Sixteen Flights Cancelled In Armenia As Of April 19 2010

SIXTEEN FLIGHTS CANCELLED IN ARMENIA AS OF APRIL 19 2010

ArmInfo
2010-04-20 12:37:00

ArmInfo. As of April 19, 16 passenger flights were cancelled in
Armenia, the General Civil Aviation Department at the Government of
Armenia reported.

The flights have been cancelled since April 15. Ten of the sixteen
cancelled flights to Europe were those of Armavia air carrier. To
recall the volcano under the icecap at Eyjafjallajokull had minor
activity in March but a major eruption on April 14, 2010 impaired air
traffic. The air traffic agency Eurocontrol says that starting April
16 over 10000 flights are cancelled in European countries every day.

On April 19 nearly 8.7 thousand flights were made in the European
air space instead of scheduled 28,000.

Azerbaijan Puts Off Joint Military Drills With US

AZERBAIJAN PUTS OFF JOINT MILITARY DRILLS WITH US

(AP)
20/04/10

BAKU, Azerbaijan – Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry says the ex-Soviet
nation has decided to postpone next month’s joint military exercise
with the United States.

Ministry spokesman Eldar Sabiroglu refused to specify a reason for
the move late Monday, but other Azerbaijani officials have recently
expressed dismay with the U.S. stance on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a part of Azerbaijan that has been under the
control of Armenian troops and ethnic Armenian forces since a 1994
cease-fire ended six years of war.

Last week, an Azerbaijani presidential aide said the U.S. is biased
against the country in its role as a mediator of the dispute. The
remarks suggested an unprecedented strain in the energy-rich Caspian
nation’s ties with the U.S.

"Words Contradict Actions"

"WORDS CONTRADICT ACTIONS"

A1Plus.am
02:37 pm | April 19, 2010 | Politics

Head of ARF faction Vahan Hovhannisyan notices some controversy in
Armenia’s stance towards the Armenian-Turkish reconciliation process.

"The words and actions of the Armenian side contradict each other. It
does not matter whether you surrender an acre or two. Once you cede
anything unilaterally, you become a loser," Mr. Hovhannisyan told a
press conference today.

On the one hand, Vahan Hovhannisyan reminded Serzh Sargsyan’s
speech at the tomb of Woodrow Wilson and the government’s decision
to celebrate the 95th anniversary of the Genocide; on the other
hand, he recalled the rejection of ARF proposals and draft laws by
parliamentary majority.

"They did everything possible to vote down our proposals and amendments
to the Law on International Agreements. We have been unable to
understand what they mean by saying "a reasonable timeframe."

Regarding the long-disputed Armenian-Turkish Protocols, Mr.
Hovhannisyan said," Turks "concocted" the document for two reasons.

Firstly, Turkey noticed that Armenian authorities were afraid of the
consequences of the Russian-Georgian conflict as the road was closed
down for a few days. Secondly, they saw that Armenian authorities
preferred personal interests to national ones."

"Initiating dialogue with Armenia, Turkey sought to split and weaken
our nation. And now it aims to split the Diaspora," said Mr.

Hovhannisyan and quoted Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
words that Turkey is ready to host Diaspora representatives but not
those with rough stance, i.e. ARF.

Vahan Hovhannisyan is of the same opinion about the protocols.

"Armenia had better withdraw from the talks."

When asked what would happen if Armenia ratified the document before
Turkey, Mr. Hovhannisyan said, "It will be a disgrace to Armenia.

Turkey will not ratify the document unless the Karabakh conflict
is settled."

Ph. Crowley: US supports the Minsk process regarding Nagorno-Karabak

Ph. Crowley: US supports the Minsk process regarding Nagorno-Karabakh
settlement

12:52 17/04/2010 » Politics

US State Department Assistant Secretary Philip J. Crowley referred to
the Armenian-Turkish normalization process at a press briefing in
Washington Friday, Turan reported.

`We obviously had very meaningful discussions this week, both with the
Turkish side, with the Armenian side, and we continue to try to find
the right formula working with both countries,’ Crowley said.

