BAKU: Azerbaijani And Armenian Presidents Due To Meet On June 10

AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS DUE TO MEET ON JUNE 10

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 27 2007

Next round of negotiations between Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents
for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict will be held on
June 10, 2007 in St. Petersburg, Russia, Armenian President Robert
Kocharian announced the date and place of negotiations in a meeting
with students of Yerevan State University, APA reports.

"The Minsk Group co-chairs are arranging the meeting at present. The
meeting will likely be held on June 10 in St. Petersburg. The stage
of the process of settlement will be clarified after the meeting. The
latest talks of the Foreign Ministers proceeded in a calm atmosphere
and this gave ground for optimistic statements. But I am not very
optimistic," Kocharian said.

Economic summit will be held on June 8-10 in
St. Petersburg. Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents are expected
to attend the summit. The presidents will have meeting during the
summit.

BAKU: Andrzej Kasprzyk: Repatriation Of Captured Azerbaijani Soldier

ANDRZEJ KASPRZYK: REPATRIATION OF CAPTURED AZERBAIJANI SOLDIER WILL DEPEND ON HIS WILL

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 27 2007

"Repatriation of captured Azerbaijani soldier Samir Mammadov will
depend on his will," said Andrzej Kasprzyk, Personal Representative
of OSCE Chairman-in-Office who is participating in the monitoring of
the contact line of Azerbaijani and Armenian troops, in the village
of Tapgaragoyunlu of Goranboy region, APA Karabakh bureau reports.

He said there are no new proposals regarding the solution of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

Kasprzyk considers that the issue can be clarified after the meeting
of the Presidents [Azerbaijani and Armenian].

Azerbaijani soldier was captured by Armenian armed forces in December,
2007.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Jailing Of Azeri Editor Sparks International Outcry

JAILING OF AZERI EDITOR SPARKS INTERNATIONAL OUTCRY
By Shahin Rzayev and Elshad Guliev in Baku

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
April 27 2007

OSCE hits out at authorities after opposition editor handed jail
sentence.

The jailing of an outspoken newspaper editor last week has provoked
strong international criticism of the government’s record on freedom
of speech.

Einulla Fatullayev, founder and senior editor of two leading newspapers
in Azerbaijan, was sentenced to two and a half years in prison,
after being found guilty of libel on April 20.

He was ruled to have insulted Azerbaijani refugees from the Karabakh
town of Khojaly in an article published in April 2005 in Realny
Azerbaijan, the weekly newspaper he founded.

No action was taken when the article first came out, but in January
this year Fatullayev reiterated what he had said in an interview to
an Azerbaijani online forum.

He was sued by the leader of the Centre for the Protection of Rights
of Refugees and Displaced Persons Tatyana Chaladze, on behalf of the
Khojaly residents. On April 6, a court ordered Fatullayev and his
newspapers to pay a fine of 20,000 manats (23,000 US dollars).

Fatullayev was accused of having said in his article that Azerbaijan’s
authorities and armed forces had deliberately failed to support the
defenders of Khojaly at a crucial point in the siege of the town in
February 1992.

He said his allegation was based on numerous interviews and videos
given to him by Khojaly residents themselves. The prosecution demanded
that Fatullayev produce the evidence, however he refused to do so,
whereupon the court pronounced him guilty.

Chaladze then pursued the case further and demanded that Fatullayev be
charged with libel under article 147 of the criminal code. On April
20, the court pronounced him guilty and the editor was given a jail
sentence and taken into custody straight from the courtroom.

Fatullayev’s arrest outraged his colleagues. On April 24, around
60 journalists defied a ban to rally in the centre of Baku under
the slogans "Freedom to Einulla Fatullayev!" and "Stop suppressing
freedom of speech in Azerbaijan!" The police broke up the protest
within 20 minutes, but no one was hurt.

A Committee for Protection of the Rights of Einulla Fatullayev has been
set up, headed by Arzu Abdullayeva, a famous human rights activist
and chairperson of the National Committee of the Helsinki Citizens’
Assembly.

