RA President Visits Border Military Units

RA PRESIDENT VISITS BORDER MILITARY UNITS

Noyan Tapan
Oct 25 2006

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 25, NOYAN TAPAN. On October 23-24, RA President,
Commander-in-Chief of RA Armed Forces, Robert Kocharian visited
a number of border military units. The goal of the visit was to
get familiarized with technical equipment and fighting trim of
military units on the spot. As Noyan Tapan was informed from RA
President’s Press Office, R.Kocharian visited military training rooms,
followed the process of trainings, spoke to officers and soldiers,
got acquainted with their living conditions. During the two-day visit
the Commander-in-Chief of RA Armed Forces had a possibility to closely
familiarize himself with the discipline level of a number of military
units, fighting, tactical and moral-psychological condition of officers
and soldiers, social conditions of officers and their families.

ANKARA: Turkish – French Economic Relations

TURKISH – FRENCH ECONOMIC RELATIONS

Turkish Press
Oct 25 2006

ANKARA – Turkey’s share in France’s overall exports was only 1.3
percent last year, said economy bureaucrats a day before the French
parliament debates a resolution that makes denial of the so-called
Armenian genocide allegations a crime.

According to economy bureaucrats, France had 5.2 percent share in
Turkey’s overall exports.

Turkey imported French products worth 5.8 billion USD last year,
while it earned 3.7 billion USD from its exports.

524 French companies are working in automotive, food, insurance,
banking, retail and fuel oil industries in Turkey.

French insurance firm "Groupama" bought 41 percent of Turkish "Basak
Emeklilik" (private retirement) last May.

On the other hand, Renault has a big automotive factory in Turkey.

Automobiles produced in Turkey are exported to European and
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries.

Turkish Ekonomi Bankasi (TEB) Mali Yatirimlar Corp. (Financial
Investments) signed a partnership agreement with BNP Paribas on
February 10, 2005. Thus, BNP Paribas had a share in TEB Yatirim
(investment), TEB Leasing, TEB Factoring, TEB Sigorta (insurance),
TEB Portfoy Yonetimi (portfolio management) and TEB NV.

-RETAIL INDUSTRY-

Meanwhile, French retail firm Carrefour cooperated with Sabanci
Holding in 1996, and has 470 markets in Turkey. CarrefourSA employs
7,500 people in Turkey.

Lafarge is another French company functioning in cement industry in
Turkey. It had a 350 million Euro turnover, and employed 1,500 people
in Turkey in 2005.

French Danone firm has investments in dairy products and potable
water industries in Turkey.

Elf and Total (oil companies), Sodexho Pass (catering), Citroen
and Peugeot (automotive), L’oreal (cosmetics) are the other French
companies investing in Turkey.

Wissen Und Wissen Wollen; Die Armeniendebatte Hat In Der Turkei Lang

WISSEN UND WISSEN WOLLEN; DIE ARMENIENDEBATTE HAT IN DER TURKEI LANGST BEGONNEN
Von Sibylle Thelen Noch wird um Begriffe gerungen

Stuttgarter Zeitung
19. Oktober 2006

Asya und Armanus, so heißen zwei junge Frauen, die sich Elif Shafak
fur ihren Roman "Der Bastard von Istanbul" ausgedacht hat, um die
turkisch-armenische Auseinandersetzung uber das schwere historische
Erbe von 1915 durchzuspielen. Die eine, Asya, ist Turkin, geboren in
Istanbul, aufgewachsen ohne Vater und mit dem Gefuhl, nicht zu wissen,
woher sie kommt. Die andere, Armanus, ist Amerikanerin, aber hin und
her gerissen zwischen den grundverschiedenen Welten ihrer Eltern,
dem american way of life ihrer Mutter und dem Diasporaleben ihres
armenischen Vaters. Armanus beschließt, in Istanbul nach den Spuren
ihrer Vorfahren zu suchen – und begegnet Asya. Die beiden nahern sich
an. Es ist kein einfacher, sondern ein turbulenter Prozess. Leid und
Vorurteil mussen uberwunden, Tabu und Sprachlosigkeit gebrochen werden,
auf beiden Seiten.

