Nagorno-Karabakh Peace Process In "Final Phase" – President

NAGORNO-KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS IN "FINAL PHASE" – PRESIDENT

Interfax
March 22 2010
Russia

*** Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said efforts to settle the
Nagorno- Karabakh conflict are in their "final phase" and reiterated
Azerbaijan’s position that a settlement must be conditional on his
country restoring its sovereignty over the disputed territory and
on Armenia pulling its troops from the enclave and Azeri territories
around it.

"We are currently in the final phase of the conflict. It can be said
that the main part of negotiations is over. I can say that, on the
whole, with minor exceptions, the proposals that have been put forward
are completely in line with the national interests of Azerbaijan,"
Aliyev said during celebrations marking Islamic New Year.

"We believe that if the other side [Armenia] shows constructivism
and accepts the option that has been proposed, we will be able to
make rapid progress to the resolution of the conflict," he said.

Azerbaijan’s position remains unchanged, the president said: "The
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan must be restored, all the occupied
territories must be returned, the occupation forces must be withdrawn
from those territories, Azeri citizens must be able to return to their
homes, and all communications must be opened." He expressed confidence
that Nagorno-Karabakh would be brought back under Azeri sovereignty.

The region would receive a high degree of autonomy, "but time will
show what this status is," he said.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan will keep building up its economic and military
power, Aliyev said.

"We are making no secret of this. We are living in an environment
of war and it is no accident that defense spending makes up the
main part of our state expenditure. That is natural. After the
Armenian-Azeri conflict has been settled there will be no need for
such high military expenditure, but today there is. Therefore, we
will continue to build up our military expenditure, strengthen our
armed forces, buy new armaments," he said.

Limit Of Our Alternative

LIMIT OF OUR ALTERNATIVE

lrahos17263.html
16:40:38 – 23/03/2010

When the point is about the fact that the NKR issue is a precondition
for the Armenian and Turkish normalization process, the Armenian
government, as the main argument of refusing this fact, brings the
statements of high-ranking officials of the international community –
U.S., French, high ranking diplomats, Putin, Medvedev, Lavrov about
the need to view these two processes as separate ones. In addition,
the official Yerevan presents these statements as if it persuaded the
authors not to connect the NKR issue with the Armenian and Turkish one.

In reality, everything perhaps is just the opposite and if the
official Yerevan had to decide, the connection between these two
processes would be set in the Armenian and Turkish protocols. Let
us remember Serge Sargsyan’s proposal to Gul to mediate in the NKR
conflict settlement during their very first meeting. Gul used to
affirm that Sargsyan proposed him to be a mediator; the latter said
he just suggested Gul to promote the issue settlement which does
not mean to mediate. No matter what word was used, the wish of the
official Yerevan to involve Turkey in the NKR issue is evident.

Apparently, initiating the football diplomacy, Serge Sargsyan was sure
the international political centers would tie it with the NKR issue.

This thought made Sargsyan bring his initiative close to the taste
of the international community. With the time, the ideas of the
international society came out to be other and it was found out not to
be going to let Turkey approach the NKR issue settlement, not because
of their inclination to Armenia but because of their own interests
because broadening the borders of Turkey’s influence in the region
does not proceed from their interests.

All of the world political centers want to use Turkey for their own
interest and not to be used by Turkey in the future. This is the
reason why Serge Sargsyan’s proposal to Gul did not have continuance,
Armenia did not go on holding Armenia-Turkey-Azerbaijan trilateral
meetings which happened once in the beginning of the Armenian and
Turkish process.

But the case is what is happening in the mind of the Armenian
government. In reality, everything is determined by the thinking codes
the Armenian government entered into the Armenian and Turkish process.

The fact is that these codes, in the beginning, supposed for a
connection between the Armenian and Turkish and the Karabakh issues.

Though the international society seems to have "persuaded" Armenia to
refrain from such proposals, nevertheless, Armenia seems to be still
keeping in mind the NKR issue when taking a step in the Armenian and
Turkish process, though stating it is for no precondition.

In other words, the problem is the mind not the international
situation, repression or encouragement. In general, the lack of
thought of the Armenian side in the Armenia-Turkey process seems to be
a serious problem. The only alternative spoken about is the immediate
leaving the process, in this case, the pressure of the international
community will double. Armenia does not have enough resources to
resist that pressure. When the country is on the way of economic
collapse and social drop, when political monopoly is destroying it,
and legality and laws are seen as elements of global treachery,
unity and solidarity are useless to be spoken about.

