FEATURE-Syria’s stateless Kurds hope for new rights

FEATURE-Syria’s stateless Kurds hope for new rights
By Lin Noueihed

05/16/05 08:00 ET

DAMASCUS (Reuters) – Ismael Hami is a foreigner in the country of
his birth. He cannot vote, run for office or register property in his
name. A pink card stamped “not for travel” is one of a few documents
proving he even exists.

But all that could soon change for Hami, who says he is one of an
estimated 200,000 stateless Kurds living in Syria.

Rights activists and Western diplomats say Syria is mulling a solution
to the status of Kurds in the mainly Arab state. Word is spreading
and cautious hopes are rising among the stateless that they could
finally get citizenship.

“There are rumors that changes are coming,” said Hami, an official
in the small but active Syrian Kurdish Yikiti party.

“They have promised a solution to the stateless Kurds issue. We
have despaired of Syrian policy but hope they reform even if it is
a response to international pressure, not people’s wishes.”

Decades of Kurdish discontent in Syria’s northeastern governorate
of Hasake, where Kurds say a 1962 census omitted 120,000 of their
number, fueled riots that swept several towns in March 2004, after
a brawl between Arab and Kurdish supporters of rival soccer teams in
the town of Kameshli escalated.

The clashes, in which some 30 people were killed, reflected
unprecedented tension between Kurds and the state in Syria, which,
like neighboring Turkey and Iran worries Kurdish autonomy in northern
Iraq could inspire separatism on its soil.

Syria’s estimated 2 million Kurds, many with family ties in Turkey
and Iraq, say they seek rights within the country where they make up
around 10 percent of the population, not a separate state.

They want citizenship — denied to those classified as stateless but
required for higher state education and employment — and the right
to teach and publish in their own language.

UNDER PRESSURE

President Bashar al-Assad, whose country is under U.S. pressure to
reform, had pledged to look into statelessness, raising hopes of an
end to the problem.

In a move Syrian Kurdish activists hope heralds wider reform, Assad
pardoned 312 Syrian Kurds accused of taking part in last year’s riots,
to enhance “national unity.”

“They released some of the detainees. This was a positive move that
all the Syrian movements welcomed,” said Lukman Oso, an activist in
the Kurdish Leftist Party in Syria.

“We are hearing through leaks to the press that they may give stateless
Kurds identity. We would welcome any such move as positive but we
have seen nothing on the ground so far.”

Kurdish activists say they wish to see the stateless Kurds issue
addressed, not least because some have no rights at all.

The offspring of stateless Kurds who married Syrians over generations
when those unions were not officially recognized, are now caught in
legal limbo.

Kurds estimate there are some 75,000 of these so-called undeclared
living in Syria today.

Hami was recently allowed to register his marriage to a Syrian citizen,
finally giving their three children official recognition, if only as
foreign residents living in Syria.

The Kurdish issue is sensitive in Syria, eliciting little official
comment or sympathy among the general public.

But Western diplomats and Syrian activists say they expect the
government to naturalize tens of thousands of Kurds.

“It will happen slowly, slowly. They will probably announce 30,000
then after a few months another 10,000 and so on, but of course they
will not give citizenship to all,” said Ayman Abdel Nour, an engineer
and reform activist.

“They will only give citizenship to those who deserve it, only after
they study their files because many of these people actually come
from Turkey or Iraq, not Syria.”

LONG HISTORY

Kurds have lived in the mountains that straddle Iraq, Turkey, Syria
and Iran, an area some Kurdish nationalists refer to as Kurdistan,
for centuries. Some Syrian Kurds have held senior official posts.

Some Kurds in Syria trace their roots back to one of the greatest
military leaders in the region’s history, Saladin.

A Kurd from modern-day Iraq, Saladin led a Muslim army that vanquished
the Crusaders and reconquered Jerusalem in the 12th century. Saladin
died in Damascus where he is buried.

While Iraqi Kurds were repressed by Saddam Hussein, who gassed the
Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988, and Turkey battled Kurdish separatists
in its southeast during the 1980s and 1990s, Syria has rarely clashed
with its own minority.

Ruled by the secular Baath party, it has traditionally stressed
national unity, avoiding references to its many minorities, including
Assyrians, Armenians and other Christians, Druze, Kurds, Shi’ites
and Assad’s own small Alawite sect.

