BAKU: Karabakh Mediators To Meet On 5 May

KARABAKH MEDIATORS TO MEET ON 5 MAY

news.az
April 27 2010
Azerbaijan

The OSCE Minsk Group mediators will meet at OSCE Headquarters in
Vienna on 5 May.

The mediators will brief the OSCE chairman-in-office, Kazakh Foreign
Minister Kanat Saudabayev, and representatives of the Minsk Group
co-chairing countries, on the negotiating process to find a settlement
to the Karabakh conflict.

Both the former and current Russian co-chairs of the Minsk Group,
Yury Merzlyakov and Igor Popov respectively, French co-chair
Bernard Fassier, American co-chair Robert Bradkte and the personal
representative of the OSCE chairman-in-office, Andrzej Kasprzyk met
on 22 April. A statement issued after the meeting said that recent
meetings in Baku, Washington and Moscow had provided ‘a new impetus
to the advancement of a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict on the basis of the Madrid Principles’.

Yury Merzlyakov will officially hand over his post to Igor Popov at
the Vienna meeting.

Armenian President Sees No Threat Of A Renewed War In Nagorno-Karaba

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SEES NO THREAT OF A RENEWED WAR IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT ZONE

ARKA
April 26, 2010
YEREVAN

In an interview with Russian news agency RIA Novosti last week
Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan downplayed speculations about the
growing threat of a renewed war in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone
in the near future. Nevertheless she said the threat of resumption
of hostilities will be there as long as peace and stability are not
established. He said that would come with signing of an effective
peace agreement by the sides to the conflict.

"Some people in Azerbaijan go over the limits, reflected in their
militaristic demagogy and Armenia-phobia,’ the president said. He
said an attempt to solve the conflict by force is an adventure,
fraught with a catastrophe for Azerbaijan.

He said a renewed war in the region would destabilize it for a long
time and create a new hotbed of tension, but would fail to solve
the conflict.

"In short, I do not see a threat of a new war in the region in near
future, but I have repeatedly said that our armed forces must be
ready for a war that may start tomorrow,’ Serzh Sargsyan said.

The conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh broke out in 1988 after the
predominantly Armenian-populated enclave declared about secession
from Azerbaijan As Azerbaijan declared its independence from the
Soviet Union and removed the powers held by the enclave’s government,
the Armenian majority voted in 1991, December 10, to secede from
Azerbaijan and in the process proclaimed the enclave the Republic
of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Full-scale fighting, initiated by Azerbaijan, erupted in the late
winter of 1992. International mediation by several groups including
Europe’s OSCE’s failed to bring an end resolution that both sides
could work with. In the spring of 1993, Armenian forces captured
regions outside the enclave itself. By the end of the war in 1994,
the Armenians were in full control of most of the enclave and also
held and currently control seven regions beyond the administrative
borders of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Almost 1 million people on both sides have been displaced as a result
of the conflict. A Russian- -brokered ceasefire was signed in May
1994 and peace talks, mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group, have been
held ever since by Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Kiro Manoyan: Yerevan Gave Ankara Another Chance To Drag Out Normali

KIRO MANOYAN: YEREVAN GAVE ANKARA ANOTHER CHANCE TO DRAG OUT NORMALIZATION PROCESS

PanARMENIAN.Net –
April 26, 2010 – 15:21 AMT 10:21 GMT

Recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the U.S. has political rather
than legal significance, said Kiro Manoyan, ARFD Bureau’s Hay Dat
political affairs office director.

"If the Washington gives the green light, the other countries will
recognize the Genocide by chain reaction," he told a news conference
in Yerevan on April 26.

At the same time, he emphasized that resolution recognizing the
Armenian Genocide were passed by the U.S. Congress in 1975, 1986 and
1993, for the administration to confirm this fact.

Asked to comment on Armenia’s decision to suspend the process of
ratification of Protocols on normalization of relations with Turkey,
Mr. Manoyan said that the danger will persist unless Armenian
authorities withdraw the signature from the Protocols.

"Yerevan has given Ankara another chance to drag out the normalization
process," he said.

In The Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry Has Appeared Deputy Blood

IN THE ARMENIAN BONE MARROW DONOR REGISTRY HAS APPEARED DEPUTY BLOOD.
By YerevanReporter

AllVoices
m/contributed-news/5683460-in-the-armenian-bone-ma rrow-donor-registry-has-appeared-deputy-blood
Apri l 26 2010

In the Armenian parliament today passed campaign "Be a donor-save one
life", which was attended by Speaker of National Assembly of Armenia
Hovik Abrahamyan, deputies, members of parliament and journalists
accredited in the parliament.