65 000-mal hat sich Shafaks Roman in der Turkei verkauft, seitdem
er vor einem halben Jahr erschienen ist. Ein Bestseller. Ein Buch,
das Herzen offnet. Die junge, erfolgreiche Autorin erzahlt vom
furchtbaren Schicksal, das Armanus’ Vorfahren widerfuhr, von Tod und
Vertreibung. Und sie erzahlt von den seelischen Schaden, die viele
Menschen damals davontrugen, um sie an Kinder und Kindeskinder
weiterzugeben. Bis heute tragen sie schwer an dem Erbe, jeder
auf seine Weise: die einen in der armenischen Diaspora, die ihre
Identitat vorrangig aus der Erinnerung an den Volkermord bezieht; die
anderen in der turkischen Mehrheitsgesellschaft, die schweigend mit
schwarzen Leerstellen weiterlebt. Diesen Lochern ruckt Shafak zu Leibe,
behutsam, beharrlich. So reift in ihren Protagonisten die Erkenntnis,
dass leugnen nichts bringt. Ein schmerzhafter Gewinn.

Das wunderbare Buch wird im nachsten Jahr auch auf Deutsch
erscheinen. Aufsehen hat es auch bei uns schon erregt: Der
ultranationalistische Anwaltsverein zerrte Shafak in Istanbul
vor Gericht. Einer der Charaktere in ihrem Roman beleidige das
Turkentum, ereiferte er sich. Das absurde Verfahren wurde am ersten
Verhandlungstag Ende September eingestellt. Der Roman indes verkauft
sich weiter mit Erfolg. Der notorisch klagenden Minderheit ist es
nicht gelungen, die Autorin mundtot zu machen. Wie gehabt schreibt
sie als Kolumnistin in der laizistischen Presse und in der liberalen
muslimischen Zeitung "Zaman" uber wichtige Themen dieser Zeit.

Wer will, kann in der Turkei heute viel erfahren uber Massenvertreibung
und -sterben im Osmanischen Reich. Die Auseinandersetzung hat begonnen:
in der Literatur, aber auch in der Wissenschaft, wo abseits vom
staatlichen Forschungsbetrieb kritische Fragen gestellt werden,
etwa am Istanbuler Institut Tesev. Vor einem Jahr fand in Istanbul
ein Kongress zum Tabuthema 1915 statt. Noch wird um die richtigen
Begriffe gerungen. Doch die Graueltaten rucken allmahlich ins
kollektive Bewusstsein.

Gerade weil sich so viel erfahren lasst, fallt umso unangenehmer auf,
wer alles gar nichts erfahren will. Um das festzustellen, kann man nach
Ankara schauen: Dort halt man eisern an einer Geschichtsschreibung
fest, die ohne Begriffe wie Schuld oder Bedauern auskommt. Man muss
aber auch nach Paris blicken; dort hat das Parlament ein Gesetz
gebilligt, nach dem all jene mit einem Jahr Gefangnis und 45 000 Euro
Bußgeld bestraft werden, die den Volkermord an den Armeniern von 1915
leugnen – so als habe in der Turkei nicht langst eine Debatte begonnen,
die sich an diesen Begriff heranpirscht.

In beiden Fallen wird Politik mit Geschichte gemacht: in der einen
Hauptstadt im Namen der Aufklarung, in der anderen Hauptstadt im
Namen der Nation. Aber der historischen Wahrheitsfindung dient keine
Version dieser staatlichen Vorgaben. Sie fordern auch keinen Dialog
und schon gar keine Annaherung. Im Gegenteil, sie sabotieren jede
Differenzierung, sie starken das Bedurfnis der Abgrenzung. Paris zahlt
es Ankara in gleicher Munze heim. Aber was ist gewonnen? Außer, dass
man sich fremd bleibt? Und außer, dass man weiterhin einen Grund hat,
sich fremd bleiben zu wollen?

