BAKU: Azerbaijani And Armenian FMs To Meet In Paris Without American

AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN FMS TO MEET IN PARIS WITHOUT AMERICAN CO-CHAIR’S PRESENCE

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
June 13 2006

Azerbaijani and Armenian Foreign Ministers will meet in Paris today
(APA).

The sides will discuss agreeing upon the issues which were not solved
during the Presidents’ meeting in Bucharest and make efforts to reach
common agreement. The two Foreign Ministers will also have talks on
organizing next meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Tahir Taghizadeh said to APA
that this meeting is the continuation of the Prague process.

The OSCE Minks Group Russian and French co-chairs, Yuri Merzlyakov
and Bernard Fassier as well as personal representative of the OSCE
chairman-in-office Andrzei Kaspiisk will also participate in the
meeting of Foreign Ministers. There wil be no delegate from US-
other co-chair of the Minsk Group.

US Embassy public affairs officer Jonathan Henick told APA that Steven
Mann is not the co-chair any more as he has been appointed to another
post. The United States will not be represented in the talks this
time as new co-chairman has not yet been appointed.

NCTR Again Infringes The Law

NCTR AGAIN INFRINGES THE LAW
Anna Israelian

Aravot.am
10 June 06

And it tries to hide infringements by small cunnings.

The 50th article of the law “About Television and Radio” was inserted
in December 2003 according to which “National Commission must properly
substantiate decisions about selecting the owner of license, refusing
the license”.

According to the 67th article of the ”NCTR code” that decision is
sent to the applicant in 10 days after taking decision.

The NCTR hasn’t substantiated yet the reasons of refusing ”A1+”
after summarizing contest proposals on 25 of May.

The NCTR chairman Grigor Amalian affirmed in the press interview
yesterday that he had been slandered. According to him they sent the
copy of decision by post on 5 of June. But the envelope was returned
to the NCTR on 8 of June; ” If the addressee doesn’t receive the
ordered letter after sending it for two times, it is returned to the
sender, informing him about it”. The point is that the letter was
sent to the ”A1+” director Mesrop Movsesian where the ”Meltex”
company is registered. The NCTR chairman mentioned that just that
address was mentioned in the application of participation in the
contest. ”You should write you next address as the alternative one
in the application”, – Grigor Amalian said.

But the address Lusovrchi15 as the address of company is mentioned
just on the first page of the contest proposal of ”A1+” and it is
supposed that the NCTR members should see the first page of that
package. The ”A1+” producer Susanna Ohanjanian told ”Aravot”;
”I was writing the application in the NCTR personnel and I wrote
Lusovorchi 15 in the place of address. The NCTR chief of licensing and
methodic department Ishkhan Vardanian asked me to write the juridical
address. I said if they needed in sending letters they should send
by that address. He answered, we knew your place. He made me tear
that paper and I wrote again”.

By the way Mesrop Movsesian’s neighbor are Badeyans’ from whom we
informed that the only letter was brought on 8 of June, that is in
14 days. The postman has made the neighbors to sign that they have
received the letter.

This story is essential for the following circumstance; Susanna
Ohanjanian informed “Aravot” on 25 of May that it wasn’t excluded
that they would turn to court for that infringement after receiving
the copy of the NCTR decision; “The NCTR was obliged to publish the
demands of the contest, those minimal demands which the participants
are obliged to provide. The commission hasn’t done it for this
time”. Grigor Amalian named this accusation “obvious falsehood”
and slander. ”There was an open, public sitting and all demands of
the contest have been published. If there wasn’t any condition how
that contest was taken place?”

–Boundary_(ID_OLnPYJeC5eUb+5SFKNo7Mg)–

Foreign Ministry Announces Armenia Diaspora Conference in September

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-10) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

ARMENIA DIASPORA CONFERENCE
ANNOUNCEMENT

The third Armenia Diaspora conference will convene on September 18-20 in
Yerevan.

This year will also mark the 15th anniversary of Armenia¹s independence. In
that context, ArmeniaDiaspora III will examine, analyze, assess our past and
consider how history and current geo-political realities raise new issues
before our nation, and how the possibilities and prospects for resolving
them together.

The conference is open to all who wish to be present and take part in
Armenia’s future.

The agenda of ArmeniaDiaspora III will consist of various strands.

On September 18, at the first plenary, we will explore the current condition
and future prospects for Armenia-Diaspora relations and cooperation ­ a
traditional concern which requires new approaches, taking into consideration
ever-changing geopolitical development. During this session, speakers will
include the leadership of the Republic of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, the
Catholicos of All Armenians, the Catholicos of the Holy See of Cilicia, as
well as other spiritual leaders, and the heads of all Diaspora-wide
structures.

During the second half of the day and on the next day, we will focus on the
second agenda item ­ rural development in Armenia. To secure Armenia¹s total
development, and from the perspective of certain strategic concerns, the
comprehensive development of Armenia¹s rural communities must be assured.

Therefore, our objective is to rally the resources of the Armenian
government and Armenia¹s business community, the Diaspora and international
organizations, to renovate rural infrastructure, facilitate economic
development and create the necessary contemporary conditions to live and
work in rural communities.

As a starting point, and for obvious strategic reasons, we have decided to
begin with Armenia¹s border villages.

Participating in this agenda item will be the representatives of those
communities, organizations, groups as well as those individuals who have
already agreed to take part in this program. Of course, those conference
participants who are interested in this topic may also attend.

Beginning Tuesday and continuing through Wednesday, September 20, there will
be a forum entitled ³New Answers to Old Questions for a New Nation-State in
the 21st Century.² Armenian identity in the context of globalization ­
preservation, language, culture, education, dual citizenship, repatriation
as a phenomenon, the history of Armenian repatriation, its organization, new
repatriation possibilities, prospects, as well other issues will be on the
agenda.

Also on Wednesday, the Ministry of Agriculture, as well as the Ministry of
Trade and Economic Development will be holding a forum on economic
developments and prospects.

On Thursday, September 21, independence day celebrations will take place
throughout the capital. All conference participants are invited.

On Friday, a major exhibition on Armenia¹s economic activity, agricultural
development, prospects and partners will take place in the same venue as the
conference, at the Demirchian Sports Complex, and all conference
participants will be encouraged to attend.

Additional information about the agenda, registration forms, as well as
modalities of participation will be available and regularly updated at
or at Information is
available at [email protected].

–Boundary_(ID_TlZIDf36rO8k1bAC6 Nh31w)–

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am
www.armeniaforeignministry.am
www.armeniadiaspora.com.

PM issues congratulating message on the occasion of the “Last Bell”

Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan issues a congratulating message on
the occasion of the `Last Bell’

ArmRadio.am
09.06.2006 15:58

`Dear graduates,

I congratulate all of you on leaving school. I’m confident that the
last bell ringing in your school on this festive day will accompany
you throughout your life, arising pleasant and kind memories about the
warm atmosphere, classmates and beloved teachers. I hope that the
knowledge and experience gained at school will help you confidently
step into the big life as deserved citizens of the country to make
your contribution to the further development and prosperity of the
state, justifying the hopes and expectations of your parentsand
teachers, realizing your aspirations and dreams.

I say farewell and wish you success throughout your life and good luck
in all your endeavors.’

Vartan Oskanian To Pay An Official Visit To Ukraine

VARTAN OSKANIAN TO PAY AN OFFICIAL VISIT TO UKRAINE

ArmRadio.am
07.06.2006 17:38

June 19 RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian will pay an official
visit to Ukraine, Spokesman of the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs Vasily Filipchuk reported. In his words, talks and meeting
with Ukrainian top leadership are planned during the visit. A
number of urgent issues of bilateral cooperation are to be discussed,
specifically ways to expand trade and economic cooperation, interaction
within international organizations, as well as European integration. In
Filipchuk’s words, special attention during talks with Ukrainian
authorities will be paid to settlement of “frozen conflicts in the
South Caucasus,” reports Novosti-Ukraina.

