ANKARA: Arinc: Number Of Turkish People’s Applications To E.C.H.R. H

Arinc: Number Of Turkish People’s Applications To E.C.H.R. Has Dropped

Anadolu Agency
May 20 2004

STRASBOURG – Number of Turkish people’s applications to the European
Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has dropped, Turkish Parliament Speaker
Bulent Arinc said on Wednesday.

Arinc, who is currently in Strasbourg to attend conference of
parliament speakers of member countries to the Council of Europe,
held separate talks with ECHR Vice President Jean Paul Costa and
Turkish jurists at the ECHR on Wednesday.

Holding a news conference following the meetings, Arinc said,
“number of Turkish people’s applications to the ECHR about right
to live, torture and maltreatment have dropped. It is a pleasing
development. Reforms made in democratization in Turkey have a
significant role in this development. Turkish people do not apply to
the ECHR about freedom of expression and closure of political parties
any longer. Our government has been making legal changes for a more
free life in Turkey.”

Upon a question about decision of the State Security Court (DGM)
in the re-trial process of former deputies of the Democracy Party
(DEP) which was banned by the Constitutional Court, Arinc said that
the ECHR had made some legal objections to the DEP case.

“Following decision of the ECHR, former deputies of the DEP were
re-tried, and the court ratified its first decision in accordance with
Article 341/1 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CMUK) arranging the
decision to be made in retrial process,” he said.

Recalling that the jurisdiction was independent in modern and
democratic societies, Arinc said that judicial independence was valid
in Turkey, and no one could affect decisions of courts.

Arinc also gave information about his meetings at the Council of
Europe.

He recalled that he had held very positive and constructive bilateral
meetings with parliament speakers of Greece, Georgia, Armenia and
Russia.

Arinc is expected to return to Turkey on Thursday.

ANKARA: Security Forces Capture 105 Illegal Immigrants

Security Forces Capture 105 Illegal Immigrants

Anadolu Agency
May 20 2004

EDIRNE – Security forces captured 105 illegal immigrants who were
trying to pass border in northwestern Edirne province in the last
two days.

A total of 26 Iraqis, 20 Bangladeshis, 14 Pakistanis, five Indians,
four Armenians, three Iranians, one Somalian and one South African,
who were trying to proceed to Greece illegally, were captured in Meric,
Ipsala and Uzunkopru towns of Edirne in the last two days.

Meanwhile, nine Somalians, six Nepalese, six Syrians, four Chinese,
three Georgians, one Algerian, one Iraqi and one Tunisian, who were
trying to enter Turkey illegally from Greece, were captured in Meric,
Ipsala and Uzunkopru towns of Edirne in the last two days.

Illegal immigrants will be deported after legal procedures.

Turkey is a route of illegal migration due to its geographical
location lying between Asia and Europe like a bridge with its rough
mountainous eastern and southeastern borders difficult to control.
Illegal immigrants from Middle Eastern, Asian and Far Eastern countries
generally use this route to sneak into European countries.

In the West, northwestern Edirne province and some other Aegean
provinces are routes for illegal immigrants to cross the border.
Particularly Meric River, a natural border between Turkey and Greece,
and Aegean provinces which are close to Greek Islands in the Aegean
Sea are used by illegal immigrants to go to European countries.

In recent years, there has been a considerable increase in the number
of illegal immigrants who were caught by the Turkish security forces
who stepped up security measures against illegal migration.

BAKU: Armenian asylum seekers on hunger strike

Armenian asylum seekers on hunger strike

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
May 20 2004

The two Armenian nationals, Roman Terian and Artur Apresian, who
came to Azerbaijan on April 7 fleeing Kocharian’s regime, announced
on Monday that they had started a hunger strike.

Terian and Apresian, who aspire to emigrate to a third country with
the assistance of international organizations, began the strike after
the Baku Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees rejected
their request.

In explaining this decision, the office said that if it granted the
request, other individuals might try to emigrate from Armenia in the
same way.

