Kocharian, EU envoy discuss Karabakh, Armenian-Turkish Relations

Armenian president, EU envoy discuss Karabakh, Armenian-Turkish relations

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
24 Jan 05

President Robert Kocharyan and the EU special representative for the South
Caucasus, Heikki Talvitie, on 24 January discussed the EU’s policy concerning
the South Caucasus countries, in particular, issues pertaining to the programme
Expanded Europe: New Neighbours.

During the meeting, the sides also discussed the current state and prospects
of a peaceful settlement to the Nagornyy Karabakh problem.

The sides also discussed Armenian-Turkish relations. Heikki Talvitie
expressed confidence that the beginning of talks on Turkey’s admission to the EU would
have a positive impact on the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

During a meeting with Armenian Security Council Secretary and Defence
Minister Serzh Sarkisyan, Heikki Talvitie noted that one of his tasks was to
establish a good basis for the development of Armenia-EU relations with the aim of
facilitating conflict settlement. Talvitie said that during the preparation of an
individual plan of cooperation, all the South Caucasus countries will be
assessed in accordance with their real possibilities.

Hailing Serzh Sarkisyan’s position on the peaceful settlement of the Karabakh
conflict, Mr Talvitie expressed the hope that real progress will be achieved
in the peaceful settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict in the near
future.

[Video showed the meetings]

Azerbaijan president to begin official visit to Iran

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 24, 2005 Monday 3:40 AM Eastern Time

Azerbaijan president to begin official visit to Iran

By Sevindzh Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman

President Ilkham Aliyev of Azerbaijan begins a three-day official
visit to Iran on Monday. He left for Teheran by plane on Monday
morning.

This is the first official visit of the Azerbaijanian president to
Iran. At least eight inter-governmental agreements, mainly of
economic character, will be signed during the visit.

According to diplomatic sources in Baku, the Azerbajanian head of
state is to have meetings with President Mohammad Khatami of Iran and
other leaders of the country.

During the meetings, the sides are expected to discuss all problems
of bilateral relations, as well as issues of regional security,
cooperation within the framework of international organizations,
settlement of the Karabakh conflict and defining of the Caspian Sea
legal status.

Besides, they are to sign an agreement on Iran’s allocating one
million dollars for the construction of a bridge across the Araks
River. Iran also intends to give Azerbaijan a credit of 40 million
dollars to build a Baku-Astara highway.

“Your pain is now ours too,” Turkish publisher writes re Genocide

PanArmenian News
January 23, 2005

“YOUR PAIN IS NOW OURS TOO,” FAMOUS TURKISH PUBLISHER WRITES ABOUT
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

24.01.2005 18:25

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Famous Turkish publisher R. Zarakolu considers that
each person should have a flower in his or her hand on April 24. He
reminds that the 90-th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide is in
2005. “No matter how those events are called, no one can deny that a
big human tragedy occurred that year,” he writes in the Turkish
press. Having fulfilled our human duty, we will remind ourselves of
humanity and simultaneously eliminate hatred from the hearts of
generations of Armenians that are full with that pain. Everyone has
to do his duty to purge oneself from that crime, R. Zarakolu calls
upon his compatriots. “One should find a place to lay a flower and
say: your pain is now ours, too,” R. Zarakolu writes.

Old lessons hard to learn

National Post (Canada)
January 24, 2005 Monday
National Edition

Old lessons hard to learn: ‘The Holocaust is not something that has
been taken on squarely by anti-racist educators’

by Heather Sokoloff, National Post

Last year, Ontario teacher Tasha Boylan covered the Holocaust in
about two hours with her Grade 10 history students. Crammed into a
few classroom periods was everything from the rise of the Nazis, to
Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King’s refusal to admit Jewish
refugees to Canada, to a discussion on discrimination and genocides
in Rwanda and Somalia.

”They really wanted to understand how people could have done nothing
to help the Jews,” Ms. Boylan says. ”When they knew this was going
on.”

Ms. Boylan wanted to spend more time on the Holocaust. Many of her
Toronto-area public students had little previous knowledge and were
keen to learn more. But the course — the only history requirement in
the Ontario high school curriculum — is jam-packed with 20th-century
content that must be completed. The standard 300-page history text
used in classrooms across the province, which covers Canada and its
role in the world from 1880 through the 1960s, devotes two pages to
the Second World War genocide.

