Azeri President Aliyev In Greece

AZERI PRESIDENT ALIYEV IN GREECE

Athens News Agency
Feb 16 2009
Greece

Greek President of the Republic Karolos Papoulias on Monday received
the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, who is on an official
visit to Greece. They held talks on ways to further develop bilateral
relations between Greece and Azerbaijan.

Private talks between the two presidents were preceded by an official
ceremony of welcome, where the government was represented by Culture
Minister Antonis Samaras and Deputy Merchant Marine & Island Policy
Minister Panagiotis Kammenos. There was then a meeting with the full
delegations of the Greek and Azeri sides attending.

This culminated in the signature of four bilateral agreements:
one for avoiding double taxation and preventing tax evasion, which
was signed by Greek Deputy Finance Minister Antonis Bezas and Azeri
Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov; a flight services agreement signed
by Deputy Transport Minister Mihalis Bekiris and Azerbaijan Airlines
general director Jakhangir Askerov; an infotech and communications
agreement signed by Bekiris and the Azeri Communications and
Information Technology Minister Ali Abbasov; and finally a memorandum
of understanding in renewable energy sources and energy efficiency
sectors, signed by Development Minister Costis Hatzidakis and Azeri
Minister of Energy and Industries Natiq Aliyev.

In statements afterward, Papoulias said the two countries gave priority
to energy issues, investments, trade and cooperation in cultural and
educational matters. He said the talks with Aliyev had also focused
on Azerbaijan’s relations with the European Union, in the framework
of strengthening the Community’s relations with Baku.

Their talks also covered current affairs in the surrounding region,
including the Caucasus, the Middle East, the Balkans and the Cyprus
issue.

"I referred particularly to the Cyprus issue and stressed to the Azeri
president the need to end the Turkish occupation of a large part of
the territory of a European country," Papoulias said, while thanking
Aliyev for his invitation to visit Azerbaijan, which he accepted.

Aliyev noted that he was the first president of Azerbaijan to carry
out an official visit to Greece and emphasised the significance of the
visit, expressing confidence that it would result in an improvement
and new period of progress in bilateral relations.

He also emphasised the issue of energy security, saying that Azerbaijan
had done a lot to give the rest of the world access to its considerable
energy resources.

"The relationship that Greece is now developing with Azerbaijan
will help in this direction. The issue of energy security is a major
priority of the international community and Azerbaijan is making every
effort to increase the energy security of Europe. For over a year now,
natural gas from Azerbaijan is reaching the Greek market. From there
it comes into Europe. There is no doubt that much more could be done
in this sector," Aliyev stressed.

Azerbaijan’s president said a meeting between business people of
the two countries on Tuesday would undoubtedly lead to a host of
opportunities for business on both sides.

Aliyev also raised the issue of the Armenia’s occupation of
Azerbaijan’s territory and the over one million refugees and internally
displaced persons in the country that resulted from this conflict.

"In order to resolve this conflict there must be absolute respect
for the principle of territorial integrity and international law. I
believe that if Armenia respects this principle, the issue will be
resolved," Aliyev said.

Fisk’s World: Everyone is equal in their suffering during wartime

Robert Fisk’s World: A fair point: Everyone is equal in their suffering
during wartime

Independent.co.uk
Saturday, 14 February 2009

The third and very final part of the "normality" of war. I have just
finished reading Lyn Smith’s Forgotten Voices of the Holocaust. I admit
to a personal interest. Lyn is a friend of mine for whom I have been
recording my memories of Middle East wars for the Imperial War Museum.
Nothing I have ever seen can equal this, however, and I can give only
one example from the terrifying, outrageously brave and moving book
this is.

It is the testimony of Leon Greenman, a British Jewish inmate of
Auschwitz-Birkenau who arrived at the extermination camp with his wife
and child. It speaks for itself. All other passages pale beside it:

"We were bullied out of the train and stood about waiting. It must have
been about half past two in the morning. It was dark, a blue light was
shining on the platform. We saw a few SS men walking up and down. They
separated the men from the women. So I stood right in front of the men
and I could see my wife there with the child in her arms. She threw me
a kiss and she showed the baby … Then one of the prisoners in a
striped uniform commanded us to follow him. Well, we turned to the left
and walked a little way for two or three minutes. A truck arrived,
stopped near us and on the truck were all the women, children, babies
and in the centre my wife and child standing up. They stood up to the
light as if it was meant to be like that ` so that I could recognise
them. A picture I’ll never forget. All these were supposed to have gone
to the bathroom to have a bath, to eat and to live. Instead they had to
undress and go into the gas chambers, and two hours later those people
were ashes, including my wife and child."

