Nalbandian, Popov Discuss Settlement To Karabakh Conflict

NALBANDIAN, POPOV DISCUSS SETTLEMENT TO KARABAKH CONFLICT

Aysor
April 27 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and a newly-appointed OSCE
Minsk Group Co-Chair Igor Popov of Russia met Tuesday, a spokesperson
for the Armenian Foreign Ministry said.

The parties discussed the process of settlement to the Karabakh
conflict. Edward Nalbandian said he hopes that Igor Popov will
contribute to the process. Russian official, in his part, said he
will make efforts to solve the conflict.

It’s worth mentioning that Igor Popov has traveled to Azerbaijan
recently and met with Azerbaijani leaders. At the meeting with Armenian
Foreign Minister Nalbandian, Igor Popov shared his impressions of
the meetings in Azerbaijan.

Session Of The Nuclear Safety Advisory Group Conducted In Armenia

SESSION OF THE NUCLEAR SAFETY ADVISORY GROUP CONDUCTED IN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
APRIL 27, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS: Session of the President-affiliated
Nuclear Safety Advisory Group (NSAG) is being conducted in Yerevan
with the participation of the Armenian President and Prime Minister.

President Serzh Sargsyan welcomed the participants of the session,
presenting the changes taken place in the staff of the group. He noted
that the global financial-economic crisis has left a negative impact
on almost all the countries of the world, including Armenia. The
head of the country said that the consequences of the crisis brought
to reduction of the electricity production volume and blue gas
consumption. "But already this year stability and tendency of economic
growth is being registered as a result of which the permanent growth of
electricity and gas consumption will be restored," Serzh Sargsyan said.

The president reminded about the gas tariff growth in Armenia from
April 1, 2010. "We do not want to make harder the social situation
of the Armenian population, nevertheless a decision has been made
to increase the price for the electricity produced by the Armenian
Atomic Station," the president said.

Serzh Sargsyan expressed assurance that there exists great potential
to export electricity to Turkey. He expressed hope that the opening
of the borders will create an opportunity to develop economic
cooperation particularly in the electricity sphere. The president
highlighted Armenia’s integration into world energy system as well
as its participation in the regional energy projects. Serzh Sargsyan
particularly highlighted the construction of 400 kilowatt power new
electricity wire with the joint efforts of Iran, Georgia and Armenia
as well as construction of Iran-Armenia gas pipeline and the activity
of the Yerevan thermo power plant operating recently.

Coordinator of the program management of the technical cooperation
department of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Andrey Chupov
said at a briefing with the reporters that the IAEA and a number of
international establishments are carrying out serious steps to ensure
security of the Armenian Atomic Station. Specialists are periodically
visiting Armenia to assess the security level of the station, support
the leadership of the AAS and its staff.

In the first part of the session director general of NSAG Gagik
Markosyan presented the activity of the atomic station.

In the second part the head of the government-affiliated State
Nuclear Safety Regulatory Committee Ashot Martirosyan will present
the report of the establishment for 2008-2010, Armenian Energy and
Natural Resources Minister Armen Movsisian will come forth with report.

A. Sagatelyan: Vera Frankel Made The Shots … Azerbaijani Are Well

A. SAGATELYAN: VERA FRANKEL MADE THE SHOTS … AZERBAIJANI ARE WELL AWARE OF THIS

Panorama.am
18:07 27/04/2010

Politics

"Our clear disposition is that the shots Azerbaijani ascribe to
Chingiz Mustafayev, are not his. Azerbaijani are well aware of this.

They also know who has made them, their author being Vera Frankel.

Now as Mustafayev is not alive, anything can be said on his behalf,"
the head of the public relations and information center of the Armenian
President’s Administration, expert on information security issues Ara
Sagatelyan told reporters today referring to Azerbaijan’s recurrent
falsification: Azerbaijan demonstrates to the world not the shots
made during Khujaly events.

According to him, Azerbaijan’s ex- and current political leaders carry
political and moral responsibility for the events which occurred
when breaking the Stepanakert blockade in the direction of Khojaly
and in Aghdam.

"Not only the printed press published during these years, but also
the videos and confessing interviews by Azerbaijani former and current
leaders prove this," A. Sagatelyan said.

Referring to continual disinformation spread by Azerbaijan and whether
the Azerbaijani citizens themselves believe this information, A.