It is difficult to find a vital idea in such a situation which could
bring unity and solidarity. Consequently, even if unity and solidarity
are solutions, they are possible only through reforms of the economic,
political situation, and establishment of legal atmosphere in all the
fields. If these steps are not made, there is no difference whether
Armenia is present in this or that process, whether it says yes or no.

In the modern world, yes or no are not important but their value is.

Value is provided with the help of economic-political and
social-psychological conditions. During two years of the Armenian and
Turkish process, this issue did not become the axis of discussions in
Armenia. While the Armenian and Turkish issue is not a reason but a
consequence. Generally, it is time to look for causes inside us. The
search is possible to ease the consequence, let alone the time when
causes are possible to be overcome.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments-

ANKARA: US, Turkey Postpone Business Meeting

US, TURKEY POSTPONE BUSINESS MEETING

Hurriyet
March 22 2010
Turkey

‘We wish for trade relations between the two countries, as well as
investments, to develop further,’ says Ugur Terzioglu.

An annual conference on United States-Turkey relations scheduled
for April 11-14 has been postponed due to tensions over the U.S.’s
official attitude toward Armenian genocide claims, according to the
chairman of a Turkish business association.

The 29th Annual Conference on United States-Turkey Relations was
postponed due to fears there would be low attendance by Turkish
representatives, according to Ugur Terzioglu, chairman of the
Turkish-American Business Association, or TABA/AmCham.

"With respect to our government’s politics and depending on the
fact whether U.S. President Barack Obama uses the world ‘genocide,’
we are supporting the postponement of the American-Turkish Council
[ATC] meeting," he said.

"We hope to see the dark clouds over politics to disappear. We wish
for trade relations between the two countries, as well as investments,
to develop further," he said.

The Turkish-American Business Council, or TAIK, and the ATC made the
postponement decision together, said the Foreign Economic Relations
Board of Turkey, or DEÄ°K.

On Saturday, DEÄ°K said the conference, which was planned for the
second week of April in Washington, was postponed due to the approval
of a resolution on genocide claims in a Foreign Affairs Committee of
the U.S. Congress and the political tensions it subsequently raised.

On March 4, the U.S. House committee approved a resolution that
supported Armenian genocide allegations during the deaths of Ottoman
Armenians in 1915.

In response to the development, Turkey has temporarily recalled its
ambassador in Washington, Namık Tan, to Ankara.

Not ‘Armenians Living Illegally,’ But Rather, ‘Guests’: Kaan Soyak

NOT ‘ARMENIANS LIVING ILLEGALLY,’ BUT RATHER, ‘GUESTS’: KAAN SOYAK

Tert.am
21:15 * 22.03.10

It would be better to use the term not "illegal residents" but "guests"
when referring to Armenians working in Turkey, said Turkish-Armenian
Business Development Council co-chair Kaan Soyak in an interview with
Turkish news agency Anadolu Ajansi, referring to the now infamous
statement by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan.

"Armenians who have come to our country are not hiding anywhere,
their place of residence is known. They are working here as guests and
are assisting their relatives in Armenia … They are our guests,"
said Soyak, adding that Erdoðan’s words about deporting Armenians
living in Turkey, regardless of them being said with good intentions,
were misunderstood in other countries.

"Our phones haven’t stopped ringing off the hook, after those
statements. We try to explain that they were misunderstood," said
Soyak.

Referring to the adoption of the US congressional and Swedish
parliamentary resolutions recognizing the Armenian Genocide, Soyak said
that such bills complicate the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement process.

"We must realize that the most important [thing] for politicians in the
United States and in European countries is not Turkey, but rather their
constituents. We must resolve our problems ourselves, and not give
others the opportunity to make various comments that way," said Soyak.

Carnegie Commits $2.5 Mil to Centers for Advanced Study in Armenia

Carnegie Corporation Commits $2.5 Million to Centers for Advanced
Study in Armenia
By Asbarez
Mar 19th, 2010

NEW YORK – Asserting scholarly research and education in the arts,
humanities and social sciences are not luxuries in difficult times but
vitally necessary for emerging nations as they articulate new civic
and cultural identities, Carnegie Corporation President Vartan
Gregorian announced a $2.5 commitment over the next two years to
further strengthen centers for advanced study focusing on Western
Eurasia and the South Caucasus.

