BAKU: Turkish Foreign Minister Meets His Azerbaijani And Armenian Co

TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER MEETS HIS AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN COUNTERPARTS

Trend
Dec 2 2009
Azerbaijan

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met on Tuesday with his
Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts in Athens, Greece within the
scope of a meeting of Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE) Ministers Council, Anadolu News Agency reported.

In his meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian,
Davutoglu discussed Turkey-Armenia relations and the approval process
of the protocols signed by the two countries as well as Upper Karabakh
issue which would also be taken up in Minsk Group meeting.

Davutoglu also met with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov. The two foreign ministers are expected to discuss Upper
Karabakh issue as well as Turkey-Azerbaijani relations.

Real Test Of Armenian Diplomacy To Begin In 2010: Richard Giragosian

REAL TEST OF ARMENIAN DIPLOMACY TO BEGIN IN 2010: RICHARD GIRAGOSIAN

Tert.am
14:19 ~U 03.12.09

At a press conference today, Richard Giragosian, Director of the
Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS), a
leading independent strategic research center in Yerevan, said that
the real test for Armenian diplomacy would begin after the new year.

"The real test of Armenian-Turkish Protocols is at what price? At
what price Armenia is required for Turkey to open the border and
extend diplomatic relations?" asked the analyst.

According to Giragosian, even if Turkey opens the border and
establishes diplomatic relations, and even if "Turkey adopts the
Protocols, Turkey should not be rewarded or even complimented. Because
this is a basic minimum demand of normal countries."

In the ACNIS Director’s opinion, Armenia needs to remain strong,
"though the real pressure and expectations are on Turkey, not Armenia."

Giragosian also referred to the December 7 meeting between U.S.

President Barack Obama and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
in Washington D.C. – an important day not only because of this visit,
but also because it is the deadline for Turkey’s parliamentary
committee to make a decision on the Armenia-Turkey Protocols.

"The foreign affairs committee of the Turkish parliament has a
deadline of Monday. It seems clear, according to Turkish officials,
that the committee will approve the Protocols. But the real delay is
in the full Turkish parliament, where they seem to be waiting until
February or March, in order to connect the issue to the April 24th
commemoration [of the Armenian Genocide]."

Jerusalem Residency Losses Rise

JERUSALEM RESIDENCY LOSSES RISE

BBC NEWS
iddle_east/8390717.stm
2009/12/02 17:34:25 GMT

Israel stripped a record number of Palestinians of their right to
live in East Jerusalem last year, an Israeli rights group has said.

Some 4,570 people had their residency rights removed, more than a
third of the total number since Israel took control of East Jerusalem
in 1967.

Palestinians fear an attempt to reduce their presence in Jerusalem,
which both they and Israel claim as their capital.

Israel says most of those stripped of their rights were living abroad.

Palestinians living in East Jerusalem were offered Israeli citizenship
after Israel occupied the area in 1967 and later annexed it.

Many refused, not wanting to recognise Israeli sovereignty, and were
instead given residency.

But, according to the Israeli rights organisation Hamoked, if these
Palestinians live abroad for seven years, or gain citizenship or
residency elsewhere, they lose their Israeli residency.

Hamoked obtained the figures from the Interior Ministry using the
Freedom of Information Act.

The organisation said that some of those who had lost their citizenship
may now be stateless, or may not even be aware they have lost their
residency.

Family visits and students studying abroad would be affected, it said.

" The state of Israel pays billions of shekels a year in stipends
to people who don’t even live here " Meir Sheetrit Former interior
minister

Hamoked executive director Dalia Kerstein said the phenomenon had
"reached frightening dimensions".

Israel’s interior ministry said it had carried out a "comprehensive
check" that people listed as residents of Israel had their lives
centred in the country, and many were found to be living abroad.

Former Israeli Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit, who initiated the
survey, told the BBC "it is a very normal, regular idea that people who
are not living here for a long time" are not supposed to be residents.

