A Constructive Approach Is Needed

A CONSTRUCTIVE APPROACH IS NEEDED
By Karine Mangassarian

Yerkir.am
May 12, 2006

What role can the political and societal attitudes of conflicting
parties have in the Karabagh settlement process? A roundtable
discussion was organized by Social Communication NGO and the Armenian
Association for Conflict and Peace Research on May 11 to discuss
this question.

Representative of ARF’s Supreme Body, head of the standing
parliamentary committee on external relations Armen Rustamian and
chairman of AACPR Khachik Galstian participated in the roundtable.

Rustamian started his presentation by referring to the meeting of the
Armenian and Azeri presidents in Rambouyet since this meeting generated
discussions that the negotiation process had entered a deadlock.

“Rambouollet was an important point and we have to assess it
objectively to understand where the negotiation process has reached
in the recent years and what the tendencies of today are. Many people
think that Rambouollet was a deadlock. I don’t think so. If we take
such an approach this would mean that we have had many deadlocks,”
Rustamian said noting that the logic of the negotiation process
occasionally implies such outcomes.

Rustamian believes the negotiation process should be assessed from
two perspectives. First, from the perspective of the degree of
constructivity and second from the perspective of efficiency of the
negotiations. There is a lot to do in terms of ensuring a constructive
approach and the international organizations accept this fact. They
believe that no projects implemented in the region can be efficient
unless the conflicts are resolved.

What should be done to make the positions of the conflicting parties
more constructive? “In the case of Karabagh settlement it becomes
increasingly evident that the settlement process cannot be constructive
if the settlement does not reflect the nature of the conflict. In
other words, this is an ethno-political conflict and there can be no
settlement unless its root causes are eliminated.

If the causes are not settled the conflict itself cannot be settled. I
think the international community gradually understands this,”
Rustamian stated noting that it is impossible to arrive at a final
settlement of a conflict if only the consequences of the conflict are
addressed without dealing with its causes. Otherwise, peace cannot
last long.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan is trying to propose step-by-step settlement
considering today’s peace as a great concession to the Armenian
side. “Peace is necessary for everyone. It cannot be in the interests
of just one party. If the other side insists that peace is a concession
and the other party should make concessions in return, this is wrong.

The negotiation process cannot be constructive if the parties do not
understand the necessity for peace,” Rustamian noted. He believes
it is wrong to address all conflicts with one and the same formula
since even the three conflicts in our region are different in terms
of their political, historical and legal aspects.

Azerbaijan is not willing to accept this fact and insists on settlement
of the conflict based on its territorial integrity. “We are ready
to respect Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity but Karabagh has never
been a part of independent Azerbaijan”, Rustamian stated.

Azerbaijan rejects any cooperation while Armenia, according to
Rustamian, considers that a platform of common interests should
be created to mitigate the parties’ mutual distrust towards each
other. Otherwise, no one can guarantee that even if an agreement is
reached it will not be breached on the very next day.

Commenting on the efficiency of the negotiation process,
Rustamian noted that the Karabagh conflict is unique in that
one of the conflicting parties, Karabagh, is not involved in the
negotiations. “What we have today is not negotiations but simply
consultations.

This process should eventually contribute to negotiations whereby
the three parties will sit around the negotiation table and agree on
a final document,” Rustamian noted adding that Armenia should not be
blamed for getting involved in the conflict since if Armenia had not
involved in it another genocide would have been committed in Karabagh.

Khachik Galstian talked about the role of people’s diplomacy in
conflict settlement, in other words, the role of the public sector. He
believes that even though on the level of political relations
militaristic statements are voiced especially by Azerbaijan, people’s
diplomacy should aim at the peaceful settlement of the conflict.

“People will have the final say in any solution of Nagorno Karabagh
conflict, ” Galstian stated noting that on this level we can witness
double standards of ethics whereby a murderer is announced the man
of the year in Azerbaijan and a murderer in Armenia.

Is the government undertaking any measures to organize interaction
between the parties at this level? According to Rustamian, the Armenian
side has always proposed to Azerbaijan to establish such relations.

