Oskanian Participates in CIS States FM Council, Meets Merzlyakov

VARTAN OSKANIAN PARTICIPATES IN CIS STATES GOREIGN MINISTERS COUNCIL
MEETING AND MEETS WITH YURI MERZLYAKOV

MOSCOW, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. A regular meeting of
the Council of Foreign Ministers of CIS Member States took place in
Moscow on April 21. The RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
participated in the meeting. The CIS foreign ministers discussed a
number of problems related to the development of cooperation among the
CIS member states, particularly the process of implementation of the
decision on improvement and reforms of CIS bodies, which was taken by
the heads of the CIS states on August 26, 2005, and the issue of
setting up a high-level group on issues of increasing the efficiency
of the CIS. The CIS foreign ministers made decisions concerning the
Agreement on Council of Humanitarian Cooperation of CIS Member States
and the Agreement on Creation of a Inter-State Fund of Humanitarian
Cooperation of CIS Member States. The meeting participants approved
the program on main measures of cooperation of the CIS member states
in the sphere of culture until 2010, and the agenda of the meeting of
the government heads of the CIS member states to be held in Dushanbe
on May 25, 2006. According to the RA MFA Press and Information
Department, later on the same day Vartan Oskanian met with the Russian
Co-Chairman of the OCSE Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov. Vartan Oskanian
returns to Yerevan late April 22.

US concerned over Russia’s growing presence in the So Caucasus – Az

From: [email protected]
Subject: US concerned over Russia’s growing presence in the So Caucasus – Az

`The US is concerned over Russia’s growing presence in the South
Caucasus’: Azeri press digest

16:46 04/21/2006
Mamed Suleymanov

The country that tries to solve the Karabakh problem by force will be
expelled from the Council of Europe, Azeri Press reports PACE
President Rene van der Linden as saying. Van der Linden does not
consider the CE membership possible for the country that would use
armed force to resolve the conflict, if a new war breaks out in
Nagorno Karabakh. In this case PACE will have to discuss the
possibility of that country’s further membership in the CE. Van der
Linden urges the parties to the Karabakh conflict to stop their
bellicose statements and to realize that the conflict can be resolved
only by peaceful measures. Van der Linden also says that if Azerbaijan
holds non-democratic elections, the mandate of its PACE delegation
will be reviewed.

In his turn, head of the public and political department of the Azeri
president staff Ali Gasanov says: `If they in the Council of Europe
want to freeze the powers of our delegation, let them do that. But
nobody has the right to threaten us.’ `Azerbaijan is an independent
state and has its own state interests. And nobody, including PACE
President Rene van der Linden, has the right to threaten us,’ says
Gasanov. (Echo)

The two radar stations built in Azerbaijan with the US’ support are
intended for strengthening the frontier control, Trend reports Azeri
Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov as saying in Washington. He says
that `those stations are part of our program to protect Azerbaijan’s
state frontier.’ Mamedyarov explains that the problem of frontier
control arose after the collapse of the Soviet Union. `Now we are an
independent state and must do it by ourselves, particularly, protect
our sector of the Caspian Sea. And here we certainly cooperate with
the US.’ Mamedyarov confirms that in the framework of this cooperation
Washington provides Baku with special equipment. `All this equipment
will go into Azerbaijan’s property.’ He notes that the project to
build radar stations has no direct relation to the security of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline and the energy projects in the
republic. `We do cooperate to ensure the security of the BTC, we have
several programs. But they are parts of the general measures to fight
terrorism and to protect oil platforms, as most of our oil comes from
the sea. We are interested in the US’ experience, and the Americans
share it with us,’ says Mamedyarov. He says that the Azeri-US military
cooperation is `quite good in principle.’ `The US helps us to reform
our army so that we can face the present risks and challenges in the
region.’ `In this context our cooperation is quite active,’ says
Mamedyarov.

The US is concerned over Russia’s growing presence in the South
Caucasus, US congressman, chairman of the sub-committee on foreign
assignments Jim Kolbe said at a news conference in Baku on April
13. One of the first questions was about Section 907 (Adopted in Oct
1992 and cancelled by the Senate in 2001, Section 907 of the Freedom
Support Act forbade the US government to provide direct assistance to
Azerbaijan because of that country’s blockading Armenia and Nagorno
Karabakh ‘ REGNUM).