He said those who had appealed had been approved to stay.

"The state of Israel pays billions of shekels a year in stipends to
people who don’t even live here," he told Haaretz.

The figures come amid Palestinian fears that Israel is trying to
increase its control over East Jerusalem and cut it off from the West
Bank, through the building of the West Bank barrier, house demolitions
and evictions.

The right-leaning government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu maintains that Jerusalem is Israel’s "eternal, undivided
capital".

But it says recent demolitions and evictions are simply issues of
law enforcement.

On Tuesday, a draft document leaked to Haaretz suggested the EU was
considering hardening its stance on the city.

According to the newspaper, the document called for East Jerusalem
to become the capital of a future Palestinian state.

The EU has never recognised Israel’s annexation of the east of the
city, which is illegal under international law.

Its formal position has been that the city’s status is to be decided
in negotiations, although some EU leaders have called for it to be
a future shared capital.

Israel’s foreign ministry reacted angrily to the reports, saying the
apparent move by Sweden, which holds the EU presidency, "harms the
European Union’s ability to take part as a significant mediator…

between Israel and the Palestinians".

It said the EU should be pressuring the Palestinians to return to
the negotiating table, but the step would have "the opposite effect."

About a third of Jerusalem’s residents – a quarter of a million
people – are Palestinians with Israeli residency or Israeli-Arabs,
who have Israeli citizenship.

Israel’s annexation of the east of the city has never been recognised
by the international community.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/m

Arzumanyan: Protocols Won’t Be Adopted Until…

ARZUMANYAN: PROTOCOLS WON’T BE ADOPTED UNTIL…

Aysor
Dec 1 2009
Armenia

"As long s there is no signed agreement on Karabakh settlement,
or there are neither statements nor announcements on the peace
settlement in the near future, the Turkey’s Parliament won’t ratify
the Armenian-Turkish protocols," said former Armenian foreign minister
and a member of the oppositional Armenian National Congress Alexander
Arzumanyan.

He said the protocols will be linked with settlement of Karabakh issue
and will be ratified only after the certain promises to withdraw
troops from the territory of Nagorno Karabakh. "Everyone but the
leaders of the Republican Party of Armenia knows it," he said.

"The progress recorded in the Munich consultations makes obvious that
there is at least verbal agreement on the deal in the near future
from the basis of the Madrid principles," he said. "This unacceptable
document has some articles and sayings related to the withdrawal of
troops and the region of Lachin, and these articles haven’t yet been
clarified, and this exactly brings some complications," he added.

OSCE MG FMs Issue Statement On Nagorno-Karabakh

OSCE MG FMS ISSUE STATEMENT ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH

news.am
Dec 1 2009
Armenia

The Foreign Ministers of the OSCE Minsk Group for the Nagorno-Karabakh
peace process issued a joint statement, pointing out progress in the
process during this year.

The heads of the delegations reaffirmed their commitment to the Moscow
declaration of last November and the Helsinki statement by the OSCE
Foreign Ministers’ Council of last December. They welcomed the progress
in the negotiation process, namely, the six Armenian-Azerbaijani
presidential meetings this year.

The Foreign Ministers expressed hope for more frequent
Armenian-Azerbaijani meetings, which, in turn, will intensify the
dialogue and help the sides agree on the fundamental settlement
principles proposed in Madrid in 2007. The Foreign Ministers of the
OSCE MG Co-Chairing countries (Russia, France and the USA) reaffirmed
their commitments at the G8 Summit in Aquila on June 10, 2009. The
matter particularly concerns assistance to the Armenian and Azerbaijani
leaders in agreeing on the fundamental settlement principles.

The OSCE Minsk Group called on the sides to agree on the principles
as soon as possible The OSCE MG Co-Chairs believe the principles can
serve as a basis for a comprehensive settlement of regional conflicts.