I recalled this searing passage this week when I received a letter from
a reader, taking me to task for my "constant downplaying of the
suffering of the Palestinians on the grounds that their deaths and
suffering are minimal when compared with that of the Second World War".
Now, I should say at once that this is a bit unfair. I was especially
taking exception to a Palestinian blog now going the rounds which shows
a queue of Palestinian women at one of Israel’s outrageous roadblocks
and a (slightly) cropped picture of the Auschwitz selection ramp, the
same platform upon which Leon Greenman was separated from his young
wife and child more than 60 years ago. The picture of the Palestinian
women is based on a lie; they are not queuing to be exterminated.
Racist, inhumane and, sometimes deadly ` Palestinian women have died at
these infernal checkpoints ` but they are not queuing to be murdered.

Yet our reader does have a point. The Second World War, she says, "does
0Aput it in a category apart … but surely if one is caught up in any
war and sees one’s loved ones killed or maimed, one’s home destroyed
… then that must be the greatest cataclysm in one’s life. The fact
that a hundred others, a thousand, a hundred thousand, a million are
suffering likewise is immaterial to the individual’s suffering. The
Second World War lasted six years. The Palestinian suffering has lasted
over sixty…"

And yes, I’ll go along with this. If it’s an individual being
deliberately killed, then this is no less terrible than any other
individual, albeit that this second person may be one of six million
others. The point, of course, is the centrality of the Holocaust and `
Israel’s constant refrain ` its exclusivity. Actually, the Armenian
Holocaust ` as I’ve said on umpteen occasions ` is also central to all
genocide studies. The same system of death marches, of camps, of
primitive asphyxiation, even a few young German officers in Turkey
watching the genocide in 1915 and then using the same methods on Jews
in the occupied Soviet Union. Numbers matter.

But our reader has another point. "After all," she says, "in the Second
World War, after the entry of the US and USSR on our side, people could
feel pretty positive about the outcome. But where is such hope for the
Palestinians? And now to cap the horror the BBC is refusing to even
show an appeal to help Gaza…" I’m not at all sure that W Churchill
Esq would have entirely placed such confidence in the outcome of the
Second World War ` he was initially worried that the Americans would
use up their firepower on the Japanese rather than against Hitler’s
Germany.

I think, however, there is yet one more point. The rules of war ` the
Geneva Conventions and all the other post-Second World War laws ` were
meant to prevent another Holocaust. They were specifically designed to
ensure that no one should ever again face the destruction of Mrs
Greenman and her child. They were surely not made only for one race of
people. And it is these rules which Israel so disgracefully flouted in
Gaza. It’s a bit like the refrain from Lord Blair of Kut al-Amara and a
whole host of other apparatchiks when the torture at Abu Ghraib was
revealed. Well, yes, they told us, it was bad ` but not as bad as
Saddam Hussein’s regime.

And of course, this argument leads to perdition. True, we were bad `
but not as bad as the Baath party. Or the Khmer Rouge. Or Hitler’s
Germany and the SS. Or the Ottoman Turks ` though I noticed movingly
that one of Lyn’s Jewish Holocaust survivors mentions the Armenians.
No, the numbers game works both ways. A thousand Palestinians die in
Gaza. But what if the figure were 10,000? Or 100,000? No, no, of course
that wouldn’t happen. But the rules of war are made for all to obey.
Yes, I know that the Jews of Europe had no Hamas to provide the Nazis
with an excuse for their deaths. But a Palestinian woman and her child
are as worthy of life as a Jewish woman and her child on the back of a
lorry in Auschwitz.

