BAKU: Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioya: OSCE Minsk Group Co-C

FINNISH FOREIGN MINISTER ERKKI TUOMIOYA: OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS PLAY AN IMPORTANT ROLE IN SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Dec 5 2006

"European Union considers that OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs play an
important role in the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict",
Finland Minister of Foreign Affairs Erkki Tuomioya announced at 14th
OSCE Ministerial Council conference in Brussels, APA reports.

He said that OSCE, which plays an important role in the settlement
of South Osetin and Abkhazia conflicts, will intensify its role in
the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict as well.

"European Union has signed an action plan with Armenia, Georgia and
Azerbaijan within Europe Neighborhood Policy and is satisfied with
this cooperation. We hope that this cooperation will consolidate
Europe-South Caucasus relations and bring stability to the region",
he said.

OSCE Can Keep Playing Mediator Role In Frozen Conflicts In South Cau

OSCE CAN KEEP PLAYING MEDIATOR ROLE IN FROZEN CONFLICTS IN SOUTH CAUCASUS

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.12.2006 17:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The OSCE can keep playing the important role of the
mediator in the so-called "frozen conflicts" in the South Caucasus
and Moldova, State Minister of the Federal Foreign Office of Germany
Gernot Erler stated during his speech at the session of the OSCE
Council of Foreign Ministers. "We urge the parties to use the available
opportunities for talks and implement agreements made. Thereupon we
welcome the process of withdrawal of Russian troops from Georgia. It
is important now that Istanbul commitments be fulfilled there, as
well as in Moldova," he remarked, reports Trend.

Ex-Minister Thinks Defense Minister Should Be Part Of Negotiations

EX-MINISTER THINKS DEFENSE MINISTER SHOULD BE PART OF NEGOTIATIONS

Panorama.am
18:00 01/12/06

"I have said that there have been no negotiations between the
parties since 1998. Minsk Group format and that format decided in
Budapest summit have not been applied. The three chairs just pay
visits. For eight year, the mediators negotiate among themselves and
present documents agreed among themselves to the parties," Alexander
Arzumanyan, former foreign minister and initiator of Civic Disobedience
movement, told a press conference today.

"I am a supporter of mutual concessions myself but I think they
do not talk about mutual concessions. They just talk about serious
concessions from our side," he said also saying the minister of defense
has no right to speak about concessions which was done by the Armenian
defense minister. At the same time, Arzumanyan thinks that the defense
minister should become part of negotiations process. Arzumanyan is
against conducting a referendum, saying Artsakh people have made
their decision and it is not subject to change.

Andranik Margaryan: The Potential Of Normalizing Russian-Georgian Re

ANDRANIK MARGARYAN: THE POTENTIAL OF NORMALIZING RUSSIAN-GEORGIAN RELATIONS NOT EXHAUSTED

Public Radio, Armenia
Nov 30 2006

"The potential of normalizing the relations between Moscow and
Tbilisi has not been exhausted," Armenian Prime Minister Andranik
Margaryan said in an interview with "Kommersant" newspaper, Mediamax
agency reports.

"We are interested in the rapid resolution of the disputable issues
in Russian-Georgian relations., since the cooperation between Russia
and Georgia is one of the most important components of security in
the region, without which it is hard to imagine the accomplishment of
mutually beneficial economic programs in the region," said Andranik
Margaryan.

Nursun Erel: Turkish Court Will Not Stop Me To Say What I Want

NURSUN EREL: TURKISH COURT WILL NOT STOP ME TO SAY WHAT I WANT

Panorama.am
16:31 29/11/06

Reporters from Azerbaijan and Turkey arrived in Yerevan within the
framework of "Dialogue: Azerbaijan-Turkey-Armenia" launched by a civic
initiative "Alternative start." Nursun Erel, a Turkish reporter, was
asked if she personally recognizes the genocide of Armenians. She said,
"I am not a historian and not an expert but I will do everything for
an open dialogue to take place."

This is not the first visit of Ernel to Armenia.

During her last visit, in 2001, she me with historians and attended the
museum of genocide. "I think a tragedy happened. But I also believe
it must not become a fixed idea. We must create a better world for
our generations," she said.

