Young Activists Beaten While Campaigning For Pashinyan

YOUNG ACTIVISTS BEATEN WHILE CAMPAIGNING FOR PASHINYAN

Tert.am
12:58 * 28.12.09

"Hima" [Arm. – "Now"] non-governmental organization has issued a
press release saying that yesterday at about 6 p.m. in the vicinity
of Vardanants 50/A building some 30 young men attacked a 10-12-member
group of the Armenian National Congress young-wing activists who
were distributing Nicole Pashinyan’s election campaign booklets. The
report says they insisted that the "Hima" activists stop the election
campaign but after being refused they attacked and beat them with
metal pipes and slingshots.

Two "Hima" activists, Vahagn Gevorgyan and Sergey Gasparyan, were at
first taken to Hospital No.1 and then to Grigor Lousavorich Clinic
in Nor Norq.

BAKU: Azerbaijan, Iran sign gas contract

Azerbaijan, Iran sign gas contract

15 December 2009 [18:42] – Today.Az

SOCAR (State Oil Company of Azerbaijan) and the National Iranian Gas
Export Company signed an agreement on supply of Azerbaijani gas to the
northern provinces of Iran during the winter and an agreement on
confidentiality, to hold negotiations on five-year contract (with
possibility of extension) for the supply of Azerbaijani gas, said the
statement by the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan.

It is planned that from the beginning of the year, Azerbaijani gas
will be delivered to Iran in certain volumes, in accordance with the
capacity of existing infrastructure between countries.

Currently, the infrastructure allows to deliver about 500 million
cubic meters of gas per year.

In the future, the sides intend to expand capacity by increasing the
capacity of gas compressor stations.

The gas price is not reported.

The Iranian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Mohammad Bagir Bahrami said
earlier that Iran intends to purchase about 5 billion cubic meters of
gas from Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan has four directions of gas export, including Turkey,
Georgia, Russia and Iran.

At present, gas is exported to Turkey and Georgia. Azerbaijani gas
will be exported to Russia from early 2010. At present, Azerbaijan
exports gas upon swap conditions with further transfer of Iranian gas
to provide the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic.

Azerbaijan and Iran are connected with the Qazimahammad-Astara
pipeline gas pipeline.

Its length is 1474.5 kilometers, including the territory of Azerbaijan
– 296.5 kilometers.

Its capacity is 10 billion cubic meters per year.

This route is a branch of the pipeline Gazakh-Astara-Iran, put into
operation in 1971. Three compressor stations have been built in
Qazimahammad, Agdash and Gazakh.

The gas transportation system is 55 atmospheres. Pipe diameter is 1,200 mm.

/Trend Capital/

RA Prime Minister Dreamed Of Becoming Truck Driver

RA PRIME MINISTER DREAMED OF BECOMING TRUCK DRIVER

news.am
Dec 25 2009
Armenia

RA Premier Tigran Sargsyan intends to celebrate New Year holidays with
his family in Yerevan and then leave for abroad for 3-4 days to get
treatment. At the moment he is in parley with Armenian doctors and in
case they undertake to treat him, he will probably stay in Yerevan,
the Premier informed journalists on Dec. 25.

Asked about the greatest achievement of 2009, Sargsyan replied:
"It’s better to have society giving its estimate. It may turn out
that an achievement to me is a pinhead to people, and vice versa,
like in case with seat belt law that was accepted further affecting
the society’s behavior."

Sargsyan found it a bit difficult to answer about the present from
Santa on Christmas. He just recalled, that in his childhood he admired
huge Soviet trucks and dreamed of becoming a truck driver.

Azerbaijan Won’t Get In The Way Of Turkey Ratifying Protocols, Says

AZERBAIJAN WON’T GET IN THE WAY OF TURKEY RATIFYING PROTOCOLS, SAYS ANALYST

Tert.am
17:31 ~U 24.12.09

Azerbaijan can’t be a genuine factor for Turkey in terminating the
ratification process of the Armenian-Turkish Protocols, said Caucasus
Institute Director Alexander Iskandaryan at a press conference today.

