BAKU: Father of captive in Armenia complains re absence of news

news.az, Azerbaijan
Jan 5 2010

Father of Azerbaijani captive in Armenia complains about absence of news
Tue 05 January 2010 | 11:15 GMT Text size:

Rafik Hasanov There has not been any news from Azerbaijani serviceman
Rafik Hasanov who was captured by Armenians on 8 October 2008 in the
past few months.

According to captive’s father Rahman Hasanov, he has no information
about his son.

The exchange of letters between the captives and their relatives is
conducted by representatives of the International Committee of the Red
Cross that is also conducting monitoring of their detainment.

Another soldier, Anar Hajiyev, is also held captive in Armenia.

1 news.az

President Serzh Sargsyan Attends Opening Ceremony Of Newly Reconstru

PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN ATTENDS OPENING CEREMONY OF NEWLY RECONSTRUCTED MEDICAL CENTER IN HRAZDAN

Panorama.am
14:35 29/12/2009

President Serzh Sargsyan attended today the opening ceremony of
the newly reconstructed medical center in Hrazdan, Kotayk marz,
President’s press office reported.

The medical center has been modernized under the "Modernization of
the healthcare system of Armenia" credit program.

"Hrazdan Medical Center" CJSC includes the hospital of the city,
the policlinic and the maternity hospital. The Medical College of
Hrazdan is also going to be moved here.

This is the first hospital in the region supplied with the main medical
equipments. The modernization of the medical center derives from the
strategy of optimization of the healthcare system aimed at improving
the effectiveness and quality of the medical institutions.

A Year Of President For Life And Bird Poop

A YEAR OF PRESIDENT FOR LIFE AND BIRD POOP
Matthew Collin

Moscow Times
Dec 28 2009
Russia

In the South Caucasus, another uncertain new year beckons. Although
2009 wasn’t scarred by another senseless war, it wasn’t a year to
confound the pessimists either.

One of the region’s few stories in 2009 that made international
headlines was widely assessed as positive: the potential rapprochement
of old foes Armenia and Turkey after decades of enmity caused by the
mass killings of Armenians in the early 20th century.

But while Armenians argued among themselves about whether establishing
diplomatic relations and opening their border with Turkey was such a
good idea, their neighbors in Azerbaijan appeared to be completely
relaxed about offering their strongman leader, Ilham Aliyev,
the opportunity to become president for life. Unsurprisingly,
the referendum on the issue gave Aliyev the right to choose how
many times he will run for president. Not long afterward, in the
authorities’ latest move against independent media in the country,
two young activists who had been using the Internet to build support
for pro-democracy movements were imprisoned for "hooliganism" after
a highly dubious trial.

The energy-rich Azeri regime appeared to be genuinely bemused by the
widespread global condemnation of the prosecution and the subsequent
glorification of the jailed activists as noble champions of free
speech. And somehow, Tony Blair, the former British prime minister
and a self-appointed "democracy promoter," omitted the mention
of the country’s civil rights violations when he made a speech in
Azerbaijan — reportedly for a $100,000 honorarium — on behalf of
a chemical company.

In Georgia, the opposition staged an all-out attempt to oust President
Mikheil Saakashvili, blockading the parliament and his flashy new
presidential palace for several months with imitation prison cells.

But the opposition leaders simply couldn’t convince the politically
exhausted Georgian people to join them on the streets in large
numbers. The opposition’s challenge ended in debilitating failure.

After Saakashvili deftly outplayed them with a hands-off approach,
their protests simply shriveled up.

Nevertheless, despite seeing off his challengers at home, it wasn’t
exactly a triumphant year for Saakashvili. Russian troops remained at
their positions within swift striking distance of Tbilisi, in violation
of a cease-fire agreement that ended the Georgia-Russia war in 2008,
while a European Union-commissioned investigation accused both the
Saakashvili government and the Kremlin of violating international
law during the conflict. Meanwhile, a report from Transparency
International suggested that the media in Georgia is now less free than
before the Rose Revolution that swept Saakashvili to power, despite six
years of what the government has hailed as "democratic transformation."