One member of the committee Hikmet Hajizade, a well-known political
analyst and former Azerbaijani ambassador in Moscow, said, "I still
cannot believe what has happened. It’s a nightmare, I want to wake
up from it but I can’t. I protest against this incident and call on
all democratic forces in the country to protest against the arrest
of Einulla Fatullayev."

A recent visitor to Fatullayev in prison said he had no complaints
about the conditions in which he was being held, but was angry about
the trial and sentence and believed he was the victim of a political
decision.

As if to confirm that the newspaper as a whole was under attack,
on the same evening as Fatullayev was sentenced the deputy editor of
the newspaper Uzeir Jafarov, was attacked by three unknown assailants.

Jafarov was hospitalised with multiple injuries. He said that he
believed he had been attacked because of the testimony he gave in
court and that he recognised one of his attackers from the courtroom.

The theme of Khojaly – the worst massacre of the Karabakh war – is an
extremely painful one in Azerbaijan and Fatullayev has been widely
criticised in some quarters for his article and also for traveling
to Nagorny Karabakh, which is under Armenian control.

Opposition journalist and veteran of the Karabakh war, Rei Kerimoglu,
said the verdict passed on Fatullayev was too light. "Einulla should
have been sentenced to at least ten years’ imprisonment and it would
be even better, if he died in the prison," he told IWPR.

But another deputy editor of the imprisoned man Chingiz Sultansoi said
the authorities had cynically used the Khojaly refugees’ lawsuit as
a pretext. "We openly criticised facts of corruption, human rights
violations and problems in the army," he said. "The authorities
repeatedly tried to intimidate us. We even had to stop publishing
our newspaper in November because of many threats we’d received."

Sultansoi said the newspapers would be coming out despite the arrest.

"We will keep on fulfilling our mission and delivering truthful
information to Azerbaijani readers," he said.

Fatullayev’s newspapers, Realny Azerbaijan and Gundelike Azerbaijan,
are leading critics of the government. Realny Azerbaijan is frequently
linked to a power struggle within the ruling elite, as it is frequently
associated with Minister of Emergencies Kemaleddin Geidarov and the
parliamentary deputy Husein Abdullayev who was recently arrested in
controversial circumstances.

Opposition political analyst Zardusht Alizade said that the
imprisonment of the editor was part of this ongoing feud. "Ahead of
the presidential elections of 2008 and the forthcoming division of
the huge oil revenues coming into the country, the ruling elite is
trying to remove or subdue all possible rivals," said Alizade.

By chance, the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s
Representative on Freedom of the Media Miklos Haraszti was visiting
Azerbaijan last week. He was sharply critical of the government’s
record on freedom of speech, calling Azerbaijan "the champion in the
number of cases against journalists".

"Freedom of the press in Azerbaijan has been under an increasing
pressure from the authorities," said Haraszti. "Alongside Fatullayev,
there are already five representatives of Azerbaijan’s press being
held in custody. Unfortunately, all the cases are constructed on
politically motivated accusations and were conducted in violation of
the principles of freedom of speech."

Haraszit said the OSCE would insist that Azerbaijan remove from
its criminal code the articles making the expression of opinions a
potential criminal offence and would recommend that the country adopt
a law on defamation as soon as possible.

Government officials have mostly avoided commenting on the imprisonment
of Fatullayev and the attack on his deputy. Ali Hasanov, a leading
official in the presidential administration, said some prosecuted
journalists had only themselves to blame. "We should try to ensure
that journalists take into consideration rights of citizens and people
are patient about what is published," he said.

Hasanov said it was possible that all five detained journalists might
be freed and this would happen within the law.

Azerbaijani human rights activists have declared Fatullayev a political
prisoner and say they are ready to pursue his case all the way to the
European Court of Human Rights. His lawyers are preparing an appeal.

Shahin Rzayev is IWPR’s Azerbaijan Country Director. Elshad Guliev
is a freelance journalist working in Baku.

No Violations Fixed In The Course Of The Planned Monitoring Of NKR A

NO VIOLATIONS FIXED IN THE COURSE OF THE PLANNED MONITORING OF NKR AND AZERI ARMED FORCES’ CONTACT LINE

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 27 2007

Today OSCE mission held planned monitoring of the Nagorno-Karabagh
and Azeri Armed Forces’ contact line to the north of the settlement
of Talysh of the Nagorno-Karabagh Republic Martakert region.

