Armenian, Latvian leaders discuss bilateral cooperation

Public Television of Armenia
Oct 7 2005

Armenian, Latvian leaders discuss bilateral cooperation

[Presenter] Following an official welcoming ceremony for the
high-ranking guest, the Armenian and Latvian presidents, Robert
Kocharyan and Vaira Vike-Freiberga, held a face-to-face meeting at
the Armenian president’s residency this morning.

The Latvian president said that the political dialogue between the
two countries was at the highest level. After this the Armenian and
Latvian talks continued with the participation of the delegations.
The sides discussed the important directions of economic cooperation
and the opportunities for intensifying them. The presidents made a
joint statement and signed several agreements on the stimulation of
mutual investment and its protection as well as the cooperation in
the spheres of culture and the customs.

[Kocharyan] We held face-to-face and expanded meetings. We discussed
economic and political issues. I informed the Latvian president of
the Nagornyy Karabakh settlement and our approaches to the
developments in the region , including the process of integration
into the European Union. Latvia’s entrance to the EU is very
interesting for us. We are confident that Latvia will help us within
the framework of the New Neighbourhood Policy.

We discussed specific directions of Latvia’s assistance and will
probably reach an agreements on this matter late this year. I
expressed my satisfaction with the recent level of the ongoing
political dialogue between our countries. The interparliamentary
relations, meetings and mutual understanding between the two
countries are very high. I am pleased with today’s meeting and give
the floor to my Latvian counterpart.

[Vaira Vike-Freiberga, speaking in English with Armenian voice-over]
The documents, which we have signed, will allow us to expand
cooperation in several important spheres. We reached an agreement at
the meeting that several spheres of mutual interest should be chosen
in order we focus on them in our cooperation. Armenia and Latvia
should join their efforts and expand relations. We welcome
cooperation with this region within the framework of the EU
programme.

If it is impossible to hold talks with all the countries of the
region simultaneously, the EU has to hold talks with the countries
separately in order to avoid creating obstacles to the negotiations
[between the EU and the South Caucasus countries].

It is obvious that along with the regional interests, there are
disagreements in the region. The experience of the Baltic region
shows that the coincidence of interests of the neighbouring countries
can be effective for the whole region. [Video showed the meeting]

Armenian premier denies rumours of resignation if referendum fails

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 5 2005

Armenian premier denies rumours of resignation if referendum fails

Yerevan, 5 October: Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan has
denied the rumours about his possible dismissal by the president if
the referendum on constitutional amendments fails.

In an interview with journalists on 5 October, the prime minister
noted that this question was not discussed at all. He said that the
ruling coalition and the government have committed themselves to
carrying out the constitutional reforms, but there will be no
political consequences no matter if the referendum has a positive or
negative outcome.

“It is another matter that we, as political parties, are obliged to
carry out a propaganda campaign that would prompt people to say yes
to the referendum,” Andranik Markaryan stressed.

Asked about the financing of the referendum, the prime minister noted
that the Armenian Central Electoral Commission will submit an
estimate of expenses in the near future and the government will
provide relevant funding from its reserve fund.

Andranik Markaryan said that discrepancies on electoral lists
revealed during the municipal elections have a technical nature.

Beirut: Prince Claus Awards honor two Middle Eastern artists

Daily Star – Lebanon
Oct 8 2005

Prince Claus Awards honor two Middle Eastern artists
Lenin El-Ramly and Ibrahim Nabavi recognized for the political,
social and ideological satire

By Ramsay Short
Daily Star staff
Saturday, October 08, 2005

BEIRUT: For the second year in a row two artists from the Middle East
have been honored in the annual Prince Claus Awards for Culture and
Development. Egyptian comic dramatist Lenin El-Ramly and Iranian
satirist Ibrahim Nabavi will both receive $25,000 in recognition of
their work over the last 30 years, the Fund announced on Thursday.

The principal award of $100,000 goes to South African cartoonist
Jonathan Shapiro (more famously known as Zapiro) for his role in
stimulating social and cultural development in South Africa. Zapiro’s
satire in cartoon form is edgy, cutting and subtle, scrutinizing
eloquently the current social and political realities of South
Africa, the African continent and the global arena. This year the
Prince Claus Fund opted for the theme of “Humor and Satire” and not
without reason.

