Azerbaijani History Institute To Enhance Anti-Armenian Propaganda

AZERBAIJANI HISTORY INSTITUTE TO ENHANCE ANTI-ARMENIAN PROPAGANDA

ArmInfo
2009-04-21 15:32:00

ArmInfo. President of Azerbaijani National Academy of Sciences Mahmud
Karimov offers enhancing the activity of Azerbaijani scientists
against ‘the Armenian propaganda on a world scale’. The scientist
made such equivocal statement in an interview with APA. ‘It needs to
be more active in this field. The Institute of History holds large
campaign via Internet. The Human Rights Institute and the Institute
of Philosophy and Political-Legal Researches are also active’.

As a bright example of ‘the efficient activity’ of the Institute,
Kerimov mentioned the researches of 26 Baku Commissars. ‘The
researches are going on. The Institute of History will publish
soon several articles on this issue. Very interesting facts,
telegrams and correspondences were found. A TV program is prepared
about the researches. I don’t make detailed reports on this’, he
said. Kerimov’s another striking statement was connected with the
graves of the Commissars. ‘ It’s exact that Shaumyan’s body was not
in Sahil Park mass grave. Two others have not been identified yet’,
he said. The situation with the so-called "mass grave in Guba" once
more proves ‘the true’ finds of Azerbaijani historians. Last year
Azerbaijani archaeologists "found mass grave of innocent victims"
allegedly killed by Armenians. This allowed them20organizing rather
large-scale PR-campaign via Internet.

‘The results of Academy’s work related to the mass grave in Guba
are also under the threat. The last year torrents removed one of
undermines. The Academy asked relevant organizations to build museum
in the mass grave area. The Academy resolved all issues depended on it.

Unfortunately there is still no museum in the mass grave are we
found. It will be better to take measures to save the mass grave.

Even I am proposing to launch a criminal case on the facts found
there. The issue should be investigated more deeply and be evaluated’,
Kerimov said. One can draw a conclusion from the aforementioned that
it is possible to ‘find’ anything and blame anyone for "crimes"
and then let the ‘find’ be removed by a natural calamity. A good
opportunity for a groundless PR-campaign!

CSTO Informal Summit To Be Held In Kyrgyzstan In Summer 2009

CSTO INFORMAL SUMMIT TO BE HELD IN KYRGYZSTAN IN SUMMER 2009

ArmInfo
2009-04-20 15:22:00

Collective Security Treaty Organization’s [CSTO] informal summit will
be held in Kyrgyzstan in summer 2009, secretary of Security Council of
Kyrgyzstan Adakhan Madumarov said at the joint press-conference with
CSTO Secretary General Nikolay Bordyuzha, the CSTO press-secretary
Vitaliy Strugovets told ArmInfo correspondent.

He also added presidents of the CSTO member-states will gather in
Cholpon-Ata at the end of July – beginning of August. At present they
are drawing out the agenda of the informal summit.

Nothing Personal: Turkey’s Top Ten Challenges

Foreign Policy Journal
April 19 2009

Nothing Personal: Turkey’s Top Ten Challenges

April 19, 2009
by Raffi K. Hovannisian

YEREVAN, Armenia – That an Armenian repatriate, American-born into a
legacy of remembrance inherited from a line of survivors of genocide
nearly a century ago, feels compelled to entitle his thoughts with a
focus on Turkey – and not Armenia – reveals a larger problem, a gaping
wound, and an imperative for closure long overdue on both sides of
history’s tragic divide.

The new Armenia, independent of its longstanding statelessness since
1991, is my everyday life, as are the yearnings of my fellow citizens
for their daily dignity, true democracy, the rule of law, and an
empowering end to sham elections and the corruption, arrogance and
unaccountability of power.

`Generation next’ is neither victim nor subject, nor any longer an
infidel `millet.’ We seek not, in obsequious supplication, to curry
the favor of the world’s strong and self-important, whose interests
often trump their own principles and whose geopolitics engulf the
professed values of liberty and justice for all. Gone are the
residual resources for kissing up or behind.

