Bako Sahakyan: NKR authorities will keep NSS tasks in the spotlight

Bako Sahakyan: NKR authorities will keep NSS tasks in the spotlight
20.12.2009 17:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On 19 December President of the Nagorno Karabagh
Republic Bako Sahakyan partook at a solemn event dedicated to the Day
of the serviceman of the National Security Service organized at the
headquarters of the service and congratulated the staff on their
holiday.

The Head of the State rated high the role of the structure in
safeguarding security and steady development of the country noting
that the issues the system faces would continue be in the spotlight of
the authorities.

Head of the Office of the NKR President, secretary of the Security
Council Marat Mousayelyan, NKR attorney general Arshavir Gharamyan,
head of the Police Robert Shaferyan and other officials partook at the
event.

Lyudmila Sargsyan, Gurgen Yehiazaryan Excluded From Hnchak Party

LYUDMILA SARGSYAN, GURGEN YEHIAZARYAN EXCLUDED FROM HNCHAK PARTY

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.12.2009 16:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Hcnhak party leaders from world’s different
countries have welcomed and recognized the Social Democratic party’s
new administration elected during the extraordinary congress.

"Hnchak party representatives from 22 states will hereafter collaborate
with Perkupekyan-led administration," the chairman of the party’s
central board Sedrak Achemyan told a joint news conference with
governing board member Vahan Shirkhanyan.

According to Shirkhanyan, the congress could not be considered illegal
as it was convened by the demand of almost all Hnchakyan cells which
participated in the meeting, "Participants also made a decision on
excluding Gurgen Yeghiazaryan and Lyudmila Sargsyan from the party,"
he added.

Besides, he said, the congress decided to declare null and void
Lyudmila Sargsyan’s decision on dissolving party cells and exclusion
of several members.

When asked by a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter about the reasons, Shirkhanyan
said it was "necessary for healing the party’s atmosphere". "Members
also decided to form a special committee which will study the party’s
activity during period of Lyudmila Sargsyan’s governance and submit
a relevant report," he noted.

Turkey Between Ethics And Politics: Put It All On The Table

TURKEY BETWEEN ETHICS AND POLITICS: PUT IT ALL ON THE TABLE
By Raffi Hovannisian

Online Journal Guest Writer
Dec 16, 2009, 00:23

YEREVAN, Armenia — In Washington, Brussels, Moscow and elsewhere,
Turkish President Abdullah Gul, Prime Minister Erdogan, Foreign
Minister Davutoglu and others have long advocated combining into
one political agenda their country’s normalization of relations with
Armenia and the resolution of Mountainous Karabagh’s conflict with
Azerbaijan.

I agree.

Newly independent Armenia’s ostensibly mature policy — which
I supported as the nation’s first foreign affairs minister — of
seeking establishment of diplomatic relations without the positing
of any preconditions can today, 18 years into the game, be pronounced
dead on arrival.

Oddly but expectedly, it has been the senior government at
Ankara which, instead of finally recognizing the responsibility
of its Ottoman-Young Turk predecessors for the great genocide
and national dispossession of 1915 or at minimum employing the
facility of an unconditional official relationship to address and
solve the outstanding issues that resulted from it, has from the
beginning proffered a variety of unilateral conditions. The staple
prerequisites of a) removing genocide and its affirmation from
Armenia’s international vocabulary and b) validating the de facto
Turkish-Armenian frontier which had been imposed by Bolshevik-Kemalist
fiat in 1921, have since been supplemented by c) a Baku-centric
regulation of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations and of Mountainous
Karabagh’s legitimate quest for liberty, post-Stalinist decolonization
and sovereign statehood.

The bilateral power asymmetry of the past has been conjoined with a
contemporary asymmetry in diplomatic demeanor, which is underscored
by Turkey’s continued bad-neighborly blockade. This makes it finally
impossible to bridge the Turkish-Armenian divide by old and outdated
technologies.

