Vardan Khachatryan:Turkish Press Goes Beyond All Permissible Limits

VARDAN KHACHATRYAN:TURKISH PRESS GOES BEYOND ALL PERMISSIBLE LIMITS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
16.11.2009 16:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish press and officials have already gone beyond
all permissible limits with their statements concerning Karabakh
conflict settlement. But we must make them realize that we can’t
have similar approach to them in terms of resolving Kurdish issue,
MP Vardan Khachatryan told today a news conference in Yerevan. At
that he noted that Armenian side may also reject possibility of any
normalization unless Kurdish issue is resolved.

With regard to Karabakh conflict settlement, he announced that
Azerbaijani side makes implausible claims for getting the maximum.

"The situation has gone so far that Azeri President is now making
statements about Zangezur," Khachatryan said, adding that Armenia
should hold a firm stance on the issue.

Days Of Russia’s Television Held In Yerevan

DAYS OF RUSSIA’S TELEVISION HELD IN YEREVAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
16.11.2009 20:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Days of Russia’s television in Armenia will be
organized from November 16 to 19 in Yerevan.

In the framework of days president of the Russian Television Academy,
Special Representative of President on international cultural
cooperation, Ambassador at Large Mikhail Shvydkoi, Deputy Director
General of the First Channel’s Information Programs Cyril Kleimenov,
commentator Andrei Kondrashov, TV presenter Arina Sharapova arrived
in Yerevan Guests have been accompanied by the Armenian Ambassador
to Russia Armen Smbatyan.

"During the visit to Armenia the Memorandum of Understanding and
Cooperation between the "Russia’s Academy of Television" Fund and
four leading Armenian TV channels – Public Television of Armenia,
Armenian Second TV Channel, "Armenia" and "Shant " will be signed,
Mikhail Shvydkoi said.

According to him, in 2010 the leading Russian TV channels will organize
master classes and training sessions for journalists from Armenia.

BAKU; USA Ready To Help On Karabakh

USA READY TO HELP ON KARABAKH

news.az
Nov 16 2009
Azerbaijan

Ross Wilson The USA is hoping for rapid progress in the settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the former US ambassador to Azerbaijan
and Turkey, Ross Wilson, told APA news agency’s correspondent in
Washington.

Wilson said the United States stands ready to help in any way that it
can. Washington is certainly very much focused on it and engaged in it.

"There are some basic understandings of the basic principles that would
be necessary to resolve this conflict, and I believe all of the parties
would benefit if there were a resolution of the conflict," he said.

The former ambassador believes any contact and dialogue among the
parties is a good thing, so "the more of that the better".

Wilson said that while Azerbaijan has made critical contributions to
international security efforts, the country has security concerns
closer to home: "The key to long-term stability in the region is
achieving a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We
want to see Azerbaijan and Armenia living side-by-side in a peace
that fosters mutual prosperity."

Speaking about the accords to normalize Turkish-Armenian relations,
Wilson said that this was not an initiative by the United States and
was initiated just by Turkey and Armenia.

"We saw during the war in Georgia in August 2008 that negative things
happen in the region. And a normal relationship with Turkey would
really be a historic development that would benefit not only the people
of both countries today, but the whole region. And so we actually do
think that there is a historic opportunity in the region," Wilson said.

BAKU: Ratification Of Protocols Not Stands On Turkish Parliament’s A

RATIFICATION OF PROTOCOLS NOT STANDS ON TURKISH PARLIAMENT’S AGENDA: TURKISH MP

Today.az
25.html
Nov 12 2009
Azerbaijan

"Ratification of the protocols signed by Turkey and Armenia in Zurich
on October 10 does stand on agenda of the Turkish parliament’s foreign
relations commission," member of Turkish parliament from AKP, member
of the parliament’s foreign relations commission Zeynep Daghi said.

"I know for sure that protocols are not on the commission’s agenda,"
she said.

Turkish parliament sent the the Turkey-Armenia protocols to the
foreign relations commission on Oct. 21.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Speaker Mehmet Ali Sahin and
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said the protocols wouldn’t be
ratified at the parliament until Armenia withdraws troops from
Azerbaijan’s occupied lands.

http://www.today.az/news/politics/574

Purchase And Sale Transactions Of 6.4 Million Dollars Carried Out At

PURCHASE AND SALE TRANSACTIONS OF 6.4 MILLION DOLLARS CARRIED OUT AT NASDAQ OEMEX ARMENIA OJSC ON NOVEMBER 11

Noyan Tapan
Nov 11, 2009

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, NOYAN TAPAN. Purchase and sale transactions of
6 million 400 thousand dollars at the weighted average exchange rate
of 388.18 drams per dollar were carried out at Nasdaq Oemex Armenia
OJSC on November 11. The closing price was 387.8 drams, the press
service of the Central Bank of Armenia reported.