Around the globe writers, musicians, artists, comedians and
cartoonists are using humor and satire to critique and express their
views on the conditions in which they live, and many are virtually
unknown outside their own countries.

Last year famed Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish won the principal
award for his life’s work under the theme “The Positive Results of
Asylum and Migration,” and in what seems to be a continued theme for
the awards, an increasing number of Middle Eastern figures are
gaining recognition every year.

“The Fund is focusing on and looking for quality, and because in the
Arab world there is a lot of artistic/cultural quality, it is on that
criteria we decide to give an award,” the Fund’s media spokesperson
Christine Wagner said.

Both Ramly and Nabavi are deserved winners.

Ramly was born in Cairo in 1945 and is a man who, as a comic
dramatist, audaciously questions the social conventions, hypocrisies
and bigotries of both Egyptian society and the Arab world. His work
encompasses popular television dramas, experimental theater, and an
oeuvre of approximately 40 plays and 12 films. His dramatic
techniques vary from farce and parody to satire and the absurd.

Wagner indicated that Ramly was given the Prince Claus prize for his
emphasis on political satire and comedy, and for maintaining a
balance between popular entertainment and serious social, political
and ideological satire.

A satirist who believes his job is to unmask those who propagate
fallacies – be they politicians or clerics – Nabavi was born in1958
in Iran. He deploys his incisive wit to parody official speeches and
statements, and to undermine allegations and rationalizations.
Through his work in the Iranian press, Nabavi has single-handedly
reinstated a long tradition of political satire despite the risk of
imprisonment. In 2002 he was sentenced to 18 months in jail.

For the first time this year, recognition was also given to an
Armenian, the poplar 50-year-old actor, singer and comedian Michael
Poghosian, for using comedy and satire to stimulate the creation of
an open society and democracy in Armenia.

The Prince Claus Fund for Culture and Development was established to
mark the 70th birthday of Prince Claus of the Netherlands on
September 6, 1996, with the purpose of “expanding insight into
cultures and promoting interaction between culture and development.”

This year is the ninth year of the awards, which are chosen by a
distinguished panel of judges and former laureates.

The other honorees are Kenyan dancer and choreographer Opiyo Okach,
Brazilian archaeology professor Nide Guidon, Indonesian contemporary
puppet master Slamet Gundono, Tanzanian cultural historian
Abdel-Sheriff, Zimbabwean stand-up comic Edgar Langeveldt,
Argentinian cartoonist Joaquin Salvador Lavado (alias Quino), and
Congolese painter ChŽri Samba.

For more info on this year’s Prince Claus Awards go to

www.princeclausfund.org

Azerbaijan official again defends decision on US upgrade for radars

Top Azerbaijan official again defends decision on U.S. upgrade for radars

By AIDA SULTANOVA
.c The Associated Press

BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) – Azerbaijan on Friday defended its decision to
accept U.S. help in upgrading two Soviet-era radar installations,
saying the country had the right to guarantee its own security.

Deputy Foreign Minister Khalaf Khalafov’s comments, given during a
news conference with a top Iranian diplomat, appear to be the latest
effort by Azerbaijani officials to assuage suspicions by Iran and
Russia over the upgrade of the two radars – one near the Russian
border and the other near the border with Iran.

Khalafov said that Azerbaijan, like any country, has the right to
cooperate with any nation it wants to cooperate with.

“Every country has the right to choose how it guarantees its own
security and cooperation with other countries. And Azerbaijan will not
base its cooperation on the positions of other countries,” Khalafov
said.

“Azerbaijan’s cooperation with third countries in any sphere is not
directed against its neighbors and does not encroach on their
interests,” he said.

The U.S. ambassador to Azerbaijan said earlier that the radars would
help Azerbaijan fight contraband goods smuggling and criminal
activity, but Azerbaijani defense analysts say the U.S. will likely
use them to listen in on Iranian military activity.

Also speaking at the news conference was Mohsn Baharvand, a top
official with Iran’s Foreign Ministry.