Turkey is right on this score. And so, for the first time in all
history, bring it all out and onto the table and let’s hammer out a
comprehensive blueprint that delivers us to a brave new future of
peace, prosperity and shared security for the parties and for the
broader region.

This daring paradigm, which will entail the constructive support
of the world of nations, must provide solution and closure to a few
pivotal points on the agenda:

In order to realize its ambition of becoming an area leader of
democratic repute, Turkey must face the cardinal sin in its memory
closet, surmount decades of denial and, in the prime but sadly
unique example of postwar Germany, chart its own revolutionary path
to recognition and remorse, redemption and restitution. These can
materialize by repealing racist laws; paying honest tribute and
bringing truth to education; conducting a complete inventory of,
and then restoring, the vast cultural heritage in present-day eastern
Turkey and celebrating its Armenian identity; launching and carrying
through a homecoming initiative to guarantee the right of voluntary
return to the Armenian heartland for the progeny of genocide survivors
and the dispossessed.

It is imperative to determine and delimit the boundaries between
the Republics of Turkey and Armenia: Are they the de jure borders
as defined and awarded under Woodrow Wilson’s presidential seal in
November 1920, or the ones that obtained de facto as part of the
Russo-Turkish compact of 1921 which usurped the lion’s share of the
ancestral Armenian patrimony? What is the legal status of the historic
homelands currently under Turkish occupation, and does Armenia have a
right to sovereign access to the sea? To these ends, and absent the
parties’ diplomatic good faith in answering these questions, likely
telling of their positions and preoccupations would be their acceptance
of the compulsory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice.

The same goes for Mountainous Karabagh and Armenian-Azerbaijani
relations. We live in a world in which the rule of interests often
trumps the rule of law, where most Western nations have overcome
standard fixations on the principle of territorial integrity to
recognize Kosovo, just as the Russian Federation and a couple of
others have done the same for Abkhazia. Under international law,
the Montevideo Convention and the Soviet legislation controlling at
the time of Karabagh’s referendum on independence, the juridical
underpinnings of its sovereignty are as strong as, if not more
solid than, the aforementioned examples. Kosovo’s "sui generis"
argument uses a fancy label that betrays a false distinction without
a true difference. All the countries that recognized either Kosovo or
Abkhazia, if the rule of laws and rights is important to them, must
move immediately to recognize the Republic of Mountainous Karabagh
within its constitutional borders. Armenia and Turkey should lead
the way.

As for the polemical scoring point of "occupied" territories and
the return of refugees, the case is closed on these consequences of
Azerbaijan’s failed war of aggression against Karabagh. And it will
remain closed until and unless a) Turkey releases from occupation
the Armenian provinces currently under its control and allows for the
descendants’ exercise of the right of return to their national home;
and b) Azerbaijan lifts its occupation of the Armenian territories of
Shahumian, Getashen and Nakhichevan, pays for the brutal and documented
destruction in December 2005 of the Armenian cultural wonder called
Jugha, provides a right of return and compensation to the 400,000
Armenian refugees from Mountainous Karabagh and Azerbaijan, recognizes
Karabagh and then enters into formal negotiations with it to finalize
issues of border adjustment and delineation, trade and communications,
peace and public safety.

These are but a few of the priority items that need be included in
the agenda of "linkage" that official Ankara has long promoted. If its
insistence is anything more than partisan puff or an escape hatch from
political accountability, then the time is ripe for laying everything
on the line, presenting in civil fashion the pre- and post-conditions
of choice, and deciding which matters can be tackled diplomatically and
which require recourse to the tribunals of law. This process alone,
without prejudice to its results, just might take the parties and
their partnership to the hope of unprecedented normalization and the
promise of a long-awaited reconciliation between their peoples.