Many educators fear students are getting little information on the
extermination of six million Jews, and worry Canadian classrooms may
not be doing enough to prevent students from making a blunder similar
to the one committed by Britain’s Prince Harry, who, as a joke,
donned a Nazi uniform at a costume party three weeks ago, during the
same month the world is marking the 60th anniversary of the
liberation of Auschwitz.

A National Post survey of Canada’s 10 provincial departments of
education found the Holocaust is covered in required history courses
only in Ontario, Alberta, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

Quebec’s curriculum is the only one that never explicitly mentions
the Holocaust. The Second World War is covered only in an elective
Grade 11 20th-century history course, and even then, the period
1914-1945 is detailed in two pages of a 50-page teachers’ manual.

Manitoba, British Columbia and Saskatchewan cover the Holocaust at
both the elementary and senior level. The three Western provinces
also go over the Holocaust in curriculum on Canadian immigration
policies, detailing how Ottawa refused to admit Jewish refugees
during the war.

Quebec’s curriculum, by comparison, is silent on the intense support
from groups such as Societe Saint-Jean Baptiste and L’Action
Nationale for Ottawa’s anti-immigration policies.

Newfoundland has put The Diary of Anne Frank and Night by Holocaust
survivor Elie Wiesel on a book list students are expected — but not
required — to read.

Official curriculum documents may have little relevance to students’
everyday learning, especially in subjects such as history and social
studies, where teachers decide which texts and historical periods
will be studied to accomplish opened-ended course objectives.

As a result, the amount of information students receive on the
Holocaust varies from province to province and even school to school,
depending on the interest of individual teachers. Ms. Boylan, for
example, also teaches about the Holocaust in a popular elective
social studies course called Introduction to Anthropology, Sociology
and Psychology, during a unit on discrimination. Although
anti-Semitism is not a required part of the section, she selects
texts and resources that discuss persecution of Jews during various
points in history.

Part of the problem, says Myra Novogrodsky, a veteran educator who
teaches a history pedagogy course at York University’s faculty of
education, is many teachers do not know much about the Holocaust
themselves. Even when they do, they may fear that bringing up the
issue could lead to an uncomfortable classroom discussion.

Teachers also worry about how to respond if their students repeat
anti-Semitic comments that they may have heard from their parents, or
from the governments in countries where they lived before coming to
Canada, she says.

According to a 2000 study from B’nai B’rith, only two Canadian
university faculties of education, at York and McGill, offer some
course material on how to teach the Holocaust to aspiring teachers.

The University of Toronto’s Ontario Institute for Studies in
Education (OISE) briefly offered a masters-level program on Holocaust
and genocide education, but cancelled it after a year in 2002.
According to the university, the reason was lack of fundraising. But
Carole Ann Reed, who co-headed the short-lived program, believes the
university never bothered to try to raise the money.

”I was told there was not enough money rounded up by the community
and I have always found that very, very hard to accept as the full
answer,” says Dr. Reed.

According to Dr. Reed, who specializes in anti-racist education and
is currently working with the National Film Board of Canada to
produce classroom materials on the Rwandan genocide, ”the Holocaust
is not something that has been taken on squarely by anti-racist
educators.”

As a result, the Holocaust is often included as one option along with
a smorgasbord of other human-rights-themed material. A new Quebec
course called History and Citizenship Education, for example, planned
for Grades 7 and 8, suggests a selection of Holocaust literature for
a unit on liberty and civil rights, along with works such as Simone
de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago and
Assi bo nanga by Johnny Clegg.

Still, many teachers do embrace the topic with gusto, while some
provinces have been vocal in ensuring resources make it to their
teachers. British Columbia published two 90-page booklets on teaching
the Holocaust for all Grade 6 and Grade 11 social studies teachers,
while Saskatchewan is providing funding for a travelling exhibit on
Anne Frank this year.

OISE is offering a new masters-level course this year on Holocaust
literature called Anne Frank, Writings of the Adolescent Self, taught
by Lesley Shore. (Ms. Boylan is one of 12 students, all teachers or
student-teachers, taking the course.)

For teachers, Anne Frank’s diary is a sure way of sparking classroom
discussions on morality. Last week, the teachers probed each other
with questions such as: If I was a Gentile, would I have tried to
save a Jewish family? If I was a Jew, which friend could I ask to
take me in? And what about all the people who knew Jews like Anne
Frank were in hiding but didn’t say anything?

According to Dr. Shore, The Diary of Anne Frank remains the
second-best-selling nonfiction book after the Bible. Recently, a
series of children’s books written by two Canadian authors, including
Hana’s Suitcase, Gabi’s Dresser and The Underground Reporters, have
become best-sellers, selling hundreds of thousands of copies around
the world.

Amy Rohr, a Grade 8 English teacher at the Halton Catholic District
School Board, also taking the OISE course on Anne Frank, has spent
months with her students exploring themes of war. Students were able
to choose any book and share it with the class; many chose
Holocaust-themed books, while others selected works on children
living through genocides in Armenia and Rwanda.

Some parents, as well as her colleagues, were worried the material
might be too stark for the middle-school-aged children, but Ms. Rohr
says students are enthralled.

”Students are interested in learning about injustice,” says Ms.
Rohr. ”Teachers have a powerful role to play in initiating
discussion on how they can make a difference.”

Review: Big Day Out 2005

Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand
Jan 22 2005

Review: Big Day Out 2005
22 January 2005
By CHRIS SCHULZ

In the end, the granddads showed everyone how to do it. Hip-hop
golden-oldies The Beastie Boys, oozing old-school cool and displaying
amazing technological prowess, saved the 2005 Big Day Out from being,
well, a little disappointing.

This year’s sun-soaked event lacked the pulling power of, say,
Metallica, and while the 40,000 crowd found plenty to enjoy, by the
time 9pm rolled around there seemed to have been something missing.

Thank God then, for The Beastie Boys. Their fantastic main
stage-closing show featured four giant TV screens and began with a
Lord of the Rings video piss-take and a thrilling introduction by the
band’s DJ, Mix Master Mike.

Dressed in matching orange tracksuits and displaying an exuberance
that defied their age, the B-Boys set spanned their entire 20-year
career, included a lounge bar intermission and at one point had two
of the trio running through the moshpit barricade. Not bad for men in
their forties.

Thanks to the new East Stand and several traffic flow innovations,
Ericsson Stadium didn’t appear to be as busy as past years. But that
didn’t stop the front row security barrier being tested by System Of
A Down, who were in a very strange mood.

Just what guitarist and vocalist Daron Malakian had been up to before
their performance is unknown, but he seemed to be completely out of
it.

It didn’t help that the Armenian-American metal giants tried to
re-interpret their ageing back catalogue using keyboards and a voice
decoder. Very prog-rock, guys, but don’t you have a new album coming
out?

And when the show had to be stopped for a moshpit injury, Malakian
took this as his cue to go wild, repeatedly shrieking ‘man down’
before launching into an impromptu acoustic anti-war song. Easily the
most random act of the day.

Over at the Essential Stage, British act Mike Skinner pulled a huge
crowd and rewarded them with an upbeat interpretation of The Streets’
brand of urban poetry.

The set was a little loose – it may have been the four months Skinner
has had off or that glass of beer constantly in his hand – but Dry
Your Eyes had the entire crowd chanting and by the end of it there
were a few blurry eyes.

No one was crying when Slipknot hit the main stage in the early
evening. They probably would have been beaten up if they were.

The masked metallers, in their first New Zealand concert, put on an
awesome – and terrifying – display.

It takes a while just to take it all in, and at first the band seem
slightly contrived. There’s nine of them, they all wear horror-style
masks and the clown’s only role seems to be to hit a keg with a
baseball bat as hard as he can.

Still, there’s a certain kind of danceable groove to their music, and
anthems like Duality and The Heretic Anthem saw the day’s biggest
moshpit bouncing high. Wise folk stayed well clear of it.

The Polyphonic Spree were the perfect antidote after that kind of
hostile environment.