“Iran does not object to other countries fighting terrorism, illegal
narcotics business and other types of crimes,” Baharvand said. “This
is one of those questions for which … the sides have a common
position.”

Baharvand was in Baku representing Iran at talks among the five
Caspian littoral states trying to reach final agreement on the inland
sea’s legal status.

The Caspian, which is believed to contain the world’s third largest
reserves of oil and gas, was governed by treaties between the Soviet
Union and Iran. Since the 1991 Soviet collapse, Russia, Iran,
Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan have repeatedly failed to
reach a new agreement.

Azerbaijan has stepped up its military cooperation with the United
States in recent years. It is the only predominantly Muslim country
that has contributed troops to the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq, where
about 150 Azerbaijani soldiers are serving.

The former Soviet republic, which also has contributed troops in
Afghanistan, is seeking U.S. support in modernizing its military and
resolving a territorial dispute with neighboring Armenia.

10/07/05 13:04 EDT

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Sarkisyan: Armenia/NATO Coop doesn’t hamper Coop with CSTO

Regnum, Russia
Oct 8 2005

Serzh Sarkisyan: Cooperation of Armenia and NATO doesn’t hamper
cooperation with CSTO

Armenian cooperation with NATO cannot harm in any way the cooperation
with CSTO, Armenian Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisyan said, who is
currently participating in the seminar of NATO and Armenia
`Rose-Roth’ on the topic of `The security on South Caucasus.’

The minister informed the participants that the plan of Armenian
individual partnership with NATO (IPAP) has already been sent to
different state institutions and several responses have already been
received.

The main reason for Armenia to join IPAP is to form the defense
system of the 21st century. Participation in IPAP means periodical
consultations with NATO on the issues of regional security,
development of the security system, creation of an Armenian defense
doctrine, improvement of war budget system, military education and
Special Forces coordination.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Oskanyan: participation of NK in negotiations is inevitable

Regnum, Russia
Oct 8 2005

Head of MFA of Armenia: participation of Nagorno Karabakh in
negotiations is inevitable

`The positions of Armenia and Azerbaijan on some principal issues of
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement have drawn together. We can
hope that soon it will be put on paper’, stated FA Minister of
Armenia Vardan Oskanyan.

Concerning the possibility of changing the negotiation format, from
OSCE Minsk Group to the European Council (on which the Azerbaijani
side insisted), Armenian foreign minister said that `useful’
negotiations could be everywhere. `But for full-fledged discussions
of problem settlement there is only one structure – the OSCE Minsk
Group. Azerbaijan can ask for format change; it’s the country’s
right. But it’s clear that Nagorno Karabakh conflict must be settled
in the format of the OSCE MG. It is recognized by the international
community’, stated Vardan Oskanyan, adding that we should distinguish
different place of discussion and different negotiations structures.
Then, the minister stated that `if tomorrow new format of discussion
would be chosen, we accept, but now there is no alternative to the
OSCE MG.’

Talking about the participation of Nagorno Karabakh in the
negotiations, FA Minister of Armenia said that it was inevitable.
`Once, Nagorno Karabakh will become a rightful participant of the
negotiations. Azerbaijani side also realizes this’, he noted. He also
expressed hope, that Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement would be
possible after the Azerbaijani parliamentary elections.

Relations with Turkish Cyprus to become a headache for Azerbaijan

Regnum, Russia
Oct 8 2005

Relations with Turkish Cyprus to become a headache for Azerbaijan
Read it in Russian

As Benita Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner for Foreign Affairs,
said, creating relations with Northern Cyprus will lead to
prolongation of Azerbaijani connection to `Neighborhood Policy’ of
the European Union. `EU recognizes only the independence of Republic
of Cyprus. And this country express protests against creation of
flight routes between Azerbaijan and North Cyprus, as well as other
relations between Baku and Lefkosha’, said Benita Ferrero-Waldner, as
`Svoboda’ radio station reports.

In her speech in Committee for Foreign Affairs in the European
Parliament in Brussels, Benita Ferrero-Waldner said she had informed
Azerbaijan, that if the country would not change its position, EU
would ally only with Armenia and Georgia. `We hope that Azerbaijan
will settle this problem, but it will take several weeks’, she said.

