Sending Armenian Military to Iraq Exclusively Humanitarian

PanArmenian News
Sept 22 2004

QUESTION OF SENDING ARMENIAN MILITARY TO IRAQ IS EXCLUSIVELY WITHIN
HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE

22.09.2004 18:18

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The question of sending medical officers and
sappers to Iraq is exclusively within providing humanitarian
assistance, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian stated today.
In his words, Armenia has stated from the first day that it does not
intend to have military presence in Iraq, while it would like to
participate in rehabilitation of the country. At the same time the
Minister added that final decision thereupon is not made yet and it
has to be approved by the National Assembly of Armenia.

ANKARA: Prodi seeks re-opening of Turkish-Armenian border

Turkiye, Turkey
Sept 21 2004

PRODI SEEKS RE-OPENING OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN BORDER

Romano Prodi, the top official of the European Union Commission, said
yesterday that he wanted to see the long-closed Turkish-Armenian
border re-opened. During a tour of southern Caucasus countries, Prodi
hold a press conference alongside Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanyan. The EU commissioner stated he was not neglecting the issue
of opening borders as a precondition for Turkey’s EU membership.
`Personally, I don’t like the closed Turkish-Armenian border and the
absence of political relations between these two countries,’ said
Prodi. He added that he was ready to contribute to efforts to open
the border. /Turkiye/

National Geographic Travel Column: Armenia’s Lesson in Street Life

National Geographic
Sept 17 2004

Travel Column: Armenia’s Lesson in Street Life

TravelWatch
Jonathan B. Tourtellot
National Geographic Traveler
Updated September 17, 2004

A small experiment in Gyumri, Armenia has shown how easy it is to
turn an urban dead zone into an appealing, living place.
Gyumri boasts two Soviet-era monumental, lifeless city squares. You
know the type: asphalt deserts walled by concrete office facades,
beloved by urban planners and hated by travelers on foot. In a remote
corner of one square, a Gyumri company recently installed just three
things: a park bench, a street lamp, and a seesaw.

Men sit on a bench in Dilizhan, Armenia. In another town, just such a
streetscape is sprouting in a once barren plaza.

According to the New York-based Project for Public Spaces, magic
resulted. Kids flocked to the seesaw, parents in tow. Parents began
to chat with each other. Soon street vendors set up stands next to
the bench, drawing more people. Three tiny seeds had bloomed into a
garden of street life. Any visitor entering that square would
automatically gravitate toward the lively corner.

Modern cities abound in dead zones; some are even handsome. But it’s
people that make a town worth visiting. Nothing makes a town or city
more appealing for tourists than lively, pedestrian-friendly streets
and squares.

It’s a lesson Europe seems to be learning, as city after city there
has created car-free zones. In the ultra-motorized U.S.–despite
success stories like San Antonio’s riverwalk–cities have been slower
to embrace the idea of streets that are more populated by people than
by traffic. Yet all you need to do is set aside a few blocks and
provide ways for people to do what people like to do–eat, drink,
talk, play. Tourists show up. Businesses thrive.

As the Gyumri experiment shows, it doesn’t take much to turn a square
with nothing into a square with something. Bring on the seesaws.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/09/0917_040917_armenia_travel.html#main

Le president Aliev hostile a la venue de soldats armeniens enAzerbai

Le président Aliev hostile à la venue de soldats arméniens en Azerbaïdjan

Agence France Presse
11 septembre 2004 samedi 11:56 AM GMT

BARDA (Azerbaïdjan) 11 sept

Le président d’Azerbaïdjan, Ilham Aliev, s’est déclaré opposé samedi
à ce que des officiers arméniens participent à des manoeuvres de
l’Otan prévues la semaine prochaine dans son pays.

M. Aliev n’a pas précisé s’il interdirait aux militaires arméniens
l’accès à l’Azerbaïdjan, indiquant seulement que le gouvernement
prenait des “mesures” dont il n’a pas révélé la teneur.