Around 20 of the robed band played under a ‘Hope’ banner in the
Boiler Room, bringing a sense of 60s psychedelia to proceedings with
their trippy choir-backed pop music. But it appeared they were a
little too weird for most punters, who emptied out of the tent and
sort solace elsewhere.

Local acts also burned bright. Scribe’s main stage performance proved
he has come of age. His album is ageing but he relished playing to
such a huge crowd and Not Many resulted in a huge ovation. As did the
Blindspot guest appearance on the nu-metal version of Stand Up.
Shihad, The D4 and Steriogram also proved popular.

Lowlights? Powderfinger’s brand of Aussie pub-rock left little
impression, while the hip-hop stage was – again – overcome by noise
pollution. When will they find a better site for it?

And, as usual, it’s impossible to see everyone you want to,
especially when the crowds make travelling between stages difficult.
Sorry RJD2 and Kid Koala, I’ll catch you next time.

Ukraine completes its Georgian revolution

OneWorld.net, UK
Jan 21 2005

Ukraine completes its Georgian revolution
Misha Kechakmadze

21 January 2005

November 2003, Tbilisi, Georgia

Tens of thousands of people carrying the five cross flags and
shouting “resign!, resign!” rallied on Freedom Square in downtown
Tbilisi for three weeks. They demonstrated against the official
results of the rigged parliamentary election – the last, desperate
attempt of the widely unpopular regime of Eduard Shevardnadze to stay
in power. These demonstrations were led by the opposition leader
Mikheil Saakashvili who, backed by the results of independent exit
polls, claimed that his party, the United National Movement, won the
elections. The culmination of these opposition protests came on
November 23, St. Georgia’s Day. 100,000 protesters with red roses in
their hands seized the parliament building and state chancellery,
forcing Shevardnadze to step down and paving the way for the
government of Mikheil Saakashvili, who on January 4, 2004, was
overwhelmingly elected as the President of Georgia with a mandate to
implement long-needed social-economical reforms. The new era in
Georgia started.

this revolution was an exception down to the particularities of the
situation in Georgia
After the Rose Revolution in Georgia, many analysts covering
political processes in the post-soviet region argued that this
revolution was an exception down to the particularities of the
situation in Georgia, and not illustratative of the general picture
in the post-soviet countries. As evidence, they would mention
Armenia, Belarus and Azerbaijan, where the authorities managed to
crack down opposition demonstrations. But in just one year this
notion proved to be totally wrong when the fire of revolution began
to flare in Ukraine.

November-December 2004, Kiev, Ukraine

Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, waving orange flags, the
color of the opposition leader Yushchenko’s campaign coalition, and
shouting “Yushchenko is our President”, jammed the Independence
Square in downtown Kiev for one month. The protests began as the
outcry of public anger against the suspect official results of the
second round of voting in the presidential contest between Prime
Minister Viktor Yanukovych and Viktor Yushchenko. The contest has
already been marred by the appalling disfigurement of Yushchenko with
the deadly poison dioxin – an assassination attempt that he hardly
survived.

The results announced by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine
on November 22 claimed that the presidential election was won by the
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych. However, citing the results of the
independent exit polls that gave him an 11% lead over his opponent,
Yushchenko called his supporters to proclaim his victory. Soon his
case was backed by international observers who denounced the election
as rigged. Thousands of people travelled to the capital from across
Ukraine, even though their journeys were disrupted by government
closures of major roads and airports. Some of the demonstrators set
up tents in Kiev’s Independence Square. Large Georgians were highly
visible in these demonstrations in Kiev
demonstrations were held in many cities elsewhere in Ukraine. It is
worth mentioning that Georgians were highly visible in these
demonstrations in Kiev and the flag of Georgia has been among those
on display in the city’s Independence Square, while Yushchenko
himself held up a rose in an apparent reference to the Rose
Revolution.

Meanwhile the governors of Eastern and Southern regions of Ukraine,
which mostly supported Yanukovych, suggested turning the country into
a federation with a new autonomous republic of “Southern-Eastern
Ukraine” with its capital in Kharkiv. With thousands of supporters of
the two opposing candidates in Kiev, separatists’ movement in some
regions of Ukraine, and Russia’s rude intervention into the internal
affairs of a neighboring state, Ukraine approached the point where
its very existence came into question. Everybody was fraught with
uncertainty – what will come next?