The reporter said the genocide of Armenians is not a taboo in Turkish
mass media. She said they openly discuss the opinions of historian
on genocide, e.g., Taner Akchama who believes that genocide took place.

Asked if her colleagues are not prosecuted based on article 301 which
considers insult of the dignity of the Turkish nation any mentioning
of the Armenian genocide, she said the Turkish reporters are not
happy with article 301 and continue fighting against it because any
word can be taken out of context and serve the base for prosecution.

About 60 writers, scientists and publicists are convicted based on
article 301.

Resurgence Of Nationalism And Islam Threaten To Turn Turkey Away Fro

RESURGENCE OF NATIONALISM AND ISLAM THREATEN TO TURN TURKEY AWAY FROM WEST
Handan T. Satiroglu

World Politics Watch
Nov 28 2006

Adolf Hitler’s "Mein Kampf" and several conspiracy-themed books
depicting Turkey as under attack by American and European influences
sell briskly in local bookstores. Turkey’s $10 million movie "Valley
of Wolves," the most expensive to date, vilifying Christians and Jews
pulls in record crowds. A 28-year-old lawyer shoots a secularist judge
to death inside Turkey’s High Court. The Islamic and far-right press is
filled with stories of missionaries within Turkish borders converting
"defenseless" Muslims to "infidels."

Masked by Turkey’s 80-year Kemalist embrace of secularism, these
recent trends reflect a hard fact: Beneath the surface of the West’s
most crucial ally in the Muslim world, a dismaying anti-Western blend
of political Islam and nationalism is blossoming. A series of recent
patriotic shows of force — including angry mobs protesting the arrival
of Pope Benedict or deriding Elif Shafak for "insulting Turkishness" in
a growing chorus for restriction of freedom of speech — have revealed
an increasing backlash in Turkey towards Western values. Even as
Turkey aspires to join the European Union, the current administration
led by the pro-Islamic Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has made
several attempts to roll back Turkey’s brand of draconian secularism:
criminalization of adultery, passage of punitive taxes on the wine
industry, and decriminalization of Hezbollah-backed Quran courses were
but a few items on the administration’s agenda as recently as 2005.

So how did this Mediterranean nation often promoted by Western
politicians and media as a "model Islamic nation" develop such a
taste for pro-Islamic nationalist sentiments? In a recent Pew poll
asking why Islam’s role is gaining strength in Turkey, the largest
reason cited was "growing immorality in our society." "The current
mood is a reaction to an anxiety felt by some people that some of the
values that are important to us are being sold out by the EU drive,"
Suat Kiniklioglu, head of German Marshall Program in Ankara, commented
in The Christian Science Monitor in 2005. Last year, "the country’s
hopes and forward-looking vision were behind the EU drive.

Now people are becoming confused. There is fatigue, and nationalism
becomes an escape route," he lamented.

Across the ocean, Jim Stroup, former Marine Corps foreign area
officer and now head of Bosphorus Consulting in Istanbul, echoed
similar sentiments: "The form of pro-Islamic nationalism we are
witnessing today is largely defensive and reactionary," he said
in an October interview. "It arises in response to what are seen
as attacks on Turkey’s viability or the honor inherent in being a
Turk." But perceived hemorrhaging of Turkish values hardly explains
why many Turks are taking to the flag and political Islam; ethnic
rivalries between Kurds and Turks and an increasing distrust of the
West, heightened by the Iraqi war and the cold shoulder given by the
EU have also been touted as possible causes for the resurgence of
nationalist pro-Islamic fervor.

A Wounded Pride

It would be simplistic to speak of a single nationalist current in
this country that has long been the guardian of the secular Kemalist
heritage. Indeed, it is viable to speak of two nationalist currents;
one "strongly positive and forward looking," as Stroup sees it, and the
second, injured and angry — the kind that is making headlines during
Turkey’s infamous controversies. The first sees grounds for optimism
on both political and social fronts and revels in the achievements of
the last decade. The country has managed to shake off some its most
dated laws against its ethnic minorities, achieved full EU candidate
status, and tamed inflation from a high 70 percent in 2002 to below
8 percent in 2005. During this period, Turkey has also managed to
attract record flows of direct foreign investment, while doubling
its foreign trade in the last three and a half years.