A single Western Eurasia center covers Belarus, Ukraine, and Moldova.
There are three South Caucasus centers in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and
Georgia. The center for Armenia is based at Yerevan State University.

The grants announced today represent a significant renewal of support
for the four advanced study centers originally launched by Carnegie
Corporation in 2003, bringing the foundation’s total investment in
these centers to $14 million.

`The intellectual and academic resources in these centers of
excellence are helping to advance the transformation of the region’s
higher education institutions into modern and more comprehensive
research universities,’ said Gregorian. `The women and men supported
by the centers – the intelligentsia – are the region’s engine of reform.
Hence, we must continue to invest in them as they contribute to
economic development, political and legal reform, and the formation of
post-Soviet civil society.’

Though started in 2003, the center for Western Eurasia and the three
South Caucasus centers grew from work initiated by Carnegie
Corporation to prevent degradation of the academic sector in the wake
of the Soviet Union’s collapse. Nine Centers for Advanced Study and
Education (CASEs) were established in Russia, in partnership with the
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Russian Ministry
of Education and Science. Over the past 10 years, the CASEs enabled
several thousand Russian academics to engage in research, publication
and international exchanges. These university-based centers have
helped to build up the capacities of the region’s intellectuals and
have contributed to stanching brain drain.

`Carnegie Corporation has worked with regional academics, educators
and officials to create access to scholarly resources and programs
aimed at enhancing the post-Soviet transformation of these societies.
Continued investment will help solidify the processes that strengthen
the role of academia in paving the way toward the countries’ future,’
said Deana Arsenian, Vice President, International Program, and
Program Director, Higher Education in Eurasia at Carnegie Corporation.

South Caucasus Centers Supporting Scholars, Providing Resources
A $2 million grant to the Eurasia Foundation will continue to fund the
Caucasus Research Resource Center (CRRC), a network of resource and
training centers established in the capital cities of Armenia,
Azerbaijan and Georgia. The centers, which partner with local
universities, offer scholars and practitioners stable opportunities
for integrated research, training and collaboration in the region.
Academics supported through the centers have helped to strengthen
social science research and public policy analysis in the South
Caucasus.

Over the past seven years, more than 100 promising young scholars have
received research support from one of the three Caucasus-based centers
through fellowship programs. And, the network of regional centers has
sponsored workshops, conferences and seminars in social science
research methods as well as on policy-relevant topics in fields such
as sociology, legal studies, economics, demography, political science,
public policy, and environmental studies. The CRRC centers have
assembled public access libraries and IT labs, created print and
electronic publishing resources and have also offered training in
quantitative research methods and statistical analysis.

`Eurasia Foundation’s partnership with Carnegie Corporation over
several years has enabled us to create something entirely new in the
Caucasus – an international-caliber academic network covering the entire
region,’ said William Horton Beebe-Center, President, Eurasia
Foundation. `The regional network advances the skills of participating
students and researchers, connects them with international colleagues
in the neighborhood and beyond, offers scholars viable career paths in
their native country, and provides a fact-based foundation for
policymakers throughout the region to steer their countries in
directions that improve the lives of ordinary citizens.’

One of the Caucasus Research Resource Center’s core programs has been
the large-scale data collection and analyses of local and regional
developments known as the Data Initiative. A response to the dearth of
reliable, up-to-date and accessible data on social, political and
economic issues, the Data Initiative collects household and other data
on issues such as poverty, employment, education, migration, and crime
across the Caucasus region.

Border Region Center Focuses on Social Transformation
A $500,000 grant to the American Councils for International Education
will continue support for a cross-regional center covering Belarus,
Moldova, and Ukraine. The center, initially established at the
European Humanities University (EHU) in Minsk, Belarus, now operates
at the `university in exile’ in Vilnius, Lithuania, following the
closure in 2004 by the Belarus government of EHU’s Minsk campus.

Scholars supported by the EHU-based center have worked to explore the
social transformations in the border regions of Western Eurasia. An
informal network of scholars from across the region, with support from
the center, have worked together to publish academic monographs and
innovative serials such as Perekrestki (Crossroads), with special
attention to long-neglected (or proscribed) themes and new
methodologies in religious studies, folklore, philosophy, history, and
cultural studies.

`The Belarus CASE has successfully taken root in the intellectual
space of Western Eurasia and is providing unique research
opportunities as the only independent social science center in
Belarus. It has become the hub for a network of both established and
younger scholars from Belarus, Moldova, and Ukraine,’ commented Dan
Davidson, President of the American Councils for International
Education.