The Assistant Secretary said the US supports the Minsk process
regarding Nagorno-Karabakh settlement.

The Armenian-Turkish normalization process has stalled from last fall
when the countries signed the protocols on normalization.

`We want to see Turkey and Armenia ratify those protocols, normalize
relations, open borders. That has significant benefits for both
countries. And we continue to work with both to see if we can find the
right formula, the right timing to see ratification and the benefits
that come with ratification,’ Crowley highlighted.

Source: Panorama.am

Reaching Out? Davutoglu Comments on Meetings in Washington

Reaching Out? Davutoglu Comments on Meetings in Washington

Sun, Apr 18 2010

By:Armenian Weekly Staff
Introduction and Translation from Turkish by Ara Arabyan

WASHINGTON (A.W.) – The semi-official Anatolia Agency this week reported
the comments made by Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu about
his and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s meetings with
Armenian President Serge Sarkisian and Foreign Minister Eduard
Nalbandian during the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington from April
11-12. Davutoglu made the comments on April 15 during a press
conference in the Turkish Embassy in Washington. The Turkish minister
also discussed other important issues, such as Iran’s nuclear program
and events in Kyrgyzstan, during the press conference.

***

The report highlighted three main issues:

– Davutoglu plans to fly to Azerbaijan immediately after his visit to
Brazil to consult with Azeri President Ilham Aliyev about the outcome
of his talks with Armenian, U.S., and Russian officials. `We will have
a detailed discussion with Aliyev about the talks we have had here. We
will consult on the steps we will take from this point on.’ He
lamented the absence of Azerbaijan at the Washington summit as a
serious `deficiency.’

These two comments suggest substantive talks were held in Washington.

– Davutoglu expressed `political resolve’ with regard to the protocols
with Armenia, but emphasizes the link of the Karabagh issue to the
agreements and effectively denies that the protocols may be approved
by the Turkish National Assembly before April 24.

The comment suggests no breakthrough in the talks.

– Davutoglu commented on the effort to `reach out’ to the `Ottoman
diaspora’ – a term suggested by a journalist – through Turkish Embassies
and activities `in every state in the United States.’

This subject was brought up earlier, but this comment provides more
depth to what was reported in the press.

***

Below are excerpts of the report related to Armenia and Azerbaijan.

`Stating that he plans to have a detailed discussion with Azerbaijan
about his talks in the United States, Davutoglu said, `[During our
visit to Iran], we plan to share with Iran the talks we have had here,
especially with the U.S. administration, and the impressions we have
gathered.”

`Speaking at a press conference at the Turkish Embassy following his
talks, Davutoglu said he had numerous meetings within the framework of
the Nuclear Security Summit, which he attended together with Erdogan
at the invitation of U.S. President Barack Obama. Davutoglu noted that
Erdogan had articulated Turkey’s views to summit participants and had
meetings with Obama during the two days he was here. He added that
major issues that concern [Turkey and the United States] as well
developments in the Caucasus, the normalization process with Armenia,
Iran, and regional developments were discussed at the meeting.’

`Davutoglu also disclosed that Erdogan discussed with Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev developments in the Caucasus and the Middle
East as well as the recent events in Kyrgyzstan.’

`Davutoglu said, `Our prime minister got together with [Brazilian
President Luiz Inacio] Lula, and I met with Brazilian Foreign Minister
Celso Amorim. Naturally, the most important of these meetings was the
one between our prime minister and Sarkisian. In addition to these
meetings by our prime minister, I had separate talks with the foreign
ministers of all these countries.”

Meeting with Clinton

Davutoglu said he discussed three issues during his meeting with U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. `The first topic was the
normalization process with Armenia and developments in the Caucasus,’
he said. `At this time – in recent consultations we have had with the
United States – we view the developments with a shared perspective. We
are determined to continue the normalization process. We expressed our
resolve on this issue to both Obama and Sarkisian, as well as
Nalbandian and Clinton, with whom I had separate talks. This is
Turkey’s sincere position. Preserving the validity of the protocols,
which were signed after a very long and truly laborious process, and
normalizing relations with Armenia as envisaged by these protocols,
are very important for us.’