For policymaker and pundit alike, the road to regional integration in
a new-age community of democratic values and global security, to the
Caucasus, Central Asia and Afghanistan, to energy sourcing and other
strategic priorities passes right through the long irrelevant but
now tectonic killing fields of old Armenia. If the future is meant to
count, no measure of NATO membership or geopolitical self-importance
or moderate-Islam grandstanding can prevent the ultimate harmony of
renaissance and realpolitik.

Raffi Hovannisian, a member of Parliament, is founding director of
the Armenian Center for National and International Studies.

Representation Office Of NGO "National Tourism Office Of Armenia In

REPRESENTATION OFFICE OF NGO "NATIONAL TOURISM OFFICE OF ARMENIA IN RUSSIA AND CIS COUNTRIES" WILL BE OPENED IN ARMENIA

ARKA
DECEMBER 16, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, December 16. /ARKA/. In Armenia representation office of NGO
"National Tourism Office of Armenia in Russia and CIS Countries" will
be opened, which started its activity from November 2009 in Moscow.

Maria Atayan, Director of National Tourism Office (NTO) said that
the main goal of the organization is to promote tourism in Armenia.

"Armenia is a very beautiful country having many advantages prom the
point of view of tourism, among which is alpine nature, Christian
heritage and cultural sites. Due to history, general interests
and language Armenia can become attractive for Russian tourists",
said Atayan.

Armenia can attract tourists by low prices for which the government’s
support is necessary, particularly in the issue of reduction of
certain taxes for air transportation, as well as regular work with
representatives of hotel business. Due to correct advertisement and
PR tourism can play serious role in the development of economy of the
country. "We are ready to work not only for involvement of Russian
tourists to Armenia, but also involve potential investors for the
development of necessary infrastructures", said Atayan. NTO will
suggest not only traditional types of tourism in Armenia, but also
develop religious tourism, medical tourism and rafting (floating on
the raft – different types of inflatable rubber dinghy).

Special attention will be paid to the development of corporate
tourism, conduction of business-forums and conferences in Armenia. In
the nearest future, it is planned to launch Internet portal of the
organization where maximum information about Armenia can be available
and any tourism operator can find any interesting information for him.

"The main activities are conducted in Moscow tourism market but it
is planned to expand it in the regions of Russia, NIS countries and
Europe where there is Armenian Diaspora", said Atayan. At the end of
November new NGO "National Tourism Office of Armenia in Russia and
NIS Countries" was established.

It will support development of tourism between Armenia and Russia. NTO
will advocate tourism in the country, outreach of citizens of Russia
about historical and cultural values of Armenia, establishment of
mutual communication with representatives of government and tourism
business in Russia. It will also develop tourism infrastructure of the
country. In February 2010 one of the largest ski resorts of Armenia –
Tsakhkadzor will be presented to journalists and the public. During
2010 NTO-Armenia plans to create networks of Armenia tourism operators,
coordination and control of which will be completely implemented by
the organization.

Cypriot Community Leaders Meet With Australian Diplomats

CYPRIOT COMMUNITY LEADERS MEET WITH AUSTRALIAN DIPLOMATS
by Anastasios Papapostolou

16/cypriot-community-leaders-meet-with-australian- diplomats/
December 2009

The president of the Federation of Cypriot Communities in Australia
and New Zealand and the president of the Cypriot Community of New
South Wales, Michael Christodoulou (foto), recently met with the
Australian ambassador in Nicosia, Evan Williams, and Australia’s
special envoy for the Cyprus issue, David Ritchie.

Also attending the meeting was the president of the Community Relations
Commission of NSW, Stepan Kerkiasarian, of Armenian origin, who was
born in Cyprus.

Christodoulou said he briefed the Australian diplomats on the feelings
and positions expressed by Cypriot-Australians on the island’s problems
and called for Australia’s assistance in order that a viable and
workable solution be found to the Cyprus dispute.

http://au.greekreporter.com/2009/12/

Detained IL-76 Headed From Ukraine To Azerbaijan

DETAINED IL-76 HEADED FROM UKRAINE TO AZERBAIJAN

NEWS.am
12:48 / 12/15/2009

Ukraine bears no relation to the aircraft detained December 12 in
Bangkok with weapons aboard. The empty jet was heading from Gostomel
to Azerbaijan, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pyotr Poroshenko said at
the Dec.14 press conference, podrobnosti.ua e-source reports.