And so, with a clarity of conscience and a goodness of heart, I expect
Turkey and its administration to address the multiple modern
challenges they face and offer to this end a list of realities, not
commandments, that will help enable a new era of regional
understanding and the globalization of a peaceful order that
countenances neither victims nor victimizers.

1. Measure sevenfold, cut once: This old local adage suggests a neat
lesson for contemporary officials. Before launching, at Davos or
elsewhere, pedantic missiles in condemnation of the excesses of
others, think fully about the substance and implications of your
invectives. This is not a narrow Armenian assertion; it includes all
relevant dimensions, including all minorities. Occupation, for its
part, is the last word Turkish representatives should be showering in
different directions at different international fora, lest someone
require a textbook definition of duplicity. Maintain dignity but
tread lightly, for history is a powerful and lasting precedent.

2. Self-reflection: Democracies achieve domestic success, applicants
accomplish European integration, and countries become regional drivers
only when they have the political courage and moral fortitude to
undergo this process. Face yourself, your own conduct, and the track
record of state on behalf of which you speak. Not only the success
stories and points of pride, but the whole deal. Be honest and brave
about it; you do possess the potential to graduate from decades of
denialism. Recent trends in civil society, however tentative and
preliminary, attest to this.

Armenians are marched to a nearby prison in Mezireh by armed Turkish
soldiers, 1915.

3. The Armenian genocide: Don’t revise history; recognize the
historical record and take responsibility. There is a wealth of
evidentiary documentation, more than sufficient to disarm the various
instruments of official denial that have been employed over the years.
But this is only the paperwork. The most damning testimony is not in
the killing of more than a million human souls in a manifest execution
of the 20th century’s first genocide or, in the words of the American
ambassador reporting at the time, `race extermination.’

4. Homeland-killing: Worse than genocide, as incredible as that
sounds, is the premeditated deprivation of a people of its ancestral
heartland. And that’s precisely what happened. In what amounted to
the Great Armenian Dispossession, a nation living for more than four
millennia upon its historic patrimony was in a matter of months
brutally, literally, and completely eradicated from its land.
Unprecedented in human history, this expropriation constitutes to this
day a murder, not only of a people, but of a civilization and an
attempt to erase a legacy of culture, a time-earned way of life. This
is where the debate about calling it genocide or not becomes absurd,
trivial, and tertiary. A homeland was exterminated by the Turkish
republic’s predecessor and under the world’s watchful eye, and we’re
negotiating a word. Even that term is not enough to encompass the
magnitude of the crime.

5. Coming clean: It is the only way to move forward. This is not a
threat, but a statement of plain, unoriginal fact. Don’t be afraid of
the price tag. What the Armenians lost is priceless. Instead of
skirting this catastrophic legacy through counterarguments or
commissions, return to the real script and undertake your own critical
introspection and say what you plan to do to right the wrong, to atone
for and to educate, to revive and restore, and to celebrate the
Armenian heritage of what is today eastern Turkey. Finally take the
initiative for a real reconciliation based on the terrible truth but
bolstered by a fresh call to candor.

6. Never again: The rewards of coming to this reality check far
outweigh its perils. What is unfortunately unique about the Holocaust
is not the evil of the Shoah itself, but the demeanor of postwar
Germany to face history and itself, to assume responsibility for the
crimes of the preceding regime, to mourn and to dignify, to seek
forgiveness and make redemption, and to incorporate this ethic into
the public consciousness and the methodology of state. A veritable
leader of the new Turkey, the European one of the future, might do the
same, not in cession but in full expression of national pride and
honor. My grandmother, who survived the genocide owing to the human
heights of a blessed Turkish neighbor who sheltered little Khengeni of
Ordu from the fate of her family, did not live to see that day.

7. The politics of power: Turkey’s allies can help it along this way.
Whether it’s from the West or the East, the message for Turkey is
that, in the third millennium AD, the world will be governed by a
different set of rules: that might will respect right, that no crime
against humanity or its denial will be tolerated. The Obama
Administration bears the burden, but has the capacity for this
leadership of light. And it is now being tested.