`However, we attach equal importance to the resolution of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict,’ he continued. `We want all these
processes to lead to the establishment of lasting stability and peace
in the Caucasus. I am pleased to say that the United States and Obama
also view the issues from this perspective. Our prime minister’s
meeting with Medvedev also proceeded with the same perspective.’

`Consequently, I think that there is a steadily growing momentum
toward the establishment of peace and stability in the south
Caucasus – there is a greater impetus to turn the south Caucasus into a
zone of prosperity.’

Davutoglu said that one of the most important outcomes of the summit
was the intensification of work on this issue.

Nagorno-Karabagh

When reminded about Sarkisian’s comments about Karabakh, Davutoglu
said, `We were not asked to serve as a mediator between Azerbaijan and
Armenia. Consequently, it would not be right to conclude that Turkey’s
involvement is not desired. However, regardless of whether there is a
normalization process, Turkey is one of the most important countries
of the south Caucasus. Consequently, we have always had an interest in
this issue. We will continue to have an interest in the future. What
matters more in these processes is taking steps that can contribute to
peace and stability with good will and political resolve. Regardless
of who says what, we are determined on this issue.’

In response to a question on whether `Armenia has given any assurances
that it will withdraw from some rayons of Karabakh,’ Davutoglu said
that all issues were discussed with different sides and on different
occasions, but that no such assurances were given.

Answering a question on the absence of Azerbaijan at the summit,
Davutoglu said, `Azerbaijan’s absence here was a big deficiency. In
the last two weeks, we brought up this issue with the United States at
every level and we said that the participation of Azerbaijan is
essential. We did everything we could, but ultimately this is the
decision of the United States as the host of the summit. Nevertheless,
they explained what they consider the objective reason for this
decision.’

`Naturally, the presence of Turkey, Armenia, and the co-chairs of the
Minsk Group was a very important opportunity. If Aliyev was also here,
I think that the positive talks we have had till now would have gained
much greater impetus. An important opportunity has been missed. I say
this with candor and sincerely.’

Davutoglu recalled that, before he came to the United States, Turkish
Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu went to Baku as
the special representative of Erdogan and elicited Aliyev’s most basic
positions, concerns, and views on the issue. `However, naturally,
where there is a Turk there is an Azeri and where there is an Azeri
there is a Turk,’ Davutoglu said.

Davutoglu will `go to Azerbaijan without spending any time even with
his family’ after his talks in Brazil. `In other words,’ he said, `we
will not waste even a single day. In that sense, our contacts with
Azerbaijan are very intensive. Azerbaijan does not have any problems
in terms of its representation.’

Answering a question on the protocols, Davutoglu said that it is
important that the climate is ready in Turkey, Armenia, and the region
in terms of political psychology.

When told about rumors that the protocols might be approved by the
Turkish Grand National Assembly before April 24, Davutoglu said, `Pay
attention to what we are saying, not to rumors.’

Promoting Turkey

Answering another question, Davutoglu said that it is natural to
discuss the normalization process with Armenia in a platform that
includes Turkey, Armenia, the United States, France, and Russia. When
asked whether Turkey’s overture to all groups in the United States is
`an overture targeted at the `Ottoman diaspora,’ Davutoglu replied
that he has met and will meet with Turkish ambassadors not only in the
United States, but also Europe, Latin America, and other regions.

He continued, `What we underscore in all these meetings…is the
following: Increase your communications with all groups and
communities that have some form of cultural proximity to Turkey, that
support Turkey, or that have contacts with Turkey. Turkey’s promotion
cannot occur only through political activities; it also requires
cultural and economic activities. Consequently, our ambassadors are
always active on these issues and will step up their activities in the
future. This is what we mean. However, this should not be viewed as
only the `Ottoman diaspora.”

