BAKU: Latvian Leader Backs Azerbaijan’s Territorial Integrity

LATVIAN LEADER BACKS AZERBAIJAN’S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY

Turan news agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 3 2005

Baku, 3 October: “Latvia’s position on the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict coincides with that of the European Union. We support
the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan,” Latvian President Vaira
Vike-Freiberga told a news conference following her talks with
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev today.

She said that it is worrying when territorial integrity of sovereign
states is violated. At the same time, she spoke for a peaceful solution
to the conflict on the basis of mutual compromises.

In turn, Aliyev said that the conflict should be solved within the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and Nagornyy Karabakh can be
granted autonomy similar to these existing in Europe.

Vike-Freiberga welcomed Azerbaijan’s aspiration to close cooperation
with the European Union.

Attempt To Regulate Lobbying In Armenia

ATTEMPT TO REGULATE LOBBYING IN ARMENIA
By Tamar Minasian

AZG Armenian Daily #178
05/10/2005

Legislative Initiative on Discussion Table

The approval of the draft law on lobbying activities by the Armenian
Government on September 22 set in motion social discussions on
this issue.

The Armenian Government and UNDP organized discussion of the draft
law yesterday. In the first instance Ashot Abovian, deputy justice
minister and head of the draft workgroup, presented the draft law
and the work done. “The law will enable wider groups of the society
to protect their interests, to carry out lobbying activities or order
specialized persons/groups to do that”, the deputy minister said. He
assured that the law will mark a serious breakthrough in the country’s
jural practice.

Aramayis Kocharian, coordinator of Partnership for Open Society NGO,
said: “There are no shaped mechanisms to protect rights and interests
and no legislative guarantees for protection in Armenia. Given this
situation, adoption of a law that enforces protection of a person’s
interests can make the state officials or legislator consider only
advices of those engaged in lobbying activities neglecting interests
and proposals of the society, citizens and members of the business
environment”.

Hrayr Tovmasian, representative of “Democracy” NGO, said that lobbying
and the activities of companies engaged in lobbying are legislatively
regulated only in countries (USA, Canada) where there was a necessity
of official information on financial flows from lobbyists during
election campaigns. “If the law applies to NGOs then I should say
that this issue already has a legal stand as the NGOs present their
reports on financial operations”. The draft law, Mr. Tovmasian thinks,
does not clearly outline the borders of lobbying. The NGOs, which
influence the legislative body by their public discussions and social
arrangements, will in fact be considered lobbyists by the law. He
thinks that the important thing to do now is to specify the issue;
everything else is of technical handling.

All sides participating in the discussion expressed readiness to make
written suggestions for a perfect law.

Newly-Appointed Greek Ambassador To Armenia Hands Credentials Copies

NEW-APPOINTED GREEK AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA HANDS CREDENTIALS COPIES TO ARMENIAN DEPUTY FM

ARKA News Agency
Oct 3 2005

YEREVAN, October 3. /ARKA/. Newly appointed Greek Ambassador to
Armenia Panayota Mavromichali handed credentials copies to Armenian
Deputy Foreign Minister Armen Bayburdyan on Monday, Armenian Foreign
Ministry’s press service said. According to the press release, after
congratulating the Greek diplomat on his appointment, Bayburdyan
pointed out centuries-old historic and cultural ties between the
two countries, which lay favorable ground for cooperation. The Greek
new-appointed Ambassador and Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister discussed
Armenian-Greek relationship prospects and stressed the importance of
trade-economic area development.

Special emphasis was also put on Armenia’s relations with Europe. The
sides paid attention to bilateral relations in international
organizations. M.V. -0–

Alien issues fan flames of nationalism

Alien issues fan flames of nationalism

Helena Smith in Istanbul
Monday October 3, 2005
The Guardian

Turkey could face a nationalist backlash if long-awaited talks over joining
the European Union fail, leading commentators said yesterday after protests
in the capital, Ankara, by thousands of Eurosceptics.