But some Kurdish political activists accuse the state of trying to
stamp out their distinct cultural identity and dilute the Kurdish
character of the northeastern Jazeera — a fertile plain rich in oil
and gas that Syria’s command economy needs.

ARKA News Agency – 05/13/2005

ARKA News Agency
May 13 2005

Armenian President discusses constitutional reforms in Armenia with
PACE Monitoring Commission’s Reporters

Armenian-US security relations good: John Evans

Regional international relations program for young civil servants
implemented in Armenia

NKR citizen suspected in spying for Azerbaijan arrested in Nagorno
Karabakh

NKR Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs: one of the main goals of the
Karabakh diplomacy is to achieve transformation of armistice into
final and stable peace

*********************************************************************

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT DISCUSSES CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS IN ARMENIA WITH
PACE MONITORING COMMISSION’S REPORTERS

YEREVAN, May 13. /ARKA/. Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and PACE
Monitoring Commission’s Reporters Yerzhi Yaskernia and George
Columbier as well as the Commission Secretary Bony Theofilova
discussed constitutional reforms in Armenia on Friday. According to
Presidential Press service, the sides paid attention to regional
issues and Karabakh settlement process. M.V. -0–

*********************************************************************

ARMENIAN-US SECURITY RELATIONS GOOD: JOHN EVANS

YEREVAN, May 13. /ARKA/. Armenia and the USA have formed good
relations in the security sphere, US ambassador to Armenia John
Evans. According to him, these relations will be developing and
expanding. This cooperation is chiefly formed within NATO, but direct
bilateral relations will be developed as well, he said. Ambassador
Evans specified that a group of Armenian specialists recently visited
Armenia to conduct a strategic study of direct Armenian-American
relations in the security sphere. Another example is, according to
him, the US financial aid to Armenia’s defense sphere. The USA is
happy that Armenia is cooperating with it in various spheres – in
ratification of antiterrorist conventions or in the dispatch of
non-combatant troops to Iraq, Evans said. He said that Armenia is
cooperating with the USA in frontier-guarding. Armenia’s borders are
not violated by those trying to smuggle weapons of mass destruction,
Evans said. P.T. -0–

*********************************************************************

REGIONAL INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS PROGRAM FOR YOUNG CIVIL SERVANTS
IMPLEMENTED IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, May 13. /ARKA/. Regional program of international relations
for young civil servants of Armenia and Georgia is being implemented
in Yerevan. Daniel Warner, Deputy Director, Geneva Institute of
International Relations (HEI), said that the goal of the program is
affording civil servants the opportunity to improve the knowledge of
international relations as well as contributing to regional
cooperation. He reported that since 2001 biannual trainings have been
held in Tbilisi for representatives of the three Transcaucasian
countries, and the first training in Yerevan was held last October.
Warner also said that two participants in the program from each
country that demonstrate their capabilities for being leaders will
spend a week in Geneva, where they will hold meetings with
representatives of the Government and of various international
organizations. The program was organized by HEI in cooperation with
the Swiss CIMERA organization, with the sponsorship of the Swiss
Development and Cooperation Agency. The program is being implemented
under the auspices of the RA Foreign Office. Sixty Armenian civil
servants from the RA Central Bank, RA Ministry of Trade and Economic
Development, RA Foreign Office and Ra Supervisory Chamber have so far
been involved in the program. P.T. -0–

*********************************************************************

NKR CITIZEN SUSPECTED IN SPYING FOR AZERBAIJAN ARRESTED IN NAGORNO
KARABAKH

STEPANAKERT, May 13. /ARKA/. As a result of joint manhunt launched by
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic National Security Service and Police, a
citizen of the republic suspected in spying for Azerbaijan has been
arrested in Nagorno Karabakh. Name of the suspect is still kept
secret. According to NKR National Security Service, the arrested has
been in contact with Azerbaijani special services providing
information containing state secret to them. NKR Prosecutor General
Office launched a legal action charging the arrested man with
espionage (Article 299 of NKR Penal Code), carrying from 10 to 15
years in jail. M.V. -0–

*********************************************************************

NKR DEPUTY MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS: ONE OF THE MAIN GOALS OF THE
KARABAKH DIPLOMACY IS TO ACHIEVE TRANSFORMATION OF ARMISTICE INTO
FINAL AND STABLE PEACE