According to the information DE FACTO received at the NKR MFA Press
Office, the monitoring passed according to the schedule. No cease-fire
violations were fixed.

>From the Azeri party the observation group was headed by the OSCE
Chair-in-Office’s Personal Representative Andrzey Kasprzyk.

RA And AR Presidents’ Meeting To Be Held In Saint Petersburg June 10

RA AND AR PRESIDENTS’ MEETING TO BE HELD IN SAINT PETERSBURG JUNE 10

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 27 2007

June 10 RA and AR Presidents’ meeting is planned to be held in Saint
Petersburg, Robert Kocharian stated at a meeting with the students
of the Yerevan State University.

He noted he was not very optimistic about the meeting. "The Ministers’
latest meeting proceeded in a calmer atmosphere than the previous
one, which gave ground for optimistic statements," RA President said,
PanARMENIAN.Net reports.

Insurance Plans Leave Costly Gap For Homeowners

INSURANCE PLANS LEAVE COSTLY GAP FOR HOMEOWNERS
By Joseph Ax – Staff Writer

The Record, NJ
April 27 2007

Some North Jersey homeowners cleaning up in the wake of this month’s
powerful nor’easter are discovering that they have an "insurance gap,"
with neither their flood insurance nor homeowner’s policy covering
the loss of furniture, electronics and other personal property.

Without insurance compensation, they will have to hope for at
least some relief from the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
which will provide grants to affected families after President Bush
approved emergency aid for six New Jersey counties, including Bergen
and Passaic.

Karina Kocharyan of New Milford left behind a wealth of expensive
belongings when she was evacuated as floodwaters encroached upon her
house. They included Persian rugs worth up to $30,000, antique books
and the pricey broadcasting equipment she uses as a journalist for
an Armenian television station.

Her flood insurance will pay for structural damage, but her homeowner’s
policy does not cover flood-related damage — she is solely responsible
for her ruined property.

"I didn’t know," said Kocharyan, whose home filled with several feet
of muddy water after the Hackensack River overran its banks.

Kocharyan and other homeowners and renters may apply for FEMA aid for
losses that are not covered by insurance. But most personal property
that is not considered essential, such as a second television, is not
eligible for FEMA grants. The federal Small Business Administration
provides low-interest loans to cover other losses.

Flood insurance is provided by FEMA, though it is sold through private
insurance companies. Most homeowners can purchase contents insurance
in addition to regular flood insurance, which only covers damage to
the structure of the building as well as basic basement appliances
such as boilers. The limit for building coverage is $250,000; the
contents limit is $100,000. Homeowner’s policies do not cover floods.

Sometimes it takes a flood to magnify the fine print on insurance
policies for homeowners. Some residents who had heavy losses during
Tropical Storm Floyd in 1999 learned their lesson and bought contents
coverage.

Haydee Mateosian, for example, who lives across the street from
Kocharyan, said she had no contents coverage when Floyd deposited more
than 4 feet of water in her living room. She received only $3,500 from
FEMA and has since paid almost $1,000 extra in insurance premiums a
year to protect the contents of her house — an investment that paid
off last week when her home was again inundated by river water.

Exactly what damages are covered in insurance policies is sometimes
unclear, some residents said. Sedgwick Rodgers, a New Milford resident
whose home sustained extensive losses, said State Farm assured him
when he moved in two years ago that he didn’t need to buy contents
insurance because his homeowner’s policy covered it. Now, he says,
they’ve told him they won’t cover his losses.

"I’m very upset," he said. "I’m going to have to pursue this. It
was misinformation."

A State Farm spokeswoman said the company’s agents explain policies
to homeowners at the time of purchase and that homeowners receive
a copy of their policy and a booklet explaining coverage both after
purchase and at the time of renewal.

Arun Sajnani moved to Fair Lawn a few months ago and says he never
imagined his home could flood. The water in his basement broke his
boiler and sump pump, destroyed some electronic equipment and trashed
his wife’s traditional Indian clothing.

He called his insurance company, Allstate, but was told his policy
won’t pay for repairs or replacements.