Une guerre a opposé l’Arménie et l’Azerbaïdjan au début des années
1990 à propos du Nagorny Karabakh, enclave à population
majoritairement arménienne sur le territoire de l’Azerbaïdjan. Le
conflit a fait 35.000 morts et environ un million de civils ont été
déplacés. Le territoire est resté sous le contrôle des Arméniens
depuis un cessez-le-feu en 1994.

Les deux pays coopèrent avec l’Otan au sein du Partenariat pour la
paix.

“Qui que vous interrogiez en Azerbaïdjan, personne ne vous dira qu’il
accepte la venue d’officiers arméniens”, a déclaré le président à la
presse lors d’une visite à Barda, dans le nord-ouest du pays.

“Je ne veux pas non plus qu’ils viennent. Je suis opposé à cela et
l’Azerbaïdjan prend les mesures nécessaires”, a-t-il ajouté.

Le président Aliev doit rencontrer la semaine prochaine son homologue
arménien Robert Kotcharian au Kazakhstan, en marge d’un sommet des
pays de l’ex-URSS qui débute le 15 septembre à Astana.

M. Aliev a estimé samedi que cette rencontre pourrait être
déterminante pour l’avenir du fragile processus de paix entre les
deux pays. “Beaucoup dépend de la rencontre à Astana”, a-t-il
déclaré. “Elle pourrait clarifier la question de savoir où nous en
sommes, si nous nous rapprochons d’un accord ou si nous partons dans
la direction opposée”, a-t-il ajouté.

L’Arménie, comme plusieurs dizaines d’autres pays, doit participer
avec un petit contingent à des exercices de l’Otan prévus à partir de
lundi en Azerbaïdjan.

Mais plusieurs médias indépendants en Azerbaïdjan ont fait campagne
auprès du gouvernement pour qu’il empêche la venue des soldats
arméniens. Les opposants ont promis de descendre dans les rues si le
projet se concrétisait.

La venue de militaires arméniens à Bakou pour participer à une
conférence de l’Otan avait déjà donné lieu à une manifestation le 21
juin dernier.

BAKU: Arrested pressure group members issue statement

Arrested pressure group members issue statement

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 10 2004

Baku, September 9, AssA-Irada — The arrested Garabagh Liberation
Organization (GLO) members issued a statement on Thursday expressing
acute protest against the planned arrival of Armenian officers’
in Baku.

The statement, signed by GLO chairman Akif Naghi, terms such a visit as
unacceptable, as it would mean ignoring Armenians acts of aggression
against Azerbaijan, and conveying recognition of the self-proclaimed
Upper Garabagh regime to the international community.

Every Azeri citizen today should be involved in preventing Armenia’s
insidious policy and contribute to national unity on this issue,
the statement says.*

Arrivals Prevail In Number

ARRIVALS PREVAIL IN NUMBER

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
8 Sept 04

Among the rates reflecting the social and demographic situation
in a country those describing migration processes are of special
importance. In the months January-June 2004, for example, the
number of arrivals to the Republic of Nagorni Karabakh increased to
548. In the same period the number of people who left the country is
194. Mechanical growth totals 354 and increased by 176 persons or twice
compared to the first half of the previous year. The number of arrivals
exceeded the number of leavers 2.8 times in the same period. In the
first half of the current year the number of marriages increased by
27.1 per cent and the divorce rate, on the contrary, dropped by 25.6
per cent against the first half of the previous year. In the mentioned
period the correlation of marriages and divorces was 100 to 9 against
the 15 divorces of the first half of the previous year. The largest
share of marriages was registered in Stepanakert – 31.5 per cent,
and the smallest share in the region of Shoushi – 1.4 per cent. The
information was provided by the NKR National Statistics Service.