As the executive director of the charity fund "Armenian Bone Marrow
Donor Registry" Sevak Avakian, the action provides for delivery of
donor 3 ml of blood from which stem cells are then allocated. At this
time, the registry recorded data 15,5 thousand people, and by the
end of the year is planned to increase that number by 10 thousand
this year chelovek.V similar rally was held in the parliament of
Nagorno Karabakh.

Sevak Avakian said that "The Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry is
a member of the international registry. Because of this, one of the
Armenian donors last year saved the life of an Italian boy. "

http://www.allvoices.co

Muslim says mistresses are the French way of life

Muslim says mistresses are the French way of life

By ELAINE GANLEY
The Associated Press
Monday, April 26, 2010

PARIS — A Muslim Frenchman at the center of a firestorm over polygamy said
Monday that keeping mistresses is the French way of life.

The man’s case came to light after his wife was fined for driving with a
veil covering her face, and his comments are an ironic riposte to those in
French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government who want to push immigrants to
better integrate into French society.

The 31-year-old Frenchwoman drew nationwide attention last week to a driving
fine she received for apparel that hinders her vision. But it soon emerged
that her husband may have four wives – although it was doubtful the
marriages were made official under French law.

The situation appeared to be a boon to Sarkozy, who is trying to rush
through controversial legislation forbidding burqa-style Islamic veils that
cover the face, on the grounds that they don’t respect French values or
women’s dignity. But it has stoked debate and may backfire on legal grounds.
The president of the French parliament’s lower chamber, Bernard Accoyer,
said Monday the text of the bill to ban full Muslim veils would be presented
at a Cabinet meeting May 19.

Many Muslims fear a law banning face-covering veils because they say
targeting the tiny minority of women who cover their faces stigmatizes
France’s entire Muslim community – at an estimated 5 million people, the
largest in western Europe. The head of the main Muslim grouping, Mohamed
Moussaoui, reiterated that message Monday after a meeting with Prime
Minister Francois Fillon. He noted that shots fired over the weekend at a
mosque in southern France failed to garner the attention given to the veil
affair.

Those who want a full ban on such veils contend the garment conceals more
than the face, notably helping to perpetuate practices like polygamy,
approved in some Muslim countries, and is a signpost of a radical
interpretation of Islam.

Interior Minister Brice Hortefeux wants to revoke the French citizenship of
the driver’s husband if he is found to be practicing polygamy. The man is
also suspected of profiting from state subsidies for single women provided
to each of the wives.

Authorities are looking into whether the Algerian-born Lies Hebbadj was
married to four women in French civil ceremonies, which would be highly
unlikely. Were he married in religious ceremonies by imams in Algeria or in
France, these unions would not count as marriages under French law, said
Rabah Hached, a Paris lawyer who specializes in immigration issues. In that
case, each of the officially unmarried women could potentially receive state
aid for her children.

For the attorney, the law may be on the side of the allegedly polygamous
man.

"It’s not forbidden to have a mistress," Hached said by telephone. While
stressing he does not know details of the case, Hached said that "I strongly
suspect this gentleman we’re talking about is within his rights."

Hebbadj, defended his lifestyle Monday by turning the notion of polygamy on
its head.

"If we are stripped of nationality, for having mistresses," Lies Hebbadj
told reporters in Nantes, then "there would be a lot of French people
stripped of nationality. As far as I know, mistresses are not forbidden,
neither in France, nor in Islam."

He did not specify whether he lives under the same roof with the various
women in his life, although press reports have quoted neighbors as saying he
moves between several houses. Hebbadj, whose robed image has been flashed
around France by TV, runs a recently opened halal butcher shop.
The revelation last week that a police officer cited the woman, whose name
has not been revealed, for driving while wearing a niqab, which reveals only
the eyes, provided a taste of what is in store.

A French bill that would outlaw the veils in all public places will be
introduced in May, despite a ruling by France’s highest administrative body
that it risks being found unconstitutional.

Prime Minister Francois Fillon met Monday with Muslim leaders and the
justice minister Monday to lay the groundwork for an eventual law.
Belgium also plans a full ban on Islamic garments that cover the face and
was expected to be the first EU country to institute one, until the collapse
last week of the Belgian government. That legislation is on hold.

Sarkozy, who has striven to revive what he says is a loss of basic French
values, is sinking in polls and his conservative party was trounced in March
regional elections. Some Socialist rivals suggested the arrest of the veiled
driver with a suspect husband was a setup.

A Socialist Party spokesman accused Sarkozy of playing to the
anti-immigration far-right.

"The government decided … to continue its strategy of stigmatizing"
Muslims and has become "the best ally of Islamic extremists in France,"
Benoit Hamon said Monday. "A banal police citation has been transformed into
an affair of state."

France’s Muslim leaders have consistently said the veil debate is
stigmatizing Muslims.

The question of banning face-covering veils was first broached last June
when Sarkozy told parliament that such garments are "not welcome" in France,
a message he repeated last month.