"You don’t really get a chance when you’re moving" to spend a lot
of time on insurance policies, he said when asked whether he had
been aware that his policy would not cover flood damage. He was not
required to get flood insurance when he moved, because the home is
not in a high-risk flood zone.

Jamie Willis, an Oakland resident, said her mortgage company required
her to get flood insurance. That was a blessing, as it turns out,
since she’s now filing her third flood claim in the last few years.

Even the most comprehensive policies may not cover everything. Willis
said one of her neighbors watched the floodwaters wash away her
driveway, a cost that she said won’t be covered.

Photo: Karina Kocharyan on the first floor of her New Milford home on
Thursday. Several rugs and some electronic equipment in her basement
were damaged by the flood.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia’s Artistic Bridge From East To West

ARMENIA’S ARTISTIC BRIDGE FROM EAST TO WEST
By Souren Melikian

International Herald Tribune, France
April 27 2007

PARIS: It is not easy to display the art of a major culture left in
tatters by organized physical destruction over centuries that reduced
its territory to a tiny fraction of its historical dimension. What
mostly survives is the art of religion, the hard-core to which the
persecuted cling and carry away if portable. Otherwise it is fragments
collected from ruins. Hence the title of the Armenian art show on
view at the Louvre until May 21 – "Armenia Sacra."

The exhibition book is as much about history as about art, a necessity
when introducing a culture known to few other than specialists.

It might have been worth mentioning that Armenia had a very long past
when King Tiridate made it the first country where Christianity was
declared the state religion around 313, when Byzantium only made its
worship permissible.

The origins of Armenia are steeped in mystery. How the Armenians,
whose language is Indo-European, substituted themselves for the
non-Indo-European inhabitants of the preceding kingdom of Urartu
around the 7th century B.C. is unexplained. If there was a fusion of
two groups, history says nothing about it.

Armenia was included in the empire founded by the Persian Achaemenid
dynasty in the mid-6th century B.C. and from the beginning had close
links to Iranian culture while maintaining an utterly different
identity. Some magnificent silver wine horns in Achaemenid style,
excavated in Armenia after World War II, are usually described as
Iranian and yet they can be seen at a glance to be aesthetically
different from the vessels excavated in Iran. This Iranian connection
persisted through time. Linguists say that well over a third of words
in the Armenian vocabulary today are of Iranian origin, ranging from
Parthian Pahlavi of the late 2nd or 1st century B.C. to present-day
Persian.

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The other part of the world to which Armenia had ties was the Roman
Empire – the land was split again and again between Iran and Rome,
later replaced in the East by the Byzantine Empire.

This twin connection with East and West remained perceptible throughout
Armenian history.

It was the case with the first art spawned by the advent of
Christianity of which the earliest surviving fragments do not predate
the 5th century A.D. However disparate these look stylistically, they
mostly share a monumental quality and an austere gravity maintained
even when startling irony creeps in. Figural art, sometimes rough,
invariably explodes with vigor. On one capital of starkly geometrical
shape from Dvin, a Virgin and Child carved in low relief stare
hypnotically at the viewer. It has a Romanesque feel to it but is
not later than the 5th or 6th century A.D.

The stem of a stone cross also from Dvin is topped by the head of
Jesus in a style strangely reminiscent of the human masks found in
early 1st millennium B.C. bronzes from Luristan, in western Iran.

This aesthetic diversity was maintained into the 7th century A.D. if
the datings suggested by art historians are right. Sacred art and
irony continued to be paradoxically associated. In a roundel carved
in sunken relief, Jesus ascends into heaven, standing in a mandorla
held up by two angels while worshippers below raise their hands in
prayer. All have incongruous goggle eyes – again these call to mind the
art of Luristan with its funny human heads topping bronze ensigns. No
archaeological context throws light on this intriguing sculpture.

But even a documented context does not necessarily resolve enigmas.

On a huge stone capital nearly two meters, or six and a half feet,
long recovered from the church at Zvartnots, an eagle spreads its
wings horizontally. This is a distant offshoot of Roman iconography,
with some input from Sasanian Iran. Its meaning in a church remains
open to speculation.