Fortunately for Ukraine, common sense won over insanity. Mediated by
high-level foreign politicians from Europe, direct talks began
between Yanukovych and Yushchenko. Though these direct talks did not
bring a major breakthrough, they contributed to defusing the
situation. In the meantime, major developments took place in the
legal field when on December 3 the Ukrainian Supreme Court reached
the decision to annul the results and order a repeat of the second
round. Viktor Yushenko and Viktor Yanukovych again faced each other
in the presidential elections.

The second vote was re-run on December 26. International observers,
deployed in thousands for this round, reported a much fairer vote,
and Viktor Yushchenko won with about 52% of the vote, to Yanukovych’s
44%. Yushchenko was finally declared the winner on January 10, 2005
after the failure of a legal action brought by Yanukovych. The new
era in Ukraine started.

These dramatic processes in Ukraine which were dubbed “the Orange
people who care for freedom and democracy cannot be intimidated by
brutal force, oppression, threats and lies
Revolution” represented one of the finest moments of Ukrainian
history. Ukraine once again proved that it is an integral part of the
democratic world. Both Ukrainians and Georgians showed to the world
that people who care for freedom and democracy cannot be intimidated
by brutal force, oppression, threats and lies when they defend their
fundamental right – to vote in fair and democratic elections.

Political analysts no longer argue about the exclusiveness of
revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine. They simply ask one question –
where is next?

Belarus, Uzbekistan sign deal on visa-free trips

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 20, 2005 Thursday 3:59 AM Eastern Time

Belarus, Uzbekistan sign deal on visa-free trips

By Andrei Fomin

MINSK, January 20

Belarus and Uzbekistan have signed an agreement on visa-free trips
for their citizens, sources from the Belarussian Foreign Ministry
reported on Thursday.

The document was signed in Tashkent by Belarussian Deputy Foreign
Minister Alexander Gerasimenko. The agreement will replace
multi-lateral Bishkek agreements of October 9, 1992 on visa-free
trips for CIS citizens.

According to the Belarussian Foreign Ministry, the signing of that
document was “necessitated by a need to replace multi-lateral
agreements with bilateral, as it is easier to control their
implementation, while amendments can be introduced more efficiently”.

Belarus has already signed similar agreements with Armenia, Moldova
and Ukraine.

Global Gold Co. Names Ian Hague to the Board of Directors

Global Gold Corporation Names Ian Hague as a Member of the Board of Directors

Business Wire
Jan 20, 2005

Global Gold Corporation (OTCBB: GBGD) announced today the appointment
of Ian Hague as a non-executive member of the board of directors of
Global Gold Corporation. He joins Nicholas Aynilian, Drury
J. Gallagher, Van Krikorian and Michael T. Mason on Global Gold’s
board.

Commenting on the new appointment, Global Gold’s Chairman/CEO Drury J.
Gallagher said: “We are pleased to have Ian Hague join us as a member
of our board. His international experience and focus on the former
Soviet Union will be a major contribution to the success of Global
Gold Corporation.”

Ian Hague is a co-founder of Firebird Management, LLC –
Firebird manages over $850 million in seven funds dedicated to equity
investments in Russia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Mr. Hague is a
leading expert on Russian politics and investments and has published
numerous articles and given dozens of presentations over the years. He
is a graduate (BA) of Wesleyan University (1983), and has a Masters
Degree in International Policy Studies from the Monterey Institute of
International Studies and has done graduate work at Columbia
University’s Harriman Institute. Ian is co-lead manager of Firebird
Fund LP, Firebird New Russia Fund, Firebird Republics Fund, and
Firebird Avrora Fund. Mr. Hague serves as a member of the Supervisory
Board of the Bank of Georgia and the Board of Directors of Amber
Trust, a private equity fund specializing in companies in the Baltic
States.

