Idea To Resolve Karabakh Conflict By Use Of Force Should Be Buried

IDEA TO RESOLVE KARABAKH CONFLICT BY USE OF FORCE SHOULD BE BURIED

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.11.2008 16:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The OSCE Minsk Group should organize talks between
the conflicting sides but not between two countries, Vladimir
Kazimirov, former OSCE MG Russian Co-chair, told a conference in
Yerevan today.

"The most important thing now is to bury the idea to resolve the
conflict by use of force. Meanwhile, a negative triad is observed in
Azerbaijan: the armament drive, anti-Armenian hysteria and the latest
incident in Fizuli," he said, adding that the MG is too passive about
the processes which can damage peaceful talks.

On the night of November 16, Azeri forces attempted to penetrate into
the rear of the NKR defense army. The attack was rebuffed. One Azeri
soldier was killed.

ANKARA: Ten Students To Be Prosecuted Under Article 301

TEN STUDENTS TO BE PROSECUTED UNDER ARTICLE 301
[email protected]

BÄ°
Nov 14 2008
Turkey

After writer Temel Demirer, the Minister of Justice granted permission
for the prosecution of the ten university students under article 301
for protesting the prison operations of 2000, too. Demirer will face
the court tomorrow, the ten students on November 19.

The Minister of Justice granted the permission for the prosecution
of the ten university students under article 301 of the Penal Code
(TCK). The students were nearly lynched in EskiÅ~_ehir while protesting
the prison operations of 2000 after seven years. They were taken into
custody afterwards.

With this decision, students Ali Haydar GuneÅ~_, Esma Yavuz, Sabit
Cicek, Å~^ahin Kösedagı, Nadide Toker, Ali Bozkına, Can Aydemir
Sezer, Atilla Aka, Esra Sönmez and Nihal Samsun will be tried for the
statements such as "murderer state" and "December 19 veterans". They
will be facing two year prison sentences. Their first hearing will be
at EskiÅ~_ehir’s 2nd Criminal Court of First Instance on November 19.

Temel Demirer, another person for whom Minister of Justice Mehmet
Ali Å~^ahin granted permission to be tried under article 301, will
have his trial tomorrow (November 14).

Ministry of Justice had given permission for the continuance of
the trial of Temel Demirer under article 301 for saying that Hrant
Dink was not only killed for being an Armenian, but recognizing the
genocide as well.

The court sent the case of Demirer who is on trial for "denigrating
publicly the state of the Turkish Republic to the ministry on May 15.

Tursun family has two more article 301 files waiting According to the
new arrangement in article 301, a permission needs to be taken from
the Ministry of Justice before a case can be tried under article 301.

The Ministry had not granted permission for the prosecution of Baran
Tursun’s family, father Mehmet Tursun, mother Berin Tursun, her sister
Å~^elale Tursun, and the seven human rights defenders under article
301. However, Tursun family has two more article 301 files waiting
for ministry’s decision. Baran Tursun was killed when allegedly not
stopping for the police while driving.

When the court released accused police officer Oral Emre Atar on
January 14, the Tursun Family’s reaction outside the courthouse
in KarÅ~_ıyaka was highly vocal, leading to their being sued for
insulting the institutions and organs of the Turkish state under
article 301.

–Boundary_(ID_6/0CFByRiIJmw3xOCr3u5A)–

Eyewitness Accounts Confirm Shelling Of Georgian Villages

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Eyewitness Accounts Confirm Shelling Of Georgian Villages
November 14, 2008
By Eka Tsamalashvili, Brian Whitmore

For Giorgi Kapanadze, the fighting in South Ossetia began days before the
world even noticed that a war was going on.

Pro-Moscow separatist forces had been shelling his hometown of Avnevi, an
ethnic-Georgian village inside the breakaway region, pretty much nonstop
since the beginning of August until Georgian troops entered the enclave
around midnight on August 7-8.