In his turn, head of MFA Information Department of Azerbaijan Tair
Tagizade said, that he had received no official information about
European cooperation under program `Neighborhood Policy.’

`Azerbaijan is ready to take steps towards the assigned plan. But
plane flights are a commercial initiative, it has nothing to do with
foreign policy of the state,’ said Tair Tagizade.

ANKARA: ‘Secret Services Used ASALA Terror as Cover’

Zaman, Turkey
Oct 8 2005

‘Secret Services Used Asala Terror as Cover’
By Ercan Gun
Published: Friday, October 07, 2005
zaman.com

It was claimed that some Turkish diplomats assassinated by the
Armenian terror organization, ASALA, were victimized due to the fight
among “secret services”.

In his last book, author Aydogan Vatandas handled the background of
the dark and secret ASALA acts. The book claims that there was a
relation between the assassinations of Turkish diplomats Bora
Suelkan, Ismail Erez and Galip Balkar.

According to the book, these assassinations were the outcomes of
spying activities during the post Cold War period. Vatandas started
his study from an official evaluation paper, which was discussed by
military sources years before it turned into a book. He worked on it
meticulously for ten years. The study will be the cover page of
Aksiyon magazine.

The book reveals how Abdullah Catli and idealist groups were
incorporated in the operations, as it highlights a new point about
the assassination of Bora Suelkan who was the administrative civil
servant in the Burgaz Embassy of Bulgaria. Vatandas divides attacks
towards Turkish diplomats as “Asala acts and Acts Committed under
ASALA’s name” and he claims that Suelkan was killed because he looked
like Mehmet Eymur.”

Eymur was an intelligence officer in Burgaz at the time. His mission
was to follow the Russian and Bulgarian activities in Bulgaria. In
the book, He leaks into the mafia there.

After a while, he understands there is the Russian Intelligence
Service (KGB) behind the pope’s assassination. Eymur makes an
interesting detection. Russians try to leak into Turkey and start a
nationalist movement via the mafia. According to Eymur, Russians try
to bring the idealists face to face with the security officials by
making provocative actions. After Eymur conveyed his analyses to the
National Intelligence Service (MIT) headquarters, trouble starts to
develop and his neighbor Suelkan, who looked like him is killed. It
claims that there is a link between Suelkan’s assassination and that
of Galip Balkar, Turkey’s ambassador to Belgrade on 9 March 1983 by
two terrorists.

Moscow mayor praises cooperation with Armenian capital

RIA Novosti, Russia
Oct 7 2005

Moscow mayor praises cooperation with Armenian capital
16:25 | 07/ 10/ 2005

YEREVAN, October 7 (RIA Novosti, Gamlet Matevosyan) – Moscow Mayor
Yuri Luzhkov said Friday that the program of cooperation between
Moscow and the Armenian capital of Yerevan is one of the largest and
most successful among similar programs with other Eurasian cities.

“We discussed the implementation of the program with Yerevan Mayor
Ervand Zakaryan and concluded that it has been successful so far,”
Luzhkov said at the opening of the Days of Moscow’s Culture in
Yerevan. “We have been closely following its progress and we are
planning to expand it.”

Moscow and Yerevan signed a medium-term agreement in December 2004 on
cooperation between 2005 and 2007, specifying the construction of a
Moscow House in Yerevan and a Yerevan House in Moscow, as well as a
range of bilateral investment projects.

Turkish discontent

Spiked, UK
Oct 7 2005

Turkish discontent
The EU debate is both anti-Turkish and anti-European.

by Bruno Waterfield

In today’s European Union (EU) the question of what it is to be a
European cannot be taken for granted. One fault line is the question
of Turkey’s EU membership. Large majorities of Europeans are opposed:
over 80 per cent in Austria, over 70 per cent in France and at least
55 per cent in Germany. Are these Europeans simply racists or
Christian bigots? Or is this discontent a skirmish in a culture war
over what makes, and who defines, a European?

