Pres. Obama responds to community concerns with respect to Turkey

President Barack Obama responds to community concerns with respect to Turkey

armradio.am
05.12.2009 12:24

U.S. President Barack Obama responded to a joint letter sent by major
Armenian-American institutions, which outlined several concerns with
respect to "Turkey’s failures to uphold its international
obligations." The joint letter called on the Administration to "hold
the Turkish government accountable" with respect to Turkey’s public
commitments to establish normal relations without preconditions and
lift its blockade of Armenia.

In addition, the letter also emphasized that "true reconciliation will
occur only when Turkey comes to terms with its past" and urged
President Obama to affirm the Armenian Genocide. Moreover, the letter
conveyed the concerns shared by the Diaspora across the globe that "if
this normalization process is used as a smokescreen for not
reaffirming the Armenian Genocide and the U.S. record, it will be a
blow to the rapprochement process and the expectations of people of
goodwill everywhere."

Responding to the joint letter, President Obama reiterated America’s
position that "normalization between Armenia and Turkey should move
forward without preconditions and within a reasonable timeframe." This
position also reflects that of the governments of Switzerland, France,
Russia as well as the European Union.

In addition, President Obama also incorporated by reference the fact
of the Armenian Genocide stating that "my view of that history has not
changed. My interest remains the achievement of a full, frank, and
just acknowledgement of the facts." The President’s reference to his
historical view was used during his trip to Turkey earlier this year
as well as in his April 24, 2009 statement and includes multiple
usages of the term Armenian Genocide. Also, the Swiss, French,
Russian, and European parliaments have all affirmed the Armenian
Genocide.

The Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (East and West),
Armenian General Benevolent Union, and the Armenian Assembly of
America welcome President Obama’s strong commitment and interest in
helping the people of Armenia. We also stand united in our position
that U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide should not be held
hostage to normalization of relations.

President Obama’s upcoming meeting with Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan scheduled for December 7th in Washington, DC represents
an important opportunity to hold the Turkish government accountable
with respect to its international obligations to lift its blockade of
Armenia and normalize relations without preconditions, as well as come
to terms with its genocidal past.

Turkish PM Not To Meet U.S. Jewish Communities

TURKISH PM NOT TO MEET U.S. JEWISH COMMUNITIES

new.am
Dec 4 2009
Armenia

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan does not intend to meet
with American Jewish organizations in the course of his visit to U.S.,
Turkish Dunyabulteni website reports. He is the first Premier since
Turgut Ozal of all Turkish Prime Ministers and Presidents who will
not meet with Jewish community’s representatives in U.S.

Dec. 6-8, Erdogan will arrive in U.S., after which leaves for Mexico
for a 2-day visit to meet Mexican President Felipe Calderon.

In the course of his last meeting with Jewish organizations
this September, Erdogan accused Israel of preventing supplies of
humanitarian aid to Gaza. And this time, it is Turkey’s initiative
not to meet with Jewish community.

U.S. Jewish community resisted American Armenian lobby by preventing
anti-Turkish initiatives. Adhering to this policy, Jews wanted to
have Turkey’s support on the matter and actually succeeded. However,
with Armenia-Turkey reconciliation, U.S. Jewish lobby will be of no
more use.

NEWS.am recalls that Israeli-Turkish relations got strained in the end
of December 2008 when Israeli forces bombed Palestinian territories.

Erdogan-Peres dialogue in Davos became the peak, when Turkish PM
accused Israel of extermination of peaceful population and walked
out the G-20 Summit.

BAKU: Euro-Lie From Euronews

EURO-LIE FROM EURONEWS
Akper Hasanov

news.az
Dec 3 2009
Azerbaijan

Euronews logo Euronews TV’s recent report on Karabakh is at best a
piece of sloppy journalism, at worst a piece of deliberate propaganda.

The report, Winds of Change in Nagorno-Karabakh, first broadcast
by Euronews on 28 November, falls far short of the independence and
neutrality in reporting that has been the principle of Euronews since
it started broadcasting in January 1993. An ancient Azerbaijani land,
Nagorno-Karabakh, was presented as "an ancient Armenian land and the
heart of Armenia" and as "the stronghold of Christianity". This is
not only incorrect but a purely one-sided, pro-Armenian view.

The report says that Armenians made up 95% of the population of
Nagorno-Karabakh in Soviet times. This is another cynical lie. Imagine
the surprise of Euronews journalists when they learn that about
two-thirds of the population of Karabakh were Azerbaijanis according
to the census in the first half of the 19th century. As for Soviet
times, the Azerbaijani population of Nagorno-Karabakh was 23%.