"The war did not start on August 7 for us, it started on August 2,"
Kapanadze, who now lives in a shelter for displaced persons in Tbilisi, told
RFE/RL’s Georgian Service in a recent interview.

Dozens of eyewitness accounts like Kapanadze’s, collected by RFE/RL
correspondents on the ground, contradict recent media reports — most
prominently a November 7 article in "The New York Times" — suggesting that
Georgia attacked the South Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali, unprovoked on
August 7.

Tbilisi has long claimed that in sending troops to South Ossetia, it was
acting defensively against separatist and Russian aggression.

The eyewitness accounts are also consistent with a report, issued on August
5, by a tripartite monitoring group, which included Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) military observers and
representatives of Russian peacekeeping forces in the region.

The report, signed by the commander of Russian peacekeepers in the region,
General Marat Kulakhmetov, said there was evidence of attacks against
several ethnic-Georgian villages in South Ossetia. The report also claims
that South Ossetian separatists were using heavy weapons against the
Georgian villages, which was prohibited by a 1992 cease-fire agreement.

Much recent media attention — including reports aired by RFE/RL’s Georgian
Service as well as the November 7 "New York Times" article — has focused on
Tskhinvali and accusations that Georgian forces began bombing the South
Ossetian capital with indiscriminate force on the night of August 7-8.

Breaking An Uneasy Peace

Supported by Russia, South Ossetia fought a brutal war to secede from
Georgia in the early 1990s after the breakup of the Soviet Union. A 1992
cease-fire ended the fighting and established a peacekeeping contingent
comprising Russian, Georgian, and Ossetian forces. The agreement did not
resolve the question of South Ossetia’s final status, and it remained
formally part of Georgia but enjoyed de facto autonomy.

Prior to the renewed outbreak of armed conflict in August, ethnic Georgians
made up just less than one-third of the population of South Ossetia. The
region was a checkerboard-like patchwork of Georgian and Ossetian villages
that coexisted side-by-side in an uneasy peace.

But that uneasy peace abruptly ended in the beginning of August, when
Georgian and separatist-controlled villages in South Ossetia began
exchanging gun, mortar, and grenade fire, with each side blaming the other
for initiating hostilities.

"The most extensive shelling began on August 7, although our village had
been attacked in previous days too," Gocha Petriashvili, a resident of the
ethnic-Georgian village of Nuli, told RFE/RL’s Georgian Service.

He added that the attacks began on August 2 when his neighbor’s home was hit
with mortar fire and burned down. "It was a miracle that nobody was killed
there. The parents somehow managed to get their 4-month-old baby down from
the second floor to the yard," he said, adding that he also witnessed a
minivan carrying women and children come under machine-gun fire.

Petriashvili fled Nuli on August 10, and later learned that his home burned
to the ground after being hit with mortar fire.

Another Nuli resident, Bela Chavchavadze, concurs with Petriashvili’s
account that the shelling started on August 2 — when the home of a local
police officer was bombed, causing it to burn to the ground — and
intensified on August 6-7.

"On August 6, in the evening they were shooting and shelling. Around
midnight it all stopped but resumed again in the early morning,"
Chavchavadze says. "We were lucky to have left the village before the roads
were blocked."

And in the ethnic-Georgian village of Ergneti, which is in the Gori region
outside of South Ossetia’s administrative borders in Georgia proper,
residents also reported heavy shelling starting in the beginning of August.
"Ergneti was bombed before the military confrontation started. In the first
days of August there was extensive shelling of the village, many houses have
been damaged. A man I know was wounded," says local resident Temur
Tatunashvili.

Fresh Allegations

The tripartite monitoring group also found evidence suggesting that Nuli,
Eredvi, Zemo Nikozi, and Zemo Prisi — all ethnic-Georgian villages — had
come under attack by separatist forces prior to the full-fledged outbreak of
armed conflict on August 7-8.