The issue blossomed into a major debate, recalling the enmity dividing
politicians and citizens before France outlawed Muslim headscarves and other
"ostentatious" religious symbols from classrooms in 2004.

The Interior Ministry estimates no more than 1,900 Muslim women wear attire
that hides the face.

There are no official numbers on the number of polygamous families in
France, most of which are from sub-Saharan Africa, but they are estimated in
the tens of thousands.

© 2010 The Associated Press

BAKU; Armenian boxing team arrives in Baku

news.az, Azerbaijan
April 24 2010

Armenian boxing team arrives in Baku
Sat 24 April 2010 | 08:12 GMT Text size:

An Armenian boxing team has arrived in Baku for participation in the
youth world championship in boxing to start on April 25.

According to News.Az, the Armenian delegation has arrived from
Tbilisi. The delegation includes 13 people including boxers. Here are
their names: Korun Sogomonyan (48 kg), Narek Abragyan (51 kg), Artur
Kirajian (54 kg), Karen Tonakanjan (57 kg), Grayr Matevosyan (60 kg)
and Hovannes Bachkov (64 kg).

The world championship will start at the Serhedchi Olympic sport
complex on April 25.

Elmir Aliyev
News.Az

ISTANBUL: Turks in Istanbul commemorate 1915 killings of Armenians

Hurriyet, Turkey
April 24 2010

Turks in Istanbul commemorate 1915 killings of Armenians

Saturday, April 24, 2010
ISTANBUL ‘ Agence France-Presse

Human rights activists and artists in Istanbul commemorated the
1915-17 killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks for the first time
Saturday, breaking with a near century-old Turkish taboo.

The Istanbul branch of the Human Rights Association, or Ä°HD, organized
a rally attended by about 100 people on the steps of the HaydarpaÅ?a
train station from where the first convoy of 220 deported Armenians
left on April 24, 1915.

Under the slogan "Never Again" and the watchful eye of the police,
demonstrators carried black and white photos of some of the deportees,
most of whom never returned.

Police kept at bay a group of counter-demonstrators including former
diplomats waving the Turkish flag.

Forty-two Turkish diplomats were killed by members of the extremist
Armenian ASALA organization in the 1970s and 1980s.

Turkish intellectuals and artists signed a petition calling on "those
who feel the great pain" to show their sorrow.

Avoiding an open confrontation over the term genocide ‘which the
Turkish government fiercely rejects ‘ the petition speaks of the
"Great Catastrophe" of the 1915-17 massacres.

But despite this precaution, organizers were afraid of a backlash from
those who could object to the demonstration.

"All precautionary measures have been taken but it’s always possible
that someone is losing it," Cengiz Aktar, an Istanbul academic who
backs the petition, told AFP.

The unprecedented commemoration came as tens of thousands of Armenians
marked the 95th anniversary of the killings in the Armenian capital
Yerevan amid fresh tensions with Turkey over the collapse of
reconciliation efforts.

The dispute about the genocide label has poisoned relations between
the two neighbors for decades.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were systematically
killed between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of
modern Turkey, was falling apart. Turkey says many were killed on both
sides during civil strife.

BUDAPEST: Minority Ombudsman Remembers Armenian Genocide

Hungarian News Agency (MTI)
April 24, 2010 Saturday

MINORITY OMBUDSMAN REMEMBERS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Budapest, April 24 (MTI) – Hungarian minority ombudsman Erno Kallai
has reiterated the need to condemn all devastating, murderous
ideologies and all forms of discrimination by race and religion on the
anniversary of the genocide committed against the Armenian nation in
1915-17.

In a statement sent to MTI on Saturday, the ombudsman noted that 95
years ago some 600 Armenian intellectuals had been massacred in Turkey
because of their ethnicity and religion, followed by the annihilation
of 2.5 million Armenians until 1917.

Kallai called the genocide a "shameful episode of world history, one
that mankind should never forget."

Armenians in Hungary were recognised as a national minority in 1991.
The community numbers around some thousand people, living mostly in
Budapest.

BAKU; Azerbaijani Political Analyst: Armenian President’s Statement

AZERBAIJANI POLITICAL ANALYST: ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S STATEMENT PURELY THEATRICAL

Trend
April 23 2010
Azerbaijan

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s statement is purely theatrical
taking into account the failure of the Zurich protocols, Azerbaijani
political analyst Fikret Sadikhov said.

"Even after signing the Zurich protocols and the amendments to the
Armenian Constitutional Court, which contradicted Ankara’s interests,
it became clear that Turkey will not ratify the documents in the form
Armenia would like to see them. Yerevan decided to make a proactive
step," Sadikhov told Trend, commenting on yesterday’s statement by
the Armenian president.

Sargsyan signed a decree and suspended the ratification of the
Armenian-Turkish protocols in parliament, News-Armenia reported.