Sagatelyan said:

"The repeatedly stated information, irrespective of being true or
false, is transmitted to the level of awareness."

He also highlighted that Azerbaijani authorities do their best
for their society to belive in "myths", though, the inventors know
the truth.

EU High Representative Regrets Loss Of Important Moment In Normaliza

EU HIGH REPRESENTATIVE REGRETS LOSS OF IMPORTANT MOMENT IN NORMALIZATION OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

ArmInfo
2010-04-27 14:31:00

ArmInfo. The spokesperson of High Representative of the Union for
Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice President of the Commission
Catherine Ashton issued a statement on normalization of relations
between Turkey and Armenia.

As EU told ArmInfo, the statement says the following: "The High
Representative has taken note of the decision by Armenia to suspend
the procedure of ratification of bilateral protocols relating to the
normalization of relations with Turkey. The High Representative is
leased to note that Armenia remains committed to pursue the process
of normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations but at the same time
expresses concern about the loss of momentum in this process. The EU
reiterates its call to both countries to continue their dialogue and
remain committed to the process of normalization without preconditions
and in a reasonable timeframe. The High Representative believes that
the full normalization of bilateral relations between Armenia and
Turkey will contribute to security, stability and cooperation in the
Southern Caucasus. The EU will continue to provide its political and
technical support to this process and stands ready to help implementing
the steps agreed between the two countries".

L. Zurabyan: "The Football Diplomacy" Served Obama

L. ZURABYAN: "THE FOOTBALL DIPLOMACY" SERVED OBAMA

Aysor
April 27 2010
Armenia

Today the coordinator of the Armenian National Congress Levon Zurabyan
touched upon the US President Barak Obama’s address, mentioning that
not pronouncing the "Genocide" term was expected.

According to the opposition politician the whole Armenian – Turkish
process was tended to not disturbing the Turkish – American allied
relations.

"All that "football diplomacy" was thought over for that very reason,
in order to give an opportunity to the United Nations and Turkey
to preserve the allied relations and not to blow them up by the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide," Levon Zurabyan said.

Turkey’s Foreign Policy Not Exclusively Focused On Europe Anymore

TURKEY’S FOREIGN POLICY NOT EXCLUSIVELY FOCUSED ON EUROPE ANYMORE

Deutsche Welle
,,5499758 ,00.html
April 26 2010
Germany

The EU isn’t any longer the sole focus of Turkish foreign policy
Like China, Brazil or the EU, Turkey in recent years has upgraded
its engagement with Africa. Ankara’s new interest in Africa is not
just economically driven, but exemplifies a recalibration of Turkish
foreign policy.

With a large delegation of some 150 business leaders and politicians
in tow, Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul embarked on a maiden trip
last month. Cameroon and the Democratic Republic of Congo were
the destination for Gul and his entourage: a debut for a Turkish
president with the goal of strengthening bilateral ties with the two
African nations.

Africa until recently didn’t feature much on Ankara’s political
agenda. That area had been firmly occupied by the European Union
and Turkey’s quest for membership in it. But since 2008 at least,
a reorientation of Turkish foreign policy has taken shape and has
become steadily more visible publicly as well.

Two years ago, Ankara convened its first cooperation summit with
Africa which led to Turkey’s designation as a strategic partner by
the African Union and plans to hold summits every five years. The
next one is planned for 2013 in Africa.

While Turkey’s branching out to Africa is significant in and of itself,
it must be seen in a larger context that extends far beyond Africa.

Neo-Ottoman or not

"I think we can consider this as part and parcel of this changing
paradigm in Turkish foreign policy which is a multiactiveness
that goes beyond Europe and that extends wider into its broader
neighborhood," says Senem Aydın Duezgit, a Turkish foreign policy
expert at Istanbul’s Bilgi University.

"They also call it the neo-Ottoman foreign policy which is supposed
to be much more proactive generally as a global player," he told
Deutsche Welle.

This reorientation of Turkey’s foreign policy that had started before
he took office, became more pronounced since Ahmed Davutoglu, an
influential academic who has published numerous papers about Turkey’s
role in the world, became foreign minister last year.