In the Caucasus, truth is often stranger than fiction. Nauru, a
minuscule Pacific island, became the fourth country to recognize
the Russian-sponsored rebel regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
as independent states. Nauru once made money by selling phosphates
derived from guano, the bird excrement that coats its 21 square
kilometers of territory. But when that resource ran out, destitution
beckoned. The Nauruan regime reportedly decided to recognize the two
Caucasus enclaves after demanding $50 million of aid from Moscow. It
was described as "guano diplomacy," but in a region characterized
by opaque maneuvering and conspiracy theories, this time at least,
everyone’s motives were clear.

BAKU: Oil And Gas Are Most Reliable Allies For Azerbaijan, Russian P

OIL AND GAS ARE MOST RELIABLE ALLIES FOR AZERBAIJAN, RUSSIAN POLITICAL SCIENTIST

news.az
Dec 28 2009
Azerbaijan

Alexander Karavayev News.Az interviews Alexander Karavayev, Russian
political scientist, head of the political forecasting service at
the Centre for Post-Soviet Studies.

Baku has condemned the decision by the US congress to allocate $8
mln to Nagorno Karabakh as a separate assistance beyond assistance
to Azerbaijan and Armenia. What can you say about this step of
the country whose leadership constantly states the support of the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and non-recognition of Nagorno
Karabakh as an independent formation?

The politicians of the global superpower that presents itself as a kind
of a geopolitical "Sun" that gives "light" to all countries without
exception view it as a usual action. Congressmen really believe that
their funds are used for civil social development and strengthen the
US influence.

Another moment is that we should not forget the peculiarity of the
US political system. It is quite pluralistic on the level of the
Congress and often there emerge a situation when the law-making body
undertakes decisions contrary to the policy of the president and the
US Department of State. To a definite extent this fact reflects the
democratic achievements of the US system. External lobbyists are also
making use of it. Therefore, the resolutions in Armenia’s favor are
constantly proposed and in the result we can observe decisions about
trenches to Karabakh almost every year, the Congress work group on
Armenian issues has attained an anti-Azerbaijani resolutions on the
Baku-Tbilisi-Kars project; Armenian NGOs also get larger financing
via USAID as compared to Azerbaijan.

Some 400 different NGOs financed from external subsidies and grants
like the ones allocated by the Congress are functioning in Armenia.

Usually, the organizations functioning in legal sphere are perceived
as conductors of external interests. This issue becomes urgent in the
mass media of the CIS countries especially before elections. Armenian
NGOs also had an active influence on the atmosphere of the recent
presidential elections. But the overall situation with Armenian public
organizations is different from the neighbor states- thanks to the
contacts with diaspora, they conduct the interests of "Armenians" in
the world and only after that do they cover their influence on Armenia.

Such influence technologies are not kept secret. The soft power
methods should be used to promote interests. The situation is gradually
changing. The meetings of Azerbaijani delegations with the US experts
and congressmen have become regular and the Center of Strategic Studies
under the Azerbaijani president makes a significant contribution to
this work. But this work will take more than a year.

Armenians are skillfully taking advantage of lobbying and a specific
shortsightedness of the giant as by taking such a decision an ordinary
congressman even not motivated by the Armenian propaganda considers
that he is making this decision to raise US influence in the region
(the funds are allocated for construction of schools, hospitals.

Allocation of grants for NGOs and so on) and he considers that money
are spent on people no matter who controls the region. How can the
idea be changed? The most obvious method is to present arguments. You
should set the question the following way- as you spend much on the
Armenian community of Karabakh, why not assist to the Azerbaijani
community expelled from their homeland? You should especially train
experts to expand the lectures at the US universities. By the way,
this can be applied not only to the United States. Azerbaijani position
will be understood by the impartial politicians of many countries.

Do you consider that Azerbaijan may incline more to Moscow and its
mediation in Karabakh settlement after this step by Washington?