However, if any Azeri political figure attempts to do something in
this direction he will not be able to return to Azerbaijan because
they think that engaging in such a dialog means treason of their
country. Galstian believes such relations should be established on
the level of intercultural communication.

Azerbaijan is not ready for this either.

What expectations can we have from the two presidents’ next
meeting? Can we expect it to be more constructive? Rustamian is not
very optimistic about this since today the principle approaches of
the two parties are very different.

Even if a document is drafted it cannot be considered final and
will only be a document stating the principles on which the parties
agree. Meanwhile, the answers to the important and subtle issues
related to the conflict can only be reached through serious work of
experts and political scientists.

Armenian speaker resigns

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
May 12, 2006 Friday

Armenian speaker resigns

by Tigran Liloyan

Armenian parliamentary Speaker Artur Bagdasaryan has declared he will
resign from his post.

Bagdasaryan has been Speaker of the Armenian parliament since June
12, 2003. The 38-year-old Chairman of the National Assembly announced
his decision at a press conference in Yerevan on Friday. “Staying on
in this post is unacceptable,” the Speaker said. “Our political
team has unanimously decided to quit the ruling coalition, and we
shall resign from all the posts, including the ministerial posts,”
Bagdasaryan said.

In accordance with the parliamentary rules of procedure, Bagdasaryan
is to submit his resignation in a written form at the next regular
meeting of the parliament due on May 22. Then, the speaker is to
confirm his resignation within five days’ time.

Many deputies suggested holding a confidence vote with subsequent
resignation as a result of the vote, but Bagdasaryan objected.

Bagdasaryan heads the Centre-Right Coalition “Orinats Yerkir”
translated from the Armenian as the Country of Law. The resolution
made by this coalition actually means the disintegration of the
ruling pro-presidential coalition that exists in Armenia since 2003.

Nonetheless, observers believe that Bagdasaryan will not abandon the
political arena, but will seek to become leader of the opposition and
even run for presidency.

NDU Opposition Party Leader Believes Withdrawal Of “Orinats Yerkir”F

NDU OPPOSITION PARTY LEADER BELIEVES WITHDRAWAL OF “ORINATS YERKIR” FROM RULING COALITION APPROPRIATE

Yerevan, May 12. ArmInfo. The withdrawal of “OY” party from the
ruling political coalition of Armenia was appropriate and expected,
Leader of the National Democratic Union included in the “Justice”
opposition bloc, MP Vazgen Manukyan says in an interview with ArmInfo.

To recap Thursday “Orinats Yerkir” Party Board resolved to withdraw
from the country’s ruling political coalition. In addition, the “OY”
Board adopted a decision on resignation of “OY” Leader, Parliamentary
Speaker Arthur Baghdasaryan from his post. Arthur Baghdasaryan intends
to made public the party’s decision today at 2:00 PM. Sources close to
the party report that approximately an hour before the party meeting
yesterday, A. Baghdasaryan met with President Robert Kocharyan and
then convened immediate meeting of the party Board.

Vazgen Manukyan sees nothing surprising in the withdrawal of the party
as it was repeatedly stating about its inability to control over the
situation in the country and was coming against the course taken by
the coalition. “However, the party has been shaken and split, which
was unnatural,” V. Manukyan says. Withdrawing from the coalition, the
party will automatically become an opposition, but if it will join the
opposition or will act independently will become known over time, he
believes. As regards the probable nominees to the post of the speaker,
V. Manukyan says: “We shall not participate in these games. There
are no elections in Armenia. There is no parliament. There is only a
Plenum of the Central Committee that resolves who will take the post
of the speaker.”

5th Shift Of Armenian Peacekeepers Left For Kosovo Today

5TH SHIFT OF ARMENIAN PEACEKEEPERS LEFT FOR KOSOVO TODAY

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.05.2006 14:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The 5th shift of Armenian peacekeepers left for
Kosovo today, Armenian MOD Head’s Spokesperson, colonel Seyran
Shahsuvaryan told PanARMENIAN.Net. To remind, the 4th shift of
peacekeepers, who numbered 34, left for Kosovo on October 19, 2005. The
4th shift is distinguished with the battalion comprising skilled
servicemen, who had already visited Kosovo once. To remind, Armenian
peacekeepers are located in the zone of US responsibility. Armenian
servicemen mainly protect check-points and special destination objects.