Moreover, according to the recent Soviet census the population of
Shusha was 23,156 in 1989, of whom 21,234 (91.7%) were Azerbaijanis
and 1,620 (7%) were Armenians. Some 17,000 people lived in the city
of Shusha itself and 98% of them were Azerbaijanis. The report said
that Karabakh is the heart of Armenian culture, but said nothing of
the heart of Azerbaijani culture, the city of Shusha, home to the
Karabakh khanate.

The report fails to say that the international community, including
France where Euronews is headquartered, supports the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan. It made no mention of the four UN resolutions
calling for the withdrawal of Armenian occupying forces from
Azerbaijani territory.

The TV report on the Karabakh conflict does not say anything about
the massacre of Azerbaijanis in Khojaly, in which 613 people died,
including 63 children, 106 women and 70 elderly people. Terrible
atrocities were committed for the only reason that the Khojaly
residents were Azerbaijanis. Almost all of them were tortured,
murdered with great cruelty: people were beheaded, blinded, pregnant
women were disemboweled.

Le Monde newspaper wrote on 14 March 1992: "Foreign journalists in
Agdam saw three scalped people with their nails pulled out among
gthe women and children murdered in Khojaly. This is not Azerbaijani
propaganda, this is reality." Valaire Actuel magazine (Paris) of 14
March 1992 read: "In this autonomous region Armenian armed formations
along with incomers from the Middle East have modern military hardware
including helicopters. The Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation
of Armenia has military camps and arms caches in Syria and Lebanon.

Armenians murdered the Azerbaijanis of Karabakh and committed massacres
in more than a hundred Muslim villages."

This is the truth about which Euronews keeps silent. Could we imagine
a report on the Second World War that didn’t mention the victims
of concentration camps who were tortured by fascists or that didn’t
mention the Holocaust and Auschwitz? The massacre of Azerbaijanis in
Khojaly cannot be ignored in reporting on the Karabakh conflict.

Unfortunately, Euronews says nothing of this. This allows us to say
that the report is pro-Armenian.

Euronews editorial policy seems to have a place for Armenian propaganda
and lies, but no place for Azerbaijani truth on the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, the truth about the massacre of Azerbaijanis in Khojaly.

Is this simply a case of very sloppy journalism or something far more
cynical? We may be able to tell by Euronews’ response to the letter
of protest from Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry.

Baku Notes Progress In Karabakh Settlement

BAKU NOTES PROGRESS IN KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

Interfax
Dec 2 2009
Russia

Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov has noted progress in talks
with Armenia on the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"This year was noteworthy in terms of intensification of the schedule
of meetings between the Armenian and Azeri presidents," Mamedyarov
told the annual conference of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe’s foreign ministers in Athens.

The Armenian-Azeri conflict, which led the occupation of nearly 20%
of Azerbaijan’s territory and to an emergence of a million refugees
and forced migrants, is the main destabilizing factor in the region
and an obstacle for the South Caucasus’ integration with the European
and Euro- Atlantic space, he said

Armenian troops’ withdrawal from Azeri territory and the granting of
an autonomous status to Nagorny Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan will
lay a good foundation for normalizing Armenian-Azeri relations and
ease tensions in the region, Mamedyarov said.

Documentaries Are Shot In Connection With The 20 Years Of The Armeni

DOCUMENTARIES ARE SHOT IN CONNECTION WITH THE 20 YEARS OF THE ARMENIAN MASSACRES IN BAKU

Lragir.am
03/11/09

With the assistance of the Center of Information and Public Relations
at the RA President, a project is being realized in the frameworks
of which documentaries about genocide, mass violence, pogroms and
expulsion of the Armenians in the territory of modern Azerbaijan and
Nagorno-Karabakh during 1988-1992 will be shot.

All the films will be based on documents, archive videos, photo
materials, testimonies of witnesses and publications in the press. The
films are planned to be translated into Russian and English.

The first film which is currently being shot is about the Armenian
genocide and expulsion in Baku on 13-19 January, 1990. The premiere
will be held next year in connection with the 20 anniversary of the
Armenian tragedy.

"Ararat" Vs. "Caucasus"

"ARARAT" VS. "CAUCASUS"

tics/2009/12/3/dataran
Dec 3, 2009

Politics

"Alexander Iskandaryan had to agree with the information that he was
releasing; otherwise, why would he spread that information?" advocate
of the "Ararat" center Artur Grigoryan asked surprisingly.

Today Judge of the Kentron and Nork-Marash districts’ first instance
court, Karine Petrosyan, presided the hearing of the "Ararat" center’s
appeal against the "Caucasus Institute" Foundation.

The plaintiff demands the court to oblige the "Caucasus Institute"
to deny the release of the fact of Armenian Genocide, prohibit the
use of the term "Genocide" and compensation for damages.