`This morning, I was with some academics from Pakistan. Pakistan is
one of Turkey’s closest friends. We must reach out to them also. We
have to build channels through which we can reach out to everyone and
describe our country, our history, and our experience to everyone. We
will increase our means and capacity in this area, and we will
undertake activities in every state of the United States to reach out
to every group.’

ANKARA: Erdogan: Armenia Talks Linked To Karabakh Settlement

ERDOGAN: ARMENIA TALKS LINKED TO KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

Today’s Zaman
April 15 2010
Turkey

Maintaining regional peace is among the fundamental elements of
Armenia and Turkey’s efforts for normalization of their relations,
thus the resolution of a territorial dispute between Armenia and
Azerbaijan is naturally linked to this process, Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has asserted.

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan and Erdogan held a rare bilateral
meeting in Washington on Monday on the sidelines of a two-day nuclear
security summit hosted by US President Barack Obama. The two leaders
didn’t release any joint statement after the meeting. In remarks
delivered at a gathering of the Armenian community, Sarksyan made
clear that his country would not accept Turkey’s imposition of the
resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute as a precondition.

Speaking to reporters late on Tuesday during the inauguration in
Washington of "The Ottoman Worldview from Piri Reis to Katip Celebi,"
an exhibition of maps depicting the Ottoman worldview from Piri Reis to
Katip Celebi, who made some of the most significant contributions to
Ottoman geography and cartography, Erdogan was reminded of Sarksyan’s
remarks.

Two protocols signed between Armenia and Turkey in Zurich in October
to establish diplomatic ties and re-open their border includes the
words "without precondition," Erdogan first of all noted, adding:
"There is a very important expression next to the expression of
‘without precondition’: Building regional peace. Can you push
Azerbaijan aside while building this regional peace?"

Recalling that Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in
solidarity with Azerbaijan over the disputed enclave, Erdogan said an
agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh was essential for opening the border
and reiterated his call on the Minsk Group of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to intensify its efforts.

The Minsk Group, the three co-chairs of which are France, Russia
and the US, has striven to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
a territorial dispute between Baku and Yerevan, for more than 17 years.

"Today we spoke about these issues with [Russian President] Mr.
[Dmitry] Medvedev," Erdogan said, adding that he had also spoken about
the issue with French President Nicolas Sarkozy during an official
visit to Paris last week.

In response to a question, Erdogan said no date had been set for
parliamentary ratification of the protocols, while indicating that
parliamentary approval would be encouraged after Turkey sees some
positive signs concerning the process. He didn’t name it but he was
most probably referring to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

In the US capital, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu had separate talks
concerning the normalization process with his Armenian counterpart,
Edward Nalbandian, and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

April 24 Erdogan, who had a lengthy meeting with Obama earlier on
Tuesday, told reporters that he still believed Obama will not use the
g-word on April 24, the day Armenians claim marks the anniversary of
the beginning of a systematic genocide campaign against Anatolian
Armenians in the last years of the Ottoman Empire. "Personally,
I don’t expect such a thing," he said. "I believe the necessary
messages have been mutually taken," he said of the meeting with Obama.

Armenian Websites Attacked Turkish Hackers

ARMENIAN WEBSITES ATTACKED TURKISH HACKERS

PanARMENIAN.Net
April 16, 2010 – 13:12 AMT 08:12 GMT

Turkish hackers have attacked several Armenian websites ahead of
annual commemorative remembrances of the Armenian Genocide.

On April 12th, more than 250 sites were impacted when cyber terrorists
attacked a server hosting sites including ,
according to the owner of the sites (who wishes
to remain anonymous), ANCA Communications Director Elizabeth Chouljian
told PanARMENIAN.Net

The attackers also took down , which is the website
for Armenian Directory Yellow pages. Attackers attempted to hack into
a second server which hosts but were unsuccessful.