Turkey angered by comments made by Israeli general

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria
Feb 14 2009

Turkey angered by comments made by Israeli general

2009-02-14 20:26:05 –

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) – Turkey’s foreign ministry summoned Israel’s
ambassador on Saturday to complain about a comment a senior Israeli
general had made criticizing Turkey. It was the latest development in
a growing war of words between the two U.S. allies.
After the meeting, Israel’s military issued a statement saying the
remarks that Israeli Maj.
Gen. Avi Mizrahi had made on Tuesday did not reflect Israel’s official
view.
Turkish officials were not immediately available for comment to
respond to the Israeli military’s statement.
Turkey’s foreign ministry summoned Israeli Ambassador Gabby Levy to
ask for an urgent explanation over comments that Mizrahi had made on
Tuesday at a military base in Israel. Turkish media said Mizrahi had
accused Turkey of killing Armenians in 1915, and of oppressing Kurds
and occupying Cyprus.
Turkey has long been Israel’s closest ally in the Muslim world, and it
has worked hard to try to mediate for peace in the Middle East, along
with Egypt and France.
Mizrahi’s remarks concerned very sensitive issues in Turkey and
angered its government.
They apparently were made in response to Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan who had sharply reprimanded Israeli President Shimon
Peres over civilian casualties during the Gaza war at the World
Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
«While referring to the criticism of Israel by Turkey, Gen. Mizrahi
made statements that could be interpreted as criticism of Turkey’s
past,» said a statement by Brig. Gen. Avi Benayahu, spokesman for the
Israel Defense Forces. «The IDF spokesperson wishes to clarify that
this is not the official position of the IDF.
Turkey’s foreign ministry issued a statement calling Mizrahi’s remarks
«baseless» and saying they contained «unacceptable allegations and
ravings» and that they were «directed against our prime minister.
Turkey’s Radikal newspaper reported Saturday that Mizrahi also
responded to Erdogan’s call that Israel should be barred from the
United Nations by saying that Turkey should be barred as well.
The Turkish military said Mizrahi’s remarks «deviate from the truth
and cannot be accepted under any condition» and «can harm national
interests between the two countries,» underlining the importance
relations between the two countries.

The Turkish military’s harsh reaction on Saturday reflected its deep
uneasiness, given its close defense ties with Israel. They include
training agreements and Turkish defense purchases from Israel worth
hundreds of millions of dollars.

Associated Press Writer Steve Weizman in Jerusalem and Gulden Alp in
Ankara contributed to this report.

=?x-unknown?q?BAKU=3A_Ilham_Aliyev=3A_=E2~=40~7_regions_must?==?x-u

Date: Fri, 13 Feb 2009 14:34:20 -0800 (PST)
Subject: BAKU: Ilham Aliyev: "7 Regions Must Be Liberated First And Status Of Nagorno Karabakh Should Determined In The Next Phase"

ILHAM ALIYEV: "7 REGIONS MUST BE LIBERATED FIRST AND STATUS OF NAGORNO KARABAKH SHOULD BE DETERMINED IN THE NEXT PHASE"

APA
Feb 13 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku-APA. "The most budget-funded sphere is the defense field in
Azerbaijan and this policy will be continued until solution to the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict", said President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev
in his interview with Russian ITAR-TASS agency, APA reports.

He said there was never a defense-industry complex in Azerbaijan and
this sphere was created in recent years. "Today Azerbaijani Army is
a structure, which is able to fulfill any duty, first of all the
duty of liberation of the occupied territories. If Azerbaijan had
this potential after the collapse of USSR, our lands would not be
occupied". Ilham Aliyev said the negotiations process did not play out
and there was still a hope for peaceful solution to the conflict. "The
conflict should be resolved phase by phase. In the first phase,
7 regions around Nagorno Karabakh must be liberated. The status of
Nagorno Karabakh should be determined in the next phase. This status
should be determined within the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan
and with consideration of the highest autonomy of Nagorno Karabakh
that was never mono-ethnic as it is today. We think that current
format of the negotiations reflect these approaches. There is a new
leadership in Armenia now and there is a hope for more constructive
approach by Yerevan to this issue".

State Duma Ratifies Protocol On Rendering Of Military-Technical Assi

STATE DUMA RATIFIES PROTOCOL ON RENDERING OF MILITARY-TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TO CSTO MEMBER-STATES IN CASE OF AGGRESSION

ArmInfo
2009-02-13 13:29:00

ArmInfo-RBC. The State Duma has ratified a protocol on the mechanism
of a military-technical assistance to CSTO member-states in case
of aggression.