`The center has offered research and travel support to more than 100
scholars, including scholars working on a study of comparative
national identities; developing university curricula in border
studies; and an analysis of the role of the Russian minority in
Moldova,’ said Carnegie Corporation’s Deana Arsenian. `The center’s
research is methodologically rigorous and, even from afar, is closely
linked to the reform of research and education in numerous regional
higher educational institutions. Situated in Lithuania, a country
outside of those on which its work focuses – Belarus, Moldova and
Ukraine – allows the center to operate with a degree of intellectual
freedom it might not otherwise have. Yet the center’s exile status
also keeps it keenly focused on its goal of eventual return to
Belarus.’

Carnegie Corporation of New York is a philanthropic foundation created
by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to do `real and permanent good in this
world.’ The foundation has a long history of supporting work focusing
on Eurasia including the establishment in 1948 of the Russian Research
Center at Harvard University to foster a comprehensive understanding
and multidisciplinary study of Russia and the Soviet Union. Prior to
the existence of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, the Center
provided a way for the United States to become informed about the
U.S.S.R. in its role as a new world power.

Turkish youth protest against Erdogan’s statement

Azg Daily, Armenia
March 20 2010

TURKISH YOUNG PEOPLE PROTEST AGAINST ERDOGAN’S STATEMENT

The statement Turkish Premier Recep Erdogan is evoking more and more
responses. Young people gathered in Galatasaray Square and severely
criticized Premier Erdogan and the members of the Grand National
Assembly representing the opposition anti-Armenian Republican People’s
Party (RPP) (Turkish: Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi (CHP)), particularly the
notorious Armenophobe Caman Aritman, news.am repored.

According to the source, the Turkey-based Samanyolu news agency
reported that the participants in the action carried a placard with a
photomontage, Talaat Pasha with Erdogan’s head, with Canam Aritman
besides him. An inscription below said: "Erdogan: We will make
Armenians go through Erzurum-Kars" and Aritman: Naked and on foot."

Cener Kenar, who spoke at the meeting, said: "In those times they did
not ask: what would a state that responded to a Committee’s decision
in this way in 2010 have done in 1915? The state reflex has not
changed for 95 years. How many premiers have changed from Talaat Pasha
to Erdogan Pasha. The premier’s statements are against conscience and
international law. Are we advocates of Talaat Pasha or Enver Pasha? We
do not want to be grandchildren of Talaat, Enver, and all those that
organized Armenian pogroms. We want to be grandchildren of those who
hid Armenians in their homes thereby saving them from massacres," he
said.

Memorial dedicated to late pastor

Eagle Tribune, MA
March 20 2010

Memorial dedicated to late pastor

By Yadira Betances

NORTH ANDOVER ‘ The Rev. Vartan Kassabian served at St. Gregory
Armenian Church for only six years, but the late priest’s legacy will
live for a long time.

A monument was erected in the church’s memorial garden patio and
blessed by Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan March 7. Kassabian’s son
Megerdich "Mgo," a stole-bearer, assisted in the service. Kassabian
died March 12, 2009, at age 52.

More than 150 people attended the event, including a large group from
Providence, R.I., where Kassabian was raised.

He was in the middle of a building campaign when he passed away.
Jaffarian Hall was renovated with the installation of a new floor,
windows and ceiling.

Phase two of the project included the renovation of the sanctuary,
hallways, classrooms, office and downstairs rooms.

In addition to celebrating services and overseeing the renovation,
Kassabian led holiday food drives for The House of Hope, a shelter in
Lowell.

A new pastor has not yet been named at St. Gregory and services are
celebrated by the Rev. Vazken Bekiarian.

Walk to raise money for Cor Unum

NORTH ANDOVER ‘ Members of St. Michael Church will walk two miles
April 25 to retrace the journey taken by priests from St. Patrick’s
Church in Lawrence who rode a horse and buggy to celebrate Mass in
town.

The walk is part of St. Michael’s 140th anniversary this year.

North Andover’s first recorded Catholic Mass was celebrated in 1756 by
Jesuit missionaries in the fields where the Cochichewick Brook and the
Merrimack River unite. As the Catholic population grew through the
19th century when the industrial revolution flourished, faithful from
North Andover would travel to Lowell and later to Lawrence to
celebrate Mass.