Iranian reminiscences kept surfacing in early Armenian art as they
do in two 6th or 7th century folios inside a 10th century Gospel from
Echmiadzin. Syria, inspired the triangular tops flanking the rounded
arch of a niche, but the outfits of the Magi are borrowed from late
Sasanian conventions, as the art historian Andre Grabar noted long ago.

Riddles continue to stake out the evolution of Armenian art well into
the 9th century. Wooden capitals from a church at Sevan, which were
published long ago, induced one of the contributors to the exhibition
book, Yvetta Mkrichian, to characterize their shape as "singular."

They actually relate to models found later in the domestic
architecture of Iranian Central Asia. The carved pattern draws
its motifs from the repertoire of contemporary Iran and transforms
them aesthetically. Again one wonders what meaning these had in the
context of an Armenian church. One of them, hitherto unrecognized,
reproduces the eagle wings of the Sasanian royal headdress as seen
by artists from Islamic Iran. The key to such riddles surely lies in
Armenian and Persian literature.

One of the great masterpieces in the exhibition, the A.D. 1134 wooden
doors and their frame removed from the Monastery at Mush (pronounced
"moosh") shows that the link with Iranian art kept being renewed
at intervals. The commentator in the exhibition book appears to be
unaware that the figural scenes featuring two jousting horsemen and two
other mounted heroes on the lintel deal with Iranian literary themes,
as do the two rounds of animals carved on each side. The geometrical
patterns in the main areas could again be seen as part of an Iranian
rather than Arab influence.

Aesthetically, the transformation is as obvious as the consummate
mastery. This is a masterpiece in isolation that bears witness to an
otherwise vanished school of architectural woodwork.

The confidence with which Armenian artists, from stone or wood
carvers to painters and goldsmiths, borrowed from the outside world
and recast the loans on their own terms is a feature shared by all
powerful cultures from Iran to India to China. What makes Armenia
astonishing is its eclecticism and its aptitude at welding together
seemingly incompatible components.

A striking case is offered by the incorporation of formal Islamic
patterns into Christian art. The early 13th-century cornice of one
of those tall stelae with crosses carved in sunken relief known as
"khachkar" is carved in the center with the figure of Jesus enthroned
under a polylobed arch. On the book that Jesus holds open on his
lap, the verse from John: 8.12 reads in its Armenian version:
"I am the Light of the World." On either side, dazzling patterns
of swirling scrolls have a rhythm and a complexity that makes them
utterly different from those of Iran to the east or of the Arab areas
of Iraq to the south.

This aptitude at creating afresh, however hybrid the mix, comes
out most astonishingly in the manuscripts copied and illuminated in
Cilicia along the Mediterranean shore of present-day Turkey.

A Franco-Armenian kingdom came into existence in the area following the
wedding in the late 11th century of a French nobleman and an Armenian
princess. By the 12th century it had a large population of Armenians
driven away from their homeland by incessant warfare. For a century
and a half or so, Cilicia became a second Armenia, leaving astonishing
castles and ramparts that still stand at Yilankale or Anavarza and
giving birth to an art of the book that blends Byzantine iconography,
the color scheme of French medieval manuscripts and formal ornament
from Islamic Iran.

A lectionary copied in 1286, perhaps in the town of Sis, offers a
remarkable example of this blending of artistic syncretism.

Cilicia thus became the first true meeting ground of East and West,
relatively immune from the violent antagonism that characterized it
in Sicily and Spain. The Cilician experience probably paved the way
to the easy transition that some Armenians made to the West, creating
an even more hybrid art of the book in places such as Perugia in Italy.

Cilician art also traveled back East. It left its imprint on the
Gospel illuminated in 1323 at Glajor in the Siunik Province to the
northwest of Iran. But the painter, Toros of Taron, owes to Syrian
book painting from the time the baroque rockery and plants – which
the exhibition book does not say.

Internationalism began centuries ago and few practiced it with greater
alacrity in art than the Armenians.

/arts/melik28.php

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/04/27

Armenia To Launch Construction On New NPP In 2012-2013 – Kocharian

ARMENIA TO LAUNCH CONSTRUCTION ON NEW NPP IN 2012-2013 – KOCHARIAN

Interfax, Russia
April 27 2007

YEREVAN. April 27 – Armenia will either launch construction on a new
nuclear power plant in 2012-2013 or modernize its existing plant,
Armenian President Robert Kocharian said.