BAKU: Forthcoming Talks Might Offer Progress For Achievement FinalPe

FORTHCOMING TALKS MIGHT OFFER PROGRESS FOR ACHIEVEMENT FINAL PEACE BETWEEN AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA – AZERI STATE OFFICIAL
Author: R.Abdullayev

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
June 6 2006

The current situation in the talks in the resolution of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh continues
representing a pressure on Armenia. I hope the further talks will
provide a necessary base for progress in the direction of achievement
of final peace between the sides. Novruz Mammadov, the head of the
Foreign Relationships Department of the Azerbaijani President’s
Apparat told journalists on 6 June, Trend reports.

During the summit “The Black Sea Forum for Dialogue and Partnership”
in Bucharest the Azerbaijani president delivered a paper which
introduced detail information on the country’s achievements in the
economic and political spheres. The head of state also touched upon
a topic on the resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Mammadov also noted that the talks between the Azerbaijani and Armenian
President were held in large format with participation of the OSCE
Minsk Group co-chairs and Foreign Ministers, as well as in the forma
of tete-a-tete. “The meeting was held in two days: 3.5 hours on the
first day and over an hour on the second day.

The talks continued in tense conditions, he noted. The agreement
was achieved only on definite issues, while there does not exist
final conclusion.

The same time Mammadov said that though the concrete date of further
meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents is to still to be
defined, they are expected to be held till the end of 2006.

Karabakh Talks Fruitless Over Baku’s Refusal To Recognize NKR Right

KARABAKH TALKS FRUITLESS OVER BAKU’S REFUSAL TO RECOGNIZE NKR RIGHT TO REFERENDUM

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.06.2006 13:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The talks on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement
do not yield fruit since Azerbaijan refuses to recognize the right of
the NKR people to referendum, Vice-speaker of the Armenian parliament
Vahan Hovhannisian stated in Yerevan.

However, in his words, the world practice proves that exercising
the right to self-determination peoples express their will via
referendum. “The point is that Nagorno Karabakh was the first to do
it during the post soviet age, when the international community was
not ready for separation from metropolises. When independence was
proclaimed in Eastern Timor, Eritrea, Montenegro it was perceived
as a normal phenomenon. By the way, the same variant will be to all
appearance proposed to Kosovo,” Hovhannisian remarked.

No Russian Officials At Black Sea Summit

No Russian Officials At Black Sea Summit

BUCHAREST, Jun 4

The summit to launch the Black Sea Forum for Dialog and Partnership
Monday will be attended by the presidents of Romania, Ukraine,
Armenia, Azerbaijan and the Republic of Moldova and officials from
Lithuania, Turkey, Bulgaria and international organizations, but no
Russian officials.

The Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a press release Sunday
containing a complete list of Summit participants. The list includes
no Russian officials.

Invited by Romanian president Traian Basescu, presidents of countries
from the Black Sea area or their representatives will attend the
summit: Robert Kocharian, president of Armenia; Ilham Aliyev,
president of Azerbaijan; Mikhail Saakashvili, president of Georgia;
Vladimir Voronin, president of the Republic of Moldova, and Viktor
Yushchenko, president of Ukraine.

The list also includes Ivailo Kalfin – deputy prime minister and
foreign affairs minister in Bulgaria, Dr. Besir Atalay – state
minister inTurkey, and Vironas Polydoras – public order minister in
Greece.

Among members of European and Euro-Atlantic communities and
international organizations to be present at the summit: Sergei
Ordzhonikidze, director-general of the UN Office in Geneva; Terry
Davis, secretary general of the Council of Europe; Marc Perrin de
Brichambaut, secretary general with OSCE; Brunson McKinley,
director-general of the International Organization for Migration;
Erhard Busek, Special Coordinator of the Stability Pact for South
Eastern Europe; Marek Belka, Executive Secretary of the United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe; Robert Simmons, Special Representative
for the Caucasus and Central Asia; Peter Semneby, EU Special
Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia.

This reunion is the first in a series of events meant to consolidate
the profile of the Black Sea area, to draw the international
community=80=99s attention to the importance of this region which
encompasses opportunities as well as challenges.

President Traian Basescu said on April 26, at the Forum of the
Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation, or BSEC, marking
the end of the Romanian presidency of the organization, which is to be
taken over by the Russian Federation, that discussions among Black Sea
area states related to sensitive issues such as security, the fight
against organized crime and terrorism, could take place outside of an
institutional framework.