Karabakh-Azerbaijan Border Observed

KARABAKH-AZERBAIJAN BORDER OBSERVED

Aysor
Nov 10 2009
Armenia

In accordance with the preliminary agreement between OSCE and
authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Karabakh-Azerbaijan border
has been explored today close to Goradiz populated locality. Armenian
delegation was represented by officials of Foreign and Defense
Ministries of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. A monitoring group led by
OSCE chairman-in-office Andrzej Kasprzyk included field assistants
Peter Keane (UK), Irji Aberlen (Czech Republic), and Zhaslan Nurtazin
(Kazakhstan).

During the observations neither ceasefire violation was registered.

Turkey reinvents its geostrategic role

Daily Pioneer , India
Nov 8 2009

Turkey reinvents its geostrategic role

MJ Akbar

When Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul visits India early next year he
will be representing a nation that has reinvented its geostrategic
role through an independent foreign policy in barely eight years. I
hope he brings along Mr Ahmet Davutoglu, who shaped the theory and
then structured the practicals, first as principal adviser to Prime
Minister Recip Tayyab Erdogan, and now as Foreign Minister. He must be
one of the few academics fortunate enough to get a chance to make
ideas work.

The starting point was 2002, when the Justice and Development Party
(AKP) won the elections and ended the monopoly on power exercised by a
military-bureaucratic-civilian Istanbul-centric elite which claimed
the inheritance of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and his European-style
secularism which still prohibits a Turkish woman from wearing a
headscarf to university. This elite protected Ataturk’s secular
vision, but, somewhere along the way lost sight of Ataturk’s
independence.

The wives of Mr Erdogan and Mr Gul wear headscarves, but that is not
the point: The wives of many Cabinet Ministers and high officials do
not, and are not required to. What is relevant is that AKP subtly
shifted a policy that had become synonymous with America’s, without
the angry rhetoric that has become a regrettable hallmark of so many
who strut as lead actors on the anti-American stage. AKP proved that
change was possible without compromising an amicable and mutually
beneficial relationship with Washington. Their predecessors had
America’s friendship. AKP has America’s respect as well.

Turkey has played a pivotal role in two of the three great wars of the
20th century. It was an ally of Germany and the Central Powers in
World War I, but refused to declare war on the United States even when
the latter joined the Anglo-French alliance. Even though it lost its
empire in the fighting, Turkey did not permit a single enemy soldier
on its territory during wartime. Istanbul was occupied only after
truce. Ataturk, victor of Gallipoli, was the great hero of this
conflict; but took his true place in his nation’s history after 1918,
when the vainglorious trio of Lloyd George, Winston Churchill and
Clemenceau, leavening their intent with anti-Muslim Crusader
sentiment, armed and financed a Greek invasion of Turkey. Their aim
was to partition the country and leave Turkey as a rump Anatolian
state. Ataturk mobilised a proud army and people, and shocked the
victors of World War I by destroying the Greeks after they reached the
outskirts of Ankara.

Ataturk, protecting his nation’s independence, kept Turkey neutral in
World War II. Historic fears of next-door Russia, now the Soviet
Union, drove Istanbul into Washington’s embrace in the Cold War. But
when in the 1980s flexibility became an option, and in the 1990s a
necessity, Turkey remained rigid. When it looked south it could only
see Israel; when it looked east it could see nothing more than
Pakistan. Both were American allies. Turkey did not have a policy or a
vision for the 21st century.

Mr Davutoglu selected the moment of departure with uncanny vision: Mr
George W Bush’s war on Iraq in 2003. It gave an early sign of change,
when it refused to let American troops pass through Turkey on their
way to Iraq. It also realised, fairly early, that America would be
weakened by Mr Bush’s Iraq folly, creating space for new players,
since the Soviet Union was too weak to play any role at all.

Israel and Iran have sufficient muscle to fill a regional vacuum, but
both were inherently belligerent. They would be able to intervene, but
as destabilisers rather than stabilisers. Iran had a natural advantage
in Shia-majority Iraq, but it simultaneously provoked deep suspicions
in the Arab world. Turkey set itself up as the region’s centre of
stability. Ironically, this was its role during the days of the
Ottoman Empire; but this time around, it could create an arc of
influence only through diplomacy and harmony, not imposition.

Turkey set about strengthening its relations with Arab nations. It
distanced itself from warriors in Israel, without breaking ties of
trade and cooperation. It criticised Israel’s Gaza war unambiguously.
But it realised that a critical key to peace lay in the amelioration
of its own antagonisms with its neighbours. This was, given the
emotionalism that is attached to the past, difficult.

But Turkey has now signed historic protocols with Armenia, warmed icy
relations with Syria to the point where visa has been abolished,
lifted ties with Iran and become a vital partner of Iraq in the
reconstruction of the country. In October Mr Erdogan signed 48 MoUs
covering energy, commerce and security (among other things) with
Baghdad. Mr Davutoglu paid a visit to the Kurdish Regional Government
in northern Iraq, which is equivalent to an Indian Foreign Minister
dropping in on Muzaffarabad in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. Not too long
ago, Turkey’s Air Force was bombing this Kurdish region as punishment
for being a base for terrorism. Turkey, America and Iraq are working
together to bring the long and bitter Kurdish war against Turkey to an
end ‘ another sign of Washington’s new respect for Istanbul.