8. Turkey and Armenia: These sovereign neighbors have never, in all
of history, entered into a single bilateral agreement with each other.
Whether diplomatic, economic, political, territorial, or
security-specific, no facet of their relationship, or the actual
absence thereof, is regulated by a contract freely and fairly entered
into between the two republics. It’s about time. Hence, the process
of official contacts and reciprocal visits that unraveled in the wake
of a Turkey-Armenia soccer match in September 2008 should mind this
gap and structure the discourse not to disdain the divides emanating
from the past, but to bridge them through the immediate establishment
of diplomatic relations without the positing or posturing of
preconditions, the lifting of Turkey’s unlawful border blockade, and a
comprehensive, negotiated resolution of all outstanding matters, based
on an acceptance of history and the commitment to a future guaranteed
against it recurrence.

9. Third-party interests: Nor should the fact of dialogue, as
facially laudable as it is, be exploited as an insincere justification
to deter third-parties, and particularly the U.S. Congress, from
adopting decisions or resolutions that simply seek to reaffirm the
historical record. Such comportment, far from the statesmanship
expected, contradicts the aim and spirit of rapprochement.

10. The past as present: The current Armenian state covers a mere
fraction of the vast expanse of the great historical plateau upon
which the Armenians lived until the surgical disgorgement of homeland
and humanity that was 1915. Accordingly, as improbable as it seems in
view of its ethnic kinship with Azerbaijan, modern-day Turkey also
carries the charge to discard outdated and pursue corrective policies
in the Caucasus. This high duty applies not only to a qualitatively
improved and cleansed rapport with the Republic of Armenia, but also
in respect of new regional realities.

On the road to inevitable self-discovery, Turkey, its future with
Armenia, and their immediate neighborhood have come to form one of the
planet’s most sensitive and seismic tectonic plates. Integrity,
equity, and a bit of humility might help to save the day. And our
world.

Raffi K. Hovannisian was Armenia’s first minister of foreign affairs
and currently represents the opposition Heritage party in the National
Assembly.

http://www.foreignpolicyjourn al.com/2009/04/19/nothing-personal-turkeys-top-ten -challenges/

Armrobotics To Take Place In Yerevan Oct 2-4 2009

ARMROBOTICS TO TAKE PLACE IN YEREVAN OCT 2-4 2009

ArmInfo
2009-04-18 14:01:00

ArmInfo. Armrobotics 2009 open championshop will take place in Yerevan
Oct 2-4 2009, says the executive director of the Union of Information
Technology Enterprises (UITE) Karen Vardanyan.

The objective of the contest is to unite young researchers from Armenia
and Diaspora, to teach them to work in a team and, most importantly,
to turn Armenia into a producer and export of high technologies.

Vardanyan says that the organizers have set size and weight limits
for the participant robots. Besides, they are planning to organize
computer simulations (the contestants will have to program a virtual
robot who will have to pass virtual obstacles) and a line tracking
(finding a way out of a labyrinth).

This championship is meant for students only but there will also be
contests for people above 30 and school-children.

The application deadline is June 5 2009.

President Of Armenia Meets CSTO Interior Ministers

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA MEETS CSTO INTERIOR MINISTERS

armradio.am
15.04.2009 18:22

President Serzh Sargsyan received the delegations participating in
the sitting of the Ministers of Interior of the CSTO member states and
the Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization,
Nikolay Bordyuzha.

The Armenian President said the cooperation between the law-enforcement
bodies is the most effective within the framework of the CSTO and noted
that the problems in the sphere are almost the same for everyone,
which provides a good basis for cooperation. He attached importance
to closer bilateral cooperation between member states.

Secretary General of the Organization Nikolay Bordyuzha assessed the
sitting of the Interior Ministers as effective and noted that one
of the pivotal issues of the meeting was related to the formation of
collective rapid-reaction forces.

No Damage To Ararat Valley By Late Frosts In Armenia

NO DAMAGE TO ARARAT VALLEY BY LATE FROSTS IN ARMENIA

ARKA
Apr 15, 2009

YEREVAN, April 15. /ARKA/. The late frosts have hardly caused any
damage to the Ararat valley, RA Deputy Minister of Agriculture Samvel
Galstyan told reporters.