BAKU: Pakistan always was, is & will be close to Azerbaijan

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
May 20 2004

PAKISTAN ALWAYS WAS, IS AND WILL BE CLOSE TO AZERBAIJAN
THE PRESIDENT OF PAKISTAN PERVEZ MUSHARRAF STATED IT IN ISLAMABAD
[May 20, 2004, 12:48:21]

As informed to AzerTAj from the embassy of Azerbaijan in Pakistan, on
May 17-18 this year, the deputy foreign minister Khalaf Khalafov was
visiting Islamabad. At the meeting, which has been carried out on the
basis of arrangement between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Azerbaijan and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Pakistan, and under
the invitation of the foreign secretary of Pakistan, also there were
representatives of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and economic
development of Azerbaijan.

Within the framework of the visit, Mr. Kh. Khalafov has met the
President of Pakistan general Pervez Musharraf. Before the beginning
of official talk, the head the Pakistani state has stated: “Pakistan
always was, is and will be close to Azerbaijan”. He has noted, that
is always glad to receive the delegation from Azerbaijan, stressed
that attaches special significance to development of relations with
Azerbaijan Republic.

President Pervez Musharraf has emphasized that Pakistani people
always supports fair position of Azerbaijan in the Nagorny Karabakh
problem. The president of Pakistan has explained the uncertainty of
the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, noting that the states of the world do
not take a fair position and approach to the said question from the
position of double standards. The president has emphasized: “Such
states as we, can solve the problems only by amplification of
economy, strengthening of statehood, due to will and determination of
people. He has expressed to the government of Azerbaijan gratitude
for support of the position of Pakistan in the Kashmir question.

The head of Pakistani state has dwelt on the processes proceeding in
the world and has emphasized necessity of development of economic and
trading links between the Islamic countries. The president has noted,
that the big need for revival of the work of OIC and its
transformation into the organization, capable to influence world
policy today is already felt, and, having put forward the idea of
liberal enlightenment, has emphasized, that it first of all pursues
the purpose of expansion of mutual cultural, spiritual, economic,
trading links of 57 countries belonging to the Islamic world.

President Pervez Musharraf has noted, that with impatience waits for
the visit to Azerbaijan, which will take place in the near future.
The head of Pakistani state has stated on existing between his
country and Azerbaijan historically friendly, political relations,
and also has emphasized importance of development of links in
economic and trading sphere. He stressed that during his visit to
Azerbaijan he would discuss ways of expansion of relations in this
area. Upon termination of conversation, general Pervez Musharraf
asked to pass over to the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev the
kind wishes and sincere greetings.

Mr. Khalaf Khalafov has thanked the President of Pakistan for warm
reception, having noted, that the government and people of Azerbaijan
wait for his visit to Baku, that Pakistan was among the first states
which have recognized independence of our country what exactly at
support of Pakistan we have come in the Organization of Islamic
Conference, and also support of Islamabad in the Nagorny Karabakh
problem and adoption of the resolution number 822 during presidency
of Pakistan in the UN Security Council.

The next meeting of the deputy foreign minister of Azerbaijan was
with the chairman of the Senate of Pakistan Muhammadmiam Sumro. At
the meeting, discussed were issues of establishment of cooperation
between parliaments of our countries, activation of work of the
deputy commissions of friendship, mutual visits of chairmen of
parliaments, and also establishment of contacts between the
governmental and non-governmental organizations. Mr. Sumro has
expressed hope, that the visit this year of the Chairman of
Azerbaijan Parliament Murtuz Alaskarov to Pakistan would promote
development of communications between parliaments of our countries.
Kh. Khalafov on behalf of chairman of parliament of Azerbaijan has
invited the chairman of the Senate to Azerbaijan.

Then, Kh. Khalafov has met the foreign secretary of Pakistan Mr. Riaz
Kokar, has discussed ways of expansion of ties between the Ministries
of Foreign Affairs of our countries. R. Kokar has recognized
expedient carrying out before visit of the President of Pakistan to
Azerbaijan sessions of the Azerbaijan-Pakistan joint economic
commission and has suggested the Azerbaijan side to organize such
session some days prior to visit of the President. Besides the
request has been expressed to speed up delivery of the corresponding
license to the Baku branch of the Pakistan national bank, started to
function in Baku several years ago.

The last day of the visit to Islamabad Kh. Khalafov has met the
secretary of the government of Pakistan on financial and economic
affairs Vagar Masud Khan, has discussed questions of revival of work
of the Azerbaijan-Pakistan joint economic commission, development of
economic, trading links between our countries.