Protesters took to the streets in a foretaste of domestic difficulties that
are likely to afflict Turkey’s protracted accession process. Although
organised by the ultra-right Nationalist Movement party, the rally is
believed to have attracted growing numbers of Turks who feel aggrieved at
the way they have been treated by the European Union.

“A lot of people, including those who have always been very supportive of
the EU are sick and tired,” said Cengiz Aktar, a prominent political
commentator. “Certain Europeans keep changing the rules of the game and,
frankly, it’s outrageous.” As a result, he said, the predominantly Muslim
country was being pushed into a “defensive nationalism” on the eve of a day
Turkey had long dreamed of. “From now on, there will be a maelstrom of
nationalist outbursts which won’t be good for anyone.”

In sharp contrast to the euphoria that had greeted the EU’s decision last
December to open talks with Ankara, Turks across the political spectrum
voiced concern yesterday at a host of perceived injustices meted out to them
by Europe.

Their main concerns are that the negotiations are open-ended, and that
Turkey could be forced to make concessions without any guarantee that the
nation of 70 million people will be allowed to join the club. “When, a year
ago, I asked my students how they felt about the EU they were terribly
enthusiastic and excited,” said Cuneyt Yuksel, who teaches international law
at the Bosphorus University. “Now, pro-European sentiment has definitely
lessened. People are much more suspicious about Europe’s intentions and they
don’t understand because they really believe that Turkey can contribute
something to the EU.”

Support in recent opinion polls has fallen from 73% to 63%. Almost all of
the ambivalence has been generated by three issues, analysts say: Cyprus,
Turkey’s ethnic Kurdish minority, and the Armenian genocide 90 years ago.

In each case, the EU has demanded that Ankara take steps that the majority
of Turks strongly oppose – recognising Greek-run Cyprus, giving the Kurds
more rights, and accepting that up to a million Armenians were deliberately
killed during the break-up of the Ottoman empire. Until recently, all three
were taboo topics, rarely ever discussed openly.

“Turks can accept Europe’s intervention on issues that are political and
economic, but on these issues they feel it is totally unjust and unfair,”
said Ihsan Dagi, a political science professor at Ankara’s Middle East
Technical University. “Turks see the EU as a means to improve their lot.
They cannot understand what relevance the Armenian question, for example,
has for Turkey’s quest to join the EU.”

All three issues had proved to be ammunition for traditional-minded
opponents of EU accession within Turkey, say observers.

“These are highly sensitive subjects for the Turks who unfortunately get
very easily offended,” said one EU diplomat. “Invariably, it’s reaction to
them that feeds the nationalists which, in turn, upsets the Europeans – a
vicious circle.”

,7369,1583522,00.html

http://www.guardian.co.uk/eu/story/0

Genocide? Turkey’s last Armenian village unmoved

WebIndia, India
Oct 2 2005

Genocide? Turkey’s last Armenian village unmoved
Vakifli Turkey | October 02, 2005 9:31:51 AM IST

The European Parliament might want Turkey to recognise a 1915
massacre of Armenians as genocide, but the people of the last
remaining Armenian village in the country have other things on their
minds — oranges.

Of all the towns and villages once inhabited by Armenians across
eastern Turkey under the multi-ethnic Ottoman Empire, only the
picturesque village of Vakifli remains, nestled in the foothills of
the Musa Mountains overlooking the eastern corner of the
Mediterranean Sea and within sight of the Syrian border.

For the influential Armenian diaspora, Musa Mountain is a source of
pride as one of the few places where Christian Armenians resisted
deportations that killed many thousands.

The European Parliament this week became the latest international
body to call on Turkey to recognise the killings as genocide; a
political slap in the face for Ankara which is due to start European
Union membership talks yesterday.

”Of course it saddens us when the European Parliament makes such a
decision,” said Vakifli village headman Berc Kartun ”Isn’t it over
yet? … Ninety years have passed and as an Armenian, I think it
should be over and done with.” Smoking and playing cards in the
plain, white-walled tea-house surrounded by lush orange groves
stretching down to the shores of the Mediterranean, other villagers
said they were sick of foreigners harping on about genocide.