FM stated that according to Ukrainian authorities’ information, the
aircraft landed in one of Kiev airports in early December, but left
for Azerbaijan further.

"That empty aircraft landed in Gostomel and flied deadhead to Baku
on December 8. It was detained in Bangkok, where Thai competent
bodies disclosed inconsistency of cargo with accompanying documents,
controlled by consignor," Poroshenko said, pledging assistance to
the investigation of aircraft detention.

He confirmed information by Transport and Communication Ministry,
that the aircraft is not Ukrainian and there are no Ukrainians among
the crew.

IL-76 with weapons from China on board was detained in Bangkok on
December 12.

Assembly Participates in Panel on Protocols, Reiterates Position

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Assembly of America
December 11, 2009
Contact: Press Department
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY PARTICIPATES IN PANEL ON PROTOCOLS
REITERATES POSITION IN JOINT STATEMENT

Los Angeles, CA – Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) Board of
Trustees Member, Peter Kezirian and Assembly Western Region Director
Yeghig Keshishian participated in a panel discussion hosted by the
Armenian Law Student Association (ALSA) of Southwestern Law School in
conjunction with the Law School’s Diversity Affairs Office regarding the
recently signed protocols to establish normal relations without
preconditions between the Republics of Armenia and Turkey. The panel
also included Steve Dadaian and Vicken Sonentz Papazian representing the
Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

Following the opening remarks by Stella Pogosyan, President of the
Armenian Law Student Association at Southwestern, the Assembly and ANCA
each discussed the protocols. Keshishian opened his discussion looking
at the geopolitical situation in the South Caucasus, noting that the
Republic of Armenia, since its independence in 1991, has sought formal
diplomatic relations with Turkey without preconditions. Turkey meanwhile
has insisted on preconditions such as concessions on Nagorno Karabakh
and demands that Armenia renounce international affirmation of the
Armenian Genocide. Turkey’s 15-year plus blockade of Armenia also
reflects part of Turkey’s strategy to attempt to isolate and marginalize
Armenia.

Armenia has withstood Turkey’s hostile actions and for the first time,
Turkey has publicly committed to normalize relations with Armenia and
lift its blockade. Despite Turkey’s continued counterproductive
statements, Turkish demands for concessions on Nagorno Karabakh are not
contained within the protocols.

Referring to the actual text of the protocols, Keshishian noted that
they do not threaten the veracity of the Armenian Genocide, nor do they
require Armenia to abdicate its treaty rights on territorial issues or
require concessions on Nagorno Karabakh as many have speculated.

Steve Dadaian, speaking on behalf of the ANCA, attempted to use legal
arguments to argue that the Protocols undercut particular interests of
the Armenian Republic and accused the current government of not having
the position or moral authority to deal with these concerns. The
analysis, however, requires Protocol opponents to read into the document
a number of arguments that have been explicitly rejected by the two
countries. Dadaian also discussed the notion of bringing a legal claim
under the auspices of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to settle
claims regarding the Armenian Genocide. While the United States filed a
document in 1951 before the ICJ affirming the Armenian Genocide, Dadaian
omitted that Turkey cannot be compelled to submit to ICJ jurisdiction.

During the question and answer period, the Southwestern Law students
raised a number of insightful issues on both the strategic and legal
elements of the Armenian-Turkish relationship. Kezirian, drawing upon
his international legal experience, addressed issues tied to treaty
interpretation, Armenian national interests and the benefits generated
by lifting the Turkish blockade and formal diplomatic recognition. In
essence, with normalized relations, Armenia will be in control of its
own economic as well as political destiny.

Papazian and Dadaian argued that the Protocols are poorly drafted and
will help Turkey’s accession to the European Union, which require open
borders. However, Turkey has been in this process for more than three
decades and the rapprochement process allows Armenia to take control of
its own future, rather than simply rely on the good wishes of others.
Open borders is and has already been an important strategic objective
for the Republic; Turkey has tried to leverage this need to force
Armenian concessions on Karabakh and the Genocide. The Armenian people
and its governments have withstood this pressure and are now poised to
achieve a major objective without any concessions.

"The Armenian-Turkish Protocols Speaker Event successfully achieved its
goal by presenting students an objective analysis of the issues, and
allowed them to formulate their own opinions," stated ALSA President
Stella Pogosyan. "Only through such open, honest and balanced talks can
we achieve progress and results. We thank each of our four speakers for
their participation: Yeghig Keshishian, Peter Kezirian, Steve Dadaian,
and Viken Sonentz Papazian," Pogosyan added.

"It was one of the most important and beneficial events the Southwestern
Armenian Law Student Association and the Southwestern Law School’s
Diversity Affairs Office held this academic year," concluded Pogosyan.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding
and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a 501(c)(3)
tax-exempt membership organization.

Churches Advocate For Religious Minorities’ Rights In Turkey

CHURCHES ADVOCATE FOR RELIGIOUS MINORITIES’ RIGHTS IN TURKEY

[email protected]
December 8, 2009

An international ecumenical delegation visiting Turkey at the end
of November has encouraged the country’s authorities to improve the
situation of religious minorities. The exercise of religious freedom,
the legal status of churches, including property issues, and the
right to religious education were on the agenda.

The five-member delegation representing the World Council of Churches
(WCC) and the Conference of European Churches (CEC) visited the
Muslim-majority Republic of Turkey on 23-27 November.

In Istanbul, the delegation met with the Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew, with Archbishop Aram Atesian from the Armenian
Patriarchate, and with representatives of the Syrian Orthodox
community. It also met representatives of the Jewish community. In
Ankara, the country’s capital city, the delegation met members of
the Syrian Orthodox Mor Gabriel Monastery led by their Archbishop
Mor Timotheos Samuel Aktas.

Amongst the difficulties faced by churches in Turkey are the
non-recognition of the "ecumenical status" of the Ecumenical Patriarch
and of his patriarchate, as well as the obstacles to the re-opening of
the Theological School of Halki (Heybeliada). The Armenian Patriarchate
reports restrictions to property rights involving several church,
school and hospital buildings, as well as neglect and destruction
of religious and cultural heritage. The Syrian Orthodox community
deplores the dispute over the Mor Gabriel Monastery.

According to the US State Department’s Annual Report on International
Religious Freedom, there is "substantial abuse of religious freedom
in Turkey". The Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights has
pointed to shortcomings regarding minorities’ cultural and property
rights. And a report by the Turkish Economic and Social Studies
Foundation has acknowledged that the country is "failing on minority
property rights".

The delegation raised the churches’ concerns in meetings with
Vice-Prime Minister Bulent Arınc; with officials of the Presidency of
Religious Affairs, which is the country’s highest Islamic authority;
and with the president of the National Education, Culture, Youth and
Sport Committee of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey.

The Turkish authorities expressed their commitment to enabling all
religious minorities in the country to fully exercise their right to
freedom of religion. Another issue addressed at those meetings was
the role churches and international ecumenical organizations can play
to actively assist the country’s integration into the European Union.

The same issue featured in a meeting at the headquarters of the
daily newspaper Zaman, where the delegation discussed with Turkish
journalists the role of the media with regard to religious minorities.

Members of the ecumenical delegation were: Rev. Kjell Magne Bondevik,
moderator of the WCC Commission of Churches on International Affairs;
Rev. Dr Konrad Raiser, former WCC general secretary; Rev. Lena Kumlin,
legal adviser on EU affairs to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of
Finland; Rev. Rudiger Noll, CEC associate general secretary; and
Christina Papazoglou, WCC programme executive for Human Rights.