The Armenian and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers reported progress
in reaching common grounds on various aspects of the settlement
principles. RIA Novosti reported that the OSCE MG Foreign Ministers
stated their countries’ willingness to complete the process of agreeing
on the principles. The Ministers reaffirmed their intention to follow
the principles of non-use of force, territorial integrity and nations’
right to self-determination.

BAKU: Everyone Talks About Progress In Settlement Of Karabakh Confli

EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT PROGRESS IN SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONFLICT, BUT NOBODY SEES IT: POLITICAL EXPERT

Today
Dec 2 2009
Azerbaijan

"I do not think that return of seven Armenian-occupied regions is
advantageous for Azerbaijan," Azerbaijani political analyst Araz
Alizade said.

"Everyone says that we are moving forward in the settlement of the
Karabakh conflict. In this regard I remember an anecdote in which the
lieutenant agrees that the crocodile is a flying weapon just because
the major said it, although the lieutenant had never seen a flying
crocodile," the analyst said.

"This is the same case also in resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict. Everyone talks about progress in settlement of the conflict,
but nobody see it. Besides, I do not know such cases in the world
practice when territories captured by war were returned through
peaceful negotiations."

With regard to media reports which predicted Armenia’s liberation of
the seven occupied regions of Azerbaijan soon, the expert noted that
"I do not think that development of events this way is advantageous
to Azerbaijan."

"First, no one is going to return the seven regions (I do not
think Armenia would return Lachin region to Azerbaijan). Secondly,
once Armenia withdraws from occupied lands, Azerbaijan will face a
strong pressure from the international community to make significant
concessions," Alizade said.

BAKU: Goran Lenmarker: "I Think There Is An Opportunity To Find Solu

GORAN LENMARKER: "I THINK THERE IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO FIND SOLUTION TO NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT THIS YEAR"

APA
Dec 1 2009
Azerbaijan

Athens. Victoria Dementyeva – APA. Special Representative of the
OSCE Parliamentary Assembly for Nagorno Karabakh conflict and Georgia
Goran Lenmarker plans to visit the region in January 2010.

Lenmarker reminded about the presidential elections and said if the
visit schedule gave an opportunity he would the South Caucasus later
in January. "Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers met yesterday.

The process is going on and I think there is an opportunity to find
solution of the problem soon because both sides need in that".

Speaking about the Kazakhstan’s presidency at OSCE, Lenmarker said it
could have a positive impact on the solution to the conflict because
of common history and culture of the post-soviet countries.

ARF Leaders Meet With State Dept. Official

ARF LEADERS MEET WITH STATE DEPT. OFFICIAL
By Asbarez Staff

ARF Press Office
Nov 30th, 2009
Yerevan

YEREVAN (ARF Press Office)-Director of the State Department’s Office
of Caucasus Affairs and Regional Conflicts, Ethan A. Goldrich,
visited the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Kristapor Mikaelian
Center Monday and met with a high-ranking party delegation.

ARF Supreme Council of Armenia chairman Armen Rustamian, ARF Bureau
member Aghvan Vartanian and ARF Political Director Giro Manoyan met
with Goldrich to discuss issues of concern to the party.

Rustamian and Aghvanian told the visiting State Department official
of the party’s position on the Armenia-Turkey protocols and the
Karabakh conflict resolution process, emphasizing that rapprochement
between Turkey and Armenia must proceed without Turkey’s push for
preconditions.

On the Karabakh front, the ARF leaders urged the US and the
international community to end the silence against Azeri military
threats.

The ARF delegation also presented the party’s position on Armenia’s
socio-economic situation and efforts to strengthen democracy in
the country.

EU’s Quiet Diplomat Steps Aside After 10 Years

EU’S QUIET DIPLOMAT STEPS ASIDE AFTER 10 YEARS
ANDREW RETTMAN

EU Observer
Nov 30 2009

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS – EU foreign relations chief Javier Solana,
who retires this week, will be remembered as a master of quiet,
behind-the-scenes diplomacy. But campaigners say he should have done
more to put human rights at the forefront of his work.

