ANKARA: Matthew Bryza To Gather Azerbaijan And Armenia

MATTHEW BRYZA TO GATHER AZERBAIJAN AND ARMENIA
Shamkhal Abilov

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Dec 5 2008
Turkey

On December 2, OSCE Minsk Group’s US co-chair Matthew Bryza talk to
Trend News agency that, "the focus of discussion in Helsinki will be
the effort if OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries, Azerbaijan and
Armenia to finalize the basic principles, which define a framework
for a comprehensive settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

Following this on December 3, Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Elmar
Mammadyarov and Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan met in
Helsinki, Finland, on the basis of the Madrid principles. OSCE Minsk
Group co-chairs Matthew Bryza (U.S.), Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia) and
Bernard Fassier (France) also attended the meeting.

The co-chairs first met with Armenian minister and later Azeri minister
joined them.

The parties stressed importance of preserving the positive spirit,
formed in the result of constructive meetings of the presidents
of Armenia and Azerbaijan, held in June in Saint-Petersburg and in
November in Moscow.

The meeting was held behind close door and no any information was
released to media after the meeting.

ANKARA: Turkish FM Says Azeri, Armenian Sides Has Political Will For

TURKISH FM SAYS AZERI, ARMENIAN SIDES HAS POLITICAL WILL FOR SOLUTION

Dec 5 2008
Turkey

Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said Friday talks between Turkey
and Armenia as well as Azerbaijan and Armenia were going well.

"I can say that things are going well both in the process between
Azerbaijan and Armenia as well as between Turkey and Armenia and
I hope that the talks would yield the desired result, which is the
total normalization of relations," Babacan told reporters in Helsinki
where he participated the 16th Ministerial Council Meeting of the
Organization for the Security and Cooperation in Europe.

Babacan said the Upper Karabakh problem was a complicated issue with
many levels, but added that both Azeri and Armenian presidents had
the political will to find a solution.

The Turkish foreign minister said the U.S., Russia and France also
extended support for the process between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"I have told all parts that they should not miss the opportunity for
a solution, and I hope these efforts will yield result to help create
a new atmosphere of peace, stability and security in the Caucasus,"
Babacan said.

www.worldbulletin.net

BAKU: Azerbaijan Issues Written Statement Reflecting Principles On R

AZERBAIJAN ISSUES WRITTEN STATEMENT REFLECTING PRINCIPLES ON REGULATION OF NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT IN OSCE MINISTERIAL COUNCIL

Azeri Press Agency
Dec 5 2008
Azerbaijan

Helsinki. Tamara Grigoryeva-APA. Delegation of Azerbaijan attending
the meeting of the OSCE Ministerial Council in Helsinki has issued
written statement reflecting Azerbaijan’s Principles applicable to the
peaceful settlement of the conflict in and around the Nagorno-Karabakh
region of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

APA correspondent in Helsinki reports that the document reads
Azerbaijan is committed to solving the conflict by political means
and in a constructive manner. But Azerbaijan will never compromise its
territorial integrity and thus accept a fait-accompli based solution,
which the Armenian side is trying to impose.

The conflict can only be solved on the basis of respect
for the territorial integrity and inviolability of the
internationally-recognized borders of Azerbaijan, and peaceful
coexistence of Armenian and Azerbaijani communities in the
Nagorno-Karabakh region within Azerbaijan, fully and equally enjoying
the benefits of democracy and prosperity.

The ultimate objective of the settlement process is to elaborate
and define the model and legal frameworks of the status of the
Nagorno-Karabakh region within Azerbaijan. The process of definition
of any status shall take place in normal peaceful conditions with
direct, full and equal participation of the entire population of the
region, namely, the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities, and in their
constructive interaction with the Government of Azerbaijan exclusively
in the framework of a lawful and democratic process. Attempts to
define the status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in a situation of
continued occupation of the region and surrounding territories, and
forced displacement of Azerbaijani population are incompatible with
universal and European values and contradict the principles and ideas
of peace, democracy, stability and regional cooperation. Such attempts
seek to legitimize the results of ethnic cleansing and impose a fait
accompli situation on Azerbaijan.

A number of important steps have to be taken to reach a stage where
the parties concerned can start negotiating a self-rule status for
the Nagorno-Karabakh region within Azerbaijan:

â~@¢ The factor of military occupation must be removed from the
conflict settlement context.

Armenia has to withdraw completely from all occupied territories of
Azerbaijan. Delay of return of the territories can complicate the
already difficult settlement process.

â~@¢ IDPs should return in safety and dignity to their places of
origin in the Nagorno- Karabakh region and adjacent territories.

â~@¢ Special programs on reconciliation and tolerance should be
initiated with a view to foster cooperation between the two communities
in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

â~@¢ All communications in the region shall be opened for mutual use.

â~@¢ Upon release of the territories of Azerbaijan from the occupation
the rehabilitation and economic development of the region shall
take place.

–Boundary_(ID_xWQxZGP0ypIwkWedjB6w6A)–

ANKARA: Turkey, Armenia Presented With Peace Award

TURKEY, ARMENIA PRESENTED WITH PEACE AWARD

Dec 5 2008
Turkey

The Peace and Sport Organization aims to use sport to educate
individuals and communities across the world about peace.

Turkey and Armenia have been presented with "Peace and Sport Image
of the Year Award" by Monaco-based Peace and Sport Organization
(Organisation pour la Paix et le Spo Sport).

The organization said in a statement posted in its web-site, "this
distinction for the best image of fraternization through sport
was awarded for a photograph of the historic handshake between the
President of the Republic of Turkey Abdullah Gul and the President of
Armenia, Serge Sarkissian, during the qualifying match for the Football
World Cup between Turkey and Armenia. Thanks to football, this moment
marked the end of nearly two decades of diplomatic silence."

Mahmut Ozgener, president of the Turkish Football Federation,received
the award on behalf of President Gul from Prince Albert II of Monaco.

Ozgener said during the award ceremony that President Gul’s historic
visit to Armenia to watch the match proved that sport was an powerful
instrument bringing peoples together and ensuring peace in the world.

The Peace and Sport Organization aims to use sport to educate
individuals and communities across the world about peace. The Peace
and Sport acts to promote sport as a basis for efficient political
actions and a tool for peace.

www.worldbulletin.net

ANKARA: Tuzmen Says "No Change" In Turkey’s Stance Over Upper Karaba

TUZMEN SAYS "NO CHANGE" IN TURKEY’S STANCE OVER UPPER KARABAKH ISSUE

Dec 5 2008
Turkey

Turkish State Minister Kursad Tuzmen has said There is an occupation
in the Upper Karabakh and it must be resolved immediately.

Turkish State Minister Kursad Tuzmen has said, "there is no change in
Turkey’s stance about the Upper Karabakh issue. There is an occupation
in the Upper Karabakh and it must be resolved immediately. We have
always supported Azerbaijani people, and we will continue to do so."

Tuzmen, who is currently in Baku, Azerbaijan together with a 150-member
delegation of Turkish businessmen, told reporters, "as a result of our
government’s strategy for neighboring and adjacent countries, Turkish
exports to those countries account for 42 percent of total exports."

"Current trade volume between Turkey and Azerbaijan stands at 2.5
billion USD. We aim at increasing this amount up to 10 billion USD
in mid-term," he said.

He added, "Turkish firms are making important investments in
Azerbaijan. We, as Turkey, are proud of Azerbaijan’s rapid
development."

Later, Tuzmen met Economy & Development Minister Sahin Mustafayev
of Azerbaijan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.worldbulletin.net

ANKARA: Armenia, Azerbaijan Decide To Work On A Lasting Peace Deal:

ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN DECIDE TO WORK ON A LASTING PEACE DEAL: TURKISH FM

Hurriyet
Dec 5 2008
Turkey

Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers decided to work on a
lasting peace agreement in their trilateral meeting with Turkish
foreign minister on the sidelines of a OSCE summit. (UPDATED)

Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan met Thursday his counterparts,
Edward Nalbandian of Armenia and Elmar Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan,
on the sidelines of the OSCE meeting in Helsinki.

"I see this decision as an important one made to solve the
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute," he was quoted by Anatolian Agency as
telling reporters after he returned from Finland.

Babacan said representatives of five countries including Turkey,
Georgia, Azerbaijan Russia and Armenia that were expected to set up
the Caucasus Stability & Cooperation Platform, also met in Helsinki
and exchanged views on the goals, principles, and mechanisms of
the platform.

The Turkish foreign minister also said he debated general developments
in the Caucasus and Nagorno-Karabakh dispute during his visit to
Baku and Caucasian issues, Russia-NATO relationship, Georgia-Ukraine
committees, and the situation in Afghanistan and Kosovo in the NATO
meeting in Brussels.

AGREEMENT ON CONTINUATION OF MEETINGS

Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers agreed to continue such
contacts; while an official from the OSCE Minsk Group said the
border between two countries will open soon, media reports suggested
on Friday.