Articles on this Issue Borat vs. Nazarbayev: An International Incident
France: The Al-Dura Defamation Case and the End of Free Speech More
on Culture Articles by this Author Turkey and Europe: An Invitation
To Dance?

More by Handan T. Satiroglu In the last decade, the positive and
West-looking brand of nationalism prevailed as each subsequent
government led Turkey increasingly closer to the European Union. The
fiery eruption of nationalism that we are witnessing today,
however, feels humiliated and cast aside by its European and American
friends. Suggestions that Turkey is unfit to join the EU, coupled with
"campaigns of everyone from revisionist nationalist groups such as
Armenians and Kurds, and religious personages such as the new pope,"
claims Stroup, which paint Turks as "backward barbarians," gravely
offends the Turkish sense of dignity. To the Turk on the street,
the seemingly endless demands for reform and trickle of criticism
from Europe are not only deeply wounding to Turkish pride, but also
spark some historical resentment.

The perceived sense of public humiliation should come as no surprise;
the EU issue is just the contemporary face of a much older history.

Turkey was, after all, the central figure of a formidable 400-year-old
Empire, now forcibly condensed to its Eurasian backend.

In the same fashion as Arabs, the Turks perceive themselves as heirs
to a rich and diverse Islamic tradition, the focal point of all
things in their heyday. Stroup cautions that we shall see more of the
vengeful, unproductive expressions of wounded pride "that express
the sentiments of ‘enough’ and ‘we are Turks, we ruled the world,
and we will again.’" The ferociously anti-American movie "Valley of
the Wolves" that pits Turks against Americans, he concludes, reflects
this longing for a resurgence of a new Ottoman Empire, combining the
Turkish identity with principles of Islam.

The West — Foe or friend?

The nationalist outburst is not limited to perceived displays of
public humiliation. Inside the country, simmering tensions between
Turks and ethnic Kurds proves to be a fertile cause for nationalist
zeal. While today’s escalating violence is nowhere near the bloodshed
witnessed in the 90s, which claimed the lives of an estimated 35,000,
the potential of Kurdish separatist violence has come back to haunt
the Turkish social landscape. Images of mothers and wives wailing in
wretched sorrow, kneeling over their sehit (martyr) wrapped in the
Turkish flag have become commonplace in the mainstream media. The
emotionally charged funerals are not only public events for the
soldiers who died fighting Kurdish rebels in the rugged southeast,
but are also becoming the focus of growing anti-U.S. sentiment.

Many Turks cite the U.S. invasion in Iraq as the most important
factor in the rise in Kurdish terrorist group PKK’s violence. Despite
stabilization in U.S.-Turkish ties after the immediate fallout of
the war, Turks have come to believe Washington’s inaction against the
PKK is a ploy to divide the Middle East. As Yektan Turkyilmaz, a Ph.D.

candidate at Duke University, observes, the current nationalist
outburst is a reaction to perceived imperialistic goals to divide
Turkey along ethnic lines, "in order to destabilize the entire
region and intensify exploitative efforts." Turkish media is rife
with provocative articles about the pro-American activities of Kurds
in Northern Iraq, as well as stories linking the PKK with the U.S.

occupation force or the CIA. "There is widespread belief in Turkey
that the U.S.’s new Middle East project also entails the formation
of an independent, but satellite, Kurdish state not only in the Iraqi
soil, but also on Turkey’s southeast," Turkyilmaz said in an interview
earlier this month. Convinced that the West is fueling ethnic tensions
in the same spirit with which European influences brought down the
Ottoman Empire, a growing number of Turks have come to "take on an
anti-EU and more specifically anti-American position," he explains.

Add to this the perceived illegitimacy of the U.S.-led war in
Iraq, Turks’ confidence in most Western projects has plummeted to
record levels. Probably nothing characterizes this disillusion more
graphically than the recent figures published by the Pew Research
Center: Seventy-one percent of Turkish people believe that the United
States may someday threaten their country, while a mere 12 percent
held a favorable opinion of Americans. Similarly, positive opinions
about Christians have fallen from 31 percent in 2004 to 16 percent,
just one percent higher than their dislike of Jews.

With only 35 percent of the public in favor of the EU (half of what
it was in 2004), a sense of drift away from the EU accession has also
deepened in the country — a mood that is unlikely to change with the
just-released highly critical "Progress Report" by the EU Commission.

The report lists a host of problems in human rights, freedom of
expression, and judiciary and military reform, and highlights Turkey’s
failure to make concessions about the Cyprus issue. In a thinly veiled
cautionary note, the Commission indicates it will suspend some parts
of the EU negotiations if there is no further progress over Cyprus

Meanwhile, Turks fault the country’s old rivals Cyprus and Greece
for the acrimonious report, claiming they are lobbying Brussels
to take a stance against Turkey’s refusal to open its ports to
Greek-controlled Cyprus. Today, demands that Turkey acknowledge the
Greek part of Cyprus, as well as the changes aimed at bringing Turkey
closer to Europe, are seen by many as undermining the integrity of
Turkey. In a recent poll, 51 percent of Turks claimed to see the
EU-inspired reforms as a reproduction of the widely despised 1920
Treaty of Sèvres, which led to the dismantling of the Ottoman Empire by
Western interests. Echoing a populous sentiment held by everyone from
storekeepers in villages to college students relaxing in cafes, Ahmet,
a cab driver in the boisterous streets of Ankara, expressed the point
in percipient bluntness: "Europe is asking a lot. I believe all these
reforms are designed to weaken the state in order to break it up."

For a very long time Turkey has been touted as a model secular
Muslim state. But the sweeping tide of Muslim nationalism might leave
Turkey more isolated by the West than it has ever been before. For
decades, Ataturk’s Turkey looked to the West for political, social
and economic cues. That, however, is fast changing as a result of
bitter relations with the EU and the Iraqi war, which has everyone
from leftists to Islamists angered. The rocky relationship with the
West would not be so alarming if it weren’t for the shift in Turkish
attitudes towards the Muslim Middle East. Alliances with neighboring
Damascus, Dubai and Tehran, as opposed to Washington and Brussels,
now seem to make more sense to Turks. For the first time since the
inception of the Turkish republic in 1923, a growing number of Turks,
primarily of the populous rural constituency, seem comfortable with
the notion of aligning with the greater Islamic ummah, rather than
traditional American and European allies.

Indeed, Turkey’s next presidential and parliamentary elections
should help determine the country’s direction. If center-right and
center-left parties manage to defeat the Islamists, Turkey’s Western
ambitions might continue. If the current pro-Islamic and nationalist
AKP is victorious, then what will happen is anybody’s guess.

Handan T. Satiroglu is a sociologist and writer who divides her time
between the U.S. and Europe.

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http://worldpoliticswatch.com/article.asp

From January 1, 2007 Minimal Salaries To Total To AMD 20,000

FROM JANUARY 1, 2007, MINIMAL SALARIES TO TOTAL TO AMD 20,000

AZG Armenian Daily
28/11/2006

>From January 1, 2007, the minimal salaries will amount to AMD
20,000. As compared with the data in 2006, the increase will make
AMD 5,000. Aghvan Vardanian, RA Minister of Labor and Social Affairs,
stated this at RA National Assembly. He said that the minimal salaries
will rise by AMD 5,000 and in the course of the coming 3 years they
will amount to AMD 30,000.

This process may be accelerated subject to the existence of necessary
funds, he said. According to him, AMD 505 million will be allocated
from RA state budget for the settlement of the given problem. About
7500 employees will be involved in the given program in total.

Georgia: Private companies carry burden for Gazprom gas price talks

EurasiaNet, NY –
Nov 25 2006

GEORGIA: PRIVATE COMPANIES CARRY BURDEN FOR GAZPROM GAS PRICE TALKS
Diana Petriashvili 11/24/06

As temperatures drop below freezing in Georgia, the problem of the
country’s winter gas supply appears to remain unresolved. While
Georgian officials emphasize that they will not pay a "political
price" for gas from Russian company Gazprom, responsibility for
negotiations with the energy giant has been placed on regional
distributors. Meanwhile, some local experts and opposition members
are blaming the Georgian government for a passive response to the
proposed price hike.

For now, the Georgian energy ministry has restrained from commenting
on the Gazprom negotiations, saying that price talks are to be held
by Georgian gas-distributing companies alone. On November 15,
however, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili stated that Gazprom’s
desired price of $230 per 1000 cubic meters of gas was politically
motivated. Speaking to reporters in Strasbourg on November 14 at a
session of the European Parliament, Saakashvili stated that Georgia
should not pay the new price.