Zwischen diese Fronten ist auch der turkische Schriftsteller
Orhan Pamuk geraten, der zufalligerweise am Tag der Pariser
Parlamentsentscheidung den Nobelpreis fur Literatur erhielt. Manche
sahen darin ein Zeichen. Denn Pamuks Satz "Man hat hier 30 000 Kurden
umgebracht. Und eine Million Armenier. Und fast niemand traut sich,
das zu erwahnen" ist um die Welt gegangen. Aber wofur hat dieser Satz
seither alles herhalten mussen? In der Turkei hat die offizielle Seite
dem Schriftsteller bis heute nicht diese Äußerung verziehen. Im Westen
gilt Pamuk seither als der große Wortfuhrer in Sachen 1915, so als
wurden sich nicht auch andere in der Turkei mit diesem schwierigen
Kapitel der Geschichte beschaftigen. Jede Seite verfahrt mit dem
Zitat so, wie es in ihr eigenes Weltbild passt. So lernt keiner dazu.

Das ist schade, denn an diesem Themenkomplex lasst sich so viel
lernen: wie muhsam es fur eine Gesellschaft ist, das dunkle Kapitel
ihrer Geschichte zu betrachten, und wie ungerecht es ist, von außen
immer nur mit den stereotypen Vorwurfen und Klischees auf ein Land
zu reagieren, das langst im Aufbruch ist. Wer will, kann wissen.

–Boundary_(ID_WcnYgWbh1CDw/HWstLXsfQ)–

UCLA: Azerbaijan Deserves U.S. Public Attention

AZERBAIJAN DESERVES U.S. PUBLIC ATTENTION
By Jennifer Mishory – Daily Bruin Reporter
[email protected]
Derek Liu/Daily Bruin

The UCLA Daily Bruin, CA
Oct 23 2006

UC Irvine doctorate student Javid Huseynov spoke Saturday at a
conference for Azerbaijani youth.

When I decided that the first Azerbaijani-American Youth Conference
would be an interesting column topic, it was with the assumption that
most readers, like me, would struggle to spell its name and locate
it on a map.

Azerbaijan, a secular Muslim country located between Iran and
Russia, is a former Soviet satellite with a history of conflict with
neighboring Armenia. The population is ethnically Azeri; there are
also about 20-30 million Azeris living in Iran, while the population
of Azerbaijan itself is only 8 million.

Seemingly unknown to the multitude of students streaming in to the
dining halls below, the conference drew about 50 attendees, most of
them Azeri, and took place in Covel Commons on Saturday.

The conference was put on by the Azerbaijani American Council of
California.

Javid Huseynov, a doctorate student at UC Irvine, said the purpose
of the event was to strengthen ties between Azeri communities from
a variety of countries now residing in the United States. There are
400,000 Azeris in the United States, with over 100,000 of those living
in California, he said.

With Russia trying to strengthen its hold on the region and
American-Iranian relations becoming more tense everyday, our relations
with their neighbor, Azerbaijan, will be important. It is a chance
to secure friendship and promote democratic values in a country that
has both ties to a large population of Iran and huge oil reserves.

The Azeri population in Iran has nationalistic tendencies, and recently
they have staged protests due to the economic situation in the region,
said journalist Abolfazl Bahadori.

Bahadori is a graphic designer who works part-time for Radio Liberty,
a U.S.-sponsored radio station based in Prague that broadcasts to
Azerbaijan. He reports specifically about the Azeri population in Iran.

There are no U.S.-backed radio stations broadcasting to Iran in
anything but Persian, perhaps missing an entire population that we
could be communicating with, he said.

With Azerbaijan’s key location and economic growth, I wondered why
there was not more interest in the conference outside of the Azeri
community. The only non-Azeris that I met were two Turkish USC students
hoping to demonstrate Turkish solidarity with Azerbaijan.