AA.
08-09-2004

RA Prime Minister Makes Notes In Book Of Condolences Opened In RfEmb

RA PRIME MINISTER MAKES NOTES IN BOOK OF CONDOLENCES OPENED IN RF EMBASSY IN
CONNECTION WITH BESLAN TRAGEDY

YEREVAN, September 7 (Noyan Tapan). On September 7, RA Prime Minister
Andranik Margarian visited the Russian embassy in Armenia and made
notes in the book of condolences which was opened in connection
with the tragedy in the town of Beslan. “I commiserate over the
heinious crime committed. Personally and on behalf of RA President
I commiserate with the families and relatives of the victimes and
the Russian people,” Prime Minister has written. According to the
Information and PR Department of the government, Hovik Abrahamian,
RA Minister for Regional Governance and Coordination of Infrastructure
Activities, and Manuk Topusian, Minister – Head of the RA Government
Staff accompanied the Prime Minister to the Russian embassy and
offered their commiserations. Other members of the government also
visited the Russian embassy later on the day.

Armenian president starts official Polish visit

Armenian president starts official Polish visit

PAP news agency
6 Sep 04

Warsaw, 6 September: Bilateral relations and the situation in Iraq
are the main subjects of talks between the presidents of Poland and
Armenia, Aleksander Kwasniewski and Robert Kocharian, that started
at the Presidential Palace on Monday [6 September].

The Armenian president started on Monday an official part of his
visit to Poland. On Sunday he paid a visit to Gdansk.

Later in the day the two presidents will chair plenary talks of the
two delegations and will attend the signing of a bilateral agreement
on cooperation in defence.

In the afternoon the Armenian president will receive Prime Minister
Marek Belka and will meet with Sejm [lower house of parliament]
and Senate deputy speakers.

Vilnius: Armenian DM coming to Lithuania

Baltic News Service
September 6, 2004

ARMENIAN DEFENSE MINISTER COMING TO LITHUANIA

VILNIUS, Sep 06

Armenian Defense Minister Serzh Sargsian is coming to Lithuania this
week to meet his Lithuanian colleagues, discuss bilateral military
cooperation and learn about NATO’s air-policing functions in the
Baltic states.

Sargsian, who is coming to Vilnius on Tuesday evening, will meet
on Wednesday with President Valdas Adamkus, Defense Minister Linas
Linkevicius, Foreign Minister Antanas Valionis, members of the
parliament’s National Security and Defense Committee and chairman
Alvydas Sadeckas and Land Forces Commander Brigadier General Arvydas
Pocius.

The Lithuanian Defense Ministry said main items on the agenda of
the meeting between Linkevicius and Sargsian would be prospects
of regional cooperation, bilateral military ties, NATO enlargement
process and the course of armed forces reforms.

After the meeting, the two officials will sign a cooperation treaty
on studies of Armenian officers at the Lithuanian War Academy.
Analogous documents have already been signed with Georgian and
Azerbaijani ministries of defense.

On Thursday, Sargsian will go to the Lithuanian First Air Base
in Zokniai to meet with soldiers of the international contingent
performing the air-policing mission in the three Baltic states.

NATO forces have started patrolling the Lithuanian, Latvian and
Estonian air space since the Baltic states joined the alliance in the
end of March. Danish troops with five F-16 fighters are now guarding
the Baltic air space.

Lithuania and Armenia signed a defense cooperation treaty in 2002.

The Lithuanian Defense Ministry has taken the initiative to transfer
the Baltic defense cooperation experience to countries of the South
Caucasus region.

Lithuania also assists in the training of Armenian officers by offering
a possibility to study at Lithuanian military training institutions
and paying for studies of one Armenian officer at the Baltic Defense
College in the Estonian city Tartu.

Armenia has been a partner in the Partnership for Peace program
since 1994.

Health system expands coverage

Tri-Valley Herald, CA
Sept 4 2004

Health system expands coverage

ValleyCare volunteers work to improve health care in Azerbaijan
By Matt Carter, STAFF WRITER

PLEASANTON — When U.S. interests are at stake in odd corners of the
world, the “boots on the ground” aren’t always worn by soldiers.
Volunteers with ValleyCare Health System and the Alameda County
Department of Public Health have signed on to a four-year project to
improve health care in troubled Azerbaijan.