"The price is not the commercial one," Saakashvili stated, the
Georgian news agency Black Sea Press reported. "Some of our neighbors
pay $65, others $110, and only some of them pay $130. There must be a
reason why Georgia, the closest neighbor to Russia, pays more than
remote states," the president argued.

At the same time, the Georgian leader expressed no concern about the
capability of the Georgian energy system to handle power and heating
needs this coming winter. Saakashvili praised the energy sector’s
recent development, adding that it had bypassed that of other
countries.

"We have started building the economy from the very beginning […]
the new economy is more effective in the energy field compared with
other states," Saakashvili said. "2006 was the first year after 1991
when Georgia not only imported, but also exported electric power
[…] We can now partially compensate for the lack of gas with
electricity in the winter." Power outages in Tbilisi, as well as in
the regions, however, nonetheless persist.

B ased supplies from Azerbaijan, facilitated by the start of gas
flows through the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline by late 2006, as well
as potentially from Iran. (For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive.)

The Turkish newspaper Zaman, however, recently reported that
Azerbaijan has approached the Turkish government about delaying the
start of gas flows from Baku for one year. The report has not yet
been confirmed.

Energy Minister Nika Gelauri could not be reached for comment. Like
Saakashvili, however, Gelauri has also recently praised conditions in
Georgia’s energy sector, telling a November 10 session of parliament
that "Georgia has all the chances for becoming an electric power
center for the entire region." Gelauri stated that repair work at
several power generating stations means that Georgia plans to start
exporting electricity to Azerbaijan and Turkey in 2007.

Gelauri’s statement, however, irritated some opposition MPs, who
claimed that the minister never answered their question about whether
Georgia will be supplied with gas in 2007.

"The minister failed to answer the most important question of the
Georgian population, and this is . . . what kind of winter do you
expect? One without snow and with a temperature that does not fall
below zero?," charged Conservative Party parliamentarian Zviad
Dzidziguri.

The Georgian opposition has also again raised the question of the
possibility that Georgia would sell its main gas pipeline, a conduit
that supplies Armenia as well as Georgia with gas from Russia. In
2005, local media reported that the government was allegedly
considering selling the pipeline to Gazprom, but officials later came
out strongly against the idea. "They say they won’t sell the pipeline
to Russia, but I’m interested in whether they will sell it to someone
else," Zurab Tkemaladze, a member of the Industry Will Save Georgia
party, commented to reporters after parliamentarians’ meeting with
the energy minister.

Gelauri himself, however, has refused to share details from the talks
with Gazprom, removing the energy ministry from responsibility for
price haggling with the Russian gas supplier. Instead, Gelauri told
reporters on November 14, Georgia’s individual gas distributor
companies "are the ones who are negotiating."

State Minister for Coordination of Reforms Kakha Bendukidze, however,
has explained the decision by saying that gas purchases fall outside
the government’s control. "[The] Georgian government itself does not
and did not buy gas from Gazprom," Rosbalt news agency quoted
Bendukidze as saying on November 15. "All deals are done by private
companies involved in gas distribution or [in the] use of gas in
industrial process[es]."

While the government’s decision to look to distributors to negotiate
the terms of their contracts with supplier Gazprom is not unusual,
noted one expert, the government should more actively supervise the
process. Failing to do so suggests that the government wants to
escape blame if agreement with Gazprom cannot be reached and supplies
to Georgia are cut, commented Giorgi Mchedlishvili, head of the
Georgian Transition non-governmental organization.

"The government seems to be trying to put all the responsibility on
the distributing companies," said Mchedlishvili. "If the population
does not get gas this winter, they will have someone to blame."

"Every single Georgian wants to know what happens with gas this
winter," he continued. "The government should be more active in the
talks, as it must answer all the questions that appear. Saying `no
comments’ is not a good idea."

One local gas distributor, KazTransGas-Tbilisi, a Kazakhstani company
that owns Tbilisi gas distributor Tbilgazi, however, hopes to reduce
Gazprom’s proposed price at least for its own contract.

"We hope that the final price will be significantly lower than the
initially proposed one," the company’s director general, Giorgi
Koiava, stated at a press conference on November 16. The company
plans to complete its negotiations with Gazprom by mid-December, he
said.