"We are currently carrying out serious expert work and I can say for
sure that either practical work on the construction of a new nuclear
power plant will begin in Armenia in 2012-2013, or upgrades will be
made to the existing nuclear power plant," he said on Friday at a
meeting at Yerevan State University.

Kocharian said experts are currently considering two key issues: how
much it would cost to build a new nuclear power plant that complies
with all the newest technologies and what changes in electricity prices
would occur as a result. "Certainly, ordinary citizens shouldn’t
suffer, but at the same time it’s clear that Armenia should have
nuclear energy," he said. Armenia has one nuclear power plant, which
has been transferred to Russian management. The plant’s service life
expires in 2016.

BAKU: Russian Politician Assesses Repeat Changes To Department Of St

RUSSIAN POLITICIAN ASSESSES REPEAT CHANGES TO DEPARTMENT OF STATE’S REPORT AS SUCCESS OF AZERBAIJAN DIPLOMACY

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
April 27 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / corr. Trend A.Gasimova / Russian politician, Head
of the Political and Economic Department of Kommersant newspaper,
Azer Mursaliyev, considers that making changes to the report of the
US Department of State on Human Rights is a success of the Azerbaijani
diplomacy.

On 6 March the Department of State published a report regarding
situation of human rights. The report reflected the fact of occupation
of the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding
Azerbaijani territories by Armenia. On 20 April changes were made
to the provision reflecting the occupation fact. Due to it, the
Azerbaijani Government had postponed a visit of the Azerbaijani
delegation to Washington for bilateral security talks, scheduled for
April 23-24. On 25 April the Department of State restored the initial
variant of the report.

Mursaliyev said that Washington was not expecting such a reaction by
Azerbaijan to the changes by the Department of State. "The situation
and relations with Azerbaijan would be even without this success,
but Armenia needed to satisfy and actively attract them due to the
forthcoming parliamentary elections in the country. And 20 April
changes were trial gesture to Armenia. The logic is clear here. Now
Armenia does not hope for anywhere, but Azerbaijan needs to satisfy,"
Mursaliyev said, adding that the Department of State achieved it with
its changes on 25 April.

BAKU: Azerbaijani And Armenian Presidents Likely To View Ways Of Res

AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS LIKELY TO VIEW WAYS OF RESOLUTION OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICTS IN ST. PETERSBURG

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
April 27 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku/ Trend , corr. E. Huseynov/ Yuriy Merzlyakov, the
OSCE Minsk Group Russian Co-Chairman, has told Trend by the telephone
that the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia, Ilham Aliyev and Robert
Kocharian, are likely to a next round of negotiations on peaceful
resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue in St. Petersburg on June,
10, 2007.

The non-formal summit of CIS Member-States is expected to be held in
the Russian Northern capital of Saint-Petersburg on June 10, 2007.

According to Mr. Merzlyakov, the OSCE mediators have proposed the both
disputing parties to hold a meeting between the both Presidents just
this day, since it will be the first opportunity to hold a meeting
between the two leaders of the conflict countries after Armenia
holds its parliamentary elections in May, 2007. "It is very rarely
when so many leaders of different states can be gathered. This is
the first opportunity for it," said the diplomat by adding that the
Azerbaijani party has not officially confirmed its readiness to meet
in St. Petersburg on June 10. According to the Russian Co-Chairman,
the statement being made by the Armenian President today can be viewed
as the consent of the Armenian party to hold such a meeting.

At the same time, he added that another possibility for holding a
meeting between the Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders would be the
forthcoming summit of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation, which was
appointed to the end of June, 2007.

Armenia has occupied 20% of the Azerbaijani lands including
Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven Districts of the country surrounding
it. Since 1992 to the present time, these territories have been
under the occupation of the Armenian Forces. In 1994, Azerbaijan
and Armenia signed a cease-fire agreement at which time the active
hostilities ended. Since then, the co-chairs of the OSCE have been
holding peaceful negotiations. The final meeting of the Presidents
of Azerbaijan and Armenia took place at the end of October in Minsk.