According to the Iskandaryan, Turkey is prepared to pay even that price
for the establishment of bilateral relations with Armenia. There is
an accepted opinion in Azerbaijan, said the analyst, that Azerbaijanis
regard this process of improving Armenian-Turkish relations as possibly
strengthening Armenia, which will then have an effect on the settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Border With Russia To Reopen, Georgian Foreign Ministry Says

BORDER WITH RUSSIA TO REOPEN, GEORGIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY SAYS

AZG DAILY
25-12-2009

International

AFP – Georgia and Russia have agreed to re-open their land border to
traffic, Georgia’s foreign ministry said Thursday, in the first sign
of a thaw in relations after their bitter war last year.

The two countries reached a deal under Swiss mediation to re-open
the Upper Lars checkpoint, which was closed in 2006, Georgian Deputy
Foreign Minister Nino Kalandadze said.

It is the only land border crossing that does not go through Georgia’s
Russian-backed rebel regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which
were the focus of the 2008 conflict.

"The decision to re-open (the border) has been made," she told
journalists, adding that Georgia expects the crossing to re-open by
the beginning of March.

Kalandadze said the agreement would allow Georgian citizens and
cargo to cross the border and that a formal protocol on re-opening
the crossing would be finalised within two weeks.

Russia closed the Upper Lars checkpoint in 2006 in a move Georgian
officials said was politically motivated amid tensions over Tbilisi’s
efforts to build closer ties with the West, particularly NATO.

Tensions erupted in August 2008, when Russian forces poured into
Georgia to repel a Georgian military attempt to retake South Ossetia,
which had received extensive backing from Moscow for years.

Russia later mostly withdrew to within South Ossetia and another rebel
Georgian region, Abkhazia, which Moscow recognised as independent
states, a move that has so far been followed by only Nicaragua,
Venezuela and the Pacific island state of Nauru.

The other two roads linking Georgia and Russia run through South
Ossetia and Abkhazia, effectively barring them to international
traffic.

The closing of the Upper Lars crossing also dealt a heavy blow
to neighbouring Armenia, which relied on the crossing as its only
overland route to Russia, the country’s key economic partner.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hinted at a thaw in relations with
Georgia earlier this month, saying he saw "no obstacles" to opening
the Upper Lars crossing and resuming direct flights between Russia
and Georgia.

Russia cut air links with Georgia during the war, only four months
after they had resumed following an 18-month embargo.

Georgia’s flagship airline this week asked Russia to lift the embargo
but has yet to receive a reply.

Privately owned Georgian Airways said in a statement that the company
had requested the resumption of charter flights between Moscow and
Tbilisi for the holiday period of December 26 to January 15 and the
resumption of regular flights starting from January 5.

2009 Most Successful Season In My Career: Aronian

2009 — MOST SUCCESSFUL SEASON IN MY CAREER: ARONIAN

news.am
Dec 23 2009
Armenia

December 18, Armenian man’s chess team will leave for training camp
in Tsakhkadzor to prepare for the world team championship in the city
of Bursa (Turkey) on January 3. However, team leader Levon Aronian
preferred to do so in Berlin.

In his interview with "Football 365" weekly Aronian said, "I am not
going to the training camp in Tsakhkadzor. I will prepare for the
championship at home and thereafter leave for Turkey. This year I was
in for many tournaments and decided to have some rest to be full of
renewed energy by January 3."

Asked about further plans, Aronian replied, "After Bursa I plan to
participate in the traditional tournament in Linares in the frames
of Grand Slam (February 15-22). Then we will see."

Commenting on the fact that he is out of 2009 top ten Armenian
sportsmen, Aronian said, "I do not take it seriously. I believe that
2009 season was the most successful in my career."

UN Takes Further Steps To Settle Cyprus Conflict

UN TAKES FURTHER STEPS TO SETTLE CYPRUS CONFLICT

Yerkir
22.12.2009 15:21

Yerevan (Yerkir) – In 2010 Greek and Turkish parts of Cyprus will
accelerate the negotiation process aimed at reaching accord and
putting an end to 35-year confrontation.