The author of the question called Kolbe the architect of the
section. Kolbe said right away that he is not. He said that now that
the Karabakh agreement is not far off, one can well take time with the
full abrogation of the section. But the next moment he said that after
the peace agreement the US Congress may provide financial assistance
for the recovery of the territories devastated by the conflict, says
Zerkalo.

The daily continues: `Explaining why Azerbaijan has not been involved
in the Millennium Challenge program, Kolbe said that the JCC criteria
were the quality of government and the rate of corruption in the
applicant countries. At the same time, he noted that Azerbaijan has
made certain progress in the above criteria. Concerning the
authoritarian growth of Russia’s presence in the South Caucasus, Kolbe
said that the US is actually concerned over Russia’s growing presence
in the region. But this growth is due to not only military but also
economic motives, and Russia, certainly, has ones in the region. In
conclusion, Kolbe said that the US supports the independence of the
region’s countries and the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and the
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum gas pipeline are the factors that will strengthen
their independence.’ (Zerkalo)

Zerkalo concludes: `We must finally stop just declaring reforms. Only
by fully renouncing `National Declarativism’ and by going from words
to actions in the democracy and market economy building, will
Azerbaijan be able to qualify for a full value role in the
Euro-Atlantic space. Only true reforms will make us real partners to
the US, who will help us to free Shusha from the Russian-Armenian
captivity¦’

The split in the Azeri opposition is the evidence of its weakness, the
head of the OCE office in Baku Maurizio Pavesi says on April 14. He
says that the OSCE is not going to arrange a dialogue between the
Azeri authorities and opposition. This process will be resumed
later. Concerning the Mar 13 parliamentary reelections in Azerbaijan,
Pavesi says that an OSCE mission, led by Ambassador Irens, will
monitor this process. (Trend)

`The authorities are enlarging the list of means that can be used in
dispersing rallies,’ reports Real Azerbaijan. The objective of the
bill submitted by the presidential administration to the parliament is
to enlarge the list of means allowed for dispersing rallies and
pickets. The authors of the bill want to add to rubber clubs,
tear-gas, water-jets and dogs ` electric shock, rangers and rubber
bullets. They also propose allowing interior troops to take part in
the dispersal of illegal actions. The opposition MPs said that the
bill will, in fact, allow the authorities to legalize the measures
they have already used for dispersing rallies. For example, the
interior troops have already been used in such measures even though
the law says nothing about that. The oppositionists noted that such
measures might be good for riots in penitentiaries, but never for
peaceful rallies. After such criticism by the opposition, the
parliament decided to send the bill back to the authors for revision.

On April 13, the Azeri Committee against Tortures published its report
for 2005. The chairman of the committee Elchin Behbudov says that
80,000 people ` including political prisoners ‘ were tortured in Azeri
remand cells in 2005. Three persons died as a result: former candidate
for deputy Etibar Asadov, serviceman from Ganca Elnur Bagirov and
resident of Sumqayit Nadir Veliyev. 29 people arrested during the May
21, 2005 opposition rally were beaten in custody. The report also
gives the names of those who applied violence against citizens: the
investigator of the Baku municipal prosecutor’s office Maherram
Azizbekov, the head of the 30th police department of Surahan district
Fuad Mamedov, deputy head of the police department of Zaqatali
district Javanshir Babayev, the employee of the Jalilabad district
police department Ibrahim Ibishev, the deputy head of the Saliani
district police department Mirzaga Gafarov, the employee of the Agdash
district police department Mehman Pashayev and the former warrant
officer of the N military unit of Terter district Altay Bayramov. The
ACAT’s report gives a generally negative assessment of the custody
conditions in the Azeri jails. (Real Azerbaijan)

Azerbaijan-PACE

Bulgarian MP Alexander Arbajiyev has reported to PACE on the human
rights situation in the army. He says that human rights are violated
in many CE armies. He says that 5,000 Azeri soldiers have died of
various diseases and malnutrition. (Azeri Press)

Azeri delegate to PACE Elmira Akhundova says that the 5,000 toll in
the report is not true. This is unverified statistics by NGOs. She
admits that Azeri soldiers die on a daily basis but not of ailments or
hunger but from Armenian bullets. Akhundova advises to be careful with
some of the report’s recommendations and objects to the proposal to
allow soldiers to join political parties. She says that in some
countries the call-up of women is undesirable due to local mentality
and historical traditions. (Echo)

Excerpts from the interview of military expert, former political
prisoner Janmirza Mirzoyev to Day.Az:

`Bulgarian MP Alexander Arbajiyev has verbally reported to PACE on the
human rights situation in the army. The section on Azerbaijan says
that 5,000 soldiers have died of various diseases and malnutrition in
the Azeri army. Is this figure true?’

Honestly, I have no such figure. I can just say that 800 dystrophic
youths were called up in 1996-2000. I am very careful with figures. In
my opinion, Arbajiyev’s figure is very much.

And did anybody of those 800 youths die?

I have no precise figures. I just can say what I know. I know that 4
people died in the night of Nov 10-11 1998 ` reportedly of alimentary
dystrophy ` that is, of hunger. Later `alimentary dystrophy’ was
replaced by `frostbite.’ But there is an original document by
pathologist. Besides, a person suffering from alimentary dystrophy can
well die of cold, high temperature and also of frostbite¦”

`In the last 5 years I have visited Azerbaijan 25 times. I will not
take part in the parliamentary reelections because I am not satisfied
with the results of the past elections. There should have been
reelection in, at least, 50 districts. My long silence and absence
from Azerbaijan were due to this very fact. Sometimes, such composure
also takes strength,’ the co-rapporteur of the PACE monitoring
committee on Azerbaijan Andreas Gross says in an interview to Azeri
Press. Asked if he is going to quit as co-rapporteur on Azerbaijan,
Gross reminds APA that some time ago he was declared almost persona
non grata by the Azeri authorities: `Then I observed the
referendum. They tried to turn me out as early as Aug 2002. The Azeri
government has long been appealing to the CE for stopping my
activities as co-rapporteur. But my mission can be stopped by me or my
colleagues. I will continue my work because I work, first of all, for
the benefit of the Azeri people.’

The statements on the necessity to defend the rights of national
minorities are used by some states as a tool of aggression against
other states, which is a form of Fascism, Trend reports Aydin
Mirzazadeh, member of parliamentary delegation of Azerbaijan to PACE,
as saying at the Assembly’s session on preventing the dissemination of
the Fascism ideology. `Fascism is widely spreading in the world
today,’ Mirzazadeh said.

`For instance, Armenia, covering its true intentions by the wish to
protect the rights of the Armenians living in Azerbaijan, has occupied
part of the country’s territory and has expatriated over million of
people just because they were Azeris.’ Mirzazadeh also mentioned the
devastation of numerous historical and cultural monuments by
Armenians. `They destroyed even monuments to well-known Azeri poets.’
Mirzazadeh urged the PACE MPs to come to Baku and to see with their
own eyes the shelled monuments. Mirzazadeh meant the fragments of the
statues of three Azeri dramatists, which were brought from Shusha and
mounted in front of the presidential residence. “The tolerance of such
steps by Armenia may become a precedent for the recurrence of such a
form of `Fascism,’ Mirzazadeh said.

Azerbaijan-US

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev will meet with US President George Bush
in the White House Apr 28. While announcing the meeting in a
traditional morning briefing then-White House Press Secretary Scott
McClellan called Azerbaijan the US’ `key ally’ in a strategically
important region of the world and `a valuable partner on Iraq.’
(AzerTag)

Commenting on Aliyev’s visit to the US, Real Azerbaijan says: `In late
April the neo-monarchic regime of Azerbaijan will finally `discover
America.’ Unlike the former Azeri president, whom the White House gave
a vote of confidence and a wing of protection at once, the present one
faced paradoxical ambiguity from the very beginning. On the one hand,
the US authorities did their best to ensure succession of power in
Azerbaijan and have actively supported Ilham Aliyev’s non-democratic
regime from the very first day of his `enthronement’ (one example is
the last parliamentary elections), but, on the other hand, they have
demonstratively kept him away from the White House and have
permanently slated him in public for conducting policies that strongly
compromised the attractive inauguration calls of the US president.’

`The unexpected news about the forthcoming visit has been snatched by
all media and has inspired analysts into theorizing about why Aliyev
was invited to the US and why he was boycotted by Washington for so
long. This is the first official visit of the new Azeri president to
the leading world power. For several days the Azeri propaganda kept
hinting that the US experts have realized the importance of Aliyev’s
visit. The ruling elite were just happy that the Bush team had finally
allowed the new Azeri president to visit the White House. This story
has `a strange prehistory,’ where the Bush team was openly reluctant
to disavow `its complicity’ in the enforcement and legitimization of
neo-monarchy. The point is that October 2003, the end of the
`scandalous’ presidential election was, in fact, the birth of the
first post-Soviet neo-monarchy. Since then `to get an official
invitation from President Bush’ has been a kind of `idee fixe’ for
President Aliyev. Every year his team played the `supposed US visit’
game, but every time their wish to pass the desirable for reality came
to grief: for over two years the Azeri president failed to find the
key to the gate of the White House,’ says Real Azerbaijan.

`The key question we should find an answer to is: why has Washington
ignored the reality of Aliyev’s presidency for so long and why does it
want to meet with him now, after one more electoral disgrace?
Probably, after the fiasco of the Paris peacemaking initiative, Bush’s
experts have got ambitious to show their imperial will for actually
resolving the Armenian-Azeri conflict. Lately the US experts have kept
saying that the problem can and even must be solved this year. Quite
naturally. With the launch of the strategic Baku-Ceyhan and
Baku-Erzerum pipelines in the offing, the US is hurrying to bring the
Karabakh conflict under its control and to enforce its peaceful
resolution for reducing the risks of the global energy projects. The
White House’s `Karabakh initiative’ is also due to the US’
`anti-Tehran plans’: before its possible war with Iran, the Bush
administration wants to settle or freeze all the other conflicts along
the Iranian border so as to minimize other threats and to avoid
unnecessary surprises. The media are already rumoring about some
`special peacemaking project,’ a plan by the Americans to force the
conflicting parties into mutual concessions. And so, they interpret
Aliyev’s forthcoming visit to the US as an indirect proof of that. The
`Iranian version’ is also convincing. This version says that Bush
wants to force his satellite into implicit obedience in his
blitzkrieg. Moreover, the very fact that Aliyev was invited to
Washington (that he is no longer an `unwanted guest’) is interpreted
by many as a proof that Baku has accepted Washington’s terms on Iran
(and possibly on Karabakh too).’

“Some Azeri analysts say that the invitation is due to the US’ wish to
stop Azerbaijan’s re-Sovetization and the constantly growing Russian
influence on the country. The US experts may well be worried lest
Azerbaijan might follow Uzbekistan’s example of geo-political
transformation and may just want to show the whole world that our
country is still the US’ strategic partner and that this partnership
cannot be replaced by the neo-Soviet friendship between Putin and
Aliyev. The `offended’ regime is getting increasingly neo-Soviet,
reactionary and corrupt and sometimes even shows some dangerous
`geo-political flirt’ with Moscow and Tehran. So, the White House may
have revised its strategy on Aliyev: it may have decided to temper
justice with mercy and to keep the Azeri neo-monarchy on as short a
leash as possible so as to provide against any possible `geo-political
betrayal¦’ (Real Azerbaijan)

Azerbaijan-Armenia. Karabakh problem

`The Azeri authorities will give the green-light to the mission of the
European Parliament’s 10-experts, sent to Armenia to investigate the
alleged destruction of an Armenian cemetery in Naxcivan, only if a
two-sided investigation is held,’ says the head of the public and
political department of the Azeri president staff Ali Gasanov. He says
that the proposal to send a mission to Naxcivan was made by a British
MP: `Azerbaijan is open for all. We want the whole world to know what
atrocities Armenians committed in Azerbaijan and what Azeris did in
Armenia. But this must be done on a mutual basis. Why are the European
Parliament experts checking the places of alleged destruction of
Armenian monuments but are closing their eyes on the destruction of
our cultural pearls in Shusha and elsewhere? We suggest setting up an
EP fact-finding mission for examining the occupied and not occupied
territories of Azerbaijan and the territory of Armenia. But we will
object if they hold such an investigation only in Naxcivan.’ (Echo)

`We can’t decide for your two countries. These will be very difficult
decisions to make, as no peace agreement can be 100% good for both
sides. But I can say that there is a solution that can justify the
hopes of both sides by more than 50% and even by 80%. But the final
decision is up to your presidents and governments,’ the French
co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Bernard Fassier says at a news
conference in Baku on April 11. On behalf of the MG, he regrets that
the meeting in France has given no results. `2005 was very hard, we
held many meetings and talks to resolve the Karabakh conflict. As a
result, we determined the key principles of the peace agreement. The
presidents were supposed to agree on the remaining principles. But
unfortunately they didn’t.’ (Zerkalo)

During the PACE spring session the chairman of the PACE ad hoc
committee on Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Lord Russell-Johnston
expressed his concern over the possibility of a new war in the
Karabakh conflict zone. He noted that the formation of the PACE
committee on Karabakh does not mean that PACE is going to become a
full mediator in the peace process. He said that the OSCE MG has
professionally mediated in the process for already 10 years and the CE
can hardly replace it therein. `Our task is to provide the OSCE MG
co-chairs with any necessary assistance,’ Johnston said. (Azeri Press)

The Halotrust organization, registered in the US and the UK, is
engaged in illegal activities in the occupied Azeri lands under the
guise of mine clearance, says the first secretary of the Embassy of
Azerbaijan in Belgium Fuad Gumbatov. He says that by its statements
and official activities The Halotrust questions the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan: `We know for sure that The Halotrust has been
founded by retired officers and that representatives of that
organization hold military trainings with Armenians in Karabakh.’
Gumbatov urges `all patriots of Azerbaijan’ to come out against the
activities of that organization. (Azeri Press)

Azerbaijan and Armenia have undertaken similar commitments to resolve
the Karabakh conflict by peace, CE Secretary General Terry Davis says
in an interview to Azeri Press. He says that if Azerbaijan tries to
solve the problem by war, it will grossly violate the commitments it
undertook when joining the CE. Davis is sure that Azerbaijan will
honor its commitments. Otherwise, it will face big difficulties.

www.regnum.ru/english/625801.html

BAKU: Nagorno Karabakh issue to discuss at summer session of PACE

Nagorno Karabakh issue to discuss at summer session of PACE

TREND Info, Azerbaijan
April 20 2006

Source: «Trend
Author: J. Shakhverdiyev

20.04.2006

Nagorno-Karabakh issue may be discussed at summer session of PACE,
Trend reports quoting MP Eldar Ibrahimov, member of Azeri delegation
to PACE.

PACE’s summer session will be held in Brussels on July 3 through 7.

The deputy said the delegation aims at putting on agenda the issue
on recognition of Armenia as an occupier country by OSCE. “Still,
we don’t have an idea on issues to be discussed at summer session”,
– Ibrahimov said. Representatives of parliaments of 2-3 states shall
sign up to put this issue on agenda of summer session of PACE.

Turkey, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and Central Asian countries
are going to support Azerbaijan’s cause. “Last year we tried to
raise Nagorno-Karabakh issue at last year’s session in Washington,
but failed. Goran Lenmarker, PACE’s speaker on Nagorno-Karabakh, was
also unwilling to raise this issue. This time will must succeed”, –
Ibrahimov said.

–Boundary_(ID_cYeCiiHm2PZwlS510GYw8g)–

BAKU: Iran Holds Up Territorial Integrity Of Azerbaijan

IRAN HOLDS UP TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY OF AZERBAIJAN

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
April 19 2006

Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar of the Islamic Republic of
Iran has arrived in Baku on an official visit, 19 April.

After welcoming ceremony, Defense Minister of Azerbaijan Safar Abiyev
met with Mostafa Mohammad Najjar.

Official visit of President Ilham Aliyev to Iran in January 2005 and
working visit of President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Nakhchivan in
December last year have given new impetus to expansion of relations,
Mr. Abiyev said. ‘Current visit will serve all-round development of
cooperation between two countries’, he emphasized.

Then, dwelling on the military-political situation on the South
Caucasus, Azeri Defense Minister said the Armenian-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno Karabakh conflict is the major factor of tension in region,
which impedes common development. The policy pursued by Armenian
leaders finally will wipe out Armenia. ‘We consider Iran which calls
Azerbaijan fraternal, should render assistance in fair solution of
the problem. Common roots of two nations give season to tell that’,
Abiyev stressed.

Mostafa Mohammad Najjar said ‘our culture and religious unanimity
should always be in progress. There large opportunities for expansion
of our links. Safety of Azerbaijan is our safety’.

Regarding the Armenian-Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
the Iranian minister said Iran stands ready to help Azerbaijan in
settlement of the conflict. “We have always supported territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan and will further do it’, he underlined.

In the meeting, discussed were issues of prospects of
Azerbaijani-Iranian relations, regional security, legal status of
the Caspian and other questions.

Armenia Has Set The Goal To Join Trans-Caspian Gas Pipeline AndAlrea

ARMENIA HAS SET THE GOAL TO JOIN TRANS-CASPIAN GAS PIPELINE AND ALREADY STARTED SERIOUS CONVERSATIONS WITH THE USA (VARDAN OSKANYAN)

Caucaz, Georgia
April 19 2006

Yerevan, 19 April 2006 (Trend.az- website) – Vardan Oskanyan, Armenian
Foreign Minister, said “Armenia has set the goal to join Trans-Caspian
gas pipeline and already started serious conversations with the USA.”

Trend reports with reference to Mediamaz agency that in his interview
published today in Armenian Aykakan Zhamanak, Oskanyan said the goal
of Trans-Caspian gas pipeline is “supply of gas from Central Asian
countries and Azerbaijan to Europe through our region”. “Standard
bearers in this program are the USA and the EU”, – minister said.

“In the event of the project execution Armenia will possess three
gas supply sources – from Russia, Iran and Central Asia”,- Oskanyan
stressed.

Alongside, the minister opined that sale of 5 power block at Razdan
head power plant to Russia would not adversely influence Armenian
policy in respect of power sources diversification.

“These facilities are located in Armenia and the owner is unable to
take them away. Moreover, these facilities are privatized or handed
over at very strict terms”, – Oskanyan said.

Student Union Launches Exhibition Of Photos About Armenian Monuments

STUDENT UNION LAUNCHES EXHIBITION OF PHOTOS ABOUT ARMENIAN MONUMENTS IN THE REGION

Armenpress
Apr 18 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS: A student organization closely
affiliated with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) has
launched today an exhibition of 70 photos, shot by Samvel Karapetian
and Hrayr Baze, which show the past and present state of Armenian
monuments in Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Iran.

Titled ‘Cultural Genocide’ the exhibition will run for three days in
the front yard of the Yerevan State University. The row of photographs
presenting the state of Armenian monuments in Iran where Armenian
monuments are preserved and the government releases funds for their
repair is titled as ‘Dialogue of Civilization.’ This is not the case
regarding the Christian Georgia were numerous Armenian monuments were
destroyed and as many were declared as ‘being Georgian.”

Abraham Gasparian from the student organization, called Nikol Aghbalian
Union, said the word ‘dialogue’ is simply inapplicable when we speak
about the fate of Armenian monuments in Turkey and Azerbaijan. He
said though Turkey’s ministry of culture has developed a ten-year
program for restoration part of Ani, a medieval Armenian capital,
now in Turkey, the Armenian side has to press for dispatching Armenian
experts to the site so that Turks do not distort its history.

Safarov To Serve His Sentence In Hungary And Leave

SAFAROV TO SERVE HIS SENTENCE IN HUNGARY AND LEAVE

Lragir.am
18 April 06

The investigation and trial of the case involving Azerbaijani Ramil
Safarov who had hacked to death the Armenian army officer Gurgen
Margaryan in Budapest in January 2004 lasted for two years. The
verdict was passed April 13, 2006. Ramil Safarov was sentenced to
life imprisonment, 30 years without the right for pardon.

On April 18 Nazeli Vardanyan, Gurgen Margaryan’s attorney, announced
in Yerevan that till the last day of the trial the Azerbaijanis tried
their hardest to have doctors certify Safarov as an insane. However,
the efforts of Azerbaijanis failed. Both the district attorney and
our lawyers, relying on the evidence – an axe bought beforehand,
the ethnic motivation of the murder, an attempt of murder, etc. –
were able to prove that the assassin had acted upon a plan, was
conscious of what he was doing, and was sane. In his final speech
the murderer did not plead guilty; he said he had lost self-control,
did not want to kill, had not planned a murder.

The justice did not believe either this, or Safarov’s words that he
did not speak Russian well and denied his own testimony uttered in
Russian. The Hungarian court was surprised to learn that a cold-blooded
killer could be proclaimed Year’s Person.

The Armenian lawyers say it was the triumph of European justice and
human values, and more than just a defeat for Azerbaijan. The court
administered the harshest punishment the Hungarian laws provide for.

Safarov will serve his sentence in Hungary, at a maximum-security
penitentiary. Even if Azerbaijan succeeds in signing with Hungary an
agreement on extradition, it will not be applied to Safarov. “By the
end of the investigation there was a decision of the district attorney
to transfer the case to a Baku court. We prevented it. They have been
consistently trying to transfer the case to Baku. Presently there is
no agreement yet.” If the 30 years in the verdict pass, and Safarov,
who will be 60 by then, is pardoned, he will be banished from Hungary
and will have no right to enter this country for 10 years.

The Armenian party sued material and moral damages, 3.5 million and 5
million Hungarian forints respectively. All in all 8.5 million forints,
which is about 160 thousand euros.

The hearing of the case involving Ramil Safarov who had attacked the
officers of the remand prison in Budapest is scheduled in May.

Kievers Oppose Construction Of Armenian Church

KIEVERS OPPOSE CONSTRUCTION OF ARMENIAN CHURCH
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily
19/04/2006

A Temporary Problem?

In 1992, Kiev authorities granted the Armenian community of Ukraine
a territory of 1022 square meters as a church site. The Armenian
community raised the necessary sum and begun the construction works
but residents of the city have recently knocked down fences around
the construction site declaring that they will allow no construction
in a green zone.

Kievers said that no one is allowed to destroy the park Armenians,
Moslems or Ukrainians regardless. Even the Jews, old residents
of Kiev’s Podol, built no synagogue even though they had such
plans. According to RFE/RL, Vahe Stepanian, head of the Armenian
community of Ukraine, voiced concern and stated that he is ready
to protect the rights of Armenians in court as the community has
all necessary documents and, besides, has already spent money for
the construction.

Regnum news agency quoted Oksana Vovk, secretary on humanitarian
issues at the Ukrainian Embassy in Armenia, as saying that this is
a temporary problem.

Reminding the recent meeting between Ukrainian ambassador Alexander
Bozhko and the head of Armenian diocese in Ukraine, Grigoris Buniatian,
Vovk informed that they had no discord over the would-be construction:
“This is not the first church to be built in Ukraine, therefore no
serious problem should emerge.”

Gerard Alexander: Europe’s New Speech Laws Attack Democracy

GERARD ALEXANDER: EUROPE’S NEW SPEECH LAWS ATTACK DEMOCRACY

Dallas Morning News, TX
April 16 2006

Three disturbing trends now under way in Europe together represent
the greatest erosion of democratic practice in the world’s advanced
democracies since 1945.

First, anti-Nazi laws are being adopted in places where neo-Nazism
poses no serious threat. Second, speech laws have been dramatically
expanded to sanction speech that “incites hatred” against groups
based on their religion, race, ethnicity or other characteristics.

Third, these incitement laws are being interpreted so loosely that
they chill not just extremist views, but mainstream ones, too.

The result is a serious distortion and impoverishment of political
debate.After 1945, Germany passed strict anti-Nazi laws. Given what
had happened between 1933 and 1945, it seemed like airing pro-Nazi
or anti-Semitic views was the equivalent of shouting “Fire!” in the
crowded theater of Austria and Germany’s troubled cultures. As it
turned out, of course, neo-Nazis proved too marginal even to come
close to posing a danger to Germany or Austria’s new democracies,
with real neo-Nazis never winning even 5 percent of the vote. So the
necessity for these restrictions became less clear with time.

But instead of being pared back, anti-Nazi legislation spread,
gradually expanding to cover other historical events. In 1993, the
eminent Princeton historian Bernard Lewis told France’s Le Monde that
he questioned whether the mass murder of Armenians in Turkey was the
result of a predetermined – that is, genocidal – plan. Dr. Lewis was
later found guilty in a civil suit for having not been “objective”
regarding events that the European Parliament and other bodies had
officially certified as a “genocide.” Genocide-denial laws can now
be used to sanction professional historians whose research leads them
to unacceptable findings.

And the anti-Nazi slope has proved more slippery than that. Denial
laws have been supplemented by new laws that are even more prone to
sanctioning reasonable people.

Especially since the 1970s, Western Europeans have been passing
bans on any speech that “incites hatred” based on race, religion,
ethnicity, national origin and other criteria. This is spreading
to the European Union level, where a stream of rules now prohibits
the broadcast, including online, of any program or ad that incites
“hatred based on sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief,
disability, age or sexual orientation” or – crucially – is “offensive
to religious or political beliefs.”

The real danger posed by Europe’s speech laws is not so much
guilty verdicts as a chilling of political debate, as people censor
themselves in order to avoid legal charges and the stigma and expense
they bring. And the most serious chill is not of fringe racists but
of mainstream moderates and conservatives when anti-incitement laws
are allowed to sanction speech that causes “offense.”

After all, two views tend to cause offense in our day and age. The
first is the speech of bigots who denigrate members of other groups.

The second is speech by modern moderates and conservatives who believe
that problems like poverty, delinquency and poor health can often be
traced to bad choices and dysfunctional subcultures. And problems have
sooner or later been disproportionately concentrated within groups
of every race, ethnicity and religion. Identifying these causes is
a prerequisite to improvement. That isn’t bigotry, but it sometimes
causes offense to sensitized members of affected groups.

Laws against any speech that causes “offense” have the insidious effect
of conflating bigoted speech and constructive criticism. The result is
the stigmatization of certain kinds of thinking about social problems
and public policy that American conservatives, moderates and even many
liberals recognize as a legitimate part of serious debate. These speech
laws won’t ultimately silence extremists, whose careers won’t end
if they’re called bigots. But they can silence reasonable people who
don’t want that label and don’t want a scandal. Mainstream European
journalists, politicians and academics have already been charged
under these laws for just such constructive criticism.

The good news is that Europeans are questioning their illiberal
speech laws as never before. Such skepticism received a huge boost
from the events surrounding the Danish cartoons of Muhammad. Many
Muslims are insisting that European governments ban such cartoons
as they ban other “offensive” speech. In response, some Europeans
ask whether their governments shouldn’t get out of the business of
banning political speech altogether.

Europeans of all political stripes should seize this opportunity
to reverse the most dangerously illiberal trend in the world’s
advanced democracies. That would cease to make Europe a role model
for censorship and restore it as a model of core democratic rights,
expanding and not contracting Europe’s moral authority in the world.

Gerard Alexander is associate professor of political science at the
University of Virginia. A longer version of this essay appeared in
The Weekly Standard. His e-mail address is [email protected].

Field Military Exercises To Be Held April 18-20 In Nagorno-Karabakh

FIELD MILITARY EXERCISES TO BE HELD APRIL 18-20 IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH

ArmRadio.am
17.04.2006 17:55

April 18-20 field military exercises, featuring all kinds of armed
forces, will be held in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Press Service of the Ministry of Defense informs that the military
exercises will be attended also by Defense Ministers of Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as representatives of high Officer Staff
of the Armed Forces of both countries.

The exercises will start in the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh
Stepanakert, and will move to other places.