Proponents of Turkish membership argue that the EU is not strictly
defined by borders or geography. Instead of shared territory, claims
EU enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn, the question is one of shared
values. ‘I am often asked where Europe’s ultimate borders lie. My
answer is that the map of Europe is defined in the min’, he said
early this year. ‘Geography sets the frame, but fundamentally it is
values that make the borders of Europe. Enlargement is a matter of
extending the zone of European values.’ But what values, and who
defines and enforces them?

Turkey isn’t joining a freewheeling, Enlightenment project of
progressives. By signing-up, Turkey is committing to an ongoing
intensive, intrusive reform process. The nameless EU officials
overseeing the ‘chapters’, the bureaucratic targets that Turkey must
make the grade on to join, will recentre the country’s political life
around the rules-based system that is the embodiment of Rehn’s
‘values’. Turkey – like the countries that went before it – will be
required to embrace sweeping reform, change that will not come from
below but from above, imposed by administrators.

This is bureaucratic decision-making by committees of EU and national
officials: governance without government, perpetual administration
and political process without any of the interruptions of democratic
accountability. Sadly, joining the EU’s bureaucratic network is as
appealing to Turkey’s elite as it is to the rest of Europe’s
political classes. Turkey’s rulers have long run scared of argument
and change driven by the majority of Turks. The criminal offence of
‘openly denigrating the Turkish identity’ is an indication of a
ruling class as frail in its self-belief as the EU elites who today
outlaw free speech for Muslim clerics.

What will change with Turkey’s EU membership will be the
administrative mechanisms. As Europeans know too well, the EU’s
tick-box world of human rights rules is no guarantor of freedom.
Becoming ‘European’ for Turkey will mean embracing a EU world where
everything is tolerated – except intolerance. Turkey will lose the
old authoritarian taboos, such as prohibition on discussion of the
role of the military or the Armenian genocide – but these will be
replaced by the new taboos of modern Western society.

A burgeoning bureaucracy of unelected administrators and officials
will step into the military’s shoes. Turks will soon be able to talk
about the Armenian genocide – no more prosecutions for famous writers
like Orthan Pamuk. In fact, recognition of the historical event is
set to be a compulsory requirement for Turkey’s EU membership, and EU
hate crime laws can no doubt be cited to ensure compliance. Europe’s
culture wars will spill over into Turkey, as Turks are asked to
abandon the past and embrace EU codes of conduct.

Decades ago, NATO members in Europe overlooked Turkey’s military
dictatorships and human rights abuses with the aim of cementing a
Cold War alliance against the Soviet Union. Today, all EU member
governments – even Austria – see Turkey as a bridge between East and
West. And in these post-11 September, 11 March or 7 July days, Turkey
is regarded as a crucial bulwark against terrorism. Cultural
difference and the prospect of a ‘clash of civilisations’ is regarded
as a clear and present danger.

‘Turkey can be a bridge between Europe and the Islamic world. The
world of the twenty-first century is not doomed to a clash of
civilisations, but can be built on dialogue, cooperation and
integration’, Rehn wrote in December 2004. The premise of this view
is that Turkey must join or there will be more terrorism. This scare
story is typically EU in terms of seeking to mobilise irrational
fear. The entirely negative content of such arguments is both
anti-European and anti-Turkish, in the sense of appealing to backward
prejudices rather than a common humanity. This argument can only fuel
mistrust between Europeans and Turks, who are stripped of a proud
secular history to become Muslims.

During grumpy debates last week, European Parliament Socialist leader
Martin Schulz attacked Hans-Gert Poettering after the Christian
Democrat criticised EU ‘double standards’ that ruled Turkey in but
ruled out (at that time) Croatia. ‘Everyone shut their eyes on the
human rights issue in Turkey while Croatia was to be refused the
start of negotiations because a single general – one who was plainly
not even in Croatia – had not yet been delivered up to the Hague war
crimes tribunal’, he said. Schulz retorted that: ‘You don’t want to
have Turkey because it is Islamic and far away. Croatia is closer and
is Catholic. That is the truth of your message. Let us not beat about
the bush. We must apply the same standards to all countries.’

