Financial Aid For Serbia, Bosnia, Armenia And Georgia

FINANCIAL AID FOR SERBIA, BOSNIA, ARMENIA AND GEORGIA

Parlamento Europeo
infopress_page/026-65074-327-11-48-903-20091124IPR 65072-23-11-2009-2009-false/default_it.htm
Nov 24 2009

Parliament gave its backing on Tuesday for 400 million-plus Euro in
budget aid to Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Armenia and Georgia. The
funds are to help these countries to finance their external balances
of payments and state budget deficits.

"Parliament’s swift and decisive action will allow the Council to
adopt decisions on the four operations in the next few days", said
EU Commissioner Sim Kallas in the plenary debate on the day before
the vote.

After the green light from the Council, the four countries will be
entitled to receive from the EU up to: 200 million Euro for Serbia
(in the form of a loan), 100 million Euro for Bosnia and Herzegovina
(loan), 100 million Euro for Armenia (65 million Euro loan, 35 million
Euro grant), and 46 million Euro for Georgia – (grant).

The following reports were adopted on Tuesday:

Vital MOREIRA (S&D, PT) on macro-financial assistance to Georgia:
550 in favour, 55 against, 60 abstentions

Vital MOREIRA (S&D, PT) on macro-financial assistance to Armenia:
580 in favour, 29 against, 55 abstentions

Miloslav RANSDORF (GUE/NGL, CZ) on macro-financial assistance to
Serbia: 583 in favour, 23 against, 58 abstentions

Iuliu WINKLER (EPP, RO) on macro-financial assistance to Bosnia and
Herzegovina: 583 in favour, 23 against and 56 abstentions.

http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/expert/

BAKU: Turkish Parliament Speaker Meets His Armenian Counterpart In M

TURKISH PARLIAMENT SPEAKER MEETS HIS ARMENIAN COUNTERPART IN MOSCOW

Trend
Nov 24 2009
Azerbaijan

Turkish Parliament Speaker Mehmet Ali Sahin, who is currently in
Russian capital of Moscow for the 34th General Assembly of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Black Sea Cooperation (PABSEC), had a
meeting with Armenian National Assembly Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan on
Monday, Anadolu Agency reported.

After the meeting, Sahin told reporters that Turkey which acted
with the principle of improving ties with its neighbors was eager to
normalize its relations with Armenia.

Turkey and Armenia earlier signed protocols foreseeing normalization
of relations, he said.

Armenia, Azerbaijan Will Continue Talks On Karabakh At Ministerial L

ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN WILL CONTINUE TALKS ON KARABAKH AT MINISTERIAL LEVEL IN DECEMBER

Interfax
Nov 23 2009
Russia

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan agreed to continue talks on the Karabakh settlement at the
end of their Sunday meeting in Munich, Azerbaijani ANS TV channel
reported quoting French cochairman of the OSCE Minsk Group Bernard
Fassier as saying.

The diplomat did not go into any other further details noting that
the talks were confidential.

He said though that talks will continue at the level of the foreign
ministers of the two countries whom the presidents bound to work out
unresolved issues.

The next ministerial meeting will take place in Athens at the beginning
of December in the framework of the session of the OSCE Council of
Foreign Ministers, the TV channel reported.

Fassier said that the Sunday meeting can be regarded as a step forward.

At the meeting that lasted for over four hours the presidents
thoroughly discussed the issues that still remain unresolved, he said.

Some new questions were also raised, he said.

The TV channel noted that the meeting lasted longer than planned.

BAKU: The USA Has Suspended Democracy Dialogue With Azerbaijan

TOPICAL. THE USA HAS SUSPENDED DEMOCRACY DIALOGUE WITH AZERBAIJAN

Yeni Musavat
Nov 17 2009
Azerbaijan

Tension between Washington and Baku has peaked. Everything has been
marred in the relations of the two countries and is taking a turn
for the worse

A new piece of information has been added to reports about the gradual
deterioration of political relations between the USA and Azerbaijan.

It became known that the annual talks on democracy and human rights
between the USA and Azerbaijan have been suspended. These talks have
been envisaged by the agreement on strategic partnership between the
United States and Azerbaijan and were one of the priority directions
in the mutual relations. According to reports, Tina S. Kaidanow,
Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Bureau of European and Eurasian
Affairs, and Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights
and Labor Michael Posner arrived in Tbilisi yesterday.

Georgian mass media outlets report that the visit is being paid
for the conduct of the traditional democracy talks between the two
countries. The high-ranking US diplomats are to meet Georgian state
and government representatives to discuss joint efforts for the
strengthening of democracy in the country. The US embassy in Baku
has told Yeni Musavat newspaper that Posner and Kaidanow are not
expected to visit Baku after Tbilisi. The head of the public relations
department of the embassy, Terry Davidson, said that no delegation
is expected in Baku soon for the conduct of talks on democracy and
human rights.