Such an idea in Baku is profitable if we judge from the position of
the Russian expert community. But we also need to disperse definite
illusions connected with such judgments. The disappointment caused
by initial optimism of hopes is not the best motive for building
long-term ally relations while Russia needs a smart ally who defines
its positions without radical changes. The "inclination" towards Moscow
will not raise effectiveness of Russia’s mediation for Azerbaijan. It
is an illusion. I understand the factors and the way it strengthened
in the late 90’s (under the analogy of Russia’s influence on Armenia)
but it is unclear why it is today so strong in Azerbaijan.

Let’s take several examples.

Let’s take Moldova and separatist conflict in Transdniestria. It
implies not the military escalation but the confrontation of ruling
elites that have their joint business, including a gas company, and
we also know how the profits from export of metallurgic production of
Transdniestria were used. In other words, the situation is different as
compared with the Karabakh conflict. Ex-president Voronin positioned
himself as a leader conducting a pro-Russian geopolitical course
in the second term of his geopolitical course. In addition, Russia
has no especially sensitive issues of security either in Moldova or
Transdniestria. Has the situation been settled in Moldova’s favor
during Voronin’s reign?

Let’s now take Armenia. The argument of Russian support to Yerevan –
the Russian base played a great role for Azerbaijani community and
the role of Russian investments is hiding Armenia’s expansion in
Azerbaijan. This is the way it seems to be.

But in fact the situation is different. Armenia used Russian security
and geopolitical interests to cover its own interests. Any other
superpower could be in Russia’s place. For example, the United States.

They have interests in Azerbaijan and probably they could gain control
over Armenian enterprises. This situation is theoretically possible.

But then we cannot expect rapid changes in Azerbaijan’s favor. It is
impossible to settle the conflict without deeper interference with
the internal political life of one of the countries in the current
situation of independence of Armenia and Azerbaijan. This script
requires full democratic and forcefully repressive control over the
communities of the two states and the full control over elites. Only
the Soviet Union could execute it in the South Caucasus in the 20th
century. At that time Armenians and Azerbaijanis though having their
national demands coexisted peacefully without killing each other. Here
we can recall the experience of the Russian empire and then there came
a brief moment of democratic South Caucasus republic. It all occurred
as an implication of the fact of the imperialistic obedience or the
disaster of its collapse. Such a situation will not repeat in the
nearest future. One should not have illusions about integration of
Armenia and Azerbaijan in the result of EU’s expansion to the East
and creation of a single supranational regulation center, this is
not the creation of a single state built on the principles of justice
and respect to the territorial integrity of its inseparable parts.

Unlike Russia, the United States are far from the South Caucasus and
its problems. Is it correct to speak about the effective participation
of this country in mediation efforts to settle our conflicts,
especially the Nagorno Karabakh issue?

The United States did not participate at the initial stage in the
moment of suspension of war. However, it was possible to speak of
the definite positive motives of Washington’s influence. The role of
the United States in the South Caucasus was growing and taking the
positions freed after the USSR collapse and weakening of Communist
Moscow’s center. It is today impossible to get rid of the US factor
though it is hard to say whether this influence is effective or no.

I would like to note once again that the conjuncture political steps
of the superpowers do not deserve so much attention. Oil and gas are
rather the best allies for Azerbaijan compared to superpowers and
neighbors. Therefore, to settle the Karabakh conflict the country
should stake on the socioeconomic development raising trust to
Azerbaijan and Azerbaijanis, therefore, traditional political pressure
and the work with the conjuncture allies is applied to this.

Russia Seen Needing System-Wide Policy On Caucasus

RUSSIA SEEN NEEDING SYSTEM-WIDE POLICY ON CAUCASUS

Gazeta.ru
Dec 23 2009
Russia

[Commentary by Sergey Markedonov, associate professor of the Russian
State Humanitarian University, under the rubric "Commentaries":
"The Year of Three Exacerbations"]

Russia needs a system-wide policy in the Caucasus. Without it nothing
will work out either inside the country – in the North Caucasus
republics, or outside it – in relations with the former republics of
the Soviet Transcaucasus.