The protocol has been signed on October 6, 2007 in Dushanbe. The goal
of the document is tightening of a mutual assistance in the form of
delivery of military products to CSTO member-states for maintenance
of combat readiness and battle efficiency in case of aggression,
large-scale acts of international terrorism or other threats of
sovereignty and territorial integrity. The document determines the
order and conditions of rendering of a military-technical assistance
(on a free or preferential basis) under the timely revealed:
preparation for the aggression; planning of large-scale acts of
international terrorism and opportunities of revealing other external
security hazards, threats of sovereignty and territorial integrity of
one or several parties or during execution of aggression, large-scale
acts or display of other external security hazards.

ANKARA: Turkish Groups Raise Concerns Over Obama’s Stance On Armenia

TURKISH GROUPS RAISE CONCERNS OVER OBAMA’S STANCE ON ARMENIAN CLAIMS

Hurriyet
Feb 13 2009
Turkey

The Turkish organizations in the U.S. have expressed concerns over
Armenian lobbying efforts to have their claims recognized in the
U.S. regarding the 1915 incidents in a letter to President Barack
Obama.

The Armenian lobby organizations have increased theirs efforts to
have recognized their claims regarding the 1915 incidents in the
U.S. Congress. During the election campaign, Obama had pledged to
recognize the Armenian claims.

"It would be stating the obvious to observe that Armenian special
interest lobbies are pressuring your Administration and Congress to
label the tragic events in the waning hours of the Ottoman Empire
during World War I as the crime of genocide," the Turkish Coalition
of America (TCA) said in the name of 53 Turkish American community
organizations in the letter published on the group’s website on Friday.

The letter said it would be unfair to accept a one-sided
characterization of the incidents by ignoring independent and impartial
assessments by historian and scholars, reminding casualties suffered
by Ottoman Muslimsm during World War I.

The issue of 1915 incidents is highly sensitive for Turkey as well as
Armenia. Around 300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks, died
in civil strife that emerged when Armenians took up arms, backed by
Russia, for independence in eastern Anatolia.

However Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5
million of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in
1915. The issue remains unsolved as Armenia drags its feet in accepting
Turkey’s proposal of forming a commission to investigate the claims.

The letter reiterated Turkey’s willingness to accept the findings by
an international commission of scholars and experts with access to
all relevant archives.

"Armenia should be urged equally to accept the formation and
conclusions of such a commission. We see such an effort as the
fairest method for assessing the truth, which will pave the way for
reconciliation, in lieu of politically charged legislative or executive
decisions by third parties," it said, asking Obama to consider the
Turkish Americans "views and concerns" on the issue.

The letter, which also includes historical facts regarding the
issue, referred to the works of many foreign historians, academics
and scholars.

Haigazian University Receives USD 100,000 Grant From The Lincy Found

HAIGAZIAN UNIVERSITY RECEIVES A USD 100,000 GRANT FROM THE LINCY FOUNDATION
By Mira Yardemian

AZG Armenian Daily
13/02/2009

Diaspora

Beirut, 28/01/2009- Within the framework of the continuous and
generous support of the Lincy Foundation to Haigazian University,
a USD100,000 grant was received as a financial contribution from the
foundation to the University.

With a feeling of gratitude, President Haidostian acknowledged the
benevolent mission of the Foundation in joining Haigazian University’s
drive for excellence in education and service, especially during this
time of global economic hardship, noting that this grant will serve
to finance the general academic operations of the University.

Haidostian also expressed the increasing financial needs of students
Haigazian serves as well as the growing needs of the University in
its expansion plans, noting that the bulk of financial aid granted
to students last year reached the amount of USD1,000,000/.

Being the only Armenian-owned university in the Armenian Diaspora that
follows the American model of higher education, Haigazian University,
through its undergraduate and graduate programs, serves 750 to 800
students per year, with around 2400 alumni spread all over the globe.

Wolf Joined Stray Dogs

WOLF JOINED STRAY DOGS

A1+
[11:41 am] 13 February, 2009

It is already three years stray dogs keep residents of Vanadzor’s
housing estate N2 on constant alert. Local inhabitants fear lest they
be attacked by rabid dogs.

Susanna Petrosyan says dogs have doubled and even tripled and they
surpass townspeople. Argunik Arustamyan states stray dogs have eaten
their six hens. The inhabitants have called the attention of the city
authorities many times. But nothing has changed so far. Recently they
have noticed a wolf among the dogs wandering near dustbins.

Georgia: Espionage Arrests Of Ethnic Armenians Stoke Suspicion Of Ru

GEORGIA: ESPIONAGE ARRESTS OF ETHNIC ARMENIANS STOKE SUSPICION OF RUSSIA
Molly Corso and Gayane Abrahamyan

EurasiaNet
Feb 12 2009
NY

Georgia’s arrest of two ethnic Armenians on espionage charges is
threatening to increase tensions in the country’s predominately ethnic
Armenian region of Samtskhe-Javakheti. Although aspects of the case
remain unclear — including an alleged confession — the arrests have
triggered public outrage in neighboring Armenia. Meanwhile in Georgia,
many suspect that Russia is somehow involved.

On January 22, police arrested Grigol Minasian, the 29-year-old
director of a youth center in the town of Akhaltsikhe, and Sarkis
Hakopjanian, the head of a local charity organization, on charges
of espionage and of creating an "illegally armed group." The pair’s
lawyer, Nino Andriashvili, told EurasiaNet that the two men pled
guilty to "part" of the charges during their January 24 arraignment.

"In part, they admitted that they are spies, but they did not admit
that they were preparing to form a [militia group]," Andriashvili
said, adding that the two men told her they were under "pressure"
when they made their admissions of guilt.

A senior official from the Ministry of Internal Affairs,
however, denies that either man has confessed to espionage. "No
[confessions]. Nothing has happened yet," said administration head
Shota Khizanishvili,

The ministry has not named the country in whose favor the pair was
allegedly spying. Local conjecture supposes that it is Russia, but
no evidence has been presented to substantiate that claim.

According to Andriashvili, the government’s case against Minasian and
Hakopjanian focuses on a questionnaire the two men were allegedly paid
to fill out by a Belarus-based non-governmental organization. Little
is known about the organization, called the Association for Legal
Assistance to the Population (ALAP). Its website is not functioning
and there is no listing for an office in Georgia.

An online directory of Belarusian civil rights organizations identifies
ALAP as active in human rights issues, and the recipient of a
1999 award from the New York-based International League for Human
Rights. The American organization did not respond to EurasiaNet’s
requests for comment. The ALAP, which at the time was headed by Oleg
Volchek, a former state prosecutor-turned-reformer, opened a human
rights protection center in 2001 in Minsk. In its 2004 report on
human rights conditions in Belarus, the US State Department noted that
Volchek suffered a severe beating in September of 2003 at the hands
of an unidentified assailant. The attack came just a few weeks after
a Belarussian court "shut down" the association. The circumstances
surrounding the association’s subsequent revival remain murky.

The Georgian Interior Ministry’s Khizanishvili would not comment
on claims that the government’s investigation focuses on the ALAP,
adding that he did not know anything about the group.

The ALAP questionnaire zeroed in on natural gas supply questions —
an increasingly sensitive topic in the South Caucasus — and general
questions about Georgia that could be answered "from newspapers,"
or from other publicly available information, lawyer Andriashvili said.

Andriashvili said that the government is using a videotape that shows
an inebriated Minasian and Hakopjanian discussing the formation of
a militia group with an unidentified man from the ALAP. The video,
the government contends, substantiates its claim that the two men
were attempting to sow unrest in Samtskhe-Javakheti.

Andriashvili stressed that while the two men admit to being on the
tape, they claim that they were "just playing." The two, however,
had misgivings about the ALAP, she claimed, and suspected that it
had some kind of connection to Russia’s Federal Security Service.

In Akhaltsikhe, people close to Minasian, who was prominent in the
town’s ethnic Armenian community, describe themselves as flabbergasted
by his arrest and the charges. By contrast, the arrest of the
lesser-known Hakopjanian sparked few comments.

"We are in a vacuum here. We don’t know anything," said Veronika
Hambarian, an Armenian-language teacher at Minasian’s youth center.

Hambarian recounted that police took the hard drive from the center’s
computer and all Armenian language material, including her language
lessons and fairy tales. They did not take Russian or Georgian language
books and materials, she said.

Parliamentarian Tamaz Petriashvili, who represents Akhaltsikhe in
Georgia’s National Assembly, as well as an acquaintance of Minasian,
described the arrests as a "surprise."

As did some ethnic Armenians in Akhaltsikhe, Petriashvili suspected
that "some people" — a veiled reference to Russia — want to
create conflict in Samtskhe-Javakheti. Certain groups in the region
"are financed as if from Yerevan, but that is not from Yerevan,"
he said. "We all know that very well."