With few oil-rich democracies and fewer Muslim democracies, the U.S.

should show greater interest, and look to promote Azerbaijan’s
transition from Soviet satellite to a democratic nation.

International monitors of the 2005 election of President Ilham Aliyev
found the elections to be tainted by fraud.

Huseynov said because Azerbaijan only gained its independence fifteen
years ago, they are becoming democratic "in an evolutionary way."

Because of their membership in the Council of Europe and other ties
with the west, "it is inevitable that they fall under European norms"
and become increasingly democratic, he said.

The U.S. already has strong economic ties with Azerbaijan. Their
newest oil pipeline spans 1100 miles and is a U.S.-backed project,
said Deputy Counsel General Elman Abdullayev.

For the U.S., Azerbaijan represents an opportunity to encourage
democracy in a primarily Muslim and oil-rich nation, a chance that
the U.S. must not let slip away.

For the average UCLA student, the Azerbaijani conference represents
the multitude of opportunities that exist right under our noses,
or in this case, right above our dining halls.

Turkish Parliament Condemns France

Turkish Parliament Condemns France

Paris Link, France
Oct 20 2006

Fri, 20 Oct 2006 11:13:00
Gareth Cartman

The attempted passing of a law penalising the negation of the Armenian
genocide between 1915 and 1917 has resulted in a furious reaction
from the Turkish parliament. They backed a declaration condemning
the Assemblee Nationale and a media boycott will ensue.

A furious Turkish parliament has issued a declaration condemning the
Assemblee Nationale for having attempted to pass the law that would
criminalise anyone who denied the Armenian genocide took place. The
law, which was voted through parliament by a handful of Socialists –
most MPs abstained – has caused a rift in French-Turkish relations
that could result in the loss of potential money-spinning contracts.

Jacques Chirac attempted to heal the divide earlier in the week by
apologising to Prime Minister Erdogan, but the parliament has insisted
that some form of sanction should be applied to France until the law
is taken fully off the agenda.

Mystifyingly, Yashar Yakish, Turkey’s former foreign minister suggested
that Turkey deport 70,000 Armenians from Turkey as punishment for
France’s attempted passing of the negation law. He claimed that
Armenia should pay the price for France’s behaviour.

Approximately 500,000 Armenians live in France.

However, more immediate measure are being suggested in the media. The
Turkish television watchdog this week recommended that French
television programs and films should not be broadcast in Turkey.

French broadcasting accounts for about ten percent of television
output, while French films are relatively popular.

One of Turkey’s leading consumer groups urged customers to boycott
one French product per week, stating that it would publicise which
product is being boycotted each week.

Turkey denies that it committed genocide against the Armenians
between 1915 and 1917. According to Turkey, there were deaths, but
nowhere near the figure stated by historians – and the use of the word
genocide is exaggerated. They claim that as Armenians were evacuated,
then continued to fight – and that losses were equal on both sides.

France has claimed that acknowledgement of genocide is a pre-requisite
for Turkey’s entry into the EU, which is looking less likely by the
day after the Parliament’s attempt to force through this law coupled
with Turkey’s riposte.

The law, however, will not see the light of day. The Senate is
expected to defeat it, and if the law does make it through the Senate,
President Jacques Chirac is already known not to be favourable,
and will immediately annul it.

Giving the People credit

Giving the People credit
By Brian Self

Cyprus Observer, Cyprus
Oct 20 2006

20.10.2006

In a replay of what happened in June an allergy struck this week,
coinciding as then with a tangible shift in the seasons. At summer’s
start I hadn’t noticed the arrival of the cicadas but the first October
storm was unavoidable; the scent of wet tree bark, and at night cloud
banks over the Karpaz torn apart by lightning – a demented stage
setting for the arrival of Mozart’s ‘Queen of the Night’. That day
dusk came on with a deepening yellow light belonging to the deserts in
central Asia, where dust and the vast emptiness are palpable qualities
of an otherworldliness. Together with the alarmingly frequent power
cuts in Lapta; the small ants still coming out with sugar from the
dispenser, the scene might easily have tipped into autumnal melancholy,
but no, I recognised the symptoms of over exposure to news from certain
places in the world, in this case brought on by a Guardian article:
Aura of fear and death stalks Iraq.

The antidote – good news – was nowhere to be found, and what appeared
to be cause for optimism was rapidly taken away. British army Chief
Sir Richard Dannatt’s ‘blistering’ denunciation of Tony Blair’s foreign
policy and his call for withdrawing British troops out of Iraq ‘soon’
was welcomed by the Stop the War Coalition and large numbers of the
British public. But on the morning of Friday the 13th as the Guardian
wrote of "a political bombshell" and an outspoken intervention
"unprecedented in modern times" Sir Richard was talking on the BBC
downplaying and revising his remarks, stating that they were not
"substantially new or newsworthy." The encouragement felt by anti-war
campaigners was further dissipated when Tony Blair, who "was bound
to be infuriated by the interview" responded by saying he agreed with
"every word" the General said. The original interview with the Daily
Mail contained more outspoken views than the next day’s headlines
suggested; several times Dannatt wandered away from military matters
by saying that planning for the post-war phase in Iraq was "poor," and
that a moral and spiritual vacuum in Britain might help the "Islamist
threat" make "undue progress." Blair’s position is too weak to sack
a general whose understanding of the British public’s mood is far
better than his own. The pity is that valid issues were raised whose
urgency was immediately drowned in Whitehall and cross-party bickering
reminiscent of the Blair-Brown leadership squabbles. A conservative,
Christian General questioning his own Prime Minister’s faith based
certainties is an oddity deserving more serious attention.

Time on their side As news from Baghdad resembled aspects of a
Hollywood scripted horror film another British General in Afghanistan,
Lt. General David Richards was giving an interview to the New York
Times and also revising some of his more recent remarks to the
press. He was using the opportunity to vent his indignation over a
Guardian column by Simon Jenkins who wrote that he was baffled by
Richard’s naivete about the Taliban. "I am not naïve; he’s naïve,"
the General complained, insisting that the surge by the Taliban across
southern Afghanistan was not a popular uprising. Jenkins was generous
with some of his ‘facts’, but there was one salient point not commented
upon by Richards. The International Security Assistance Force he
commands numbers 31,000 troops; when the Russians left in 1989, their
defeated and humiliated divisions had 110,000 soldiers spread across
the entire country. "People do not want a return to the Taliban,"
said Richards, "but we need time to allow that aspiration to win."

The Taliban have time on their side but Richards does not have very
much left. Generals in Iraq and Afghanistan echo their political
masters in Washington and London in saying they cannot afford to fail,
but they are failing; the facts are there for all to see.

Poles growing further apart By Wednesday morning there was no escaping
from sanctions against North Korea, American Congressional cover-ups
and the latest estimate of Iraqi civilian casualties. Writing about
the meaning of 655,000 deaths the editor of the Lancet Richard Horton
ended on an idealistic note. "We need a new set of principles to govern
our diplomacy and military strategy – principles that are based on the
idea of human security and not national security, health and wellbeing
and not economic self-interest and territorial ambition. The best
hope we can have from our terrible misadventure in Iraq is that a
new political and social movement will grow to overturn the politics
of humiliation. We are one human family. Let’s act like it." Well,
the world acts otherwise, but this was the stuff I wanted to hear;
to become permanently jaundiced by an unending stream of reports of
killing, cruelty and the incompetence of those governing us is as
damaging to the spirit as misplaced optimism. And there were other
idealistic notes as well, in unexpected places. The growing carnage in
Iraq and Afghanistan and heightened tension with Iran has connected
parallels with a schism between Islam and the West which seems to be
deepening. Protests at the Pope’s remarks, at Jack Straw’s comments
on the wearing of veils, Turkey’s reaction to the French government’s
handling of the Armenian genocide issue are only the most publicised
incidents among many pointing to an increasing polarisation.

The Cordoba Initiative was founded in 2002 as a multi-faith
organisation whose objective is ‘to heal the relationship between the
Islamic World and America’. Its founder Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf was
interviewed last month by Foreign Policy magazine about the Pope’s
remarks, US foreign policy towards the Muslim world and Iran in
particular. On the subject of possible sanctions against Iran Rauf
said: "Imposing sanctions on Iraq had no impact on Saddam Hussein …

When you employ sanctions, you’re creating an artificial economic
depression. If there are sanctions against Iran, it will strengthen
the Iranians’ resolve." He went on to say: "People basically want
a few simple things in life: a decent meal, the ability to clothe
themselves, and a roof over their heads. And they want their pride.

To do that you have to engage with people on an equal basis." The
contrast between Rauf’s words and those of most European and American
politicians could not be greater.

Surprise!

On Thursday morning the permanent secretary of that most secretive and
discreet body, the Nobel Prize Committee, was asked by the BBC if he
would give a hint as to who would be awarded the Peace prize. "No,
I want to keep my job," he said, only revealing there were 191
nominations and prompted by the interviewer said yes, the winner would
be a surprise. It was in fact a well kept secret. When a journalist,
days before the announcement, handed the Nobel Institute’s head Geir
Lundestad a bookmaker’s list of 60 candidates, he remarked that it
was "a good list." Finland’s former president Martti Ahtisaari who
brokered a peace settlement in Indonesia’s Aceh province – widely
tipped as the favourite – was at the top. Two hours after the BBC
interview the Laureate’s name was announced; neither Muhammed Yunus
nor his Grameen Bank were on the bookmaker’s list.

Journalists at the prize giving ceremony, accustomed to statesmen
or humanitarian agencies as recipients were shocked; no financial
institution or banker had ever won the Peace prize.

Breaking the cycle of poverty In the Citation was the sentence:
"Every single individual on earth has both the potential and the right
to live a decent life." By creating a new kind of bank, giving small
loans to the poorest of the poor without collateral, Yunus, according
to the World Bank’s Bangladesh director has improved the lives of
half of the country’s 140 million population. Destitute widows,
abandoned wives, rickshaw drivers, sweepers, landless labourers and
beggars use loans from $12 to $80 to buy cows, chickens, bamboo for
crafting stools, or incense to sell in stalls. Beggars were encouraged
to take merchandise with them to sell from door to door, ribbons or
biscuits; some have stopped begging. But the true significance of
breaking out of poverty for people who live on less than $1 a day,
is the self-respect and status which comes from having all children of
school age in school, where all family members eat three meals a day,
have a sanitary toilet, a rainproof house, clean drinking water and
the ability to repay $8 a week on their loan.

At present the bank has 6.5 million borrowers, 97% of whom are women,
and the loan repayment rate is almost 99 percent.

Yunus has his detractors and critics. Interest rates are higher
than those charged by commercial banks, but loan agreements have
no provision for legal recovery in the event of default. Some right
wing American organisations view the Grameen Bank as far left and its
empowerment of women as an enemy to procreation and the family. But, as
the Citation speech said, "Microcredit has proved to be an important
liberating force in societies where women in particular have to
struggle against repressive social and economic conditions."

And, said the Nobel Committee, "development from below also serves
to advance democracy and human rights." It also serves to engender
pride, and the simple things of a decent life; something the barrel
of a gun never achieves.

–Boundary_(ID_G52b1VM4PvLZInfwF+l5Rg)- –

ANKARA: Is it Victor Hugo’s turn?

Is it Victor Hugo’s turn?

Sabah, Turkey
Oct 19-25 2006

RTUK (Radio and Television Supreme Council) has issued a statement:
"do not watch French movies or series; and do not listen to French
music," as a response to the Armenian bill approved by the French
parliament.

RTUK (Radio and Television Supreme Council) member ªaban Sevinc
stated: "The market share of French products in the media is 10%.

Most of these are movie, series, music and cartoons. Our radio
stations and television channels should not broadcast products
originating in France."