In 2009 the Greater Caucasus has not been shaken by such high-profile
events as the "five-day war." But many tendencies and processes of
the outgoing year are no less important in terms of their impact on
the entire architecture of Caucasus geopolitics.

Independence "Behind a Line of Friendly Bayonets"

In 2009 the formation of the new order in a problematic region
of Eurasia taken separately continued. The reinforcement of the
independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia occurred. Naturally it
is a matter of independence from Georgia "behind a line of friendly
bayonets" of Russia. However, be that as it may, Abkhazia held
its first presidential election in conditions where direct danger
from Tbilisi did not threaten Sukhumi for the first time since the
dissolution of the Soviet Union. There was no military-police fist
nor any "government in exile" in Kodori. But then there were the
friendly "recommendations" of the Russian ambassador on who should
be the future president, as well as a showing of the Russian Navy
boats Sokol and Mangust on the eve of election day.

The "merging" of small South Ossetia with big Russia in conditions
where the number of incidents from the Georgian side declined by an
order also continued. And the nature of the incidents changed. Today
the prospects of their escalating into a storm of Tskhinvali or even
a Tliakan operation (that took place in 2004) are practically nil. In
that way what is gradually becoming paramount are not problems of
the "Georgian threat," but the quality of the independence acquired,
the level of republic management, and Russia’s role as a guarantor
of security and internal political development.

There are fewer and fewer questions for Tbilisi, but then questions are
appearing for Moscow. How tolerant of the economic "independence" of
the South Ossetian authorities will the Kremlin be? Will Moscow be able
to respect those elements of democracy that were formed in Abkhazia,
and is it willing to listen to the opinion of the opposition? It
appears that the Kremlin still has not altogether realized that the
agenda in the two former Georgian autonomies differs significantly from
the one that existed a year or two ago. The statements and speeches
of various levels of officials devoted to the Abkhazian and Ossetian
problem area prompt us to that conclusion. Two topics continue to
dominate in them – ensuring Russian interests in the Caucasus, and
in addition an appeal to Georgian revanchism.

The "Impulses" for Recognition

In the outgoing year, only two states were added to the list of
countries recognizing the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia –
Venezuela and Nauru. At the same time, Nicaragua decided to establish
diplomatic relations with Abkhazia a year after the signing of
two presidential decrees on recognition. One should note that this
modest result was achieved not thanks to cunning diplomatic moves,
but because the Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez called Abkhazian and
Ossetian independence "imparting impulses." In one case the "impulse"
cost the Russian side $2 billion US, and in the other it was a matter
of only 50 million. At the same time, the non-economic price of these
recognitions is not too high. And in this case it is by no means the
point that Venezuela and Nauru are "second class" countries. It is
simply that the domestic situation in Latin American countries is
so changeable that only a naive optimist can hope to preserve the
current position in the medium term.

The history of this region has seen the conversion of partisans into
presidents, and popular presidents – into political outcasts. The
foreign policy of the changing countries also changed 180 degrees
with this conversion. But this is not the first year that Nauru
has been famous for converting the process of recognition into a
profitable business (the elite of this small island country already
changed their attitude towards the recognition of Taiwan and the PRC,
also basing it on the principle of financial "impulses"). Where is
the guarantee that tomorrow Nauru, after obtaining from Georgia (or
perhaps from the United States or Australia) 60 million or even 100
million, will not change its decision?

But no matter what pitfalls might accompany the process of recognition
of the two former Georgian autonomies, international legitimization
of the new Caucasian realities is important in itself.

No matter how events develop in the future, the precedents of foreign
recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia (even
ones that are generously paid for) objectively distance them from
Georgia.

The format of the Geneva consultations on the situation in the
South Caucasus also works towards the legitimization of Georgia’s
two former autonomies. No matter how much American and European
politicians say that they will never sign off on the recognition of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the participation of the delegations of
these republics in the work of the international conference promotes
their at least partial perception as separate political entities.