Antelias: Requiem in Antelias for the Armenian air crash victims

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

Watch the recorded video here:
mservice.wmv

REQUIEM SERVICE IN ANTELIAS FOR THE MEMORY
OF THE ARMAVIA AIRPLANE CRASH VICTIMS

His Holiness Aram I presided over a special requiem service in the Antelias
headquarters of the Catholicosate of Cilicia on May 7 in memory of the 113
innocent victims of the Armenian “Airbus-320” airplane crash recently. The
airplane that belonged to the Armenian Armavia Airlines crashed into the
black Sea as it headed from Yerevan to Sochi in the early morning hours of
May 3.

His Holiness delivered a sermon before the service, speaking about the sad
incident. Stressing the concept of the wholeness of a nation, the Pontiff
presented the tragedy as a pain for the entire Armenian nation.

“Not only the relatives of the victims felt the pain, not only Armenia felt
the pain, but we, as a nation, mourned the sad incident. We’re a small
nation and therefore our pain is double. Christ came to heal our wounds. He
came to remind us that this earthly life is not the end of our lives,” he
said.

“As we conduct requiem in the Catholicosate of Cilicia on this sad occasion
today, we express our condolences on behalf of the Cilician Brotherhood, the
central committee of this Holy See, its Dioceses around the globe and
believers to the president of the Republic of Armenia H.E. Robert
Kotcharian, Catholicos of All Armenians His Holiness Karekin II and the
relatives of the victims. We pray to God to strengthen our nation in its
internal life and unity, to brighten and develop our motherland and church,”
added the Catholicos.

##
View photo here: tm
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of the
Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Videos/requie
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Pictures64.h
http://www.cathcil.org/

HH Karekin II Offers Requiem to Armavia Flt. 967 Crash Victims

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  (374 10) 517 163
Fax:  (374 10) 517 301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
May 7, 2006

“Be strengthened with faith.  Death is not the end of life!”

On Saturday evening, May 7, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians, presided during a solemn requiem service
offered in the Saint Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral of Yerevan, in memory
of the victims of the recent Armavia airline disaster.  Three days earlier,
the Yerevan-Sochi flight carrying 113 men, women and children was lost in a
tragic accident prior to landing at the Adler airport in the Russian resort
city.  Many of the relatives, friends and co-workers of the crew and
passengers were in attendance for the service.

The Pontiff of All Armenians addressed his words of consolation to the
families and friends of the victims, as well as to the entire grieving
Armenian nation dispersed throughout the world.  He stated in part, “We have
gathered today in this holy sanctuary, to pray together for the eternal rest
of the souls of the victims who perished in the airline disaster three days
ago… Our great sorrow is shared by millions of people, countless nations,
clergymen and statesmen, who raise their prayers to heaven asking that God
Almighty receive the souls of the victims in luminous and blessed
tranquility and grant solace and consolation to their families and friends.

“Adversities, worries, sorrow and even death are a part of this life. 
However, death is not the end of life… Those who perished in this tragedy
departed from us, but life has not departed from them.  They went to join
our Creator, Almighty God, Who with His unending love for us, has granted us
eternal life through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

“It is always difficult to become separated from a loved one, great is the
pain of his or her loss.  We are unaware of how God will heal the sorrows
and pains, what solace He will bestow, but let our hope in God’s mercy be
unshakeable and everlasting.  It is God Who strengthens us when we are
filled with sorrow and weak of spirit… As the Apostle states, God
comforts us in our afflictions, so that we may comfort those who are
afflicted as well. (II Corinthians 1:3-4).

“We offer prayers from the depths of our heart, asking that the Lord, in His
love and mercy, receive the souls of the 113 victims of the tragedy and make
them worthy to dwell in His Divine company, and through the Holy Spirit,
grant solace and comfort to their beloved family members, friends and
neighbors.  Dear ones – Be strengthened with faith.  Death is not the end of
life!  Their lives will continue through your righteous works and
God-pleasing paths, and their memories will remain forever alight.”