Thomas Diez, a professor of international relations at the University
of Tuebingen, gives Turkey’s new foreign policy approach a good grade
overall, but cautions against designating it as a neo-Ottoman strategy
as has been done by politicians and analysts inside Turkey and abroad:

"I think one has to be careful with this. I think we should be aware
that once we make those linkages we plant things in certain ways and
therefore link them with associations which I find very problematic,"
he told Deutsche Welle.

What’s more, argues Diez, the reasons for Turkey’s foreign policy
shift are much more mundane than the label neo-Ottoman belies. One
is simply the economic expansion of a country which has the potential
to grow into becoming an important player in international business.

The second factor is an internal realignment within the country away
from idea of a sole orientation toward the West by the founder of the
Turkish republic, Kemal Ataturk. "And of course, the Africa policy
goes far beyond what used to be the Ottoman empire I should hasten
to add," says Diez.

World beyond Europe

While Turkey’s troubled bid for EU membership has influenced Ankara’s
broadened global perpective, it didn’t trigger it, say the experts.

"I don’t think they have formulated this policy because relations with
the EU have stalled in the last couple of years and because accession
negotiations are not going as they were planned," notes Duezgit.

Unlike in the 1980s and 1990s Turkey doesn’t perceive relations with
the EU as a mutually exclusive partnership. "The official Turkish
foreign policy line here is that we can have good relations both with
our neigbors and also in the wider global network of countries and
also with the European Union," says Duezgit.

Ankara’s branching out may actually boost its chances of ultimately
joining the European Union.

"I think that Turkish foreign policy in general has taken a road
that is rather beneficial to an EU membership," argues Diez and cites
Davatoglu’s strategy of opening Turkey up to its neighbors, working
actively to solve the Cyrus conflict and striving for reconciliation
with Armenia.

"I think all these issues have made Turkey in many ways more in tune
with what the EU would regard as a considered foreign policy."

Bildunterschrift: GroÃ~_ansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:
Turkey has made steps toward normalizing ties with ArmeniaThis in
turn allows Turkey to make a different and much more pragmatic claim
why it should be a member of the EU. The earlier argument held that
Ankara belongs to Europe due to its historical, cultural and political
connections.

"Now the argument goes that we are going to help the EU play the role
of a stronger global player especially regarding the EU neighborhood
policy," says Duezgit. "The argument goes that Turkey actually might
be an asset for EU foreign policy."

But regardless of its chances for EU membership, it seems Turkey has
firmly settled on its realigned foreign policy approach. In the past
two years it has opened five new embassies in Africa. Ten more are
slated for the coming years.

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0

Armenian, Azeri Faith Leaders Make Karabakh Pledge

ARMENIAN, AZERI FAITH LEADERS MAKE KARABAKH PLEDGE
By Afet Mehtiyeva

Reuters
April 26 2010
UK

BAKU, April 26 (Reuters) – The head of the Armenian church and the
senior Muslim cleric in Azerbaijan pledged on Monday to help to
resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, with talks between Yerevan
and Baku on the enclave deadlocked.

With the collapse of the Soviet Union, ethnic Armenians in
Nagorno-Karabakh, backed by Christian Armenia, threw off Azeri rule in
a war that killed 30,000 people before a ceasefire in 1994. A peace
deal has never been reached, and Azerbaijan frequently threatens to
take the region back by force.

Karekin II, the Catholicos (chief bishop) of All Armenians, joined
in making the pledge during a trip to Baku.

It marked the first visit by the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church
to Muslim Azerbaijan since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and
fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh escalated towards all-out war.

Karekin II met Allahshukur Pashazade, who heads the Muslim Board
of the Caucasus, for talks in Baku which Russian Orthodox Patriarch
Kirill also attended.

After the talks, they issued a joint statement promising support for
a 15-year-old mediation process between the leaders of Azerbaijan
and Armenia that has yet to produce a deal.

"… we intend to contribute to their aspirations and believe it
important to continue the dialogue between religious leaders to help
resolve the conflict", they said.

Patriarch Kirill said he hoped the meeting would "help ease tensions,
and create the conditions for political leaders to take responsibility
and come to an agreement".

Tensions have risen since Armenia and Azerbaijan’s ally Turkey
announced a deal last year to mend ties and open their common border,
which Ankara closed in solidarity with Azerbaijan during the war. That
deal has now been suspended.

Azerbaijan sees the deal as a betrayal of its efforts to win back
territory seized by ethnic Armenian forces during the war.

Armenia suspended ratification of the accord last week over Turkish
demands that it reach terms with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh,
but some analysts say the collapse has come too late to soothe Azeri
suspicions. (Writing by Matt Robinson in Tbilisi; Editing by David
Stamp).

Our Forgotten Cry

Our Forgotten Cry

April 26, 2010
Los Angeles Club Scene

It was a relatively small event by comparison to other Armenian events for
the remembrance of the martyrs of 1915 Armenian Genocide by Turks.

But it was for a splendid cause.

PYUNIC – Disabled Children of Armenia is a non-profit organization that has
been around since the devastating earthquake of 1988 in Spitak, Armenia that
killed over 27 thousand people and injured an even larger number. It was
rather fitting to organize a Rock concert to raise awareness against
genocide on a day before the 95th annual commemoration of the Genocide and
raise money for this charity.

The concert titled "Our Forgotten Cry" at the club The Mint in West Los
Angeles, California attracted a sizable crowd of people from different walks
of life. As expected, it was mostly an Armenian crowd, but somewhat
surprisingly about one third of attendees were non-Armenians, which was very
welcome news.

There were 8 bands that took an active participation. The show stated at
7:30 PM – the first on a stage was Los Angeles based, newly formed and
talented band called "Oh So Wild". It is made up of 4 young and dedicated
musicians – their beautifully powered and inspirational songs reflected the
entire mood of the nights’ coming events.

They were followed by "Madstory", whose singer suitably called for a moment
of silence.

The third band was "Leave It Alone", followed by "ED", "Full Force Rising",
"Send the Sages", legendary "Red Snow", and a special appearance by
"Candyman 187". Needless to say how encouraging it was to witness the
collaborative efforts of Armenian and non-Armenian musicians sharing the
stage on such an eventful day of remembrance.

The reception of each band was outstanding – the atmosphere was one of
remembrance, determination, and rectitude.

Hopefully this will become an annual affair and raise awareness in all
communities throughout the greater Los Angeles.

Created and distrusted by OSW
©OSW – 2010

Armenian leaders commemorate Genocide victims

Aysor, Armenia
April 24 2010

Armenian leaders commemorate Genocide victims

Armenia’s political, church and military leadership attended Saturday
the Memorial to the 1915 Genocide Victims, located at the
Tsitsenakaberd Complex in Yerevan, to commemorate the 95th anniversary
of the Genocide, committed by Turks against civil Armenian population
early in the 20th century.

The delegation with country’s President Serzh Sargsyan on the head
laid wreaths at the Memorial and at the Eternal Flame.

Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II served a prayer for the
innocent victims of the Genocide.

Today, on the 1915 Genocide Memorial Day, which is being marked on
April 24, Armenia and Armenian Communities worldwide are holding
commemoration and mourning events, dedicated to the genocide victims.
The 1915 Genocide is recognized by numerous nations and international
organisations. Among the nations, who recognized the Genocide of
Armenians are France, Italy, Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Canada,
Poland, Lithuania, Russia, Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, Greece,
Cyprus, Lebanon, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, and 42 States of America;
Vatican, the European Parliament, and the World Council of Churches.
The Resolution, branding the 1915 massacres as Genocide, was approved
recently by the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the United States
House of Representatives and the Sweden Parliament.

The 1915 Genocide left more than 1,5 million deaths among Armenians.

Commemoration event held in the US State of Illinois

Commemoration event held in the US State of Illinois dedicated to the
95th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS: A commemoration event was held April 23
in the US State of Illinois dedicated to the 95th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide. A protest rally was conducted in front of Turkish
consulate in Chicago against that country’s policy of denial.

ANCA official told Armenpress that April 24 in the Armenian community
center a commemoration event will take place and a call will be
addressed to Turkey to give an end to the policy of denial, come into
terms with its own history and recognize the greatest crime against
humanity in early 20th century. The international community will be
called to stop yielding to the denial policy of Turkey and to
recognize the massacres of 1,5 million Armenians as Genocide.

April 25 a requiem service will be served in the Armenian Apostolic
Church and a wreath laying ceremony at Martyrs’ Monument will take
place.

Illinois is one of the 42 US States which has recognized and condemned
the Armenian Genocide.