"Sargsyan signed a decree on the suspension of the ratification of the
Zurich protocols signed Oct. 10. The Armenian foreign minister was
charged to inform Turkey about the suspension of their ratification
in accordance with the presidential decree," the news agency reported.

"The amendments to Constitutional Court indicated that the country does
not actually refuse its territorial claims to Turkey and will continue
to push the resolutions on the 1915 events. But the Zurich protocols
provide for the establishment of a joint commission of scholars and
historians to study the events of those years," political analyst
said. "Armenia has ignored all the facts, which were laid out in the
Zurich protocols. It sounds ironic, but Armenia wanted to overcome
a difficult situation and the isolation in which it found itself,
improve the economic situation in the country, and at the same
time continue to make territorial claims against Turkey, push the
resolutions on the 1915 events, and refuse to resolve the Karabakh
problem, keeping Azerbaijani territory under the occupation. However,
this cannot happen."

Armenia realized that its mission to resolve its domestic problems
by besting Azerbaijan and Turkey is impossible, and Ankara will
never ratify the protocols in this form, the analyst said. Thus,
the president decided to take a proactive step, he added.

In fact, even before yesterday’s announcement, it was clear the Zurich
protocols would not be approved in the form in which they were signed
in October last year, Sadikhov said.

"This is nonsense. The county’s desire to overcome a difficult
situation must be associated with some compromises, especially if a
country is at war with a neighboring state and this state is closely
linked with Turkey. So, it is necessary to take into account many
factors, fine points. If all these details are ignored and the country
continues to take care of its personal well-being and does not remove
its claims and ambitions from the agenda. The result of the situation
happened since October last year up to now is quite obvious.

Sargsyan’s statement is a purely theatrical gesture, coming from an
understanding that in any case, the protocols will not be approved by
the parliaments of these countries in a such form," the analyst said.

Karabakh Key To Turkish – Armenian Peace – Azerbaijan

KARABAKH KEY TO TURKISH – ARMENIAN PEACE – AZERBAIJAN

New York Times
April 23 2010

BAKU/YEREVAN (Reuters) – Azerbaijan warned Armenia on Friday it
could not achieve anything in the region unless it makes peace over
Nagorno-Karabakh, and warned its army was ready "to hit any target"
to take the breakaway region back.

The comments follow the collapse on Thursday of a U.S. and
Russian-backed bid to mend ties between Armenia and Turkey after a
century of hostility stemming from the World War One mass killing of
Armenians by Ottoman forces.

Armenia suspended ratification of a deal to establish diplomatic
ties and reopen its border with Turkey after Ankara said Armenia
should first reach terms with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh,
where ethnic Armenians threw off Azeri rule in the early 1990s with
backing from Armenia.

Armenia says it is unacceptable to link the two issues.

But in Baku, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said nothing would be
possible without a solution to Nagorno-Karabakh, something that has
evaded mediators since a cease-fire was agreed in 1994.

"You cannot achieve anything in the region without a solution to
the Karabakh conflict," Aliyev said in a televised meeting of the
government.

Azerbaijan, its military budget swollen by petrodollars, frequently
threatens to take the mountain region back by force.

But the rhetoric became sharper after the thaw began between Turkey
and Armenia late last year, and traditionally good ties with the
United States have become strained by Washington’s support for the
rapprochement.

ISOLATED

"The fact that we continue peaceful negotiations is a major compromise
on our part," Aliyev said.

Defence Minister Safar Abiyev told him: "The Azerbaijan army has
all the capabilities to hit any target on the territory of Armenia
if necessary."

To the vast majority of Armenians, the idea of giving up some of
the land won during the Nagorno-Karabakh war in exchange for an open
border and diplomatic ties with Turkey, is unacceptable.

But Turkey, which closed the border in 1993 in solidarity with
Azerbaijan, has been stung by the backlash in Azerbaijan, an oil and
gas exporter and one of the West’s key hopes for gas for the planned
Nabucco pipeline.

Though the deal is now on ice, some analysts warn it is too late to
sooth tempers in Azerbaijan.

"It increases instability because the process has left Azerbaijan
isolated and effectively pulled the rug from under its foreign policy
framework, built on close ties with the U.S. and Turkey," said Svante
Cornell of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute.

The Armenian-Turkish peace process has also roused opposition within
Armenia and the huge Armenian diaspora, many of whom trace their
roots to the killings and deportations of World War One.

On Friday, the eve of the 95th anniversary of the massacres, thousands
of Armenians with flaming torches marched through the capital Yerevan
to demand Turkey recognise the events as genocide.

Turkey rejects the term genocide and says many Muslim Turks and Kurds,
as well as Christian Armenians, were killed in inter-communal violence
as Russian forces invaded eastern Anatolia during World War One.