The Spanish politician will on Tuesday (1 December) step aside to make
way for the union’s first "foreign minister" as the Lisbon Treaty
enters into force. The British official to take up the new post,
Catherine Ashton, will have a tough act to follow.

The Spanish politician (r) will step aside on Tuesday after 10 years
in the post (Photo: kremlin.ru) Print Comment article In his 10
years in the job Mr Solana has transformed the EU’s common foreign
and security policy from words on paper into a Brussels-based body of
some 800 military experts and diplomats who co-ordinate the work of 23
crisis relief missions in hotspots such as the Gulf of Aden and Kosovo.

He has personally acted as the EU’s spokesman and negotiator in around
600 foreign delegations, clocking up over 2.6 million air miles on
the way.

The numbers tell just a small part of the story: with limited support
from EU states, Mr Solana has relied on his personal charisma,
quick-wittedness and vim to win the trust of leaders in Balkan,
post-Soviet and Middle Eastern countries.

The 67-year-old sleeps five hours a night and still goes running in
Brussels’ Parc de Cinquantenaire. When he retires, he will continue
to help out in international mediation and to "travel a lot," his
office said.

Mr Solana’s achievements are often silent or emerge in anecdotes years
later. In 2001, following the bombing of the Dolphinarium disco in
Tel Aviv, he persuaded the then Israeli leader Ariel Sharon to put
off a military response long enough to hammer out a new truce with
Palestine’s Yasser Arafat.

In 2003, Mr Solana’s last-minute call to Moldovan president
Vladimir Voronin saw him refuse to sign a Russian peace plan, the
so-called Kozak Memorandum, which could have led to decades of Russian
domination. "Mr Putin’s jet was already warming up on the runway when
we got the news," Russia’s ambassador to the EU, Vladimir Chizhov,
recalled.

"I don’t think anybody could have done a better job under the
circumstances. He made Europe visible around the world without
anybody feeling threatened," former EU commissioner Chris Patten told
EUobserver. "The Middle East will miss him. He was a unique statesman,"
left-wing Israeli politician and peace negotiator, Yossi Beilin, said.

In a point for Ms Ashton to take note of, Mr Solana often had to work
against the ill will of member states.

Banana skins

"EU countries liked to slip him banana skins – to send him into
situations where they knew there was nothing that could be achieved,"
Mr Solana’s former Middle East security advisor, Alastair Crooke,
told this website. "On other occasions, he was sent into the corridor
when the foreign minister from the rotating EU presidency held a
one-to-one. He was relegated to a note-taker, called in for the photo
op and the handshake. It wasn’t good for his prestige."

The Spaniard’s long career has not been without its gaffes.

At the signing of a historic peace accord between Turkey and Armenia
in October, Mr Solana fondly slapped the Armenian foreign minister,
Edward Nalbandian, around the jowels, causing national affront. The
clip is still doing the rounds on YouTube.

The veil of secrecy around his meetings has sometimes hidden
unflattering moments from view.

With Mr Solana often credited for helping broker the round table
agreement in Ukraine in December 2004, which saw the country’s
pre-revolution president, Leonid Kuchma, peacefully stand down, one
Ukrainian diplomat present at the meeting, Kostyantyn Gryschenko,
gave EUobserver a different account:

"Mr Solana and his interpreter couldn’t keep up with the fast,
colloquial Russian being spoken round the table, so they sat there
silent most of the time. In the end it was [former Polish leader]
Kwasniewski, who can speak Russian, who took Kuchma aside and said
‘Leonid, Leonid. There is life after the presidency. Just look at me.’"

Too much realism

On a more serious note, human rights campaigners do not blame Mr
Solana for agreeing to the bombing of Serbia in 1999 in his time as
Nato chief. They are also ready to forgive his support of the Iraq
war in 2003 as an error based on his personal friendship with US
general Colin Powell.