Recently, arrests, resignations and staff changes have marked
Georgia’s gas distribution sector. On November 8, state-run gas
distribution company International Gas Corporation General Director
Revaz Urushadze and two of his deputies were arrested on charges of
corruption, and sentenced to a two-month pre-trial detention.

Two days later, David Ingorokva, head of the International Gas
Corporation, resigned, saying that law enforcement agencies’
inspection of the Corporation’s financial documents motivated his
decision. The newly appointed Gas Corporation chief, Irakli
Chogovdaze, previously minister of economic development, resigned
from the post on November 18, just after over a week on the job,
without naming his reasons.

Meanwhile, Russian energy giant Gazprom has given little indication
that it is willing to compromise on Georgia’s gas price. Without a
contract on a new price by January 1, 2007, Gazprom Vice President
Alexander Medvedyev told a November 7 press conference in Moscow, the
company will cut gas supplies to the South Caucasus state. "No
contract, no supplies," the Russian news agency Interfax reported
Medvedyev as saying. Gas, however, would continue to be supplied "to
our Armenian partner," he said. The price hike for Georgia – from
$110 to $230 per 1,000 cubic meters – is being applied equally to
other clients as well, the Gazprom executive continued. "None of the
post-Soviet states will be getting gas at reduced price."

If Gazprom elects to cut all gas to Georgia, while continuing its
Armenian shipments, the government needs to ensure that transit
tarrifs are paid to Georgia by Gazprom for allowing the gas to pass
through its territory to Armenia, Mchedlishvili said. So far, the
government has not indicated how it would address this scenario.

The possibility of a gas crunch has offered one Tbilisi insurance
company an entrepreneurial opportunity. In cooperation with
KazTransGas, GPI-Holding announced on November 16 the launch of a new
$150 insurance policy for existing clients against a possible
increase in city gas tarrifs in response to a Gazprom price hike. To
help juggle their gas bills, the company promises to pay
policyholders 50 lari (about $27) per month from January to March
2007 if Gazprom prices increase.

Editor’s Note: Diana Petriashvili is a freelance reporter based in
Tbilisi.

Same suspects in two race-hate crimes in Russia – lawyer

RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 24 2006

Same suspects in two race-hate crimes in Russia – lawyer
17:54 | 24/ 11/ 2006

MOSCOW, November 24 (RIA Novosti) – Criminal cases on a market
bombing and an Armenian student’s murder in Moscow have been combined
into a single case, since they involve the same suspects, a lawyer
said Friday.

The student was stabbed in the capital in April, and 11 people were
killed in a market bombing in August.

"The cases have been united, as the same suspects appear in both of
them," Simon Tsaturyan said.

Vagan Abramyants, a 17-year-old student at the Moscow Academy of
Management, was attacked and stabbed to death on the platform of
Pushkinskaya metro station in central Moscow, at about 5 p.m. on
April 22.

On August 21 an explosion rocked the Cherkizovsky market in
northeastern Moscow killing 11 and injuring at least 49 people.

On the day of the bombing, police arrested three students of Moscow
institutes, Ilya Tikhomirov, Oleg Kostyrev and Valery Zhukovtsov. The
police later arrested 25-year-old Nikolai Korolyov.

The bombing suspects confessed to being motivated by race-hate. As
with most markets in Moscow, many traders at the Cherkizovsky market
are from the North Caucasus region and former Central Asian Soviet
republics, as well as China and Vietnam.

Hundreds of Azeris Live in Europe under Guise of Armenians

PanARMENIAN.Net

Hundreds of Azeris Live in Europe under Guise of
Armenians
25.11.2006 14:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «Hundreds of Azeris live in
Netherlands, who got shelter there under the guise of
Armenians,» Head of the State Committee on Work for
Azeris Living Abroad Nazim Ibrahimov stated at a news
conference in Baku. He lately visited the establishing
conference of the Congress of Azeris of Benelux and
observed this.

«The most hurting thing is that certain forces make
these people slander against Azerbaijani state and
authorities,» Nazim Ibrahimov complained. During his
stay in Holland he urged Azeris, who found shelter in
Europe as oppositionists, to return to Azerbaijan and
live in normal life conditions, reports the Zerkalo.