Let us recall that in 2008, the "Caucasus Institute" released the book
entitled "Neighborhood in the Caucasus: Turkey and the South Caucasus"
where, among other articles was the article by Turk Aybars Gurgulu
entitled "Turkey-Armenia Relations: Eternal labyrinth?" in which the
writer, according to the plaintiff, denies the Armenian Genocide.

Director of the "Ararat" center Armen Ayvazyan claims that editor of
the book, Alexander Iskandaryan, also denies that fact.

Present at court were Armen Ayvazyan from the plaintiff’s side, his
advocate Artur Grigoryan, and Vahagn Grigoryan who is the advocate for
Alexander Iskandaryan. Despite the open-door trial, video recording
was prohibited because the defendant was against it.

Besides objecting that, he did not wish to respond to any questions
after the trial. The latter petitioned the court to quash the case
because the "use" of the term doesn’t presuppose a situation that
will be subject to the court examination.

The plaintiff brought up objections in relation to that. "This is
a case because it relates to the honor and dignity of the Armenian
nation."

The judge went to the consultation room to take the decision on an act
regarding the petition and the session was postponed for tomorrow at
4 p.m. In other words, tomorrow it will be clear if the appeal will
be examined or not.

After the session

Alexander Iskandaryan told "A1+" that he was surprised that he was
charged with forgetting about the genocide. In his book, he states
that he is not responsible for what was published in his book. How
grounded is the appeal? In response, Artur Grigoryan said: "A person
can commit very serious financial machinations, but put up a sign and
say that he is not responsible for that. That doesn’t free the person
from responsibility. If he reserves that he is not responsible for
that article, then that still doesn’t mean that he is not responsible
from the angle of legislation."

Armen Ayvazyan said that if his claim was upheld, the denial of
Armenian Genocide in Armenia would be part of law and practice with
many consequences. If it is not upheld, that will mean that there
can be any article or speech denying the Armenian Genocide in Armenia.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/poli

Yerevan To Host Deep Purple Concert On May 25, 2010

YEREVAN TO HOST DEEP PURPLE CONCERT ON MAY 25, 2010

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.12.2009 19:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ According to Barshegyan media factory, the full
complement of the band is: Ian Gillan (vocals), Steve Morse (guitar),
Roger Glover (bass guitar), Don Airey (keyboards), Ian Paice (drums).

The event is organized by Vibrographus and ArmRosGazprom companies.

Information partner is Barseghyan media factory.

BAKU: Karabakh Peace Process Entering New Phase

KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS ENTERING NEW PHASE
Leyla Tagiyeva

news.az
dec 3 2009
Azerbaijan

Dennis Sammut News.Az interviews Dennis Sammut, executive director of
LINKS, the London Information Network on Conflicts and State-Building.

You participated in the round table discussion on the topic "The
Corfu Process, European Security and the Resolution of Conflicts in
the South Caucasus" in Athens. How do you think the Corfu Process
might influence the Karabakh settlement?

The war between Georgia and Russia last year reminded people that many
problems on the European continent remain unresolved. During the Greek
Chairmanship of the OSCE this year a new initiative was launched. It
is called the "Corfu Process" because it was launched at a meeting
on the island in June. This process enables the governments of the
56 member states to discuss and hopefully come to a decision on many
issues important for the future peace and security of our continent.

I have always argued that the Karabakh conflict is best solved in
the context of a wider security framework in the Caucasus region. The
Corfu Process has the potential to offer this context. However this
is a long and difficult process. The OSCE Ministerial Meeting which
has just ended in Athens has taken some important steps so we can
say that the journey has started.

What was the purpose of the Karabakh report published by LINKS on
1 December?

LINKS decided that this was the right time to issue a report on
Karabakh that would help inform both where we are with the efforts
to resolve the conflict, but also more importantly what we feel are
the major steps that need to be taken. The timing is very important
because we feel that there is now both an opportunity which must not
be missed, and a danger that if this opportunity is not taken than
it may not reappear for a long time.

Could you briefly tell us about the main points of the report?

The process to resolve the Karabakh conflict is entering a new phase.

2009 has seen six meetings between the presidents of Armenia and
Azerbaijan and even usually sceptical diplomats are now expressing
cautious optimism. With an agreement apparently almost within reach
the two sides, with the help of the international community, need to
find the courage and political will to overcome the remaining sticking
points – including a formula on how to deal with defining the eventual,
final status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

However, in the report we also have a word of caution. An agreement
in the next weeks will not be the end of the story. There is a lot of
work to be done by both governments, and by the international community
for an agreement on paper to be turned into a proper peace process,
not least to help ensure that the ownership of such an agreement does
not remain a monopoly of a tiny political elite but is shared within
the wider community on both sides.

So the report makes practical suggestions: to the sides in the
conflict the report recommends the intensification of the domestic
debate in order to allow a national consensus in favour of a peaceful
resolution to the conflict to emerge. Some say that there is already
a national consensus in both Armenia and Azerbaijan, but in truth this
is a consensus based on slogans and unattainable maximalist positions.

We are very far away from having a consensus for peace. Here
politicians of all parties and leaders of society must assume their
responsibility.

To the international community we say that it must do more to help
the sides resolve the conflict. Crucially we say that support for the
work of the Minsk Group should not be an excuse for doing nothing else!

Whilst the first responsibility for solving the Karabakh conflict is
with the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan the international
community has responsibilities too and it needs to show a new
commitment to this end.

President Aliev stated before the meeting with President Sargsyan that
there was a possibility of a new war for Karabakh if the negotiations
in Munich fail. What should be done to prevent a new war?

War will not be a solution. It will just make the problem worse. It
is now time for the international community to speak with one voice
and in more robust tones to both sides. Some messages that have been
transmitted before, but in cautious diplomatic language need to be
repeated in clearer terms and without ambiguity in such a way that not
only the leaderships, but also the populations of the two countries,
will understand clearly. Armenia needs to be told that the continued
occupation of the Azerbaijani territories around Nagorno-Karabakh
is neither acceptable nor sustainable. Azerbaijan must be told that
any attempt or talk of regaining these territories by force without
a UN Security Council resolution will bring Azerbaijan into direct
confrontation with the international community. Both sides must be
reminded of the right of all refugees and IDPs to return to their
homes in safe and dignified conditions.

The international community has throughout the whole period when the
search for a solution to the Karabakh problem was ongoing, largely
held Armenia and Azerbaijan responsible for finding a solution to it.

In doing so it has opened itself to criticism and cynicism amongst
both the Armenian and the Azerbaijani communities who see this as
a means through which the international community was abrogating
its responsibility.

In this important moment in the negotiations the international
community must show that it also is willing to carry responsibility by
engaging more, by showing that a Karabakh solution is a priority and
by offering new frameworks from which a mutually acceptable solution
can emerge. This will be particularly important when in the future we
reach the point where the final status of Karabakh is being discussed.

It is not realistic to expect Armenia and Azerbaijan on their
own to reconcile the principles of territorial integrity and
of self determination, which some argue are contradictory. This
will need an international effort. Whilst that is being done the
international community must also find ways in which to ensure that
key stakeholders, such as the de facto authorities in Nagorno Karabakh
and representatives of the displaced, are engaged with properly.

And finally, what are the perspectives for an early settlement of
the Karabakh problem?

The process to resolve the Karabakh conflict is entering a new phase.

The continuation of the process in the present mode is no longer
sustainable. We have reached the end of the beginning. If the present
negotiating process within the framework of the OSCE Minsk process
collapses, it will take years for an alternative to emerge and to
reach the point where we are today. This scenario must be avoided at
all costs. The alternative, however, is not stalemate but progress.

The last steps are needed to move the process to a qualitatively
improved level, enabling changes on the ground to take place and
opening the way for a final solution. This objective is now within
reach and this opportunity must not be squandered.

ARFD: International Community Should Attend To Baku’s Militaristic S

ARFD: INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY SHOULD ATTEND TO BAKU’S MILITARISTIC STATEMENTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.11.2009 20:41 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ U.S. State Department’s Caucasus Office Director Eton
Goldrich visited ARF-Dashnaktsutyun’s Christopher Mikalyelyan Center
in Yerevan to meet with ARFD Supreme Council Chair Armen Rustamyan,
ARFD Bureau member Aghvan Vardanyan and Hay Dat and Political Affairs
Office Director Giro Manoyan.

The American diplomat was briefed on ARFD’s position on Armenia’s
social-economic situation and democracy issues. Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement and Karabakh conflict settlement were in the focus
of discussion.

Parties agreed that normalization of Armenian-Turkish ties without
preconditions was key to the establishment of peace in the region.

They also stressed the importance of international community’s
attending to Baku’s militaristic statements, ARF Dashnaktsustyun’s
press service reports.

Margaryan Says President’s Speech Gives Some Hope Over Armenian-Turk

MARGARYAN SAYS PRESIDENT’S SPEECH GIVES SOME HOPE OVER ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

Yerkir
30.11.2009 12:39
Yerevan

Yerevan (Yerkir) – President Serzh Sargsyan’s speech at the 12th
congress of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) can be only
welcomed, ARF Bureau representative Hrant Margaryan told journalists
following the congress.

He underlined that the president’s words convey some hope that Armenia
will be more prudent further, while exposing with Turkey.

Speaking at the RPA congress, Sargsyan said that "Armenia is consistent
in its stance on relations’ establishment with Turkey, which does not
imply oblivion of Genocide issue." Sargsyan said that the Protocols
should be ratified within a reasonable time, "their protraction by
Turkey leads to Armenia’s accurate response in accordance with norms
of international law."