He pointed out that the situation was more serious in the lowlands.

Specifically, low temperature was registered in the lowlands of the
Armavir region about a week ago. However, he said that this cannot
have caused any serious damage, especially to stone fruits – apricots,
plum and peaches.

Galstyan also reported that the strongest frosts were registered in the
Tavush region, Vaiots Dzor, Lori, Aragatsotn, Kotayk – 4-10 below zero.

He pointed out that drupes will be most seriously damaged in the
regions in questions.

"On the instruction of the Minister of Agriculture, a special
commission was formed to study the consequences and determine the
damage in cooperation with the regional administrations," Galstyan
said.

He pointed out that the Government will be properly informed of the
situation to limit the damage.

"I do not think we will not have any serious damage in the [Ararat]
valley. We have one year ahead, but even now I can say that the frosts
will not cause grave damage, which will allow the farmers to meet
the market demand and leave the prices unchanged," Galstyan said.

ANKARA: Turkish Parliament Speaker Says Turkish-Azeri Relations Cann

TURKISH PARLIAMENT SPEAKER SAYS TURKISH-AZERBAIJANI RELATIONS CANNOT BE HARMED

Anadolu Agency
April 15 2009
Turkey

ANKARA (A.A) – 15.04.2009 – The Turkish parliament speaker said on
Wednesday that Turkish-Azerbaijani relations could not be harmed.

Turkey’s Parliament Speaker Koksal Toptan called for not harming
relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

"We should not let Turkish-Azerbaijani relations be harmed," Toptan
told a group of women Azerbaijani parliamentarians visiting Turkey.

Toptan said, "one million Karabakh people will be displaced and try
to survive, and we will open the border gate with Armenia. Such a
thing cannot happen."

"Discussing all problems with Armenia, one of which is Karabakh,
does not cause any weakness in Turkish-Azerbaijani relations, and
it does not mean that Turkey is making concessions of its policies
regarding the Upper Karabakh issue," Toptan also said.

Toptan said Turkey’s views were very clear and obvious, and said
nobody knew when those discussions would be completed, or whether or
not they would bear positive result.

The Turkish parliament speaker said that Turkey would never give up
Azerbaijan, and two countries should join forces and walk together.

Also speaking in the luncheon, Genire Pasayeva, an Azerbaijani
lawmaker, said that the border crossing with Armenia could not be
opened before the invasion of Azerbaijani territories ended.

"We are not telling to keep the borders closed, but we are saying that
Armenia should withdraw from our territories and recognize Turkey’s
territorial integrity," Pasayera said.

Pasayera also called for regional cooperation.

Turkey and Armenia has been holding talks to normalize relations
in recent years. Armenian President Serzh Sargsian said last week
that the border between Turkey and Armenia, which was closed after
Armenia invaded Azerbaijan’s Upper Karabakh in 1993, could be opened
in a few months.

However, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the border
could not be opened until Armenia-Azarbaijan dispute is resolved.

Turkish State Minister Nimet Cubukcu also received the Azerbaijani
women parliamentarians.

Azerbaijan To Take Over BSEC Chairmanship From Armenia

AZERBAIJAN TO TAKE OVER BSEC CHAIRMANSHIP FROM ARMENIA

454_4/14/2009_1
Tuesday, April 14, 2009

BAKU–Azerbaijan will send its Deputy Foreign Minister, Mahmud
Mammadguliyev, to Yerevan on April 20 to formally accept the rotating
chairmanship of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization from
Armenia, Armradio reported.

The transfer of the regional organization’s chairmanship from Armenia
to Azerbaijan will come at the end of a meeting of the BSEC Foreign
Ministers Council that will be chaired, for the last time, by Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

Nalbandian and Mammadguliyev are not scheduled to meet with any
Armenian officials on the sidelines of the meeting, the Azeri Press
Agency reported.

The meeting is expected to discuss strategies to minimize the impact
of the global economic crisis on the Black Sea Region. It will also
focus on further developing the effectiveness of BSEC and build on
guidelines for improving the BSEC’s mechanisms adopted at the previous
Foreign Ministers Meeting in Tirana on October 23.