The meetings of Kh. Khalafov were broadcast on the Pakistan TV, and
his visit was widely covered in mass media of the country.

At the meetings, attending was the ambassador of Azerbaijan in
Pakistan Eynulla Madatli.

Preventive Arrests

PREVENTIVE ARRESTS

A1 Plus | 17:40:25 | 20-05-2004 | Politics |

This morning preventive arrests have been made in Armenia. Under
the information we possess Opposition activists were arrested in
Artashat, Charentcavan and other cities. Some of them were “judged”
at the scene and isolated for 10 days. Members of “Republic” and
People’s Party of Armenia are mainly arrested.

For the time being 15 people are in detention. Many are pursued. In
particular PPA member, Artashat regional head of PPA Aramayis
Barseghyan has been kept an eye on for 2 days. Policemen in civil
clothes were ambushing near his house to kidnap him after he comes
out. But Barseghyan managed to elude and to get the Party Office
in Yerevan.

PPA member Smbat Eghiazaryan, “Republic” Party Secretary Artak
Hakobyan, “Republic” Party member and Echmiadzin regional head of
“Republic” Sayad Tumanyan and many other men whose names are made
more accurate are in the same state.

Georgia’s Roads Will Be Reconstructed

Georgia’s Roads Will Be Reconstructed

A1 Plus | 18:17:19 | 20-05-2004 | Official |

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili informed pro-governmental
parliamentary bloc that some international donor organizations will
allot Georgia aid of $300-350 million.

According to A-INFO Agency, bloc Armenian member Van Bayburdyan
assures by president’s words about $ 80-100 million will be allowed
for reconstruction of Akhaltckha-Akhalqalaq, Ninotsminda-Tsalka-Tbilisi
roads.

National Citizens’ Initiative Examines “Army and Society”

PRESS RELEASE
The National Citizens’ Initiative
75 Yerznkian Street
Yerevan 375033, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 1) 27.16.00, 27.00.03
Fax: (+374 – 1) 52.48.46
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

May 20, 2004

National Citizens’ Initiative Examines “Army and Society”

Yerevan – The National Citizens’ Initiative (NCI) convened today a
policy discussion on “Army and Society” to address the challenges
which the Armenian public faces in the military sphere and to
search for optimal solutions to the problems in army-society
interrelations. Public alienation, draft evasion, issues of law
and justice in the armed forces, and the roles of political forces,
civil society, and the intelligentsia in strengthening the army were
in the focus of the day’s deliberations.

Raffi Hovannisian, founder of NCI and the Armenian Center for National
and International Studies (ACNIS), greeted the capacity audience with
opening remarks. “We trust that today’s multidisciplinary discussion
will help define contemporary army-related challenges, ascertain the
level of military-society relations, and offer effective solutions,
all with the expectation of holding a broader conference together
with the Defense Ministry in the near future,” Hovannisian said.

During the first session Lieutenant Colonel Sedrak Sedrakian, chief
of the Defense Ministry’s legal department, delivered a paper on “The
Armenian Armed Forces Today: Achievements, Challenges, and Relevant
Legislation.” The armed forces’ strong legislative foundations
are accompanied both by reinforcement of legal requirements and by
expansion of rights and privileges, he maintained. “The legislative
field for the armed forces already is established in Armenia and has
a dynamic character, hence enabling development and adoption of a
comprehensive legislative
conception.”

Colonel Vardan Avetisian, chief of the Defense Ministry’s educational
department, addressed “The Principles of Legality and Justice: A
Look at Interpersonal Relations among Soldiers and Officers.” “The
restrictions and stringent enforcement mechanisms currently being
applied in the army are aimed at fostering high military readiness
and every individual’s personal responsibility toward his military
service. “The public cannot treat the army as a stepchild, because
justice and legality are just as important in the service as in
society,” Avetisian said.

Avetik Ishkhanian, chairman of the Armenian Helsinki Committee,
concluded the session with a paper on “Civil Society-Armed Forces
Relations” based on his own investigations. “Crimes committed in the
army, violations of soldiers’ rights, and other breaches presently are
considered a taboo. The homicides and other crimes we occasionally hear
about result mainly from demands outside of regulations,” asserted
the human rights advocate, opining that the army should be fully
apoliticized and gradually transform into a professional system.

Reflecting on audience questions that sparked particular interest,
the speakers noted the measures required to rule out the custom of
“dedovshchina” widely inherited from the Soviet period, to prevent
provenance- triggered confrontations among soldiers, to continue
exercise of postponed enlistment entitlements for those in higher
academic courses, to regulate specific manifestations of various sects,
and to enhance the patriotic education of the youth.

The second session was completely devoted to exchanges of views and
policy recommendations among the public figures and policy specialists
in attendance. Noteworthy were contributions by General Arkadiy
Ter-Tadevosian, chairman of the Armenian Defense-Sport Association;
Colonel Gegham Haroutiunian, political council member of the Republic
party; Tamar Gevorgian of the United Labor Party; Vahagn Gevorgian,
expert of the Commission on Defense, National Security, and Internal
Affairs of the Armenian parliament; law professor Hrair Tovmasian;
Hrant Khachatrian of the Constitutional Law Union; former minister
of state Hrach Hakobian; Vardan Khachatrian, theology professor
at Yerevan State University; Hovhannes Hovhannisian of the Liberal
Progressive Party; Davit Petrosian of the Noyan Tapan News agency;
academician Rafael Ghazarian of the Armenian Intellectuals’ Forum;
Petros Makeyan of the Democratic Fatherland party; Greta Mirzoyan of
the “Soldier’s Mother” NGO; former defense minister Vazgen Manukian;
and many others. The majority of interventions concentrated on ensuring
the rule of law in the army, achieving higher levels of military
efficacy in the armed forces, pursuing the imperative of patriotic
upbringing, and realizing the public’s potential to these ends.

ACNIS analyst Hovsep Khurshudian closed the seminar with summary
remarks. “It is evident that today’s deliberations have given one
further opportunity for relevant high-ranking officials and public
representatives together to refocus on the army’s problems and its
relations with society, and once more to be convinced that these
issues need deeper examination.”

The National Citizens’ Initiative is a public non-profit association
founded in 2001 by former foreign minister Raffi K. Hovannisian,
his colleagues, and fellow citizens with the purpose of realizing
the rule of law and overall improvements in the state of the state,
society, and public institutions. The National Citizens’ Initiative
is guided by a Coordinating Council, which includes individual
citizens and representatives of various public, scientific,
and educational establishments. Five commissions on Law and State
Administration, Socioeconomic Issues, Foreign Policy, Spiritual and
Cultural Challenges, and the Youth constitute the vehicles for the
Initiative’s work and outreach.

For further information, please call (3741) 27-16-00 or 27-00-03;
fax (3741) 52-48-46; e-mail [email protected]; or visit

www.nci.am
www.nci.am

BAKU: OIC amends resolution “on aggression of Rep. of Armenia agains

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
May 19 2004

OIC AMENDS THE RESOLUTION “ON AGGRESSION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
AGAINST AZERBAIJAN REPUBLIC”
[May 19, 2004, 13:11:59]

In the information received by AzerTAj from the embassy of Azerbaijan
in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, it is stated that the next assembly
of top officials of member-states of the Organization of Islamic
Conference (OIC) was held in Jeddah. Discussed was the issue of
preparation to the XXXI conference of the foreign ministers of the
OIC member-countries in Istanbul.

Before the arrangement, the permanent representative of Azerbaijan in
OIC, ambassador Elman Arasly has met the Secretary General of this
international structure Abdulwahid Bilgeziz, his assistant Izzet
Al-Mufti and other high-ranking officials of the Organization, has
discussed with them questions of the further expansion of relations
of Azerbaijan with OIC, has addressed the Secretary General with the
request for support of initiatives of our republic.

As earlier, at this assembly, the OIC member- states have supported
the issue connected to Azerbaijan. So, the resolution of OIC “On
aggression of the Republic Armenia against the Azerbaijan Republic”
under the offer of the Azerbaijan side has been amended. Participants
of assembly have agreed to include Azerbaijan’s draft resolution
submitted by the delegation “Youth initiative of Islamic Conference”
in the agenda of XXXI Istanbul conference of the ministers of foreign
affairs of the OIC member–states.

At the assembly in Jeddah, discussed was the report of Secretary
General A. Bilgeziz, decided to submit for discussion in the Istanbul
conference the question in connection with the appeal submitted to
the OIC Secretary General on admission of the Central African
Republic and the Republic Mauritius in membership of the
Organization. Taking into account the appeal on granting to some
states of the status of the observer in OIC, it was decided to create
special commission for preparation of offers concerning entering into
the Charter of structure of respective alterations. Participants of
the assembly condemned the inhuman treatment of the American soldiers
with the prisoners in Iraq.

The draft resolution “Concerning new position of Cyprus” submitted by
the delegation of Turkey has been unanimously adopted by the
assembly.

US military, NATO join forces to stabilize Caucasus

US military, NATO join forces to stabilize Caucasus
By Brian Whitmore, Globe Correspondent | May 19, 2004

Boston Globe, MA
May 19 2004

GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany — US Army Colonel Michael Anderson
has Georgia on his mind. He spends a lot of time thinking about
Armenia and Azerbaijan, as well.

Plagued by ethnic conflicts, political instability, organized crime,
and porous borders, the volatile South Caucasus region has long been
viewed by Western officials as a hotbed of chaos and of instability
in Europe’s backyard.

The US military and key NATO allies are now laying the groundwork for
an unprecedented engagement in the region that will include coordinated
military and humanitarian assistance, education, and training aimed
at eventually bringing these troubled nations and their armed forces
into Europe’s mainstream.

“We want these nations to ultimately be able to stand on their own
and to be secure and stable states,” said Anderson, the US military’s
European Command point man for policy in the Caucasus.

The emerging initiative in Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan is part
of a focus on what military commanders call “an arc of instability”
ranging from the Caucasus through the Middle East to the Gulf of
Guinea in West Africa. Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, US armed
forces worldwide have been taking steps to redirect their resources
to fight the war on terrorism more effectively.

Officials at the US European Command say that since they do not
anticipate a major war in their area of responsibility in the near
future, they are focusing on preventing conflicts on and beyond the
continent’s hinterlands before they become full-blown security crises.

In the South Caucasus, as well as in North Africa, US military
officials say they are seeking to use “the prudent application of
soft power” — gaining access and influence in these regions by
exposing nations there to Western thinking and values — to advance
the interests of the United States and its allies.

“We are applying a regional, cooperative approach . . . helping
nations help themselves,” Air Force General Charles Wald, deputy
commander of US forces in Europe, said in a statement.

At a two-day conference this month at the George C. Marshall European
Center for Security Studies in this southern German Alpine town, US
defense officials met with their counterparts from key NATO allies to
coordinate their efforts to assist a defense overhaul in the region.
Officials from Georgia and Armenia also attended. Officials from
Azerbaijan were invited, but did not attend amid the continuing
animosity with Armenia over the disputed territory of Nagorno Karabach.

By helping stabilize the South Caucasus and assisting in improvements
in the region’s armed forces, officials say, the initiative contributes
to the war against terrorism.

“Terrorists are looking for areas of instability where they can play
the East-West cultural card, and the Caucasus is a region that is ripe
for that,” a senior British defense official said on the condition
of anonymity. “If we don’t turn our attention to it, they will.”

The new emphasis on the Caucasus seeks to build on recent
US initiatives in the region. From May 2002 until last month, US
soldiers trained four Georgian light-infantry battalions and a tank
company under a $64 million program called the Georgia Train and Equip
Program. The program aimed to professionalize Georgia’s armed forces
and to equip them to root out suspected terrorists linked to Al Qaeda
in the country, most notably the Pankisi Gorge region near Chechnya.

US military officials have since identified illicit weapons, narcotics,
and human-trafficking across the region’s porous frontiers as other key
security concerns. Easy access to smuggling routes empowers organized
crime groups, compromises the authority of central governments,
and destabilizes the region, the officials say.

“Who do we want running these countries, stable democratic authorities
or criminal elements?” US Army Lieutenant Colonel Albert Zaccor
said. “We’re trying to foster the kind of countries we can be
partners with.”

To help eliminate what military officials and strategists call
“ungoverned areas” in the region, the US military and its European
allies seek to help train the region’s border guards. A new American
program called the Caspian Guard Initiative also intends to help
Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan improve air, ground, and maritime security
in the Caspian Sea Basin.

Protecting the flow of oil out of the region is also a top security
concern for the United States and its allies. A major pipeline running
from Baku, Azerbaijan, through Tblisi, Georgia, to Ceyhan, Turkey,
is scheduled to be completed by the end of the year. Analysts say
the pipeline will reduce the West’s energy dependence on the Middle
East and the Persian Gulf, but could also become a potential target
for terrorists.

Longtime NATO allies like Britain, Germany, and Turkey — as well
as new alliance members Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania — are also
contributing with assistance programs in the region.

Germany is helping to train noncommissioned officers in the region,
Britain has a civilian adviser assisting the Georgian Defense Ministry
and junior officer-training programs in the region, and Turkey is
offering to help coordinate security for the oil pipeline.

The former Soviet republics of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, which
have reformed their militaries sufficiently to join NATO this year,
say they are now prepared to help Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan
do the same.

The Baltic nations are also offering to help train border guards.

Nikoloz Laliashvili, head of defense policy and NATO integration for
Georgia’s Defense Ministry, said it is his country’s “aspiration”
to follow in the footsteps of the three Baltic countries. “They have
strong experience and advice to offer,” Laliashvili said.

US and other Western officials concede privately that Georgia, Armenia,
and Azerbaijan have made uneven progress. Georgia, which tossed out
its Soviet-era leaders in favor of the pro-Western government of
Mikhail Saakashvili in a peaceful revolution in November, has shown
the most serious commitment to an overhaul, the officials say.

Earlier this month, Georgia peacefully seized control of the rebel
province of Ajaria, in the country’s southwest corner, although
Saakashvili is still struggling to bring other breakaway regions like
Abkhazia and South Ossetia under Tblisi’s control.

Other ethnic and political issues, most notably Armenia’s and
Azerbaijan’s longstanding and bitter dispute over the Nagorno Karabach
region, remain obstacles to progress.

Nevertheless, analysts say the optimism generated by Georgia’s
democratic “Rose Revolution” in November, coupled with the new Western
engagement in the region, has created a window of opportunity. “With
the rise of a new generation of politicians coming into power, the
possibilities for change are greater than ever before,” said Robert
Parsons, director of Radio Free Europe’s Georgia service.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Environmental security initiative launched in S. Caucasus

ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY INITIATIVE LAUNCHED IN SOUTHERN CAUCASUS
[May 19, 2004, 14:35:03]

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
May 19 2004

Workshops held May 10-18 in Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia.
Eliminating environmental problems helps to ease political tensions:
that is the basic idea behind a new initiative launched in the
Southern Caucasus region by the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the U.N. Environmental Program (UNEP)
and the U.N. Development Program (UNDP).

An initiative focusing on the links between environmental problems
and security was launched this week with national events in Georgia
and Azerbaijan.

Through the Environmental Security Initiative, the OSCE, the United
Nations Environmental Program (UNEP) and the UN Development Program
(UNDP) aim to identify cases in which environmental degradation
may pose threats to human security and contribute to instability,
and suggest action to deal with them.

The initiative began on 10 May in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, with
two days of consultations among government officials, non-governmental
organizations and local and international experts. They discussed
key environmental risk factors that have the potential to hamper
security in Armenia.

The workshops continued on 14 and 15 May in Tbilisi, Georgia. They
focused on the role of environmental security in economic growth and
poverty reduction in Georgia, both greatly dependent on the quality
and quantity of existing natural resources in the country.

Concluding the series, a workshop in Baku, Azerbaijan, on 17 and 18 May
focused on principal environmental concerns with security implications
in the country, including trans-boundary water pollution and freshwater
quality as well as contamination of the Caspian Sea and deforestation.

The main idea behind the Environment and Security Initiative, launched
in 2002, is that eliminating environmental problems helps to ease
political tensions. In order to achieve this, the Initiative seeks to:

Raise awareness of environmental risks and their impact on security;

Engage with government and non-government groups to identify both risks
posed by environmental change and opportunities for trans-boundary
co-operation to promote sustainable development, peace and stability;

Map risks, as well as needs and opportunities, for environmental
co-operation to improve sustainable resource management, crisis
prevention and peace promotion;

Develop and implement projects to reduce risks identified.

National consultations are considered to be a key element of the
Initiative as they generate information on specific problems that
can then be addressed through individual projects.