He added at the time that Romania would be an active partner in
solving problems in the Black Sea area.

At the beginning of June, official sources said Russia should attend
the summit, at least on a diplomatic level.

© Mediafax 2004. Toate drepturile rezervate.

The Roots of Rage

Washington Post, DC
June 3 2006

The Roots of Rage
An angry reporter blames a region’s turmoil on local despots and
Western meddling.

Reviewed by Stephen Humphreys
Sunday, June 4, 2006; Page BW06

THE GREAT WAR FOR CIVILISATION
The Conquest of the Middle East
By Robert Fisk
Knopf. 1,107 pp. $40

This is first of all a book about war — in particular, the wars that
have scarred the Middle East, from Afghanistan to Algeria, throughout
the author’s long career as a correspondent for the London Times and
then the Independent. It switches back and forth across the 20th
century in a way that seems driven more by stream of consciousness
than by any linear design, and, as befits its topic, it is a book of
almost unremitting violence. The author presents himself both as
unflinching witness and implacable judge of the events he recounts,
for he believes that he is telling a story of unrelenting perfidy and
betrayal — in part a story of Middle Easterners being betrayed by
themselves and their leaders, but mostly one of the Middle East being
betrayed by the power, greed and arrogance of the West.

Fisk has thrown himself into the fiery pit time after time, often at
grave personal risk — Afghanistan at the beginning of the long
struggle against the Soviets, the bloodbath of the 1980s Iran-Iraq
War, the civil war in Algeria after 1991, the second Palestinian
intifada since the fall of 2000. When he is not personally in the
midst of conflict and destruction, he evokes them, as in his lengthy
discussion of the Armenian deportations and massacres of World War I
or (in a different register) his treatment of the shah of Iran’s
prisons and torture chambers.

However Fisk regards himself, he is at bottom a war correspondent,
and the fabric of his book is woven largely from his battlefield
reporting. Fisk’s writing on war is vivid, graphic, intense and very
personal. Readers will encounter no “collateral damage” here, only
homes destroyed and bodies torn to shreds. At times, as one horror is
heaped upon another, it all seems too much to absorb or bear.

That intensity is both the book’s great strength and one of its
principal weaknesses. After reading it, no one can hide from the
immense human costs of the decisions made by generals and
politicians, Middle Eastern or otherwise. But Fisk portrays the
Middle East as a place of such unrelieved violence that the reader
can hardly imagine that anyone has enjoyed a single ordinary day
there over the past quarter-century. That picture is a serious
distortion. Life in the region is far from easy, but in spite of
endemic anxiety and frustration, most Middle Easterners, most of the
time, are able to get on tolerably well. Fisk says little about more
abstract, less violent issues such as economic stagnation, the
complexities of political Islam or the status of women. This gap is
not a weakness in itself — Fisk is writing about different themes —
but readers need to be aware that, despite its staggering length,
this book is not The Complete Middle East.

It may well be The Complete Robert Fisk, however. It is full of
autobiographical reminiscences about the author’s troubled but
intense relationship with his father, Bill; indeed, that relationship
provides the book’s title. The elder Fisk had been awarded a campaign
medal for his service in France in 1918, and the medal (which he
bequeathed to his son) was inscribed with the motto “The Great War
for Civilisation.” The bitter irony of that motto is underscored by
another gift, this one from the author’s grandmother to his father —
a boy’s novel, Tom Graham, V.C. , which recounts the adventures of a
young British soldier in Afghanistan in the late 19th century. For
the author, both the medal and the novel symbolize the West’s
arrogant and destructive intrusion in the Middle East throughout the
last century.

If this is a book about war, it is equally a book about the hypocrisy
and indifference of those in power. Fisk is an angry man and more
than a little self-righteous. No national leader comes off with a
scrap of credit here; he regards the lot of them with contempt, if
not loathing. Among the men in charge — whether Arab, Iranian,
Turkish, Israeli, British or American — there are no heroes and
precious few honorable people doing their inadequate best in
difficult situations. Jimmy Carter is lucky to escape with
condescension, King Hussein of Jordan with a bit better than that.
Fisk is not fond of the media either (though he grants some
exceptions); CNN and the New York Times are particular targets of his
scorn for what he sees as their abject failure to challenge the lies,
distortions and cover-ups of U.S. policymakers. Only among ordinary
people, entangled in a web of forces beyond their control, does Fisk
find a human mixture of courage, cowardice, charity and cruelty.