"The Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot leaders are intensifying their
United Nations-backed talks aimed at reunifying the Mediterranean
island, scheduling two three-day series of discussions next month
after a senior UN official said they had made good progress over the
past year," the UN website reads.

Both leaders Dimitris Christofias and Mehmet Ali Talat met under UN
auspices in Nicosia. The officials announced their intensions in the
joint statement voiced by the Coordinator of the UN’s Good Offices
Mission, Yasser Sabra.

ISTANBUL: Turkey’s `foreign media initiative’ heats up

Sunday’s Zaman, turkey
Dec 20 2009

Turkey’s `foreign media initiative’ heats up

Turkey has begun a public diplomacy campaign involving its neighboring
countries through what has come to be called a `media initiative,’
which seeks to have foreign correspondents and media bosses visit
Turkey.

Following the appointment of Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu as foreign minister on
May 1, Turkey has worked to realize the `zero problems with neighbors’
principle in its foreign policy, a result of which has been
intensified efforts to normalize relations with Armenia and Syria.
Top-level visits exchanged with Russia in the first half of the year
strengthened Turkish-Russian relations. Numerous agreements that have
been signed with Syria, Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Egypt, Jordan and Armenia
have shifted Turkey’s weight in regional affairs. To show that the
normalization of relations with Turkey’s neighbors is not only on the
leadership level, the Turkish government is taking steps to
familiarize local media organs of neighboring countries with Turkish
politics, economy and culture. By doing so, the Turkish government
aims to positively shape public opinion with respect to Turkey in
surrounding countries.
To bolster its foreign policy initiatives through engaging the people
of neighboring countries, the Turkish government has started to
organize trips of media representatives from abroad. Recently,
Bulgarian, Moldovan, Azerbaijani and Syrian journalists visited Turkey
to meet with local media representatives, government officials,
representatives from political parties, civil society organizations
and companies. The last such a visit concluded on Friday and involved
a delegation comprising Syrian media bosses. The delegation, invited
by the Foreign Ministry, met with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an.
The move is expected to improve relations prior to the prime
minister’s visit to Syria on Dec. 23, Neslihan Gözükara from the
Directorate General of Press and Information (BYEGM), who coordinated
the Syrian delegation’s trip, informed Sunday’s Zaman.

Speaking to Sunday’s Zaman, BYEGM General Director Salih Melek said
media representatives from neighboring countries previously visited
Turkey as tourists but that they now visit to learn something, to
launch new projects and to start beneficial initiatives. `We organize
visits by groups of journalists and try to serve them as best we can.
Some of them are interested in investment opportunities, trade
possibilities and economic relations. We help them meet
representatives from related companies. Some of them want to meet with
government officials, politicians and bureaucrats; we again try to do
our best to make that happen,’ Melek said.

Commenting on the recent foreign policy initiatives, Melek said the
new initiatives help foreign journalists and media bosses get to know
Turkey better. `In the early 2000s, there were approximately 130-140
journalists coming to Turkey each year. Now that number has already
boiled over to 2,000 every year,’ Melek said, adding that the number
is constantly growing.

Most of the groups of journalists visit big cities such as Ä°stanbul
and the capital, Ankara. However, BYEGM also organizes trips to cities
such as Gaziantep, Bursa, Kayseri and Konya to display Turkish culture
and lifestyle to foreign reporters and media bosses. Many foreign
journalists recently covered Å?eb-i Arus, ceremonies marking the 736th
anniversary of the death of Mevlana Jelaluddin Rumi, in Konya. Melek
also said they send journalists from the European Union to Konya to
become familiar with Turkish culture and the nation’s religion.

Trip coordinators are very well organized and financed. The
government’s chief press information body pays travel costs, if
necessary, accommodation and all expenses faced by visiting media
representatives. The trip program is organized according to the
journalists’ requests and desires. `They choose with whom to meet and
where to go. We only help them arrange meetings and take care of
logistics,’ Melek noted.

Melek also said these trips help promote Turkey in other countries.
`We broadcast in 11 languages and are working on launching broadcasts
in Arabic and French very soon. Foreigners will now be able to follow
Turkey through these channels,’ Melek added.