”Are there any citizens of Turkey who think that way, any Armenians
here who think that way?” asked 72-year-old Musa Emekliyan. ”What I
am worried about it is what will happen to my oranges, will they sell
this year.”

RAIN NOT RESOLUTIONS

Turkey sees an international campaign led by the Armenian diaspora to
blacken its name behind the claims of genocide.

Turkish nationalists also fear the EU’s calls for minority rights are
a repeat of Western meddling that ended in war and the break-up of
the Ottoman Empire.

With Russian forces advancing across the eastern frontier, in 1915
Istanbul’s Ottoman rulers ordered local Armenians to be sent to Syria
and Lebanon, fearing they might side with the Russians. Many were
killed or died from deprivation.

Turkey/EU: Chaos ahead of membership talks underscore hesitations

Associated Press Worldstream
September 30, 2005 Friday 8:53 AM Eastern Time

Chaos ahead of membership talks underscore hesitations about letting
Turkey into EU

by CONSTANT BRAND; Associated Press Writer

BRUSSELS, Belgium

In Austria, a far-right party has plastered walls with the slogan
“Vienna must not become Istanbul!” Polls show that not one EU country
has a majority who support Turkey’s membership bid. Turks themselves
are wondering if it’s all worth the effort.

As chaos swirls over last-minute obstacles set up by Austria,
Turkey’s hopes of one day joining the EU – or even of starting
negotiations Monday as planned – are increasingly in doubt.

The opening ceremony in Luxembourg – replete with champagne toasts,
handshakes and a celebratory dinner – has been a moment Turkey has
coveted for over four decades. But Austria’s sudden insistence that
the EU offer Turkey a lesser partnership instead of full membership
has thrown the process into disarray.

Diplomats were scrambling to achieve a breakthrough Friday, as Turkey
threatened to keep its delegation home until it saw a document
outlining exactly what it would be negotiating for.

The Austrian position may reflect a growing resistance on the
continent to welcoming a poor, mainly Muslim nation whose population
is soon set to overtake the 80 million of Europe’s largest nation,
Germany.

“I don’t think Turkey should join the EU. There’s the religion – they
still are quite fanatic – and I don’t think Turkey is European
enough. It’s more Asian,” said Martin Maikisch, a 23-year-old
bookkeeper from the small eastern Austrian town of Guessing.

In London, 42-year-old zoologist Dave Clarke was worried about
extending Europe’s borders indefinitely, saying: “I have nothing
against Turkey per se, but the EU has to decide how far it extends.
There has got to be a limit.”

Recent surveys across Europe have found a majority of Europeans
oppose Turkish membership. An EU survey published this week found
only 10 percent of Austrians support Turkey’s membership, while
support across the 25-nation bloc stood at just 35 percent.

For EU nations struggling with high unemployment and worried they
might have to scuttle time-honored social protections, Turkey was
always going to be a hard sell. But the rejections by France and the
Netherlands of the draft EU constitution have put Europeans in an
even more inward-looking mood.

The stinging repudiations in May and June were largely seen as a cry
of alarm about the bloc’s rapid expansion; they have even called into
question of membership for Romania and Bulgaria, which are expected
to join in 2007.

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen told Danish media this
week that the EU had to heed public concerns. “My overall conclusion
is that we must lower the pace and consolidate the EU,” he said.

Advocates of Turkish membership argue that welcoming Turkey would
send a positive signal to the Muslim world and strengthen a crucial
security alliance as Europe confronts the problem of terrorism on its
own soil. The European deadlock threatens to alienate Islamic nations
– fueling bitterness and suspicions that the West isn’t willing to
accept Muslims on equal footing.

Turkish newspapers reflected growing anxiety that the EU is about to
break its word. Daily Sabah newspaper devoted its entire front page
Friday to “a historic warning” to EU leaders.

“Does the EU realize that it is playing with fire,” wrote daily
Milliyet columnist Hasan Cemal. “There is no end to the dynamites
being thrown” on Turkey’s EU path. “They think that the Turkish
public opinion is a stone of patience.”