Global Gold Corporation is an international mining company whose
strategic focus is the acquisition, development, exploration and
operation of gold mining properties. Global Gold has acquired and is
developing projects in Armenia and Chile. The company headquarters are
located at 104 Field Point Road, Greenwich, CT 06830; additional
information can be found at

To the extent that statements in this press release are not strictly
historical, including statements as to revenue projections, business
strategy, outlook, objectives, future milestones, plans, intentions,
goals, future financial conditions, future collaboration agreements,
the success of the Company’s development, events conditioned on
stockholder or other approval, or otherwise as to future events, such
statements are forward-looking, and are made pursuant to the safe
harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995. The forward-looking statements contained in this release are
subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual
results to differ materially from the statements made.Global Gold
Corporation Drury J. Gallagher, 203-422-2300 [email protected]

www.fbird.com.
www.globalgoldcorp.com.

Russia Ready to Facilitate Mutual Understanding b/w Armenia, Azerb.

RUSSIA IS READY TO FACILITATE MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN ARMENIA AND
AZERBAIJAN

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15. ARMINFO. Russia’s Foreign Ministry is pointing to
certain similarity in Armenia’s and Baku’s views and concepts of the
Karabakh conflict settlement, reports RIA Novosti.

Armenian and Azeri FMs Vardan Oskanyan and Elmar Mamedyarov met in
Prague Jan 10-11 in the presence of the OSCE Minsk Group. Moscow is
pleased to see that the Armenian-Azeri meetings on presidential and
ministerial levels are becoming regular. Meeting under international
aegis Armenian and Azeri officials discuss almost all the aspects of
the problem including such acute points as withdrawal of troops,
demilitarizing of territories, international guarantees, Karabakh’s
status.

Moscow has been lately observing certain similarity in Yerevan’s and
Baku’s views and concepts of the problem. Both parties confirm their
commitments to continue joint work for reducing tensions and improving
the situation in the whole South Caucasus. This also includes the
parties’ agreement to carry out the earlier decisions to send an OSCE
monitoring group to the occupied territories and to organize a new
meeting of the Armenian and Azeri presidents in Warsaw this summer.

As OSCE MG co-chair Russia is committed to facilitate the mutual
understanding between Armenia and Azerbaijan for settling the Karabakh
conflict through peaceful talks.

Armenian minister says no Karabakh settlement without compromises

Armenian minister says no Karabakh settlement without compromises

Arminfo
12 Jan 05

YEREVAN

The latest meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers
in Prague on 11 January was held in a good atmosphere, Armenian
Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan told a news conference today.

The minister reiterated earlier reports that a series of issues had
been outlined as a result of last year’s Prague meetings and these
issues would lay the foundation for further meetings, which was
confirmed during the meeting of the OSCE foreign ministers in Sofia
6-7 December 2004 . The minister added that an attempt was made in
Prague to start such discussions around these issues.

“Yes, there is such a range of issues, but it has to be said that
there is no final agreement on some of them yet. The Prague meeting
has shown that there is still a need for greater consolidation, and
the main objective of the meeting was to try to consolidate these
issues,” the minister said.

At the same time, Oskanyan pointed to some progress but added that the
process has not yet been completed. Neither is it known when the next
meeting will be held, the minister said.

The minister stressed the importance of being more careful with
statements. He said it is easy to make a statement or to speak about
successes. Each side is pursuing its own interests in the negotiations
and no-one will make statements against their own interests.

“The issue can be resolved only when both sides, and eventually
Karabakh which will be part of the process, make compromises. Without
that it is not worth expecting us to sign a document which would
reflect the wishes of all sides. It is premature to talk about
that. It is also premature to say in which direction the process is
going, because all aspects of the issue are being negotiated. It will
soon become clear how they will eventually ‘be packaged’ and agree
with each other. But so far we haven’t started the process yet. All
the questions are being discussed and each side is providing its own
comments. We think we have entered a more serious stage in the
negotiations and at this phase it is necessary to make more reserved
statements in order not to put the other party in a difficult
situation or not to get into such a situation oneself,” the minister
said.

The foreign minister also noted that the Azerbaijani press was full of
misinformation.

“There is a disgraceful situation in the Azerbaijani press today,” the
minister said. He believes that such an assessment is based on an
analysis. For instance, he said the statements some Azerbaijani
newspapers put into his mouth were wide of the mark.

“After the Prague meeting I gave a brief interview to Radio
Liberty. Anything beyond that interview is wide of the mark,” the
Armenian foreign minister said.