The most recent attack is the latest in a series of incidents
believed to be related to the approach of April 24, which marks the
commemoration of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and the deaths of
more than 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish
authorities. Last month the Armenia National Olympic Committee’s Web
site was hacked and replaced with a Turkish flag and a message denying
the Armenian Genocide. Modern Turkish officials have denied that the
genocide took place, referring to the deaths as the effects of a
"relocation" or deportation. The Turkish government’s position is
in contradiction to widely accepted scholarly research and official
eyewitness accounts.

The attacks appear to be carried out by a hacker who goes by the
Internet handle of "Ghost61" from the Turkish Website Turksec.info.

This person is also believed to be involved in a series of attacks
on more than 600 Swedish sites since the passage of a resolution
recognizing the Armenian Genocide by the Swedish parliament on March 1.

Several other Armenian owned businesses were affected by the server
hack, who were the innocent victims of this incident. The sites
included social media marketing company iClimber (),
a beauty salon (), a flower shop
(), and a garbage bin rental company
() .

"Sadly, most cyber-hate-crimes by Turkish entities against Armenian
websites are rooted in the environment of prejudice and hatred
created by the Turkish Government’s international campaign of
Armenian Genocide denial," stated ANCA Communications Director
Elizabeth Chouldjian. "It’s simply an extension of Turkey’s Article
301 restrictions on free speech into the internet – placing a cyber
"gag rule" on open discussion of this crime against all humanity."

All the websites attacked were offline for a period of two days
due to the damage caused by the attack. The hosting company will
be looking into enhanced security measures to stop future incidents
from occurring.

www.ArmeniaChat.com
www.ArmeniaSearch.com
www.armenian.com
www.ArmGate.com
www.iclimber.com
www.daniesbeautysalon.com
www.melodyflorist.com
www.roscoerolloff.com

U.S.-Turkish High-Level Meeting Reinforces Status Quo

U.S.-TURKISH HIGH-LEVEL MEETING REINFORCES STATUS QUO

World Markets Research Centre
Global Insight
April 14 2010

U..S.-Turkish high-level meetings at the fringes of the nuclear weapon
summit in Washington reinforced the status quo on contentious issues
such as Iran’s suspected nuclear programme and the Turko-Armenian
peace process. The Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met
with U.S. president Barack Obama for talks on the peace process,
and took part in a short trilateral meeting with Obama and outgoing
Brazilian president Luis Inacio Lula da Silva to discuss sanctions
against Iran. High officials later stressed that the aforementioned
countries were making progress on finding a solution to their differing
stances and remained committed to keeping up their dialogues.

Significance:The meetings show that the U.S. and Turkish government
leaders continue to "agree to disagree" in a friendly manner, at
least in public. The Turkish government–with its emancipation from
the United States and its self-proclaimed "zero conflict" policy–is
rendering the United States’ task easier in some parts (Iraq), and
more difficult in others (Iran). Armenia is an interesting case, as
it combines the sweet-sour stance of Turkish officials on brokering a
true thaw with Armenian counterparts: Armenian and Turkish officials
remain committed to the peace process, without actually climbing
down from their hardened stances. United States-Turkish relations are
unlikely to be significantly harmed from the seemingly slow progress
in finding a joint stance at yesterday’s meeting: the two governments
need each other far too much in economic, geo-political, and security
terms to break off their diplomatic ties.

Sooner Or Later Obama Will Use Phrase: Genocide Of Armenians

SOONER OR LATER OBAMA WILL USE PHRASE: GENOCIDE OF ARMENIANS

Aysor
April 16 2010
Armenia

Hakob Chakrian, a turkologist, said he thinks that no one knows what
the statement will make US President Barack Obama on April 24.

However, he suggested that the developments will match Armenia’s
interests.

The White House has been addressing to the Armenian nation with
the April 24 remarks since 1975, stressed Hakob Chakrian. "Obama is
the first American president who said of the 1915 Genocide at the
residence of Turkish President," he pointed.

"Even if Obama doesn’t use the genocide-word, the most important
thing is that Turkey’s policy of denial is shaken. People started
actively speaking of the Genocide of Armenians both in the world and
in Turkey," Hakob Chakrian added pointing that sooner or later Obama
will use the phrase: Genocide of Armenians.