Even if negotiations open on Monday, they will be tough: The EU has
made clear the talks offer “no guarantee” of success and they are
likely to continue for up to 15 years.

Cyprus has raised threats of blocking the talks once they start if
Turkey does not move quickly to recognize the island during the
talks. Nicosia grudgingly backed off from demands earlier this month
that Turkey recognize the EU member before the start of negotiations.

The European Parliament this week added new demands that Turkey
recognize the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks at the beginning
of the 20th century as genocide during the talks. And France – where
polls show deep resistance to Turkish membership – has vowed to hold
a referendum on Turkey’s bid if negotiations begin.

“Evidently there are cold-feet,” said Fadi Hakura, a Turkey
specialist at London’s Chatham House think-tank. But he warned that
by rejecting Turkey, the EU “would lose all influence over the
Turkish reforms that Turkey is undergoing at the present.”

TBILISI: CIS Interior Ministers Meet In Yerevan

CIS INTERIOR MINISTERS MEET IN YEREVAN

Civil Georgia, Georgia
Sept 29 2005

Georgian Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili is participating in the
session of the Council of Interior Ministers of the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS) in Armenian capital Yerevan on September 29.

The issues of combating corruption and illegal migration top the
agenda of the session, that brought together the ministers from
Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia,
Tajikistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.

In his opening speech Executive Secretary of the Commonwealth of
Independent States (CIS) Vladimir Rushailo described the Council of
CIS Interior Ministers as one of the most effective bodies of the
Commonwealth, according to RIA Novosti.

$190.7m transfers arrive in Armenia in first half of 2005

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Sept 28 2005

$190.7 MLN PRIVATE TRANSFERS ARRIVED IN ARMENIA IN FIRST HALF YEAR
2005

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28. ARMINFO. 88.3 bln AMD ($190.7 mln) private
transfers or 87% of total transfers (101,0 bln AMD or $218.2 mln)
arrived in Armenia in the first half year of 2005.

The quarter bulletin of Armenia’s CB informs that within the
reporting period the private transfers from Armenia totaled 12.7 bln
AMD ($27.5 mln) or 13% of total transfers. To note, transfers to
Armenia 7 times exceeded the transfers made from the country.

The transfers have been made by Armenia’s commercial banks through
Western Union and Money Gram systems, “Anelik” system of “Anelik
Bank”, “UNIstream” of the Moscow UNIstreamBank (corresponding bank of
the Armenian UNIBANK), as well as Express and Contact systems, etc.

Most of transfers to Armenia arrived through UNIstream – 27.9% (35.5%
of total transfers), 20.5% and 25% arrived through Western Union and
Anelik systems respectively (16.9% and 18.2% of total transfers
respectively).

Eye On Eurasia: Militias Threaten Russia

EYE ON EURASIA: MILITIAS THREATEN RUSSIA
By Paul Goble

United Press International
Sept 28 2005

Published September 27, 2005

VIENNA — Setting up local armed militias to support the work of the
authorities highlights the weakness of state power in the Russian
Federation and simultaneously threatens both the existing state system
and the territorial integrity of the country.

According to Sergei Markedonov, a specialist on ethnic affairs at the
Moscow Institute of Political and Military Analysis, local officials
who set up “druzhinniki” are dangerously mistaken in believing that
these groups of armed citizens will strengthen the state and its
institutions (prognosis.ru/news/secure/2005/9/22/sr.html).

Several ethnically Russian regions have taken this step in recent
months, but Markedonov’s comments came following an announcement two
weeks ago by Sergei Arenin, the interior minister of North Osetia,
that his republic has already set up “druzhinniki” in the capital
city and plans to create more.

According to RIA Novosti news agency on Sept. 12, Arenin said that the
creation of such groups will not only help the government protect key
institutions but also give citizens who possess weapons the opportunity
to register them with the authorities. And he added that he believes
that in his republic, “the more druzhinniki [we have], the better.”