The predominantly Muslim nation of 7.9 million people is rich
in oil, but has been fragmented by war since the collapse of the
Soviet Union. Situated between Iran and Russia on the Caspian Sea,
Azerbaijan also is coping with environmental damage caused by oil
spills and pesticides.

A five-member delegation from the emerging nation arrives Sunday for
a week-long stay in the Valley, where they’ll see the latest medical
techniques and practices first hand.

Azerbaijan has an infant mortality rate of 82 deaths for every 1,000
live births — more than 10 times greater than the United States.
ValleyCare board member David Mertes of Livermore said the main goal
of the program is to improve health care for women of childbearing age,
newborns and children.

“While some of the program will impact (adult) men and older folks,
the priority issues are related to women of reproductive age,” Mertes
said. “Things such as ovarian cancer, breast cancer and cervical
cancer are very high on the list.”

ValleyCare has been involved in a similar project before, helping
doctors in Snezhinsk, Russia, provide better medical care.

The goals of that three-year program included creating jobs and
bettering living conditions for Russian nuclear weapons scientists,
in the hopes of reducing the likelihood that they’d leave home to
work for nations hostile to the United States.

Mertes said the “very successful” outcome of that project led to
another offer.

“A year or so went by, and we were contacted by the American
International Health Alliance, and asked if we were interested in a
project in Azerbaijan,”

Mertes said.

The Health Alliance, which administered a $750,000 Department of
Energy grant for the Snezhinsk project, is overseeing a U.S. Agency
for International Development grant of about $800,000 for work in
Azerbaijan.

“When we were approached again, I think it was because we had the
experience,” Mertes said. “They said this was their first program in
Azerbaijan, and they didn’t want to have a failure right off the bat.”

As was the case with Snezhinsk, most of the money is earmarked for
travel expenses. The goal of both programs is an exchange of expertise,
not the purchase of supplies and equipment.

“We have two criteria,” Mertes said. “Whatever is done must be of
a nature that it can continue after the project ends. It has to be
sustainable — not, ‘We leave after four years and it stops.’ Second,
it must be replicable in other cities.”

According to the CIA Fact Book, the average life expectancy in
Azerbaijan is 63. The CIA estimates that foreign firms plan to invest
some $60 billion in the country’s oil fields, but a dispute with
Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region has slowed the country’s
development and created 800,000 refugees.

“Corruption is ubiquitous and the promise of widespread wealth
from Azerbaijan’s undeveloped petroleum resources remains largely
unfulfilled,” the book concludes.

Mertes and Mike Ranahan, a gynecologist affiliated with ValleyCare,
visited Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku, and another city, Ganca, in May.
In June, a delegation of five health care professionals from the East
Bay conducted a tour that included refugee camps surrounding Ganca.

In addition to Ranahan, the delegation included ValleyCare infectious
disease nurse Jessica Jordan and three Alameda County Public Health
employees: Marla Blagg, and doctors Tony Iton and James Steward.

Mertes said the information will flow both ways in the program,
and that ValleyCare’s volunteers expect to learn as well as teach.

Snezhinsk “was the first foray ValleyCare got into with international
stuff,” Mertes said. “We learned a lot about ourselves by looking at
how other people looked at the way we did things. You can’t do it
without asking yourself, ‘Why am I doing it this way?’ It’s really
valuable.”

While they are here, the group from Azerbaijan will tour ValleyCare
facilities in Livermore and Pleasanton, Highland Hospital in Oakland,
and the University of San Francisco Medical Center.

On Wednesday, the group — which includes Ganca’s vice mayor and the
minister of health for the region — will see an Oakland A’s game,
courtesy of Alameda County Supervisor Scott Haggerty.

Next Saturday, the group will meet with their American counterparts
and devise a work plan for achieving the program’s goals.

“During the course of the week, we’ll decide on specific things they
want to accomplish,” Mertes said, “and determine whether we can help
them achieve them.”