Ban on Victor Hugo and Jacques Brel with the recommendation of RTUK

The RTUK (Radio and Television Supreme Council) has advised against
broadcasting any French media products, including French music.

The RTUK (Radio and Television Supreme Council) has advised a ban on
French media products. The RTUK (Radio and Television Supreme
Council) recommended radios and televisions not broadcast any French
media products including French music. So, the works of Victor Hugo,
"Les Miserables" which is among the world’s classics and the song,
"Ne me quitte pas" by Jacques Brel will not be broadcasted.

–Boundary_(ID_ygtr6fhf6ThTo7LcNzcgj g)–

BAKU: Merzlyakov: Azerbaijani & Armenian Presidents’ meeting depends

Yuri Merzlyakov: Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents’ meeting depends
on Foreign ministers’ talks

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 19 2006

[ 19 Oct. 2006 20:23 ]

Azerbaijani Foreign minister Elmar Mammadyarov and Armenian Foreign
minister Vardan Oskanian’s next talks in the frame of Prague Process
will be held on October 24, Yuri Merzlyakov, Russian co-chair of
OSCE Minsk group and coordinator on Garabagh conflict told the APA
exclusively.

The talks will be the continuation of the meeting held on October 6
in Moscow, the ministers will discuss the uncoordinated parts of the
main principles of Nagorno Garabagh conflict regulations. Co-chairs
Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia), Bernard Fasie (France), Matthew Bryza (USA)
and Andrzey Kasprzyk, OCSE Personal Representative will have consulting
a day before the meeting. Merzlyakov said that the co-chairs did not
plan meetings with the ministers.

"Only one meeting will be held with the participation of ministers
and coordinators," he said. Answering the question "Will you discuss
the next meeting of the presidents in the meetings of ministers?" the
Russian diplomat said that they have already suggested it.

"But the meeting of presidents depends on ministers’ talks. If the
ministers need high level meeting, we will begin to the preparations,"
Merzlyakov said.

Merzlyakov also said that if the presidents agree to meet, we will
decide where and when to organize it.

"We do not know the president’s schedules. In a case of agreement we
will find an appropriate time and place," Merzlyakov stated.

Russian co-chair did not rule out the fact that the meeting of the
presidents can take place in the summit of CIS countries’ heads in
Minsk in late November. /APA/

Ursula Plasnik: EU-Turkey talks at a critical point

Ursula Plasnik: EU-Turkey talks at a critical point
19.10.2006 13:25

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 19 2006

Acting Foreign Minister of Austria Ursula Plasnik has declared that
Turkey’s entry talks with the European Union have entered a critical
phase. "EU-Turkey talks, which started a year ago, have reached
a critical point," she said Wednesday after the meeting with her
countrpart from Cyprus Georgios Lilikas.

"The European Union has clearly mentioned in the statement of 21
September, 2005 that it anticipates progress in the settlement of the
Cyprus issue on the part of Turkey," the Austrian Foreign Minister
said. She reminded also that Ankara has undertaken the obligation to
apply the custom union to all new EU member states. "Nevertheless,
it has not been the case up to now," Plasnik underlined. "The European
Union is patient, but it makes no discounts for separate partners.

Turkey should choose which direction it will be moving," she added.

ANKARA: Baykal’s Target Was A ar

BAYKAL’S TARGET WAS AðAR

Sabah, Turkey
Oct 18 2006

The chairman of CHP (Republican People’s Party) Deniz Baykal responded
harshly to the words of the chairman of DYP (True Path Party) Mehmet
Aðar saying: "Baykal does not understand me." He responded to Aðar
that: "You were not misunderstood; you have spoken wrongly just
like the Pope." Baykal added that the government does not give real
reaction to the Armenian genocide denial bill of France except a flash
in the pan. Baykal stated that political fight should be accompanied
by jurisdical fight.

–Boundary_(ID_LZEUV5g50/lNMZNdDuQGzg)–