Present for the service were President of Armenia Robert Kocharian and First
Lady Bella Kocharian, Prime Minister and Mrs. Andranik Margarian, National
Assembly (parliament) President and Mrs. Artur Baghdasarian, Constitutional
Court President and Mrs. Gagik Haroutiunian, Ministers and state officials,
members of the National Assembly, ambassadors and foreign diplomats
accredited to Armenia, high-ranking Church officials, members of the Supreme
Spiritual Council, and more than 5,000 faithful.  The service was also
broadcast live throughout Armenia and around the world.

Assisting His Holiness during the service were His Eminence Archbishop
Nerses Bozabalian, member of the Brotherhood of Holy Etchmiadzin; His
Eminence Archbishop Sebouh Sarkissian from the Catholicosate of the Great
House of Cilicia; His Grace Bishop Yeznik Petrosian, director of the
Publications Department of the Mother See; and His Grace Bishop Paren
Avedikian, Director of Administrative Affairs for the Mother See.

His Grace Bishop Arshak Khatchatrian, Chancellor of the Mother See, welcomed
the faithful and asked for a moment of silence at the beginning of the
service, and His Grace Bishop Navasard Kjoyan, Vicar General of the
Araratian Pontifical Diocese, read the Holy Gospel.  The traditional Repose
of Souls service concluded with a somber choral rendition of “Der Voghormia”
(Lord, Have Mercy).

www.armenianchurch.org

BAKU: Swante Cornell: Armenia lost support from France and the US

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
May 8 2006

Swante Cornell: Armenia lost support from France and the US

Source: «Trend»
Author: R. Abdullayev

08.05.2006

Status of Nagorny-Karabakh will not be defined at current stage of
peace negotiations, reportedly said Swante Cornell, Research
Director, John Hopkins University.

Cornell said this issue may be discussed upon return of most part of
occupied Azeri grounds.

He added that in resolution of the conflict Armenia lost the support
earlier provided by the US and France.

«At the moment Azerbaijan is quite an important state for the US, and
France is neutral in this conflict»,- he outlined. Yerevan, he
continued, is left aside the processes going in the region, while
Baku is in the very center.

Cornell stated the necessity in America’s participation in resolution
of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Thus, it is likely that official
Washington is going to pay more attention to this issue.

BAKU: Ahmadinejad:”No independent state to accept literature of bull

Today, Azerbaijan
May 6 2006

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: “No independent state to accept literature of
bullies”

06 May 2006 [11:46] – Today.Az

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that no independent state will
accept the literature of the bullying powers.

“Our stances on nuclear activities are based on the international
regulations and those taking stances against our country in the case
of nuclear energy should know that if nuclear energy is good, why we
should not have it and if it is bad, why they should have it,” said
Ahmadinejad in a press conference on the sidelines of the 9th ECO
summit, IRNA informs.

On Tehran-Baku relations, Ahmadinejad said, “Regional states are
friends and brothers to each other and cooperation is the best
guarantee for security of the region; the countries can build
security by helping each other adding that regional countries are
against foreign interference.”

On Iran-Russia relations, Ahmadinejad said Tehran-Moscow ties are
friendly and growing.

“And we are interested in further expansion of the relations; and as
far as nuclear issue is concerned, we are ready to act within
framework of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s regulations.”
To a question on dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ahmadinejad
said, “We are for peace, tranquility and spirituality; the rights of
both sides should be respected.”
Elsewhere in the interview, Ahmadinejad said Iran is mulling
inauguration of an oil exchange market and details of the plan will
soon be unveiled to the public.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/25823.html

Russia, Armenia mourn for victims of Armenian jet crash

Russia, Armenia mourn for victims of Armenian jet crash

Xinhua, China
May 5 2006

MOSCOW, May 5 (Xinhua) — Russia and Armenia mourned for the victims
of the Airbus A-320 Armenian jet crash on Friday, the Itar-Tass news
agency reported.

The tricolor national flags of Russia and Armenia were hoisted
half-mast on the buildings of the state institutions of both countries.

The Russian tricolor, raised for the first time next to the Kremlin,
at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Alexandrovsky Garden, was also
elevated half-mast. The mourning will not interfere with the planned
solemn functions, timed for Victory Dayon Tuesday.