But he has drawn flak for concentrating on conflict resolution in
Europe and the Middle East at the expense of human rights problems
in Russia and China and for what some see as his excessive pragmatism
in the face of power.

"The general picture is one where human rights took a back seat," Dick
Oosting, the former Brussels director of Amnesty International, said.

Human Rights Watch advocate Lotte Leicht, recalled that in January
2005 Mr Solana torpedoed an EU campaign for the UN to refer Sudan
to the International Criminal Court in the Hague because he did not
believe the US would back the move.

Mr Solana comes across as a "thoroughly decent man" with a "strong
moral vision" when you speak with him in private, Ms Lotte said. He
may deliver a tough message in behind-closed-doors talks with world
leaders, for all we know, she added. But he has not put human rights
at the heart of the EU’s identity in a public way.

"In terms of quiet diplomacy he has probably performed quite well. But
in terms of public diplomacy he has not," Ms Lotte said. "It’s a
missed opportunity."

PFA Announces a Youth Forum to Discuss Armenia-Diaspora Relations

PRESS RELEASE
Policy Forum Armenia
1250 I (Eye) Street N.W., Suite 710
Washington, D.C. 20005
Contact : Irina Alaverdyan
Email: [email protected]
Internet:

PFA Youth Forum

Armenia-Diaspora Relations: Future Endangered?

Call for Proposals

On October 10, 2009, the foreign ministers of Armenian and Turkey signed two
protocols entitled the `Protocol on the establishment of diplomatic
relations’ and the `Protocol on the development of bilateral relations’. The
period between the announcement (August 31, 2009) and the signing witnessed
significant and wide-spread demonstrations in the Diaspora, with limited
public resistance in Armenia. Yerevan’s handling of the process that
preceded the signing of the protocols appears to have deepened the divide
between the Diaspora and the establishment in Armenia. The fragmented
opposition in Armenia is yet to form a common view on the issue, all while
the establishment is still struggling with challenges of legitimacy
resulting from the fraudulent elections in February 2008 and May 2009.

To provide an opportunity for young professionals to discuss
Armenia-Diaspora relations, perspectives on and approaches to the
present-day challenges facing the Armenian nation, Policy Forum Armenia
announces a Youth Forum to take place on Saturday, January 23, 2010 in
Washington, DC. The full-day Forum will include 3 panels each comprising 4
panelists. An additional panel of academic and policy experts will also
present at the Forum. The event will feature a keynote speech on the overall
topic of Armenia-Diaspora relations.

Topics of interest for the Organizing Committee include:

· Benefits and drawbacks of the protocols

· Concerns of legitimacy and the signing of the protocols

· Licking the wounds and looking ahead: An optimist’s agenda

· People of Armenia vs. its governments: Who should Diaspora pledge
its allegiances to?

· Globalization and transnationalism: Are Diaspora-Armenia relations
stuck in the past?

· Legal, developmental, and moral reasons for Diaspora’s engagement
in Armenia

· Traditional Diaspora leadership: Out of touch, out of vision, or
out of integrity?

How to Apply

Interested undergraduate and graduate students residing in the United States
and Canada should submit a 1-page proposal on their topic as well as a cover
letter containing the following information:

· Applicant’s full name

· Personal contact information including mailing address

· Institutional affiliation (college or university) and status
(years completed)

· Major area of study

· Names and contact information for two referees (at least one
academic)

Applicants should also mention in this letter whether they would like to be
considered for need-based travel funds. These funds are limited and will
only be available to a small number of applicants.

The application deadline is December 14, 2009. Applications should be
forwarded electronically to [email protected] with a subject `PFA Youth
Forum.’ Participants will be informed about the Committee’s decision by
December 20. Successful applicants must submit their full position papers
(5,000 word limit) by January 17, 2010.

Policy Forum Armenia is an independent professional non-profit association
aimed at strengthening discourse on Armenia’s economic development and
national security and through that helping to shape public policy in
Armenia.

www.pf-armenia.org