Given the present state of things in the Middle East, one is tempted
to agree with him. The mendacity and bland pomposity of the suits and
talking heads, both Western and Middle Eastern, are infuriating to
anyone who has any direct knowledge of what is going on there. Again,
however, there is a problem: Fisk excoriates politicians for the
awful suffering they have imposed on the peoples of the Middle East,
but he never seriously asks why they make the decisions they do or
what real alternatives they might have. It is all very well to flog
Western and Middle Eastern leaders for their ignorance, moral
blindness, lust for power, etc. That might instill shame and guilt
(though it rarely does), but it provides no serious principles or
criteria that serious policymakers might use to develop something
better.

In short, The Great War for Civilisation is a book of unquestionable
importance, given Fisk’s unmatched experience of war and its impact
in the contemporary Middle East and his capacity to convey that
experience in concrete, passionate language. Still, novices will find
themselves both overwhelmed by the book’s exhaustive detail and hard
put to follow the author’s leaps across countries and decades. The
Great War for Civilisation is also a deeply troubling book; it may
well confirm the conviction of many that the Middle East is incurably
sunk in violence and depravity and that only a fool would imagine it
could ever be redeemed. As tragic as the last three decades have
been, there are different lessons to be learned — one must hope so,
at least. ·

Stephen Humphreys is a professor of Middle Eastern history and
Islamic studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and
the author of “Between Memory and Desire: The Middle East in a
Troubled Age.”

Presentation of Genocide denial punishment bill in The Netherlands

ANP (DUTCH PRESS AGENCY)

1 June 2006

Christian Union wants to make the denial of genocide punishable

THE HAGUE (ANP) – The denial of genocide, such as the Holocaust, must be
punishable. To this end the Christian Union (ChristenUnie) party has
submitted a bill to the Parliament. Anyone who intentionally denies a
genocide or a crime against humanity in order to insult others or incite
hate shall be accountable as having committed a crime which can carry a
maximum sentence of one year imprisonment, according to the draft law.

The presenter of the bill, Dutch MP Mrs. Tineke Huizinga, wants to have this
provision included in the Dutch Penal Code as a clear signal that such
denials would not be tolerated. The law should also make it easier to combat
discrimination on Internet, said Huizinga Thursday during the introducing of
her bill.

For the victims of genocides and their surviving relatives the intentional
denials of the committed evil or distorting of the facts are ³indigestible².
Huizinga named as an example, next to the persecution of the Jews during the
Second World War, the extent and dimensions of the slavery in which The
Netherlands has played a ³disgraceful² role.

In addition, the parliament member recalled the Genocide of the Armenians in
1915 during the Ottoman Empire, which is still being denied by the present
day Turkey and the Turks elsewhere. Huizinga and other members of the
Parliament have recently been bombarded by E-mails forwarded especially by
the Turks who oppose the Christian Union bill.

Huizinga emphasised that the bill does not seek to restrict the freedom of
speech. According to her, the historical facts should always be open to
discussion. The denial, approval or justification of genocide should
therefore be punishable when it concerns a deliberate expression to insult
and discriminate people.

The Federation of Armenian Organisations in The Netherlands called the bill
a step forward and is happy that the Armenian Genocide has been explicitly
mentioned in the Explanatory Memorandum of the bill. A representative of the
organisation, Mrs. Inge Drost, thinks that the adoption of the bill should
make it possible to close Internet sites which engage in the denial of
Armenian Genocide, such as seemingly innocent site www.armenië.nl

In a reaction, the National Bureau for Combating Race Discrimination and the
Israel Information and Documentation Centre, likewise announced their
support of the bill. The draft law should go first to the Council of State
for advice, following which the Parliament can start the proceedings on the
bill.