The meeting will also appoint members to the BSEC Permanent
International Secretariat and deal with a number of regional projects
and funds operating under the auspices of the organization.

Yerevan assumed the chairmanship of the BSEC last November and has
focused on streamlining several issues, primarily dealing with energy
cooperation between the BSEC member countries.

www.asbarez.com/index.html?showarticle=41

ANKARA: Generals’ backtracking on boycott for Obama hypocritical

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 12 2009

Generals’ backtracking on boycott for Obama hypocritical, commentators
say

Chief of General Staff Gen. Ä°lker BaÅ?buÄ? and the
commanders of Turkey’s land, air and naval forces were all present in
Parliament to listen to Obama’s speech.

Senior members of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) who ended a long
boycott of Parliament on Monday to listen to a speech from visiting US
President Barack Obama acted hypocritically and inconsistently in
terms of their reason for the longstanding protest, opinion leaders
have said.

Chief of General Staff Gen. Ä°lker BaÅ?buÄ? and the
commanders of Turkey’s land, air and naval forces were all present in
Parliament to listen to Obama’s speech, ending a boycott they have
maintained for the past 21 months against the election of Abdullah
Gül as president and the presence of deputies from the
pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP), which has been accused of
having links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).
Obama’s visit to Turkey on April 6 and 7 was extensively covered by
Turkish and world media. The US president delivered important messages
to both Turkey and the entire Muslim world.

Senior TSK members, who traditionally attend ceremonies held in
Parliament, have not been to Parliament since the election of former
Foreign Minister Gül to the presidency because of their
concerns over his secular credentials.

In the process leading up to Gül’s election — as the nominee
of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) — the TSK
strongly voiced its opposition to Gül on the grounds that he
lacked secular credentials and the General Staff even issued a
memorandum on April 27, 2007, warning the AK Party to withdraw its
candidate. A quorum deadlock over Gül’s presidency was settled
after early general elections, which also paved the way for the DTP
deputies to enter Parliament, prompting the TSK leaders to start their
boycott against Parliament.

The DTP entered Parliament in compliance with Turkey’s laws, so it is
wrong for the TSK to boycott it, just as it was wrong for the TSK to
boycott the presidency of Gül, who was elected in compliance
with the law, by not attending his oath-taking ceremony, according to
Altan Tan, a prominent Kurdish intellectual. He said the commanders
who imposed the boycott on legitimately elected politicians did not
take a stance against Obama, even though he talked about things that
the TSK does not approve of, such as the reopening of the Greek
Orthodox Halki Seminary, the opening of borders with Armenia and the
fulfillment of demands from the Kurdish public. `This is very
contradictory. Their visit to Parliament in order to not be seen as
boycotting Obama meant a big surrender for them,’ Altan argued.

The Turkish generals’ failure to accord their new commander-in-chief,
President Gül, traditional signs of respect on several
occasions since Gül took office and their absence during his
oath-taking ceremony in Parliament drew widespread criticism at the
time, even from Gül’s opponents, given the fact that Gül
had a wide base of support and that in the end his presidency was the
will of Parliament.

According to Mehmet Altan, a columnist for the Star daily, the
generals’ coming to Parliament to listen to Obama was a
scandal. However, he does not think the boycott was against the DTP,
but against President Gül.

`It is a scandal peculiar to Turkey for the generals to boycott
Gül’s speech in Parliament after assuming office, but come to
Parliament to listen to Obama. This attitude shows that the commanders
embraced Obama more than they embraced Gül,’ he said.

On whether the TSK members had any right to boycott Parliament, Altan
said members of the armed forces do not have any right to make
official statements on issues other than security in a normal
democracy. `I lived in France for five years and I returned to Turkey
without hearing anybody uttering the name of their chief of general
staff,’ Altan noted.

Will the TSK continue to boycott Parliament?

Yasemin Ã?ongar, a columnist for the Taraf daily, said time will
tell whether the TSK members will give up on their boycott against
Parliament and attend the events there that are relevant to them.