Instead of Catholics going to Lawrence, priests from St. Patrick
celebrated Mass in the Union Hall beginning in 1846. The group soon
outgrew Union Hall and purchased land on Water Street for $800.

St. Michael Church was dedicated on Nov. 19, 1869. Three years later,
St. Patrick Church was erected as a parish with St. Michael as its
mission church.

For the next 28 years, priests from St. Patrick would travel each week
to North Andover to celebrate Mass at St. Michael.

Participants of the commemorative walk on April 25 will raise money
for Cor Unum Meal Center.

story_079000521.html

http://www.eagletribune.com/punews/local_

BAKU: Azerbaijan prepared to sign non-use of force after deoccupatio

Trend, Azerbaijan
March 20 2010

Foreign Ministry: Azerbaijan prepared to sign with Armenia an
agreement on non-use of force, but only after deoccupation of
Azerbaijani lands (UPDATED)

20.03.2010 14:56
Azerbaijan, Baku, March 20 / corr Trend News E.Tariverdiyeva /

EDITOR’S NOTE: Two paragraphs added at the end

"We welcome statement by Serzh Azadovich Sargsyan [Armenian president]
and his calls to sign a statement on non-use of force, and are
prepared to it but only after removal of a reason causing such a
threat. i.e. deoccupation of Azerbaijani territory," spokesman for the
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Elkhan Polukhov told Trend News March 20.

"We will be prepared to sign such an agreement after the withdrawal of
Armenian occupant forces from the territory of Azerbaijan," Polukhov
said. He was commenting on Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s recent
interview to Euronews.

In his interview with Euronews Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said
the international community offers them to solve a dispute on the base
of three principles of the international law: right for
self-determination, territorial integrity and non-use of force.
"Taking the opportunity I want to appeal to Azerbaijan from the air
with a call to sign an agreement on non-use of force. It would lay a
foundation of confidence in Armenia and in Nagorno-Karabakh itself,
enable the people to understand that Azerbaijan takes a peaceable
position in solution of the conflict. Afterwards, we could work over
details ¦," he said.

Patriarch Kirill Consecrates Foundation Stone Of New Orthodox Church

PATRIARCH KIRILL CONSECRATES FOUNDATION STONE OF NEW ORTHODOX CHURCH IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.03.2010 12:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ His Holiness Kirill, the Patriarch of Moscow and
All Russia consecrated the foundation stone of the Exaltation of the
Cross Cathedral in Yerevan.

"God grant that this holy place may become a spiritual monument
of friendship between our nations," His Holiness Kirill said. "The
construction of an Armenian Church in Moscow is nearly accomplished.

It’s remarkable that both churches are being built in the name of
the Exaltation of the Cross."

"The temples built in Armenia, Russia and other post soviet states
appear as striking illustration of a new epoch, of human hope for
God," His Holiness Kirill said, expressing gratitude to Catholicos
of All Armenians, His Holiness Karekin II for support.

He also thanked President of the Union of Armenians of Russia
Ara Abrahamyan and his brother, Armenian MP Serzh Abrahamyan, who
covered the construction expenses, Mayor of Yerevan Gagik Beglaryan,
the Russian Embassy the Armenian government and people.

BAKU: Report On Conflicts Settlement Prospect To Be Made In France

REPORT ON CONFLICTS SETTLEMENT PROSPECT TO BE MADE IN FRANCE

news.az
March 18 2010
Azerbaijan

Elkhan Nuriyev Elkhan Nuriyev, director of the Center of Strategic
Studies under the president of Azerbaijan, will leave for France on
29 March 2010.

According to the news service for the Center, Nuriyev will take part
in the round table as a main reporter on the topic of "Prospects of
conflicts resolution in South Caucasus on example of Nagorno Karabakh".

The event will involve French parliamentarians, famous political
scientists, economists and representatives of diplomatic missions
accredited in France.

Working meetings with officials of the presidential administration,
parliament, Foreign Ministry and brain centers of France are also
planned within the framework of the visit to France.

Issues of modern geopolicy of the South Caucasus, Azerbaijan’s role
in the system of Europe’s energy security, influence of the unsettled
conflicts on global security, as well as projects of regional concern
regarding scientific and research cooperation between the analytical
institutions of the two countries will be discussed during the planned
meetings and speeches in the brain centers of France.

The wide exchange of views on different issues of Azerbaijan’s
foreign and internal policy, including the analysis of the current
state and prospects of the development of the Azerbaijani-European,
in particular, the Azerbaijani-French relations will be held on par.