Meanwhile, a group of Turkish journalists are in the Armenian capital
of Yerevan to meet with representatives of civil society
organizations, government officials and media representatives there.
Speaking to Sunday’s Zaman from Armenia, Mensur Akgün, the director of
the Global Political Trends Center (GPoT) and the organizer of the
trip, said the primary aim of the visit is to contribute to the
development of relations between the two countries. Akgün also added
that among their goals in organizing a trip of Turkish media
representatives to Armenia is improved understanding of one another by
the two sides, overcoming prejudices and the development of stability
in the region. `We also want to contribute to intensifying peace
efforts in the Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict,’ Akgün said.

He noted that the first leg of the meeting between journalists from
both countries was held in Bursa, during the 2010 World Cup qualifying
soccer match between Turkey and Armenia on Oct. 10, and that it is now
the turn of Turkish journalists to visit Armenia.

20 December 2009, Sunday
MAHÄ°R ZEYNALOV Ä°STANBUL

BAKU: Obama to contribute to global peace by veto on Senate decision

Trend, Azerbaijan
Dec 18 2009

U.S president will contribute to restoration of global peace by
putting veto on Senate’s decision: Azerbaijani Deputy Speaker

Azerbaijan, Baku, Dec. 18 / Trend News K.Zarbaliyeva /

Azerbaijani Parliamentary Deputy Speaker Bahar Muradova expressed hope
that the U.S. president will demonstrate its contribution to
restoration of peace and security worldwide by putting veto on the U.S
Senate’s decision.

"We will see how Barack Obama is worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize," she
told journalists.

The U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate approved a bill on
the general appropriations for the 2010 fiscal year, according to
which assistance to Nagorno-Karabakh will be allocated to the amount
of $8 million. Any restrictions on the implementation of programs in
Karabakh have been removed.

According to Muradova, at the current stage of negotiations, the U.S.
Senate’s decision on the allocation of aid to the Nagorno-Karabakh
encourages the separatist regime and allows it not to not give up.

"This step inspires the separatist regime. Instead of condemning the
aggressor, this creates the conditions for its development. Although
it is not military assistance, the allocated funds will help the
separatists of the Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia to strengthen the
military sphere," Muradova said.

"The U.S. Congress’s decision does not meet the spirit of the
US-Azerbaijan cooperation," she added.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.
Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994.

The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. –
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. General Assembly’s
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the
occupied territories.

Turkish court ruling sets stage for more ethnic bloodshed

Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
December 18, 2009 Friday
Final Edition

Turkish court ruling sets stage for more ethnic bloodshed

by Harry Sterling, Freelance

It’s said the Kurds’ only friends are the mountains.

Thanks to a decision by Turkey’s Constitutional Court some Kurds may,
in fact, end up in the mountains of northern Iraq, joining guerrilla
forces of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which have been engaged
in hostilities with the Turkish army since 1984.

The 11-member court unanimously agreed Dec. 11 that the Kurdishbased
Democratic Society Party (DTP) violated Articles 68 and 69 of the
country’s constitution and had become a " … focal point of
activities against the indivisible unity of the state, the country and
the nation."

The judges ruled that the Democratic Society Party be closed due to
its alleged links with the PKK and its top leaders be banned from
politics for five years, including some DTP members of parliament. One
of the key charges was the refusal of the DTP to label the PKK a
terrorist organization — a move which would have been political
suicide, given the widespread support for the PKK among many Kurds.

The leader of the DTP, Ahmet Turk, said the ban would not help efforts
to end the 25-year-long insurgency.

The ban comes at a time when Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan has been trying to persuade Turks to support initiatives to
reconcile the Turkish and Kurdish communities and to bring about an
end to the bloodshed which has killed more than 40,000 since the
mid-1980s.

Interestingly, Erdogan’s own ruling party, the Justice and Development
Party (AKP) narrowly missed being banned itself by the court because
of its alleged Islamic policies which violated the constitution.

Erdogan’s reforms include greater Kurdish language rights, including
access to television programming in Kurdish, the use of Kurdish during
political campaigns and reverting to Kurdish names for towns.