She said although it was problematic for the TSK members who did not
come to Parliament to listen to their own president to come to
Parliament to listen to a US president, it was still a good step
regarding the removal of the embargo on the DTP.

`There is nothing wrong about military members coming to Parliament
and being present there while issues relevant to them are being
debated. What is abnormal here in Turkey is the fact that members of
the military make statements with political messages,’ Ã?ongar
underlined.

A columnist from the Bugün daily, Adem Yavuz Arslan, said last
week that he hoped the generals’ `meaningless boycott’ against the
nation’s will has ended. `Otherwise, a picture will emerge in which
the military does not heed their president as much as they heed Obama,
which I think will not be a good one. Ignoring the existence of the
DTP does not make any contribution to the settlement of problems,
either,’ he wrote.

12 April 2009, Sunday
FATMA DÄ°Å?LÄ° Ä°STANBUL

Opposition’s Hope

OPPOSITION’S HOPE
by Ike Janpoladjan

WPS Agency
What the Papers Say (Russia)
April 9, 2009 Thursday
Russia

ELECTION OF MAYOR OF YEREVAN, ARMENIA, WILL BE A POLITICAL BATTLE OF
THE FIRST MAGNITUDE; Armenia is on the threshold of fierce political
wars.

Political tranquility in Armenia was shattered by the opposition whose
leader Levon Ter-Petrosjan (the first president of sovereign Armenia)
decided to run for the Council of Elders and mayor of Yerevan. The
voting is scheduled for May 31. Corridors of power in Yerevan avidly
discuss the recent disturbances in Moldova where the mayor of the
capital city was identified as one of the organizers of protests. Even
these speculations aside, however, what has always been a routine in
Armenia is now anything but. Armenia faces the prospect of vicious
political wars.

Seven political forces will run for the Council of Elders. Four of them
represent the ruling coalition – Republican Party, Prosperous Armenia,
Armenian Revolutionary Front Dashnaktsutjun, and Orinats Yerkir (or
Land of Law). A couple of small organizations nominated candidates
too, and so did the Armenian National Congress, a conglomerate of 18
political parties led by Ter-Petrosjan.

One has to know Yerevan to understand what the whole fuss is about. It
so happens that nearly 50% of the population of Armenia lives in
Yerevan. Practically all of the political, financial and economic,
academic and educational, cultural, and intellectual potential of
the republic is to be found within Yerevan’s city limits. In other
words, Yerevan is essentially a state within the state. Should the
Republican Party (the ruling party) win the election in Yerevan, its
positions will be rock-solid even for the next nationwide election. The
Republican Party nominated incumbent Mayor Gagik Beglarjan for another
term of office.

Victory of the opposition on the other hand will put into motion some
serious and far-reaching processes. The Armenian National Congress
all but admits that election of the mayor of Yerevan will be but "an
instrumental phase of restoration of the constitutional regime". The
opposition means business as may be judged from the words of Congress
Coordinator Levon Zurabjan that "… election of the mayor of Yerevan
will become the second round of the presidential election" (that took
place in February 2008).

"Once victory is ours, we will serve the authorities the schedule
of their resignations," Zurabjan said. Chances of the opposition are
estimated as fine. Leader of the party that polled 40% plus one vote
automatically becomes the mayor of Yerevan. Even by official estimates
of the presidential election last year (whose outcome the opposition
questions), the opposition polled 43% throughout the country and
48.2% in Yerevan. Dispersing the opposition rally last March, the
authorities bagged, tried, and convicted literally hundreds activists
of independent movement. All of that couldn’t help earning the Armenian
National Congress sympathies of the population. The latest developments
– devaluation of the national monetary unit and price-rise – delivered
a serious blow at the image of the regime and society’s trust in it.

Sociometer Center Director Agaron Adibekjan kept telling everyone
within earshot in 2008 that there was absolutely no chance for
Ter-Petrosjan to poll above 4-6% votes (he polled 22%). Adibekjan
changed his tune now. "If the first president plays it real smart, he
may poll more than 35% in election of the Council of Elders," he said.