Many Europeans are turned off by EU elites setting down new rules
of life and politics

Schulz may well have a point here about Poettering. But religious
bigotry does not explain why such huge majorities, in France for
example, are against Turkey’s EU entry. In fact, a Marshall Fund
opinion survey last month showed that 59 per cent of Europeans do not
think Turkey’s ‘Muslim’ status is a reason against EU membership. The
religion issue, upholding a Christian Europe in opposition to the
Islamic East, in the style of the 1683 Siege of Vienna, is irrelevant
to most Europeans. Most Europeans are secular and turned off from the
Catholic Church or organised Christianity. In fact, it is the EU
elites who bring up religion as an argument, to avoid a ‘clash of
civilisations’, and to tutor Europeans (as well as Turks) in the joys
of ‘inter-cultural dialogue’.

By 2008, Turkey will be moiled in membership negotiations and the EU
will be entering a ‘European year of intercultural dialogue’. The
premise of the therapeutic theme is the inability of Europeans, and
Turks, to deal with the modern world. Launching the event this week,
EU culture commissioner Jan Figel explained that Europe’s citizens
were just not up to it. ‘Over the past few years, Europe has seen
major changes resulting from successive enlargements of the EU,
greater mobility in the single market, and increased travel to and
trade with the rest of the world’, he said. ‘This has resulted in
interaction between Europeans and the different cultures, languages,
ethnic groups and religions on the continent and elsewhere. Dialogue
between cultures would therefore appear to be an essential tool in
forging closer links both between European peoples themselves and
between their respective cultures.’

Commission documents claim the ‘real challenge is to move from a
“multicultural” society to an “inter-cultural” one’. But the message
is clear: the problem is interaction between Europeans. ‘It is
essential to ensure that [the] diversity [of an enlarged EU] becomes
a source of richness rather than a source of confrontation… the
peoples of the EU are increasingly made up of a mosaic of cultures,
languages, traditions, origins and religions. The social fabric of
the EU is threatened by rampant racism and xenophobia…. One is afraid
of what one does not know. In this context, it is essential to
promote dialogue between religious and ethnic communities’, states a
Brussels work document.

For Europe’s elites and bureaucrats, those who are opposed to Turkish
entry are mired in backward-looking national or religious communities
that must be ditched in today’s globalised world. Turks and Europeans
who exhibit reservations about the EU will be enlisted in the
‘intercultural’ game. ‘We should get to know Turkey better and Turkey
should… get to know European values better. The commission is
preparing proposals on how we can promote the dialogue, bringing
people together from EU member states and Turkey’, Rehn said
recently. This shows the isolated bureaucratic process that estranges
EU elites from Europeans.

Opposition to Turkish EU membership in Austria, France, Germany and
elsewhere is far wider than isolated groups of racists or chauvinist
rumps. Many Europeans are turned off by EU elites setting down new
rules of life and politics.

EU ideologues Ulrich Beck and Anthony Giddens are sniffy about what
they see as ‘an emotional return to the apparent safe haven of the
nation’. In the new world of globalisation, they argue, nations are
enhanced by international networks. ‘Let us start to think of the EU
not as an ‘unfinished nation’ or an ‘incomplete federal state’, but
instead as a new type of cosmopolitan project’, they wrote in the UK
Guardian on 4 October. But the ‘cosmopolitanism’ of Beck or Giddens,
or the EU elite, is empty. Cosmopolitanism cannot be built on nothing
more than isolated bureaucratic castes. Elites that themselves share
little more than their contempt for Europeans.

The idea of ‘intercultural dialogue’, which fears the interaction of
Europeans new and old, shows up elites’ pseudo-cosmopolitanism. All
the EU elites actually share are the prejudiced assumptions of a
minority pitted against the majority – and only those who sign up to
this debased worldview may join the club. The real dynamic behind the
row over EU membership is nothing to with Turkey or Europe as such,
but is the issue of how European identities should be ordered.
Europeans should oppose all attempts to bureaucratically impose the
dead ‘cosmopolitanism’ of the EU elites.

Bruno Waterfield is editor of the Brussels-based website Eupolitix
and Parliament magazine.

http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/0000000CADA0.htm