WCC member churches in Turkey:
ns/europe/turkey.html

Conference of European Churches:

Commission of Churches on International Affairs:

WCC programme work on human rights:

Additional information: Juan Michel,+41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363
[email protected]

The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith,
witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical
fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together
349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing
more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works
cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary
is Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia, from the Methodist Church in Kenya.

www.oikoumene.org/en/member-churches/regio
www.ceceurope.org
www.oikoumene.org/?id=3610
www.oikoumene.org/?id=3111

Priest Of Assyrian Church Threatened In Turkey

PRIEST OF ASSYRIAN CHURCH THREATENED IN TURKEY

Armenian Week
December 10, 2009

Following a referendum banning mosque minarets in Switzerland, three
unidentified persons visited the 1,750-year-old Assyrian/Syriac Church
of Virgin Mary in Diyarbakir, Turkey, and allegedly threatened the
priest, Yusuf Akbulut, by saying, "Switzerland is banning minarets
and we will ban bell towers to you. You will demolish the bell tower
by next Friday."

Akbulut informed the police of the threat to demolish the bell towers.

He is now receiving protection by the police, and made the following
statement:

"Last Friday, i.e. on the 4th of this month [December], my church and
I were threatened. Three persons in their forties visited the church
at 14:00 hours last Friday. They knocked on the door of my house
inside the church and asked me to come outside. In the courtyard of
the church, these three persons that I do not know asked me if the
church had a bell tower. When I told them that it did, they said,
"You will demolish this bell tower. Switzerland is banning minarets
and we will ban bell towers to you. You will demolish this bell tower
by next Friday." When I told them that this was a historic church with
an ancient bell tower and that the foundations (directorate) and the
state would react, they said for the second time, "Go and complain
to whoever you want. This bell tower will not remain here. We will
take the necessary action," and left. Then I filed a complaint to the
police. Now the police are seeking the three persons who threatened
me by checking the camera records."

Noting that he would not destroy the 600-year-old church bell in any
way, Akbulut stated that the minaret ban in Switzerland had nothing to
do with him, and added: "We, the Syriacs, have been living in these
territories for 6-7,000 years. We have a deep-rooted history. Who
can dare demolish this bell tower by asserting the minaret ban in
Switzerland as a pretext? We do not approve of the minaret ban.

Switzerland should let them construct minarets in mosques. Everyone
has the right to worship freely. We all pray to God."

Noting that five families resided in the church, and around 10 other
Christian families were in the city center of Diyarbakir, Akbulut said,
"As the Syriac community, for centuries we led a peaceful life with
the other people residing on these territories. We never did any harm
to anyone. It is very wrong to hold us accountable for the minaret
ban in Switzerland."

Ukraine’s Leading TV Channel Says Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian Territor

UKRAINE’S LEADING TV CHANNEL SAYS NAGORNO-KARABAKH ARMENIAN TERRITORY

Panorama.am
18:23 07/12/2009

Azerbaijan is gravely concerned over a report Ukraine’s leading Inter
television broadcasted about Nagorno-Karabakh in a weekly program on
Sunday, nearly all Azerbaijani media evidence this.

The leader of the Azerbaijani Diaspora in Crimea Rahim Humbatov told
APA that one of Ukraine’s leading TV channels aired a report about
Nagorno-Karabakh, saying Karabakh is Armenian territory.

According to Humbatov, it’s of grave concern Shushi was spoken about
as an Armenian town. Unfortunately, the Ukrainian people have been
misinformed, he highlighted.

Panorama.am recalls that several days ago Azerbaijan raised a wave of
protest over a report Euronews issued about Nagorno-Karabakh. Euronews
approach contradicts to Azerbaijan’s interests, they said.