US suspends democracy dialogue with Azerbaijan

We should say that there was an intensive dialogue over the issue
in question between Washington and Baku before. The latest official
American-Azerbaijani democracy dialogue was held in June last year. At
that time, the talks were led by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for European and Eurasian Affairs David Kramer. The US-Azerbaijan
security dialogue was kicked off in December 2006. The talks were
held both in Washington and in Baku and were around specific issues,
including elections, media and freedom of speech, the right to free
assembly and others. Similar talks are conducted between the USA,
Georgia and Armenia.

So far six similar talks have been held between the USA and
Azerbaijan. However, as obvious, such dialogue will not be conducted
between Washington and Baku this year. Under the mutual strategic
partnership agreement, along with democracy and human rights issues,
the sides also hold security and energy dialogues every year. The
annual security talks between the USA and Azerbaijan has been held
recently and was held in Washington by a delegation led by Deputy
Foreign Minister Araz Azimov. After the talks devoted to mainly to
then presidential election in June last year, Deputy State Secretary
David Kramer paid another visit to Baku in November. At that time, the
main topic of the talks was an unexpected decision of the government
to take foreign radio stations off the air immediately after the polls.

At that time, a representative of the outgoing Republican
administration warned Baku over the matter, saying that the issue of
the closure of exactly radio stations would be on the table of then
president-elect Barack Obama as soon as he took the office. Therefore,
if Baku did not want the deterioration of the relations with Washington
and incoming Democratic administration, it should restore the broadcast
of foreign radio stations on FM frequencies. However, the authorities
brushed away the recommendation and the relations began to take a turn
for the worse. True, this year in the spring, Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov was invited to Washington and the issues of democracy
and human rights in Azerbaijan were raised at talks he had there.

No US ambassador in Azerbaijan yet

However, the visit was connected with the Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement and the conflict of the Nagornyy Karabakh. The
deterioration of the relations has reached a level that the USA is not
appointing a new ambassador to Azerbaijan and it seems that at least
will not name one within several months to come. The discontent over
non-appointment of the ambassador was also raised by Deputy Foreign
Minister Araz Azimov while on a visit in Washington. He also confirmed
that the relations between the two countries were not good, that is
to say, Azerbaijan does not see the wished partnership relations from
the USA. For official Baku such a partnership with the USA envisage
non-interference in democracy and human rights issues, elections
and similar issues in Azerbaijan. However, such a partnership model
does not fit for the USA. The United States would like at least to
formally demonstrate that democracy and human rights issues are one
of the priorities in its relations with Baku.

However, Baku’s stable refusal from recommendations to this end has
led to a point that Washington is reviewing relations and suspends
democracy-related talks. At the same time, it stops activities of
political institutions engaged in this sphere. That is to say although
the relations with Azerbaijan have not been severed completely, they
are lagging behind significantly and cannot anymore be described as
strategic partnership. One of the fundamental achievements succeeded
by Azerbaijan in its foreign policy for many years was close relations
with the world’s superpower. Nevertheless, everything has been marred
and is going from bad to worse…

AUA Student Receives a Junior Faculty Development Program Grant

PRESS RELEASE
November 23, 2009

American University of Armenia Corporation
300 Lakeside Drive, 12th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
Telephone: (510) 987-9452
Fax: (510) 208-3576
Contact: Gaiane Khachatrian
E-mail: [email protected]

AUA Student Receives a Junior Faculty Development Program Grant

Arevik Ohanyan, an American University of Armenia (AUA) student, received a
grant from the Junior Faculty Development Program (JFDP), and has been named
a Fellow in the field of Education Administration.

The JFDP program is funded by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
of the U.S. Department of State and is administered by the American Councils
for International Education: ACTR/ACCELS. The goal of the program is to
contribute to the development of higher education in participating
countries. To this end, the JFDP provides opportunities for university-level
instructors with strong potential for leadership in their disciplines to
engage in curriculum development and explore alternative teaching
methodologies, expand and enhance the academic knowledge of the subject they
teach throughout a semester in the States, and maintain on-going contacts
between their home and host institutions.

BAKU: Garabagh solution in superpowers’ interest – US congressman

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
Nov 19 2009

Garabagh solution in superpowers’ interest, US congressman says

19-11-2009 06:20:38

A US congressman has said he would support the October agreement on
mending ties signed by Turkey and Armenia if the deal can both bring
Armenia closer to the West and expedite a negotiated solution to the
Armenia-Azerbaijan Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict.
`It is in the interest of both the United States and Russia to resolve
this conflict, which has serious implications for global energy
security,’ Michael McMahon said.
The congressman also noted that Washington shares with its allies an
interest in the Caucasus region.
Armenia and Turkey signed protocols on October 10 in Switzerland to
establish diplomatic relations and reopen their sealed borders, in a
bid to normalize ties, marred by decades of hostility due to Armenian
occupation of Azerbaijani territory and Yerevan’s claims on 1915
`genocide’ in Ottoman Turkey.
`Unfortunately, a timeline has yet to be set for the protocols to be
ratified by Turkey or Armenia. This does not mean, however, that the
signing in Zurich was not a huge step forward for both countries. In
an ideal world, all the players would be cognizant of this fact and
move to ratify on the protocols in their respective parliaments,’
McMahon added.
The documents require ratification in both countries’ parliaments, and
Turkish officials have assured Azerbaijan, Turkey’s ally, that the
protocols will not pass in the country’s parliament until progress is
made in resolving the Garabagh conflict.*