In his discussion of Arenin’s plans, Markedonov suggests that the
“druzhinniki” Mozdok is establishing will not strengthen the position
of the authorities but rather instead highlight and exacerbate their
weaknesses. And as a result, this move will not calm ethnic tensions
there and in the region but rather make those conflicts more violent.

Officials in North Osetia should understand all this on the basis
of their own experience, Markedonov continues, because this is not
the first attempt by the authorities there to make use armed popular
groups in the name of promoting North Osetian interests.

The first of these came at late 1991 — early 1992. At that time,
officials and local activists worked to create what they called
“detachments of self-defense” in the Ingush villages of the Prigorodniy
rayon. The result? An armed conflict between Osetians and Ingush
in which 583 people died, 939 were wounded, and 40,000 were forced
to flee.

Given the dangers involved of arming the population during periods
of political and social instability, Markedonov says, it is striking
that no one in Moscow or in the apparatus of the force structures
subordinate to the Southern Federal District has denounced Arenin’s
plans or taken any steps to stop them.

Their inaction is all the more striking given that officials in
neighboring republics of the north Caucasus have reacted negatively.

Musa Aliyev, the deputy minister of internal affairs of Ingushetia,
for example, described Arsenin’s ideas as of “doubtful” value.

What Arsenin is doing may be especially dangerous given the tinderbox
quality of the north Caucasus. But unfortunately, Markedonov notes,
it is far from unique. Astrakhan Gov. Sergei Zhilkin has called for
the creation of similar “druzhinniki” in his area, as have government
leaders in Stavropol, Krasnodar, and the Kuban.

In the last of these places, armed “druzhinniki” are already playing
a role in the operation of the notorious filtration camps where
“undesirable” arrivals are detained. And Markedonov reports, there
are ever more “demands to arm the Cossacks and give them the right
to protect law and order — above all, against outsiders.”

The immediate consequences of such steps, Markedonov, will be more
clashes among the ethnic groups in this region, but over the longer
term, the impact of these “druzhinniki” could be more serious because
the existence of such groups will convince ever more people that
neither the local authorities nor Moscow can defend them.

And those who reach this conclusion will thus become ever more inclined
to “arm themselves, to defend ‘their own population and lands,’ thereby
undermining the unity of [the country’s] legal s pace and creating
the conditions for the flourishing of illegal armed formations.”

No one should be under any illusion that this dangerous trend can be
stopped without Moscow’s intervention, Markedonov argues — or that
it may not be fatal for the state, noting that “similar mass arming
of the population in Karabakh, Abkhazia and Transdniestria took place
at the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union.”

Law enforcement then and now, Markedonov points out, “cannot be a
subject of ‘the creativity of the masses'” because if that happens,
people “at first not believing in the militia, the Federal Security
Service (FSB) and the army will begin to defend themselves.” And after
that, they will begin to redefine the territory worth defending as
less than the country as a whole.

If armed patrols of the citizenry spread in Ingushetia, this process
is likely to jump over quickly to adjoining Russian regions where
Cossacks will be allowed to conduct “‘purges'” of non-Russian groups,
something that officials in Moscow ought to understand, given what
happened only 15 years ago.

But so far, Markedonov concludes, those in the central Russian
government do not appear to be aware of just how dangerous all this
is, and as a result, they are acting or rather not acting in ways
that may push the Russian Federation as a whole “along the path of
self-destruction.”

Vladimir Rushaylo To Arrive In Yerevan Sept 27

VLADIMIR RUSHAYLO TO ARRIVE IN YEREVAN SEPTEMBER 27

Pan Armenian News
26.09.2005 09:08

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Chairman of the Executive Committee, CIS Executive
Secretary Vladimit Rushaylo will pay a visit to Armenia September
27-19, RA MFA press center reported. V. Rushaylo is scheduled to meet
with President Robert Kocharian, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian and
Defense Minister Serge Sargsyan. September 29 the opening ceremony
of the Council of the CIS Ministers of Interior will take place.