The Airbus A-320 of the Armenian airline belonging to the air company
Armavia crashed into the Black Sea near the southern Russian resort
town of Sochi at around 2:15 a.m. local time (2215 GMT Tuesday),
killing all the 113 people on board, including six children and eight
crew. The remnants sank to a depth more than six hundred meters below
the sea surface.

The national flags of the Russian Federation were hoisted half-mast
in Sochi, too. All the culture institutions and TV companies of the
city have canceled their entertainment programs. The same was done
in the entire Krasnodar Territory of the south Russia region.

A steamship carrying relatives and near ones of the crash victims
will lower wreaths onto the surface of the sea at the place, where
the tragedy occurred.

According to the latest reports, 53 bodies of the crash victims
were found in the sea on Thursday. Thirty-seven of them were
identified. Twenty-six identified bodies were flown from Adler to
Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan late Thursday night.

According to a list of passengers submitted to the Russian Ministry
for Emergency Situations, all the passengers were of Armenian descent,
but 26 of them were citizens of the Russian Federation.

Former Armenian Interior minister and KGB — the state security
committee– chairman Major-General Usik Arutyunyan was among the
victims killed in the plane crash.

On decision of Sochi Mayor Viktor Kolodyazhny, the Municipal Council
will pay 500,000 roubles (18,000 U.S. dollars) to each family of
the crash victims, which will get a compensation worth 20,000 U.S.
dollars from insurance company too.

“The city will not forget their children, too. We shall help them
get an education, including higher school professions,” Kolodyazhny
stressed. Enditem

Relatives cast flowers into sea for air crash victims

Relatives cast flowers into sea for air crash victims

People’s Daily, China
May 6 2006

Armenia and Russia marked an official day of mourning on Friday,
grieving relatives cast flowers into the Black Sea at the spot where
an Armenian jet plunged into the waters, killing all 113 on board.

To the sound of mournful music and the boom of a fog horn, they
scattered carnations and roses over the waters six kilometres offshore
from the Russian resort of Sochi, where the Armenian Airbus A320
crashed on Wednesday.

A woman holding a photograph of two young newly-weds who died in the
crash fainted on the deck of the boat that took them to the site.

Several others also passed out.

Transport Minister Igor Levitin, who was in Sochi, said it was urgent
to find the corpses of the many victims still lost in the sea more than
half of the people on the plane. Only 50 bodies have been recovered
so far, according to the emergency situations ministry.

“It’s very important for us to raise the bodies. That’s our priority
now,” Levitin said.

A first plane carrying 26 bodies arrived at the airport in the Armenian
capital, Yerevan, on Friday after an initial delay, apparently due
to a lack of coffins.

“The victims’ bodies are unrecognisable, horribly disfigured. A mother
wouldn’t know her own son,” said one young man who had returned from
Sochi after failing to find his brother-in-law, his eyes red from
crying and fatigue.

Flags flew at half mast across Armenia, radio and television channels
played sad music and memorial services were held at churches across
the country.

Russian officials and members of the public also laid flowers at the
Armenian embassy in Moscow for the victims of the accident. The crash
has shocked the two countries, which have long had close ties.

Work continues

Meanwhile work continued to recover from the sea the victims’ corpses
and the black box flight recorders that might help establish why the
plane crashed. Bad weather is thought to be the cause of the crash,
according to investigators.

The latter said they had picked up signals from what seemed to be
the flight recorders at a location 680 metres below the surface,
where a large section of the plane’s wrecked fuselage lay.

Russia, whose investigators are being helped by experts from France,
is seeking assistance from other foreign countries to raise the black
boxes since its Black Sea fleet is not fully equiped for the task,
Levitin said.

A bathyscaphe submersible vehicle will be sent down to the site to
ascertain whether the signals that have been picked up are really
coming from a section of the plane, he added.

Relatives face the grim task of identifying their dead loved ones
from photographs pinned on a hotel wall in Sochi, many of the bodies
battered and bloated from submersion in the water.

On board the plane were 85 Armenian citizens, 26 Russians, one
Georgian and one Ukrainian, according to a list published at Yerevan
airport. Six children were thought to be among the dead.