BAKU: Armenia expects Russia to retract statement on Garabagh

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
Nov 20 2009

Armenia expects Russia to retract statement on Garabagh

20-11-2009 06:58:39

The Armenian government is seeking a retraction from Moscow following
a statement by the Russian Foreign Ministry’s spokesman that the
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict is being discussed as part of
Turkey-Armenia reconciliation talks.
Armеniа Today news agency quoted Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian as
saying that Andrei Nesterenko was a professional diplomat but this
time he committed `an omission.’
`Andrei Nesterenko made a mistake, it happens. I suggest we wait for a
refutation from the Russian Foreign Ministry, which probably won’t
take long.’
Nalbandian claimed that the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement has no
bearing to the process of settling the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh
conflict.
`Nesterenko’s statement runs counter to the statements being made by
the Russian foreign minister, as well as those made by Russia jointly
with the other co-chair countries of the [mediating] OSCE Minsk Group
– the United States and France,’ Nalbandian claimed, adding that those
statements have repeatedly ruled out a link between Garabagh
settlement and Ankara-Yerevan normalization.*

Armenia-Lithuania relations have great development potential

Armenia-Lithuania relations have great development potential
21.11.2009 16:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
On November 21, RA National Security Council Secretary Artur
Baghdasaryan met Lithuanian Foreign Minister Vygaudas UÅ¡ackas. The
meeting focused on Armenia-Lithuania relations and collaboration
within international structures’ frameworks.

Artur Baghdasaryan noted that Armenia-Lithuania relations have great
development potential in various spheres, with the parties agreeing to
strengthen cooperation in food safety and frontier infrastructures
modernization.

The parties exchanged views on RA-Turkey rapprochement process and NKR
conflict settlement issue. Vygaudas UÅ¡ackas gave high assessment to
Armenia’s efforts towards normalization of ties and expressed
Lithuania’s support in rapprochement process, RA NSC press service
reported.

Major Section Of 14th Century Armenian Church In Tbilisi Collapsed W

MAJOR SECTION OF 14TH CENTURY ARMENIAN CHURCH IN TBILISI COLLAPSED WEDNESDAY EVENING

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
20.11.2009 12:05 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A major section of a 14th century Armenian church
in Tbilisi collapsed Wednesday evening, after years of neglect by the
authorities to repair the historic structure, reported the Georgian
Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church on Thursday.

The St. Gevorg of Mughni Church, built in 1356, had been entirely
rebuilt in 1756. It is made of brick and its architectural typology
is that of a cross within a rectangular perimeter, with four
free-standing supports. The church had been closed for years, owing
to the structures deteriorating condition. Locals say the recent
rains further exacerbated the damage to the church.

450px-Saint_Gevorg_of_Mughni_Church,_Tbil isiThe medieval church had
been operating as a museum of folk art until the mid-1980s. By 1990
it was no longer a museum and its interior lay in ruin. The vestibule
attached to the western facade of the church was destroyed in May,
1991.

"The Georgian Ministry of Culture, Monuments Protection and Sports
should bear the responsibility," the Diocese said in a statement
Thursday. "All this creates an impression that by failing to solve
the issue of returning the churches to the Armenian Diocese, the
Georgian Patriarchate and authorities do not pay proper attention
to the preservation of Armenian churches, and intentionally destroy
important monuments of Armenian culture."

Georgian authorities had pointed to large cracks in the church’s
walls as an excuse to demolish the church instead of repair it. The
district governor in Tbilisi Thursday promised to allocate funds for
reconstruction of the church.

6th Media Conference On "Journalistic Education, Improvement Of Qual

6TH MEDIA CONFERENCE ON "JOURNALISTIC EDUCATION, IMPROVEMENT OF QUALITY OF EDUCATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY IN THE SOUTH CAUCASIAN COUNTRIES" STARTED IN TBILISI

AZG DAILY
2009-11-20 00:28:31 (GMT +04:00)

The 6th media conference on "Journalistic education, improvement
of quality of education and new technology in the South Caucasian
countries" has started in Tbilisi on Thursday.

About 70 journalists participate in the two-day conference

The conference is organized on the initiative of the Office of OSCE
Representative on Freedom of the Media.

Chief of the international relations department of the Georgian
parliament Akaki Minashvili delivered welcoming speech at the
conference.

OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Miklos Haraszti said it
was important for the journalists to get education abroad to gain
experience. He said Tbilisi conference had significant importance
for approaching of Azerbaijani and Armenian journalists and it has
arisen from the requirements of "people to people diplomacy".

According to Haraszti, Armenia and Georgia already adopted defamation
law.