-ness…" The
problem, of course, as Bell had noticed long before, was that the
boundary the Arabs had in mind included all of a land called
Palestine.
Many of these quotations come from the long out-of-print Letters to
T. E. Lawrence, which also includes a wonderful 1922 description by
Doughty of King Abdullah (father of the future King Hussain), who was
"not much pleased with anything he saw here in England. He could not
approve of the endless movement & rush of human life in these
parts. He esteemed himself a great personage…" Then suddenly we come
across a letter of infinite politeness from an Arab, to Lawrence from
King Feisal I of Iraq. "I cannot but send to you my cordial thanks for
the interest you have had of our affairs despite your being at far
distant [sic] from us … I wish you pleasant long life … I close by
reiterating my wishes for your everlasting prosperity and happy
days. Your friend Feisal." This is the same Feisal earlier described
by Cunninghame Graham as "a charming man and the only Oriental I ever
saw, who looks really well in European clothes…"
Some references to the Arabs are an attempt at humour. Ezra Pound
addressed Lawrence as "My Dear Hadji ben Abt el Bakshish, Prince de
Mecque," and Winston Churchill, whose early work on the Sudanese
campaign contains plenty of anti-Arab racism, would address Lawrence
as "My dear ‘Lurens’," because that’s how Arabs pronounced Lawrence’s
name.
No one, I hastily add, could ever beat Noel Coward’s wonderful opening
to a letter to Lawrence when our hero was posing as an anonymous
aircraftsman with a mere service number for a name. "Dear 338171,"
Coward begins. "May I call you 338?"
That’s almost as good as the Second World War cartoon by Pont of an
English gentleman lifting the phone in 1940 and telling the operator:
"Get me Messerschmitt 109."
But what was it that bestowed upon our recent ancestors such marked
ill-humour towards the Arabs? Even Caroline Doughty (Charles’ wife)
would write of the painter Eric Kennington that "he is so imbued with
the strange strongly marked features of the Arabs that it will be
sometime before he can return to European colouring and softness of
touch."
At least this doesn’t match David Garnett’s remark that he was afraid
Lawrence had joined the RAF "as returned Crusaders used to go into
monasteries … Holy Men are anathema to me; I hate Fakirs …"
Siegfried Sassoon, who served in Palestine as well as the Western
Front in the Great War, wrote of Seven Pillars that "I have savoured
your Hejaz hardships. Have, in fact, enjoyed all the fun without so
much as a grain of sand in my cup or the least touch of dysentery!"
George Bernard Shaw shrugged off Lawrence’s assumed anonymity in the
RAF with the exclamation that "the people have their rights too
… They want to you to appear always in glory, crying, ‘This is I,
Lawrence, Prince of Mecca!’ To live under a cloud is to defame God."
Perhaps that is the problem. We like the Arabs if we pose at being an
Arab. Otherwise, the undertow of all these remarks echoes the
crusading knight who wrote so imperishably on the wall of that
Majorcan palace.

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/comment

BAKU: New OSCE MG co-chairmen to visit Karabakh conflict zone

Interfax, Russia
Aug 14 2009

New OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen to visit Karabakh conflict zone

BAKU Aug 14

The co-chairmen of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group are going to make another visit to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict area, diplomatic sources in Baku said on
Friday.

French mediator Bernard Fassier is planning to visit the region in
early September, they said. Then he will make another visit to the
region as part of the renewed trio of co-chairmen that will also
include representatives from Russia and the United States.

During their visits the co-chairmen will meet with Azeri and Armenian
leaders to discuss further ways of resolving the Karabakh conflict.

U.S. co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group Matthew Bryza has already
stepped down.

The Russian co-chairman could also be replaced, sources said. The
names of their successors are not being disclosed so far, sources
said.