Many see Erdogan’s reforms as linked to Turkey’s application for
membership in the European Union, which has called on the Turkish
government to end restrictions on free speech and fundamental human
rights for all Turkish citizens.

However, the reforms are not solely about ending the marginalization
of the Kurdish population or ending the bloody conflict with the PKK,
led by the now jailed Abdullah Ocalan.

What the prime minister has set in motion are changes to the very
nature of Turkey and how Turkish society might function in the future.
Erdogan’s reforms would transform Turkey from a nation where every
person has been labelled a Turk regardless of their ethnic background
— Kurds represent 15 to 20 per cent of the population — to a state
where the glue holding the population together would be their mutual
citizenship in Turkey, not their "Turkishness."

While this concept of emphasizing citizenship over ethnic background
would not be unfamiliar to many Canadians, for ultra-nationalists in
Turkey it’s an intolerable concept threatening the very unity and
existence of the nation, not to mention their own entrenched power.

In fact, they have been in the forefront of those totally opposed to
any changes which would lessen "Turkishness". At present, insulting
"Turkishness" is subject to imprisonment under Turkish law.

Not surprisingly, the two main opposition parties in Turkey’s
parliament have denounced Erdogan’s current consultation process with
various groups in society concerning the reforms program.

Unfortunately for those who believe such reforms are necessary to
reconcile Kurds with the rest of the population, the banning of the
Democratic Society Party and its top leaders will only exacerbate the
situation. It will convince many Kurds their community is once again
being discriminated against as in the past. (Until recently,
mentioning the Kurdish population by name was a taboo subject; Kurds
were referred to as Mountain Turks, and even Kurdish traditional names
not allowed.)

Where all this may be heading remains unclear. It could work to the
advantage of hardliners in the PKK, some of whom are not interested in
their insurgency ending, particularly not if there’s no blanket
amnesty for all PKK fighters.

This setback in Erdogan’s reforms occurs at a time when Turkey’s
relations with other nations is also undergoing significant changes,
including relations with western nations and NATO allies.

Changes in Turkish foreign policies have caused considerable concern
in certain American circles. Some have concluded the Erdogan
government is even prepared to lessen ties with NATO allies and
refocus its attentions on countries in the region like Syria, Iran and
Sudan, which are viewed as anti-American.

Some say the new foreign policy is a deliberate attempt to manipulate
anti-western nationalism in Turkey in favour of the AKP’s supposed
Islamic objectives. Others maintain that the Erdogan government’s bias
in favour of Muslim countries has allowed it to downplay Turkey’s
traditional close relations with the U.S. and Europe. Positive views
of the U.S. and EU membership are now at all time lows. Even President
Barack Obama’s pro-Turkish statements have failed to improve Turkish
domestic views of the U.S.

Turkey’s relatively new foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, scoffs at
such concerns. He insists the AKP’s efforts to broaden relations with
neighbours and Muslim states are simply part of a new policy of
"Strategic Depth" and "zero problems with neighbours" policy.

(Paradoxically, Turkey’s traditionally close relations with
Turkish-speaking Azerbaijan have been adversely affected by Ankara’s
rapprochement with Armenia, the Azeris angered by Turkey possibly
opening its borders with Armenia before Armenia’s occupation of
Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region is resolved.)

The rationale for the new policy seems benign, based on the premise
Turkey sits among a number of "geocultural basins," such as the Middle
East and the Muslim world. In this view, Turkey can become a regional
power by establishing close relations with the so-called basins and
nearby neighbours, like Iran and Russia.

One casualty of this process could be Israel. Until recently, Turkey
and Israel had established close relations, including military
co-operation. However, following the Israeli attacks against Gaza,
Erdogan strongly condemned Tel Aviv’s actions, even storming out of a
meeting in Geneva with Israeli President Shimon Peres.

Ironically, while some once saw Turkey as a useful bridge between the
West and fractious Middle East countries, others may now wonder what
side of the bridge Turkey ultimately intends to be on.

Harry Sterling, a former diplomat, is an Ottawa-based commentator. He
served in Turkey.