YEREVAN, May 13. /ARKA/. One of the main goals of the Karabakh
diplomacy is to achieve transformation of armistice into final and
stable peace. According to NKR MFA, the NKR Deputy Minister of
Foreign Affairs Masis Mailyan told about it in regard with the
regular anniversary of armistice in the zone of Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict concluded on May 12, 1994 through the mediation of Russia.
According to him, the achievement of ceasefire became the only result
in the process of peaceful settlement of the conflict. According to
Mailyan, support of the regime of ceasefire, notwithstanding any
separate facts of its violation, mostly are preconditioned by the
fact that the agreement is signed by the representatives of the
authorities of the three parties in conflict, namely Azerbaijan,
Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.
Mailyan was satisfied with the fact that for the recent time the
situation on the front line between the Armed Forces of
Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan became stable. According to him,
significant role in it played the “firm position of international
mediators, who stated about inadmissibility of escalation of tension,
as well as monitoring of a line of demarcation conducted regularly by
the OSCE mission”. A.H.-0–

Armenian MP raps coalition over draft constitutional reform

Armenian MP raps coalition over draft constitutional reform

Noyan Tapan news agency
13 May 05

YEREVAN

“The draft of constitutional reforms proposed by the ruling coalition
reflects the interests of the incumbent president,” the chairman of
the National Democratic Bloc, MP Arshak Sadoyan, told a news
conference today.

He said the draft retains all presidential powers and is only intended
to “pull the wool over Europe’s eyes”.

Sadoyan said it was obvious that the coalition, dictated by the
president, would continue pursuing the same strategy and that the
draft being put on the referendum would not contain any serious
changes. Namely, the president will unilaterally determine the
structure of the government and main directions of the state’s foreign
and domestic policy.

The president will effectively be able to appoint and dismiss the
prime minister, the prosecutor-general and other senior officials. The
president will also retain all control pillars to influence the work
of the justice council, etc.

Arshak Sadoyan believes that such an “evil reform” of the constitution
will turn Armenia into a state with backward “Asian” dictatorship. He
said his party would try to introduce its own draft of reforms.

“We are calling on all political forces, public organizations and
private individuals to join their efforts and say a collective ‘no’ to
these treacherous constitutional reforms,” he said.

BAKU: Azerbaijan diaspora becomes more active in Canada

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
May 12 2005

AZERBAIJAN DIASPORA BECOMES MORE ACTIVE IN CANADA
[May 12, 2005, 15:06:32]

As was informed from the State Committee on Work with the
Azerbaijanis Living in Foreign Countries, employees of the Committee
were in official trip to Canada where have met representatives of the
Azerbaijan communities which are carrying out activity in the cities
of Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton and Montreal.

In Canada, where are more than 60 thousand Azerbaijanis, some 10
Diaspora organizations are functioning. The Azerbaijan cultural and
educational center, Association of the Canada-Azerbaijan Cooperation,
Association of Azerbaijanis of Quebec, the Canada -Azerbaijan Chamber
of Commerce, Association of the Canadian Azerbaijanis, Association of
the Azerbaijan-Canadian friendship and other societies carry out
active work directed on bringing of the right voice of Azerbaijan up
to the public, the government and parliament of Canada, and also on
strengthening of links of our compatriots living here with
Motherland, regularly informing them on political processes in our
country.

Carrying out now activity in Canada, the Diaspora organizations
closely cooperate with local Turkish communities and media. Due to
this, the Azerbaijan cultural and educational center has achieved
opening in newspaper “Canada Turk’ of special page issued by large
circulation under the name `Voice of Caucasus’.

The Center has published in a number of newspapers and magazines of
Canada of numerous articles about the Azerbaijan realities, has
released a book titled `Azerbaijan: The Land of Hope’, narrating
about aggression of Armenia against the country. Besides Canada, this
book has been distributed in several countries of the world.

In the near future, it is stipulated to open the Azerbaijan Sunday
schools in Canada, carrying out of Days of Culture of Azerbaijan. The
State Committee will assist maintenance of these schools with
teaching aids.