Pakistan has recognised the change as well, but done so in its
India-centric manner. It has asked Turkey to help solve the Kashmir
problem. Istanbul is not so green as to try and do so; and certainly
New Delhi will be frosty towards any such misguided initiative. But
Turkey has found its role on the world stage. A stem in the Cold War
greenhouse has flowered in the fresh air of an open mind.

— MJ Akbar is Chairman and Director of Publications of the
fortnightly newsmagazine Covert.

-reinvents-its-geostrategic-role.html

http://www.dailypioneer.com/214155/Turkey

Nagorno-Karabakh Cannot Be Part Of Azerbaijan, Says Sharmazanov

NAGORNO-KARABAKH CANNOT BE PART OF AZERBAIJAN, SAYS SHARMAZANOV

Tert
Nov 6 2009
Armenia

"Nagorno-Karabakh cannot have a worse status than it has today. That
is, it cannot be included as part of Azerbaijan. Let Azerbaijan give
up this idea, " Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) press spokesperson,
RPA parliamentary faction secretary Eduard Sharmazanov stated today
at a press conference, referring to the statement made by EU Special
Representative to the South Caucasus Peter Semneby.

As Tert.am had reported earlier, Semneby had said, in his interview
with Russian paper Vremya Novostey, that the status-quo of
Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be perpetual.

Continuing, Sharmazanov said that Karabakh today with its structures
and inner life is more established and independent than Azerbaijan.

Sharmazanov also emphasized that its right to live under the sun,
its fate, the people of Nagorno-Karabakh have already decided.

Day Of Sts. Metropanos, Alexandros, Paul, Markianos And Martyron

DAY OF STS. METROPANOS, ALEXANDROS, PAUL, MARKIANOS AND MARTYRON

Aysor
Nov 5 2009
Armenia

Today Armenian Apostolic Church marks commemoration day of Sts.
Pontiffs Metropanos, Alexandros and Paul the Confessor, and the
Scribes Markianos and Martyron.

The Pontiff Metropanos (Metrophanes) was the junior son of the King
Probios. He has been ordained by the Bishop Titos of Byzantine and
has succeeded him in his office. Bishop Metropanos was known for his
deep faith and good reputation, who was able to influence even King
Kostandianos the Great to decide that the site of the new capital city
to be built should be in the place of Byzantine. He was appointed
by the same king to be the first Bishop of Constantinople. Because
of his old age the Pontiff Metropanos has not participated in the
First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea, in 325, sending instead of him
Alexander, who later succeeded him. He passed away in 236 AD.

The Pontiff Alexandros (Alexander) has succeeded the Pontiff
Metropanos. According to the tradition he has been ordained by the
Pontiffs participating in the Ecumenical Council of Nicaea, when
they had arrived to Nicaea to attend the previous Pontiff’s burial
ceremony. St. Alexandros has participated in the First Ecumenical
Council of Christ’s Church. He has been a generous, eloquently
speaking, fair and pious pontiff, who has always struggled against
the Arianism and the heathen philosophers. According to the Church
tradition it is thanks to his prayers and the prayers of the Pontiff
St. James of Nisibis that Arius has died. The Pontiff Alexandros has
passed away in 326 AD. (According to some sources – in 327 AD.)

The Pontiff St. Paul the Confessor was born in Selanik. He was a
pious man and very well knowing the Holy Bible. He has succeeded
the Pontiff Alexander of Constantinople. For his strict attitude
against Arians St. Paul has been exiled by the King Kostantdianos
to Pontos. He returns to Constantinople in 338 AD. But it was fated
that the Pontiff should be exiled for three more times. For the last
time the Pontiff Paul has been exiled to the town Kokison (Armenia),
where he has been martyred by the Arians, who strangled him during
the Divine Liturgy in 350 AD.

Markianos (Marcian) and Martiron (Martyrius) were senior scribes, who
served in the Patriarchate of Constantinople and assisted the Pontiff
Paul the Confessor who was the Patriarch during that period. When they
become aware of the Pontiff’s being strangled, they spread among the
people the fact that the reason for the Pontiff Paul’s death are the
Arians. For making them to keep silent the Arian Eparkos living in
Constantinople orders to behead the scribes in about 350 AD.

BAKU: OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs To Arrive In Baku Today

OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS TO ARRIVE IN BAKU TODAY

Today
Nov 5 2009
Azerbaijan

Co-chairs of OSCE Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia,
Bernard Fassier of France, Robert Bradtke of the U.S. and personal
representative of OSCE chairman-in-office Andrzej Kasprzyk will arrive
in Baku on Nov. 5..

The mediators will start their visit to the region from Azerbaijan.

The co-chairs will meet with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and
Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov.

Later, they will leave for Yerevan to have talks with the Armenian
leadership.

The mediators will discuss the preparation for the new meeting of
Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents.