ANKARA: Bird sanctuary as price for peace?

Hurriyet, Turkey
May 16 2009

Bird sanctuary as price for peace?

KARS – As debate continues about opening the border between Turkey and
Armenia, which would be a great step toward normalizing relations
between the two countries, scientists are concerned about the area’s
untouched wildlife. Increased traffic across the border opening may
bring more danger for this major migratory bird habitat and its
globally endangered bird species

With the final scoops of earth shoveled away, the last ties are
severed between a lake island and the mainland, breaking new ground
in the struggle to protect wildlife along the border between Turkey
and Armenia.

The group of men and women gathered here are members of the Kuzey
DoÄ?a Society, a non-governmental organization that has been
working to preserve habitats of birds living on Kuyucuk Lake in
northeastern Kars province near the border. As political negotiations
continue on the reopening of the border, experts agree many steps
remain before the area’s wildlife is protected from the anticipated
increase in border traffic.

"Today, it sounds like Turkey is backing away from the Armenian
border, which is unfortunate from a peace-movement perspective, but
from our selfish Kuyucuk perspective, it might help us," said Sean
Anderson, a restoration ecologist and an assistant professor at the
California State University at Channel Islands who has been coming to
the area twice a year for the past three years to work on the Kuyucuk
Project. "It might give us a few more years to put things in order
before the road is heavily traveled, so that would be good."

Dr. Ã?aÄ?an Å?ekercioÄ?lu, a senior research
scientist at Stanford University’s Center for Conservation Biology,
and the president of Kuzey Doga, agrees. "The opening of the border is
a political decision," he said. "However, as nature conservationists,
we are trying to save the [Kuyucuk] lake as much as possible before
the border opens."

Å?ekercioÄ?lu explained that an old dirt road used to run
from the town of Akyaka on the Armenian border to the area that was
recently turned into an island.

"It used to disturb the ecology of the lake by running through it," he
said.

"We took away 50 meters from each side of the road to create the
island," which is intended as a safe haven for birds.

The project is a collaboration between Kuzey DoÄ?a, the Kars
Governor’s Office, the Kars Environment and Forestry Municipal
Directorate, the Kars Special Provincial Administration and the people
of Kuyucuk village. Biologist Emrah Ã?oban, the science
coordinator for Kuzey DoÄ?a, said the organization has received
a lot of help and support from Kars Governor Mehmet Ufuk Erden. "Erden
prefers to work with experts. He is very idealistic," said
Ã?oban.

Overgrazing disturbs bird

The new island sanctuary will protect rare birds in the region,
Å?ekercioÄ?lu said. "For example, there are nine or 10
white-headed ducks in Kuyucuk. They belong to an endangered species;
their numbers are few in the world," he said.

"They live in smaller, marshy places. The fact that it is an island
means it is a place where birds can grow and take shelter."

The idea for the island has been discussed for more than a year, said
Anderson, who calls it "the first actual ecological restoration in
eastern Turkey." According to Anderson, there was "massive
overgrazing" in the area that the affected bird habitat. "The north
part was cut off from the main lake, making it easy for it to go
stagnant," he said.

"Making it into an island improves the water quality of the lake." The
island location will also keep predators away from the birds’ eggs,
Anderson said: "It is unlikely a fox or a cat would swim to the
island."

Growing traffic problem

The dirt road that ran to Akyaka through Kuyucuk was replaced some
time ago with a larger asphalt highway that still cuts Kuyucuk Lake
into two. The presence of this asphalt road, Å?ekercioÄ?lu
says, threatens the rare migratory birds that stop off at the lake in
certain seasons, as well as the birds that have chosen it as their
year-round home.

"The traffic will increase with the opening of the border,"
Å?ekercioÄ?lu said. "Cars crash into birds; gasoline or
motor oil that leaks from cars flows into the lake with the first
rain. This becomes a bigger problem when there are more cars."

In a survey about road kill that he conducted in the United States,
Anderson found that in areas with moderate traffic, collisions with
cars were the No. 1 cause of death for wildlife. Traffic also impacts
the environment negatively by creating pollution. "Every time you
brake, some copper is released from your brakes to the road," Anderson
said.

"The first rain rinses that into the lake. And the nitrogen oxide from
exhaust gas acts like nitrogen fertilizer, causing weeds to grow near
the road."

The American scientist said, "If we manage it right, more traffic
brings the opportunity to educate more people, but if it is not done
right, it will mean more plastic bags and more ripped truck tires left
alongside the road."

On the positive side, Anderson said, the Kuyucuk locals are not
interested in hunting birds Ä? but the new people an open border
would bring might be. "I am not saying they will, but I have seen that
happen many, many times," he said.

Asked if the road to Akyaka could pass further from the lake,
Å?ekercioÄ?lu said: "The road may pass two or three
kilometers farther north. There are a number of dirt roads to the
north that could be paved; they lead to the same destination."

A lack of data has prevented scientists from determining just how much
the increased traffic would affect wildlife in the lake. "No research
was made for the longest time. We did the first bird count on Kuyucuk
Lake on Sept. 24, 2004," said Å?ekercioÄ?lu. "At that
time, there were around 40,000 birds. The very next year, their number
had gone down to less than 10,000."

Since there is no data from before 2004, Å?ekercioÄ?lu
said, scientists cannot be sure whether the high number seen that year
was due to a record number of migrating birds, or whether there has
been a drop in the region’s bird population.

In addition to increased traffic, opening the border could bring more
development to the region, including around the lake,
Å?ekercioÄ?lu said. The lake is on the Ramsar List of
Wetlands of International Importance, designating it as an area that
needs to be preserved.

But the Ramsar Area Status does not include any enforcement;
responsibility to protect the area rests with the government. "It is
under conservation status for being a wetland,"
Å?ekercioÄ?lu said. "What is important is that the
conservation status continues." The island also received Wildlife
Development Area status from the Turkish government on Sept. 7, 2005.

What makes Kuyucuk such a rare gem is that eastern Anatolia is located
on the major migratory routes of birds from around the world. "We have
been banding birds since 2005, and we found out that a duck that was
banded in Kars in 2007 was killed by a French hunter in Kazakhstan in
2008," Å?ekercioÄ?lu said. "So these birds deal with many
problems around the world.

That is why it is important to provide them with a sanctuary in
Kuyucuk."Another species that will be negatively affected by the
opening of the Armenia-Turkey border is the endangered Egyptian
vulture.

The Kuzey DoÄ?a team has realized that these rare birds have
made their home in the 88-kilometer-long Arpaçay Canyon. "It is
a military zone and people cannot access it," said
Å?ekercioÄ?lu.

"So it is a well-preserved area." Anderson said similar situations
have occurred in California where wildlife flourishes in a military
zone.

But as is the case with the birds in Kuyucuk, there is no data
available about the number of vultures living in the area during the
earlier period when the border was open.

"However, common sense and the precautionary principle dictate that as
a place becomes more populated, the number of vultures living in the
area will decrease," Å?ekercioÄ?lu said. "They are very
sensitive to disturbances. They abandon their nests, never to return,
if people approach closer than 100 meters. We need to think about the
worst-case scenario because [the vultures] are globally endangered."

Armenia’s Energy Minister Rules Out Nairit Plant’s Shutdown

ARMENIA’S ENERGY MINISTER RULES OUT NAIRIT PLANT’S SHUTDOWN

ARKA
May 15, 2009

YEREVAN, May 15. /ARKA/. Armenia’s Minister of Energy and Natural
Resources Armen Movsisyan ruled out possible shutdown of Nairit
chemical plant where an explosion took place on Thursday.

"The plant must keep working and resume activities," Movsisyan said
as he visited today the enterprise.

The estimate for reconstruction activities is for US$150,000 and the
shareholders of the plant will cover all expenses.

"The plant’s management will also cover funeral expenses and will
compensate their families," Movsisyan was quoted saying.

An explosion in Armenia’s rubber producing giant Nairit plant on
Thursday at around 6:00 pm local time took lives of four workers.

A lawsuit filed against the explosion at the Yerevan-based Nairit
chemical plant for violating safety rules in highly explosive areas,
causing human losses, as well as for careless utilization of hazardous
chemical and biological agents and toxins.

The police have launched preliminary investigation into the case.

Established in 1949, Armenia’s leading rubber producer Nairit chemical
pant manufactures chloroprene rubber marketing its products under
the Nairit brand.

BAKU: Spokesman For Azerbaijani FM: Armenian President’s Distancing

SPOKESMAN FOR AZERBAIJANI FM: ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S DISTANCING FROM HIS DECLARED POSITIONS CAN ARISE NOTHING BUT SURPRISE

Today.Az
cs/52326.html
May 15 2009
Azerbaijan

The statement of the leadership of Armenia about the undesirable
participation of Turkey in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is surprising,
said spokesman for Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan Elkhan
Poluhov, commenting on the words of the President of Armenia Serzh
Sargsyan who said that Turkey should not interfere with the process
of Karabakh settlement, if it wants to help the Karabakh settlement.

"I would like to recall that in September last year, President
Serzh Sargsyan, speaking to the media, stated that Armenia welcomed
the Turkish initiative, as outlined in the Stability Pact for South
Caucasus, and stressed that it was natural to welcome the initiative,
as the parties have no right to bypass various initiatives aimed at
enhancing their security". noted the diplomat.

As pointed out by E. Poluhov, "so today, Armenian president’s
distancing from his declared positions breeds nothing but surprise
in Azerbaijan".

http://www.today.az/news/politi

Clinton Reconfirms US Support For Armenia-Turkey Reconciliation And

CLINTON RECONFIRMS US SUPPORT FOR ARMENIA-TURKEY RECONCILIATION AND MINSK GROUP EFFORTS

armradio.am
15.05.2009 13:09

US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton sent a letter to the President
of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, President’s Press Office reported.

In the letter Hilary Clinton reconfirmed the willingness of the
United States to continue its support for both the process of full
normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations and the mediating
efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group towards settlement of the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict.

The Secretary of State also turned to the bilateral Armenian-American
relations and the programs implemented in Armenia with the financing
of the Millennium Challenge Corporation.

Hilary Clinton underlined that the free and fair conduct of the
elections of the Yerevan City Council is an opportunity to demonstrate
anew the commitment to democratic principles.

RA MFA: Karabakh Conflict Resolution Was Possible In 2001

RA MFA: KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION WAS POSSIBLE IN 2001

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.05.2009 13:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian took
part in the 119th meeting of Council of Europe Cabinet of Ministers
in Madrid on May 12.

In his address to the meeting participants, Minister Nalbandian said
in part, "Independence of Arstakh is an issue of security. Azerbaijan
responded to it with ethnic cleansing which transformed into an open
aggression. In 2001, the sides were close to an agreement on resolution
of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. However, Azerbaijan non-constructive
approach frustrated peaceful plans."

"Meetings between Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents, signature of
Moscow declaration and adoption of Helsinki statement are prerequisites
for peaceful resolution of the conflict. If Azerbaijan renounces
non-constructive methods and stops militaristic and anti-Armenian
propaganda, the OSCE Minsk group may succeed in bringing positions of
the sides closer," the Minister said, the RA MFA press office reported.

Merkel, Sarkozy Denounce EU Enlargement

MERKEL, SARKOZY DENOUNCE EU ENLARGEMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.05.2009 16:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The leaders of Germany and France – gearing up
for next month’s European Parliament elections – on Sunday denounced
the idea of expanding the European Union indefinitely to include new
members such as Turkey.

Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has advocated having a vaguely
defined partnership with the largely Muslim Turkey, said "we cannot
take in everyone in Europe as a full member.

"We have to talk about the borders of this Europe," Merkel said at
an event organized by her conservative Christian Democrats before the
June 7 European Parliament vote. "It makes no sense if there are ever
more members, and we can’t decide anything any more."

"It is right that we say to people in the European election campaign
… our common position is: a privileged partnership for Turkey,
but no full membership," she said.

Turkey began EU membership talks in 2005, despite opposition voiced in
Germany and France. Neither country, however, has blocked the talks,
and Germany’s other main coalition party – the Social Democrats –
supports EU membership for Turkey.

President Barack Obama has also urged the EU to embrace Turkey as a
full member.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, a longtime opponent of Turkish
membership, last week advocated discussing a common economic and
security forum with Turkey as an alternative.

"When Angela Merkel says Europe must have borders, she is right –
because a Europe without borders would be a Europe without a will,
without identity, without values," he said at Sunday’s event, where
he was a guest of honor as France’s leading conservative.

He was quoted earlier Sunday as telling Germany’s Bild am Sonntag
newspaper: "Let us stop making vain promises to Turkey and study with
it the creation of a big common economic and human space."

Sarkozy also underlined France’s support for Germany’s bid for a
permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council. France already is a
permanent member, AP reported.

Overlooking Diaspora’s Voice Would Be A Major Blunder

OVERLOOKING DIASPORA’S VOICE WOULD BE A MAJOR BLUNDER

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.05.2009 19:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ When addressing the Armenian Genocide, the Government
of Armenia would be wise to not take any drastic steps without
consulting this with the Diaspora organizations, Vahagn Avedyan,
Head of the Armenian community in Sweden, said. "The Armenians living
outside Armenia are the heirs of Genocide victims. They have a very
justified and legitimate right to affect any agreement or road map
which would directly affect their interests and claims."

Mr. Avedyan also added that "Overlooking the voice and the rights
of the Diaspora would be a major blunder on behalf of the current
Armenian Administration and would be nothing else than realizing the
long standing policy of Turkey to divide and conquer by separating
Armenia from the Diaspora," "Nor Horizon" newspaper reports.

ANKARA: Majority of Turks against opening Armenian border

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 9 2009

Majority of Turks against opening Armenian border

A majority of Turkish citizens are against the possible opening of the
Turkish-Armenian border, a study conducted in late April has
found. According to the survey, conducted by the Genar research
company on 2,044 individuals across the 17 largest Turkish cities
between the dates April 17 and April 26, 67.6 percent said they were
against a potential opening of the border with Armenia and the
normalization of diplomatic ties with that country, while 32.4 percent
said they would support such a move.

Genar’s latest opinion poll, the Turkey Society Politics research
survey, tried to solicit respondents’ answers to a number of questions
on a variety of political and diplomatic issues, from the
normalization of relations with Armenia to voter behavior in the
municipal elections of March 29.

The survey found that 79.6 percent of voters who voted for the Justice
and Development Party (AK Party) in the general elections of July 2007
again voted for that party’s candidates in the municipal elections of
March 29, while 5.7 percent voted for Nationalist Movement Party (MHP)
candidates, 5.2 percent for the Felicity Party (SP), 3 percent for the
Republican People’s Party (CHP), 1 percent for the Democrat Party (DP)
and 1 percent for the Democratic Society Party (DTP). Nearly 4 percent
of the AK Party’s vote from the previous elections went to various
other parties.

The survey also found that 89.3 percent of the CHP’s voters in 2007
voted again for that party’s candidates in the local elections, while
1.3 percent voted for the AK Party and 2.3 percent for the SP.

The MHP retained 80.7 percent of its July 2007 vote. However, 5.7
percent of MHP voters in the 2007 election voted for the AK Party in
this year’s elections, while 4.8 percent voted for the CHP, 3.9
percent for the SP and 1.8 percent for the DP. As for the DTP, 85.3
percent of those who voted for them in 2007 voted for that party again
in the municipal elections. Four percent voted for the AK Party while
2.7 percent voted for the CHP.

In the case of the SP, 87.2 percent voted for that party again. This
year, 6.4 percent voted for the AK Party, while 2.1 percent voted for
the MHP.

In another question about political parties, 48 percent of
respondents said the AK Party was the most successful political party
in the country, followed by the CHP (22.8 percent) and the MHP (13.7
percent). The survey also predicts that if there were elections in
Turkey today, the AK Party would get 41.8 percent of the vote,
followed by the CHP at 26.3 percent and the MHP with 16.5 percent.

Ergenekon investigation most important In response to the question
regarding what they thought the most important event in Turkey was in
the first three months of this year, 24.8 percent replied `the 12th
wave of arrests in the Ergenekon investigation,’ which started in 2007
with the discovery of an arms cache in ?Ä?°stanbul and which has
expanded to reveal a clandestine terrorist organization nested within
various state agencies charged with secretly plotting to overthrow the
AK Party government. Academics, professors and former rectors were
detained in the 12th wave of detentions in the probe last month.

In response to this same question, 18.8 percent said the most
important event of the first quarter of this year was the tragic death
of Grand Unity Party (BBP) leader Muhsin
Yaz?Ä?±c?Ä?±o?Ä?lu , who died in a helicopter crash while
touring various cities as a part of his election campaign.

In another poll, 12.1 percent of respondents said they trusted the
Zaman daily, which is in the same media group as Today’s Zaman,
followed by H?Ã?¼rriyet at 11.2 percent and Sabah at 9.8
percent. The survey also found that US President Barack Obama’s visit
to Turkey had a positive effect on the US’s image. The percentage of
those who said they had a positive attitude toward the US after the
visit was 52.7 percent, compared to 38 percent, a figure from a
separate survey conducted before the visit took place.

09 May 2009, Saturday
TODAY’S ZAMAN ?Ä?°STANBUL

Gul Seeks Four-Way Summit To Discuss Nagorno-Karabakh Row

GUL SEEKS FOUR-WAY SUMMIT TO DISCUSS NAGORNO-KARABAKH ROW

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.05.2009 19:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish President Abdullah Gul plans to convene a
for-way summit with participation of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey and
Russia for discussing possibilities of establishing peace between
Yerevan and Baku, Turkish Today’s Zaman periodical reports, relying
on information sources. According to the periodical, Gul planned to
step up efforts for the four-way summit after he met with Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan in
Prague on Thursday. The venue and date of the proposed four-way
summit will become clear after the talks Gul and Erdogan will have
with Azerbaijani, Armenian and Russian leaders.

Mr. Gul also noted that Russia plays a key role in the region and
it cannot be excluded from efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh
dispute.

Armenian Premier: Reorientation Of Preferences Of Armenian Tourists

ARMENIAN PREMIER: REORIENTATION OF PREFERENCES OF ARMENIAN TOURISTS NOT TO SPEND THEIR VACATION IN ABROAD MAY BRING $200-300 MLN

ArmInfo
2009-05-07 01:01:00

ArmInfo. Reorientation of preferences of Armenian tourists not to
spend their vacation in abroad may bring $200-300 mln, which may lead
to 2-3% economical growth and positively affect the payment balance
of the country, Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisyan said today
when making a speech at the meeting of representatives of regional
administrations in Shirak region.

‘It is much possible that in the conditions of crisis many Armenian
tourists will prefer spending their vacation not in abroad but in
their own country.

There are very good conditions to receive tourists not only in Armenia
but in Nagornyy Karabakh as well with its big nature potential. In this
context the leadership of the country may become a sample to follow’,
– Sarkisyan said. The premier charged regional administrations of
Armenia to investigate the potential to receive tourists.

To recall, according to Armenian Economy Ministry, 558thsd tourists
visited Armenia in 2008, which is by 9,4% more than in 2007 (510
thsd). The number of tourists within Armenia was 447 thsd in 2008.