POWs returned to Azerbaijan

A1plus

| 14:49:46 | 10-05-2005 | Politics |

POWS RETURNED TO AZERBAIJAN

May 7 at 2 p.m. local time at the Karabakh and Azeri armed forces contact
line the NKR State Commission on POWs and missing conveyed to the Azeri
party three soldiers – Hayal Abdullayev, Hikmet Tagiyev and Ruslan Bakirov,
who were captured February 15 when attempting to cross the demarcation line.

Within the frames of its international commitments the Karabakh party in
time informed about the incident the representations of the International
Red Cross (IRC) and the OSCE. Presently the conveyance of the soldiers was
carried out with the mediation of the IRC and the Office of the Personal
Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office after the achievement of an
appropriated agreement with the Azeri party.

From Moscow exile, ex-Azerbaijan president laments politics in homel

>From Moscow exile, ex-Azerbaijan president laments politics in homeland
by Simon Ostrovsky

Agence France Presse — English
May 7, 2005 Saturday 2:13 AM GMT

MOSCOW May 7 — He was the first post-Soviet president of Azerbaijan,
and from his exile in Moscow today Ayaz Mutalibov says the oil-rich
republic’s current rulers resist his return because they fear him as
a viable opponent in November’s parliamentary elections.

“The fact that I can’t take part in the social and political life
of my country as a citizen is total nonsense, and it depends on the
authorities who prefer to keep me away by any means,” Mutalibov said
in an interview with AFP here earlier this week.

Mutalibov, who has lived in Moscow without so much as a passport ever
since a nationalist coalition forced him to resign in the turbulent
days following the collapse of the Soviet Union, said the current Azeri
authorities were personally unwilling “to have a political opponent.”

Sitting on billons of dollars worth of proven oil deposits, Azerbaijan
has become a key link in a US-backed energy corridor that spans Turkey
and Central Asia on one hand and separates Russia from traditional
ties to regimes in the Middle East on the other.

Tensions between the Azeri opposition and the regime of President
Ilham Aliyev are heating up in the run up to the November elections
with the opposition and rights groups alleging that the government
is stifling freedoms necessary to guarantee a legitimate vote.

Observers fear the election could turn into a repeat of the 2003
presidential elections when Aliyev replaced his ailing father as
president after a contested poll, leading to mass protests and clashes
with police, in the former Soviet Union’s first dynastic succession
of leaders.

Mutalibov, who is wanted in Azerbaijan on murky charges alleging that
he did not do enough to prevent a massacre of Azeris by Armenians
during the Nagorny Karabakh war, is one of many political emigrants
afraid to return to their homeland.

A co-chairman of the Social Democratic party, Mutalibov has joined a
block of four parties called New Politics which has announced it will
field single candidates for the vote, but complains the government
has put in place barriers to prevent candidates from registering for
the poll.

The ex-president called on Europe’s top human rights body, the Council
of Europe, to facilitate his return to the country so he could take
part in the elections.

As a member of the organization, Azerbaijan “should not have political
prisoners or political emigrants,” Mutalibov said.

He said he didn’t have ambitions to return to the presidency, adding
however that political parties are created, “with the goal of coming
to power eventually.”

New Politics has also said it would support Azerbaijan’s former
parliamentary speaker Rasul Guliyev, who currently resides in the
United States and faces corruption charges at home, in an electoral
bid.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) has
hinted that the situation in the country’s media and its electoral
code could jeopardize a fair vote if changes are not made quickly.

The Council of Europe, said in April the elections would be a fork
in the road where “we may become witnesses either to fair and free
elections or a bloody confrontation between thousands.”

ANKARA: Armenian Allegations and Azerbaijan Reality Symposium

Armenian Allegations And Azerbaijan Reality Symposium

Turkish Press
May 7 2005

ANKARA (AA) – The final statement on the “First International Symposium
on Armenian Allegations and Azerbaijan Reality,” organized at the
Capital Teachers’ Home, has been announced today. The statement
said, after encouragement by British historian Andrew Mango, that
“Armenians want to cover up their occupation of Azerbaijan and the
massacre they are doing by spreading their lies and implementing an
anti-Turkish campaign.”

Eurasia Strategic Researches Center (ASAM) Armenian Researches
Institute Chairman retired ambassador Omer Engin Lutem has evaluated
a possible decision to open the Turkey-Armenia border crossing.