"Trace of various calibration shells were found on local residential houses
in Zemo Nikozi. Bullet holes were found in the roofs of private houses and
other buildings of Zemo Nikozi in the vicinity of residential areas," the
report said.

"In the settlements of Nuli, Eredvi, and Zemo Prisi, observers found
82-millimeter fractions on private houses as a result of grenade-launcher
attacks. Military observers from the Joint Control Commission witnessed
shootings towards Sarabuki, a Georgian peacekeeping post, with
120-millimeter grenade launcher and one 100-millimeter mortar."

In an article published on November 7, "The New York Times," however, wrote
that "newly available accounts" from military observers from the OSCE
"question the long-standing Georgian assertion that it was acting
defensively" when Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili ordered troops into
South Ossetia just before midnight on August 7-8.

The monitors, including a Finnish major, a Belarusian airborne captain, and
a Polish civilian, told diplomats at two confidential briefings that Georgia
attacked the South Ossetian capital Tskhinvali on August 7 "with
indiscriminate artillery and rocket fire." The article also said the
monitors "were unable to verify that ethnic-Georgian villages were under
heavy bombardment that evening, calling into question one of Mr.
Saakashvili’s main justifications for the attack."

Georgian officials have challenged the account. Moscow, meanwhile, has
embraced it and asked the OSCE to conduct a broader inquiry into the
allegations.

Georgia has long called for an international investigation into the events
leading up to the start of the war. EU foreign ministers have sanctioned
such an investigation and chose Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini, the former
head of the UN Mission in Georgia, to head it.

Speaking at a press conference in Moscow on November 12 after meeting
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander
Stubb, the current OSCE chairman in office, said he would comply with
Russia’s request, but also appeared to cast doubt on some of the monitors’
allegations.

Stubb said the small contingent of monitors in Tskhinvali was not in a
position to determine how the war started. "It’s not my job to make the
judgment on who started the war, or how it actually started," Stubb said.
"The OSCE isn’t an intelligence service. Our instruments are, unfortunately,
very limited."

Unarmed Military Officers In A Couple Of Cars

"The New York Times" cited mostly anonymous OSCE officials in its November 7
story. One official it did quote by name, however, was Ryan Grist, a former
British Army captain who was deputy head of the OSCE mission in Tbilisi when
the war broke out. Grist has also been cited in numerous other media reports
critical of Georgia.

OSCE officials in Tbilisi said Grist traveled to Tskhinvali days after
Georgia sent troops into South Ossetia and began giving unauthorized
interviews to Russian media that were critical of Georgia. Upon returning to
Tbilisi, according to the officials, he was reprimanded, had a heated
conversation with his superiors, and subsequently resigned from the
organization.

Grist could not be reached for comment and the OSCE says it will not comment
on personnel matters.

In an interview with RFE/RL’s Georgian Service, OSCE Deputy Spokeswoman
Virginie Coulloudon said the organization’s monitors make "patrol reports"
from the ground "on a daily basis." The organization’s reports were
distributed to all 56 member states.

"Another level of information is what some of our monitors…experienced
during the night of the 7th to the 8th [of August]," Coulloudon said "They
were in Tskhinvali. Three OSCE staff members were in the basement of the
Tskhinvali office, and they did witness the shelling of Tskhinvali. However,
the OSCE is not in a capacity to say who started the war and what happened
before the night of [August] 7-8."

Coulloudon added that the OSCE in South Ossetia consists of just "unarmed
military officers in a couple of cars."

Tbilisi has fed the confusion about the war’s origins. Shortly after
Georgian troops entered South Ossetia, Georgian officials cited "restoring
constitutional order" in the separatist region as the reason for using
force.