Within Armenia, the arrests have set off a wave of public
criticism. Rather than espionage, many people see the case as an
example of an alleged Georgian campaign to push ethnic Armenians out
of Samtskhe-Javakheti, a region that many Armenians see as historically
part of Armenia.

"We Armenians have always tried to have good relations with Georgia,
but the only thing working in Georgia today is anti-Russian sentiment,
and Armenians, Russia’s partners in that context, are seen as
Georgians’ enemies," commented Yerevan-based political analyst Levon
Shirinian. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

A representative of the Armenian Foreign Ministry said that
the government in Yerevan was monitoring the situation concerning
Minasian and Hakopjanian’s arrest. "We watch the developments and are
in a continuous daily contact on various levels" with the Georgian
government, commented spokesperson Tigran Balaian.

Some politicians and interest groups, however, charge that the Armenian
government has responded passively to the two men’s arrest. The
Armenian Revolutionary Federation Party (ARF), a member of Armenia’s
governing parliamentary coalition, insists that the region deserves
to have some form of autonomy. The ARF regularly raises the issue
of ethnic Armenian rights in Georgia during parliamentary debate
in Yerevan.

"The Georgians simply need to understand that if Javakhk [the Armenian
name for Samtskshe-Javakheti] or any other Armenian-populated region
loses its Armenian population, it does not mean it will be inhabited
by Georgians," commented ARF parliamentarian Vahan Hovhannisian, a
former presidential candidate and deputy chairman of parliament. "Any
vacuum in the Caucasus is immediately filled with Turks."

The issue of education is frequently raised as well in conjunction with
coverage of the Minasian-Hakopjanian arrests. Many ethnic Armenians in
the region have limited knowledge of Georgian and, hence, are unable
to study in Georgian universities.

Name differences divide the two countries as well on the
Minasian-Hakopjanian case. While the Georgian government states
Minasian’s first name as "Grigol," Armenian media use the Armenian
version of the name, "Grigor."

But while Samtskhe-Javakheti is known for its strong Armenian ties,
such cultural influences appear slight in Akhaltsikhe, where store
signboards are all in Georgian. Georgian town residents interviewed
had little or no knowledge of the arrests.

According to Eduard Ayvazian, a computer instructor at Minasian’s
center, prior to the arrests, no real tension existed between the
town’s Georgian and Armenian communities.

"There is discrimination here, but not strong discrimination,"
Ayvazian said. "The authorities are afraid that a conflict can start
here. But I believe they are moving in the wrong direction with these
types of arrests."

As a result of the arrests, many ethnic Armenians in Akhaltsikhe
now "are actually thinking about how to leave here," Ayvazian
continued. "We are all afraid. No one needs problems."

Editor’s Note: Molly Corso is a freelance reporter based in
Tbilisi. Gayane Abrahamyan is a reporter for the ArmeniaNow.com weekly
in Yerevan.

Serzh Sargsyan to deliver speech at session-discussion on

ARMENPRESS

SERZH SARGSYAN TO DELIVER SPEECH AT SESSION-DISCUSSION ON `MANAGEMENT
OF INSTABILITY: SOUTH CAUCASIAN REGION AND WESTERN BALKANS’

MUNICH, FEBRUARY 6, ARMENPRESS: Delegation headed by the President
of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan arrived today in Munich to participate in
the 45th International Summit on Security Policy. The delegation
headed by the president includes Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan,
deputy head of staff of the president Vigen Sargsyan, Armenian
ambassador to Germany Karine Ghazinyan, and other officials.
On the first day of the summit German Foreign Minister Frank
Walter-Steinmeier, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, Iranian
Foreign Minister Ali Larijani, Russian Vice Prime Minister Sergey
Ivanov will deliver speeches on `Oversight of Ammunition and Future of
International Arms: Is zero variant possible?’.
Today late in the evening Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan is
expected to meet with the Prime Minister of Bavaria Horst Zeehofer and
on February 7 in the morning with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
On the second day of the summit German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and US Vice President Joseph Baiden
are expected to deliver speeches.
At the session-discussion entitled `Management of Instability:
South Caucasian Region and Western Balkans’ President of Armenia Serzh
Sargsyan is expected to deliver a speech.
Over 300 official delegations will participate in the summit.