The "Geopolitical Capitalization" of Armenia

In 2009, to use the language of economists, there has been a build-up
in the "geopolitical capitalization" of Armenia. This republic
over the course of the entire year formed fundamental questions for
the regional agenda. It is specifically in the outgoing year that
Armenia for the first time since acquiring independence decided to
sign legally binding documents with Turkey.

The two protocols on normalizing relations with Ankara became not
simply a gigantic step for the two neighbouring countries. They
created the prerequisites for serious transformations throughout the
entire region.

Among them are Georgia’s loss of the status of a country of exclusive
transit, the weakening of the strategic Baku-Ankara axis, Turkey’s
changed role in the region (its departure from the role of the
United States’ younger brother and Azerbaijan’s older brother and
its establishment as an independent regional Caucasian power), and
the major diversification of Armenia’s foreign policy.

And although ratification of the protocols has dragged out and the
prospects of their final passage through parliament are not evident,
even now these documents have caused significant changes in the
South Caucasus.

Bearing in mind all the complexity for Turkey of reconciling with
Armenia, the leading world players (particularly the United States
and Russia) accelerated the peacemaking process on Nagornyy Karabakh
(in order to provide Ankara with some compensation for losing the role
of Baku’s geopolitical patron and an interested party in the conflict).

In the end in July 2009, there appeared a document that has
no less significance for the entire South Caucasus than the two
Armenian-Turkish protocols. I am referring to the so-called Updated
Madrid Principles (so named in honour of the OSCE Madrid summit
meeting in 2007). Unlike the "old principles," it was not three
diplomats taking the roles of the cochairmen of the Minsk Group of
the OSCE who signed the "updated" version, but the three presidents
heading the mediating countries. And for Russia and the United States,
the accelerated Karabakh peace process is the result not only of
the Caucasian interests of these states per se, but also of broader
geopolitical ones (and even personality factors).

The Russian Federation needs to show its Western partners that the
revisionism of the times of the "five-day war" is a situational
phenomenon and it will not be used for other spots on the territory
of the former Soviet Union. For the United States, Nagornyy Karabakh
is one of the numerous fields for the possible "reset" of relations
with Russia, as well as for testing the "new course" of American
foreign policy.

And although the "Updated Madrid Principles" text itself is an
unpolished document that has internal contradictions, it is important
because it establishes the framework of a future settlement of the
conflict. That means abandonment of the maximalist standards of the
parties and offering in veiled form of the formula "peace and the
status of Karabakh in exchange for territories." However, it may take
a considerable amount of time to reconcile the details (and above all,
possible losses to the images of the two presidents).

Between "Uzbekistanization" and "Dynamic Equilibrium"

In the meantime, the year 2009 proved to be memorable not only on the
geopolitical level. The internal development of all the Caucasian
states (including Russia too) was marked in the outgoing year by
many important events. In Azerbaijan yet another step towards the
establishment of the regime of the personal power of the incumbent
president occurred. The Baku political analyst Arif Yunusov [as
transliterated] called this "Uzbekistanization." On 18 March 2009,
a constitutional referendum on 41 amendments to 29 articles of
the fundamental law was held in the largest republic of the South
Caucasus. But the most important in this series was the lifting of
restrictions on the number of presidential terms in office permitted
for one person.

In addition to the amendment prolonging the term in office of the
head of state, such an important and dangerous innovation as the
possible postponement of the election of the president and parliament
in the event of military actions was introduced into Azerbaijan’s
constitution.

In Georgia throughout all of 2009, the opposition tried to overthrow
President Mikheil Saakashvili, whom they hated. Their actions reached
three peaks during the year (9 April, 26 May, and 7 November). But
the opponents of the incumbent president of Georgia were unable
to completely turn the situation in their favour. Ultimately, by
the end of the year, a situation of dynamic equilibrium had become
established in Georgia. The government cannot destroy the opposition,
nor the opposition – the government.

The opposition is showing its strong protest potential and ability to
build it up, but even so a clear shortage of new people and new ideas
is evident in its ranks. Moreover, the oppositionists are waging the
fight on two fronts – against Saakashvili, and against one another.

Allow me to note that the mutual accusations, intrigues, and plots
within the ranks of the government’s opponents are no less serious
than in interrelations between the president and the opposition.

Not Everything Is Peaceful in the North Caucasus

A special point in the 2009 Caucasus agenda is the situation in the
Russian North Caucasus. The outgoing year in the Caucasus was for
Russia a year of three "exacerbations."

The first was the increased political violence noted even by
officials. In 2009 both well-known politicians and administrators,
and human rights activists, heads of municipal formations, soldiers
and security officers, and civilians were the "targets." At the same
time, North Caucasian political violence is difficult to measure
with one ruler. On the one hand, it is the stepped-up activity by the
radical Islamist underground, but on the other, it is the increased
number of showdowns between clans (which sometimes are "concealed" as
"Wahhabism"). But no matter how varied the reasons for one particular
murder or another are, the result is the same. The level of political
culture is falling catastrophically, and so of all the possible
formulas, "If the person is gone, the problems are gone" seems the
most effective. Given the Federal Centre’s effective absence of a
public policy and strategy, this formula is not difficult to realize.

The second exacerbation deals with nationalist sentiments. It would
seem that by the start of the 2000s, different latent interethnic
confrontations had become a matter of history. But in 2009 we were
witnesses to a whole series of nationalist actions (the Balkar mass
actions in the KBR [Kabardino-Balkar Republic] and Moscow, the Cherkess
actions in the KChR [Karachayevo-Cherkess Republic], and tension in
relations between Lezgins and Azeris in Southern Dagestan).

And unlike the 1990s, it is not left over from Soviet history. It is a
response to present events (the realization of municipal reforms, land
issues, and corruption based on personnel preferences for "insiders").

In some republics the elites can find nothing better to do than try
to extinguish the Islamist fire with ethnic nationalism. Allow me to
mention that an appeal to Russia and Russian political-legal space
is typical (at least in the present stage) of nationalist actions
(unlike the Islamist struggle). But there is no reason for complacency,
since the lack of a space for dialogue around these trends and actions
does not permit them to be absorbed in a civilized manner, but then
it does promote the appearance of radical sentiments.

And finally, the third "exacerbation" deals with the behaviour of
the Russian supreme power.

It was specifically this year that through President Medvedev,
the Kremlin declared the North Caucasus a crucial domestic policy
problem of the country. For the first time in the last 10 years or
so, at the "very top," they began to speak of this region not as a
resolved problem but as an acute challenge to the security of the
entire country.

In the meantime, the quality of such statements leaves something to be
desired. In places a sober analysis gives way to primitive propaganda
and "glossing over" of reality.

But just before the curtain falls on the outgoing year, an event that
inspires cautious optimism has occurred in Russian North Caucasus
policy. On 17 December the leaders of North Ossetia and Ingushetia
signed an agreement where for the first time in the post-Soviet
period, they found a compromise formula for resolving the conflict
over Prigorodnyy Rayon (abandonment of territorial claims in exchange
for returning the forced resettlers to their places of residence). In
that way for the first time during the conflict, the leaders of the two
neighbouring republics abandoned the principle of "ethnic ownership
of land." But a great deal more must be done for this compromise
to become historic and presented as a positive example for all the
Caucasus. But the most important thing is that it must be understood
that without a system-wide policy in the Greater Caucasus, nothing
will work out for Russia either within the country – in Chechnya,
Dagestan, or North Ossetia, or outside it – in relations with Armenia,
the two, in part recognized republics, Georgia, or Azerbaijan.

Tigran Sargsyan: Armenia’s Banking System Was Best Prepared For Cris

TIGRAN SARGSYAN: ARMENIA’S BANKING SYSTEM WAS BEST PREPARED FOR CRISIS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
25.12.2009 17:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s banking system was best prepared for the
crisis, according to RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan. "Armenia is the
only country which paid no single penny to commercial banks in order
to receive assistance," he told a resulting news conference in Yerevan.

, At that, he noted that citizens’ savings in 2009 increased by 30%.

"That testifies to increased trust in the banking system," the Prime
Minister added.

The phenomenon, according to him, is characteristic of all countries
where citizens save means in anticipation of the worst outcome. Hence
positive changes will help attract more investments in the banking
system and create new workplaces, promoting economic growth, Armenian
Premier said. In that connection he stressed the importance of
providing proper information to public.

Turkey And Azerbaijan Agree To Remove Visa Requirements

TURKEY AND AZERBAIJAN AGREE TO REMOVE VISA REQUIREMENTS

Tert.am
11:56 ~U 25.12.09

Azerbaijani Minister of Foreign Affairs Elmar Mammadyarov arrived in
the Turkish capital of Ankara on Thursday. He will meet with Turkish
President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan today,
reports Turkish news agency Anadolu Ajansi.

Mammadyarov will also have a separate meeting with Turkey’s Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu where they will sign a protocol on visa
exemption for their respective country’s citizens travelling between
the two countries.

Larisa Alaverdyan: Armenians Are Just Now Starting To Realize The Es

LARISA ALAVERDYAN: ARMENIANS ARE JUST NOW STARTING TO REALIZE THE ESSENCE OF PROTOCOLS

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.12.2009 18:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Press secretary of Heritage parliamentary faction
Larisa Alaverdyan highly appreciates her party’s firm stance on
Armenian-Turkish Protocols.

As she said today during a news conference, Heritage is the only
political force which proposed keynote theses to parliament,
immediately following the statement on starting Armenian-Turkish
normalization process.

"Any country wishes to maintain friendly ties with neighbors. The
question is what it will cost them," Alaverdyuan said.

At that, she noted that the party would continue its activities in
that direction notwithstanding the outcome.

"The information campaign will help both Diaspora and Armenian society
to realize perils contained in the Protocols," she stressed.

De Facto Magazine Announces Gagik Tsarukyan Man Of The Year

DE FACTO MAGAZINE ANNOUNCES GAGIK TSARUKYAN MAN OF THE YEAR

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
21.12.2009 16:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Prosperous Armenia party leader, head of National
Olympic Committee Gagik Tsarukyan accepted public apologies from
Armenian Football Federation President Ruben Hayrapetyan, Prosperous
Armenia Party member Naira Zohrabyan said.

"We’re satisfied with Hayrapetyan’s reply," she told Monday a news
conference, during which editor-in-chief of De Facto magazine,
Menua Harutyunyan announced Gagik Tsarukyan the man of the year,
charactering him as the only man successful in all of his undertakings.

Protocols’ Heated Discussions Are Expected: A. Rustamyan

PROTOCOLS’ HEATED DISCUSSIONS ARE EXPECTED: A. RUSTAMYAN

news.am
Dec 21 2009
Armenia

Heated discussions are expected in the RA NA Committee on Foreign
Relations after the Armenia-Turkey Protocols introduction to the
Parliament, Chairman of RA NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations,
ARFD member Armen Rustamyan stated.

"We are awaiting the Protocols to be introduced to the Parliament by RA
President, thereafter the discussions will be more specific. We have
sufficient materials, the committee will consider them and arrive at
conclusion. I hesitate to predict the results, however impassioned
debates are undoubtedly impending," Rustamyan outlined. He also
added that ARFD will arrange the recognition of the Protocols by RA
Constitutional Court (CC) partially anti-constitutional.

"It will be a formidable alert both for Turks and international
mediators that we will not ratify the Protocols as they go,"
Rustamyan said.

January 12, 2010 — the day of Armenia-Turkey Protocols’ discussion
by RA CC, ARFD will hold a rally, he underlined not ruling out that
it might occur ever earlier.