Lutem indicated that Armenia currently does not need the Kars border
crossing open. “Armenia does trade with Russia and meets its energy
requirements with the help of the Russians,” told Lutem.

Lutem remarked that Armenia brings up the issue of border crossing in
order to leave Turkey in a difficult position vis-a-vis EU and ruin
Turkey’s ties with Azerbaijan. “There is immense pressure on Turkey,
put by the U.S. and EU, since the beginning of the twenty-first
century for the opening of the border crossing,” commented Lutem.

The final statement read:

“Turkey was the side defending itself. Russia, Britain and France
used the Armenians as puppets and armed the Armenians to reach their
goals. The three countries motivated Armenians to uprise and attack the
Ottoman Turkish army. The Ottoman government reacted by re-locating
a certain portion of the Armenian population to provinces in the
south of the empire. What took place was re-location but definitely
not a genocide. Many Muslim Turks were killed by Armenians at the
time. Some Armenians died due to poverty, famine and hunger. In the
past two centuries, thousands of Azeri Turks have been butchered
by Armenians. Armenia must immediately withdraw its troops from the
occupied Azeri territory.”

Laura Kennedy calls Armenia and Turkey to coordinate approaches

LAURA KENNEDY CALLS ARMENIA AND TURKEY TO COORDINATE APPROACHES

Pan Armenian News
04.05.2005 04:26

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Deputy Assistant to US Secretary of State Laura
Kennedy stated the US supports reconciliation between Turkey and
Armenia, Associated Press reported. She rated the exchange of letters
by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Armenian President
Robert Kocharian as “promising”. At that Laura Kennedy called
upon both parties to coordinate the approaches. When commenting
on Erdogan’s proposal on formation of a joint commission of the
investigation of the fact of the Genocide and Robert Kocharian’s
reply-proposal on establishing diplomatic relations without
preconditions Ms. Kennedy said, “What not have both? We fully support
the reconciliation between the governments of the two states.”

=?UNKNOWN?Q?Schr=F6ders?= heikle =?UNKNOWN?Q?T=FCrkei-Reise?=

Hamburger Abendblatt
3. Mai 2005

Schröders heikle Türkei-Reise;
EU-BEITRITT Skepsis unter den Türken wächst. Den Kanzler erwarten
heute in Ankara schwierige Gespräche.

Berlin

dpa/fis

Die anfängliche Euphorie hat sich gelegt. Wenn Gerhard Schröderheute
nach einem Abstecher in Bosnien seine Türkei-Visite beginnt,
isterheblicher Gesprächsbedarf angesagt. Als der Kanzler im Februar
2004am Bosporus weilte, war die Stimmung auf beiden Seiten ganz
anders. Fürseine klaren Worte, daß die Türkei in die Europäische
Union (EU)gehöre, bekam er damals überall begeisterte Zustimmung.
RegierungschefRecep Tayyip Erdogan, zu dem Schröder nach anfänglicher
Distanz auchein enges persönliches Verhältnis entwickelt hat, lobte
ihn als bestenFreund seines Landes in Europa.

Innenpolitisch nützt Schröder diese Türkei-Treue kaum. Lautjüngsten
Umfragen sind inzwischen drei Viertel der Bundesbürger gegeneine
volle EU-Mitgliedschaft. Aber auch in der Türkei selbst geht
dieZustimmung zurück. Befürchtungen, zu viele Zugeständnisse in
sensiblenPunkten machen zu müssen, schlagen dabei ebenso zu Buche wie
das Gefühlin der Bevölkerung, vom Tempo der anstehenden Veränderungen
überfordertzu werden.

Verstärkt flammen momentan in der Türkei nationalistische Gefühleauf.
So wurde der berühmte Autor Orhan Pamuk (52) massiv bedroht, weiler
zu sagen wagte, daß in der Türkei 30 000 Kurden und bis zu 1,5Million
Armenier ermordet wurden – eine Wahrheit, die in der Türkeinicht wahr
sein darf. Die Zeitung “Hürriyet” nannte den Schriftstellereine
“miserable Kreatur”. Pamuk hat mittlerweile die Türkei RichtungUSA
verlassen.

Generalstabschef Hilmi Özkök sagte, eine EU-Mitgliedschaft derTürkei
sei “kein Segen”, und warnte vor Zugeständnissen in derZypern-Frage.
Sonst könnte das Militär seine Unterstützung für denEU-Beitritt
überdenken.