Later, Georgia said Russian forces moved into South Ossetia first on August
7, and that Georgia had no choice but to send troops and try to head off the
invasion.

s_Accounts_Confirm_Shelling_Of_Georgian_Villages/1 349256.html
David Kakabadze, director of RFE/RL’s Georgian Service, contributed to this
report

http://www.rferl.org/content/Eyewitnes

Greek Orthodox Leader Blames Armenians For Jerusalem Incident

GREEK ORTHODOX LEADER BLAMES ARMENIANS FOR JERUSALEM INCIDENT

Agence France Presse — English
November 10, 2008 Monday 10:02 AM GMT

The Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Theophilos III blamed
Armenian clerics Monday for weekend violence between Greek and Armenian
Orthodox faithful in Jerusalem’s Holy Sepulchre church.

"The Armenians are constantly provoking us. They claim additional
rights and seek to equate their privileges to ours which date back
centuries," Theophilos told Greek state television NET.

"They are causing trouble in Bethlehem and Gethsemane," the garden
at the foot of the Mount of Olives where Jesus Christ prayed with
his disciples before his crucifixion, he added.

Israeli police were called in Sunday as the free-for-all left several
people with black eyes, bruises and bloody cuts.

A number of the faithful hit out with religious artifacts as priests
tried to tear each others’ robes off in the brawl.

Custody of the Holy Sepulchre is shared by Greeks, Armenians and
Roman Catholics, all of whom jealously guard their responsibilities
under a fragile network of agreements hammered out over the centuries.

Rivalries between the various denominations is such that the keys
to the church have been entrusted for centuries to two Palestinian
Muslim families.

The church is built on the site most Christians revere as the place
where Jesus Christ was crucified, and also where he was buried and
rose again.

Theophilos added that since his election in 2005 he has sought to
improve relations with all the Christian denominations which share
use of the Holy Lands’ pilgrimage sites, but the Armenians "remain
obdurate".

Theophilos was elected to the throne after his predecessor Irineos I
was ousted over an alleged multi-million-dollar sale of church land
to Jewish investors.

President Urges Government Help Armenian Producers

PRESIDENT URGES GOVERNMENT HELP ARMENIAN PRODUCERS

ARKA
Nov 12, 2008

YEREVAN, November 12. /ARKA/. The Government must held Armenia
producers to export their products to various parts of the world,
RA President Serge Sargsyan told reporters during his visit to the
8th international food exhibition Armprodexpo-2008, which was opened
in Yerevan yesterday.

About 60 processing enterprises, local and foreign commercial
organizations, advertising agencies and media outlets display their
products.

"I have good, but mixed, impressions of the exhibition as the quality
of the agricultural produce and of processed products is a pleasure
to the eye.

On the other hand, there arises a question: why aren’t high-quality
goods exported to various parts of the world?" the President said.

Sargsyan pointed out that he recently visited the Ararat region and
talked to representatives of the local processing enterprises.

"We agreed that in increasing the yield and selling it the Government
and the processing industry must constantly be beside the farmers. And
the Government must always assist the processing industry at the
stage of sale," he said.

The RA President also stressed the need for creating new brands. "Along
with the world-famous Armenian brandy and apricots, Armenian pickles,
pepper, goat’s and sheep’s cheese and other delicious dishes must
become known," Sargsyan said. Armenian President urged journa lists
to help in this process because "advertising is one of the best
instruments."

The Armprodexpo-2008 exhibition was organized by the RA Ministry of
Agriculture, RA Foreign Office, Yerevan Municipality, Chamber of
Commerce and Industry of Armenia and the Agribusiness Development
Center CJSC.

Head Of Avan Commune Also Awarded

HEAD OF AVAN COMMUNE ALSO AWARDED

A1+
[04:17 pm] 10 November, 2008

Under a Presidential decree of November 10 Vardan Gevorgyan (Mayor
of Kajaran), Samvel Darbinyan (Mayor of Vanadzor), Taron Margaryan
(Head of Avan community of Yerevan) and Suliko Shushanyan (Head of
Shorza village in Gegharkunik Marz) were awarded with Anania Shirakatsi
medals for their great contribution to the development of communities
of the Republic of Armenia.