Berlin sieht diese Entwicklung mit Besorgnis. Schröder will derTürkei
unmißverständlich zu verstehen geben, daß noch viel Arbeit vorihr
liegt, um die Eintrittskarte nach Europa zu bekommen. Dazu gehörtaus
deutscher Sicht der umfassende Schutz der Menschen-
undMinderheitenrechte. Dafür sei in der Türkei ein
“Mentalitätswandel”notwendig, forderte Schröder. Am Fahrplan für die
Aufnahme deroffiziellen Beitrittsverhandlungen mit der EU am 3.
Oktober soll sichaber nichts ändern. Experten gehen davon aus, daß es
noch mindestenszehn bis 15 Jahre dauert, bis die Türkei EU-Mitglied
werden kann.

Bewußt hat Schröder sich beim Patriarchen von Konstantinopel
inIstanbul angesagt. Bartholomäus I. ist das “Ehrenoberhaupt”
dergesamten orthodoxen Christenheit, was von der offiziellen
türkischenPolitik aber ignoriert wird. Der türkische Generalstab hat
gerade eineStatus-Aufwertung für den Kirchenführer, die
Wiedereröffnung einer seitüber 30 Jahren geschlossenen
Priesterakademie sowie mehr Rechte für dienoch etwa 150 000 im Lande
lebenden Christen noch einmal ausdrücklichabgelehnt.

Mit Erstaunen wurde in Berlin auch zur Kenntnis genommen, daß
vontürkischer Seite ganz kurzfristig die Unterzeichnung eines
Abkommensüber eine gemeinsame Rechtspartnerschaft abgesagt wurde.
TürkischeJuristen sollen mit deutscher Hilfe moderne rechtsstaatliche
Methodenkennenlernen.

Eine Rolle wird bei Schröders Gesprächen auch der Umgang Ankarasmit
der Tötung von bis zu 1,5 Millionen Armeniern unter
osmanischerHerrschaft spielen. Der Bundestag hatte anläßlich des 90.
Jahrestagsdes Beginns der Massaker am 24. April 1915
fraktionsübergreifend dieTürkei aufgefordert, sich zu der
historischen Verantwortung dafür zubekennen. In der Entschließung
wurde auf den Begriff des Völkermordsverzichtet, um Schröders Besuch
nicht zu belasten. Falls sich anAnkaras Verhalten nichts ändert, soll
der Text aber entsprechendverschärft zur Abstimmung gestellt werden.
Aus Sicht der “Hardliner” inAnkara ist die Armenien-Frage nur ein
Argument, um einen EU-Beitritt zutorpedieren.

Verstärkt flammen in der Türkei nationalistische Gefühle auf.

–Boundary_(ID_B2Cd2w3K5Ce78IimJUxwlA)–

BAKU: Borders with Armenia not opened, says Turkhan,

Azerbaijan News Service
April 28, 2005

BORDERS WITH ARMENIA NOT OPENED,NEVZAT TURKHAN,GOVERNOR OF GARS
PROVINCE OF TURKEY
2005-04-28 19:50

Turkey won’t open borders with Armenia unless Armenian withdraw its
troops from occupied Azerbaijani territories, said Nevzat Turkhan,
governor of Gars province of Turkey upon leaving Baku after his three
days official visit to Azerbaijan. He stated information about
opening Turkey’s borders with Armenia is groundless. Hasan Zeynalov,
chief consul of Azerbaijan to Gars considers Azerbaijan has great
problems in these areas. As there is no transport connection between
this region and Azerbaijan residents suffer lack of information about
Azerbaijan. And there are some circles that use this against interest
of Azerbaijan. In order to eliminate this problem Azerbaijan’s Chief
Consulate to Gars organized three days official visit of governors of
5 Turkish provinces-Gars, Agri, Erdehan, Iqdir and Arzrum to
Azerbaijan. Turkish officials held meetings with Azerbaijani
government leaders within the frames of their official visit ended on
April 28. Development of cooperation between Azerbaijan and 5
provinces of Turkey, construction of Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan main oil
export pipeline as well as realization of Baku-Tbilisi-Gars railway
was at the center of attention in the meting with Ilham Aliyev,
president of Azerbaijan.