Azerbaijan: OSCE Minsk Group Co-Charis Give Press Conference In Vien

AZERBAIJAN: OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHARIS GIVE PRESS CONFERENCE IN VIENNA

ISRIA (subscription)
ient/archive.cgi?action=GetFullNews&ldid=2005- 07-26<id=21:41:54&ndid=2008-11-07&nid=5
Nov 9 2008
DC

Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia,
Bernard Fassier of France and Matthew Bryza of the United States –
presented a statement on Nagorno-Karabakh to the OSCE Permanent
Council in Vienna on November 6.

Following their address, the Co-Chairs talked to journalists.

They praised the Moscow Declaration, and expressed hope the parties
will continue high-level discussions.

The Co-Chairs also stressed both countries` commitment to find a
peaceful solution to the conflict.

They stressed the importance of observing international legal norms
and principles during the dispute`s settlement process.

The Co-Chairs also said that the settlement of the conflict depends
only on the conflicting sides, and stressed the Minsk Group is just
playing the role of a mediator.

The Minsk Group Co-Chairs are expected to visit the region in
mid-November.

http://www.azerbaijan.az/cgi-bin/cl

Ameriabank gains leading positions on Armenian banking market

AMERIABANK gains leading positions on Armenian banking market

2008-11-08 13:31:00

ArmInfo. Due to third emission worth 1.2bln AMD ($4mln) AMERIABANK has
increased its authorized capital to 18.2bln AMD ($61mln) – the biggest
authorized capital in Armenia’s banking system.

Director General of AMERIABANK Artak Anesyan says that the bank has
issued 30,000 ordinary nominal shares each worth 40,000 AMD. All of the
shares have been bought by TDA Holdings Limited, affiliated company of
Troika Dialogue. Now, that company has a 99.7% stake in the bank.

Following the emission the bank has amended its charter and has
submitted it for the Central Bank’s registration.

AMERIABANK’s consistent capitalization policy has made it one of the
leaders in the fields of investment banking and universal banking
services. In the future the bank is going to increase its capital due
to profit – in 2009 it is planning an over $5mln net profit.

To remind, the first emission was carried out in Feb 2008: then the
bank issued 4.4bln AMD worth of shares and increased its capital of
6.4bln AMD. The second emission was effected in Aug 2008 and the
capital was increased to 17bln AMD. The bank has one of the five
biggest total capitals in Armenia’s banking system.

Wine Day Celebrated

WINE DAY CELEBRATED

Panorama.am
19:48 07/11/2008

Today wine day is celebrated. In Armenia wine day has been celebrated
in Vanadzor where a real fate was organized. "Union of wine-makers
of Armenia" plans to take the initiative to apply to state bodies to
fix official celebration of the holiday.

Avag Harutyunyan, the president of the union said to Panorama.am that
once Armenian wine was famous in the world. But currently Armenian
grape is used to produce cognac.

According to A. Harutyunyan in recent years 67% of Armenian wine
is exported to CIS countries, USA is in the second horizontal and
European countries are in the third. Note that only 10% of grape in
Armenia is used in the production of wine-making.

NKR: Conference On Conflicts In South…

CONFERENCE ON CONFLICTS IN SOUTH…

Azat Artsakh Daily,
05 Nov 08
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh [NKR]

Conference on conflicts in South Caucasus took place in France On
November 3, a conference on "The role of international law in the
process of South Caucasian conflicts’ settlement" took place in
the Higher School of Political Sciences in Aix-en-Provence. The
conference was held by the NKR Permanent Representative in France
Hovhannes Gevorgyan.

Representatives of local self-governing bodies of Aix-en-Provence,
French deputies, members of the local Armenian community, as well as
professors and students of the Higher School of Political Sciences
participated in the conference, organized with the support of the
Armenian Cultural Union of Aix-en-Provence.