Babacan and Nalbandian agreed to continue such meetings, Public Radio
of Armenia and Russian Interfax news agency reported.

"The foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey met in Helsinki on
December 4. At their meeting, the parties continued negotiations
intended to help straighten out the Armenian-Turkish relationship,"
an Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman told Interfax.

The two countries have no diplomatic relations and their border
has been closed for more than a decade, as Armenia presses the
international community to admit the so-called "genocide" claims
instead of accepting Turkey’s call to investigate the allegations,
and Armenia’s invasion of 20 percent territory of Azerbaijan.

A warmer period began in the relations when Turkish President Abdullah
Gul paid a landmark visit to Yerevan in September. Two countries have
been holding contacts on the minister level since.

NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Turkey believes the renewed dialogue with Armenia could contribute to
the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, an Azerbaijani under
the occupation of Armenia.

An official from the OSCE said 2008 was a good year in the sense of
the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"I have often recalled the so-called golden opportunity, and after
today’s meeting it seems to me that the work on the basic principles
will complete next spring and them it will be possible to work at
the agreement. But everything certainly depends on the will of the
parties", the special rapporteur of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly
on South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh Goran Lennmarker was quoted as
saying by the Azerbaijani media.

The conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia began in 1988 on Armenian
territorial claims over Azerbaijan. Since 1992 Armenian Armed Forces
have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan including the Nagorno-Karabakh
region and its seven surrounding districts.

Lennmarker added Turkey’s mediation on the conflict was a good
initiative and it is not good not only for Azerbaijan but also for
Armenia. He also voiced hope that the border between Armenia and
Turkey will open soon.

Turkey had offered Armenia to open the border on the condition of
the establishment of a joint commission to investigate the 1915
incidents. Armenia has been dragging its feet on accepting the
proposal.

TALKS GOING WELL

Babacan said earlier Friday that talks between Turkey and Armenia as
well as Azerbaijan and Armenia were going well.

"I can say that things are going well both in the process between
Azerbaijan and Armenia as well as between Turkey and Armenia and
I hope that the talks would yield the desired result, which is the
total normalization of relations," Babacan was quoted by Anatolian
Agency as telling reporters in Helsinki.

Babacan said the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was a complicated issue
with many levels, but added that both Azeri and Armenian presidents
had the political will to find a solution.

The Turkish foreign minister also held talks with co-chairs of the
Minsk Group dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue in Helsinki.

He said the U.S., Russia and France also extended support for the
process between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"I have told all parts that they should not miss the opportunity for
a solution, and I hope these efforts will yield result to help create
a new atmosphere of peace, stability and security in the Caucasus,"
Babacan said.

ANKARA: Turkish And Armenian Leaders Take 2008 Peace And Sport Award

TURKISH AND ARMENIAN LEADERS TAKE 2008 PEACE AND SPORT AWARD

Hurriyet
Dec 5 2008
Turkey

Turkish and Armenian presidents were awarded for a peace and sports
prize for their landmark meeting in September.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul and his Armenian counterpart Serzh
Sargsyan were awarded in the International Peace and Sport Forum’s 2008
session in Monaco for their landmark meeting in Yerevan in September.

Gul and Sargsyan were awarded for a photograph of the historic
handshake during the qualifying match for the Football World Cup
between Turkey and Armenia.

Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties and their border has been
closed for more than a decade, as Armenia presses the international
community to admit the so-called "genocide" claims instead of accepting
Turkey’s call to investigate the allegations, and Armenia’s invasion
of 20 percent territory of Azerbaijan.

A warmer period began the two countries began after Turkish President
Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit to Yerevan in September on the
occasion of a Turkish-Armenian World Cup football qualifying match.

"Thanks to football, this moment marked the end of nearly two decades
of diplomatic silence", the organization said on its website.

H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco presented the award jointly to
Mahmut Ozgener, President of the Turkish Football Federation, and to
Armen Grigorian, Armenian Minister of Youth and Sport, who exchanged
long greetings on stage.

BAKU: Armenia Urges To Create New Safety Architecture In Europe: FM

ARMENIA URGES TO CREATE NEW SAFETY ARCHITECTURE IN EUROPE: FM

Trend
Dec 5 2008
Azerbaijan

Finland, Helsinki, 5 Dec / Trend News, corr. I.Gusatinskaya/
Armenia considers it necessary to create new safety architecture
in Europe. Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandyan stressed a
need in a new architecture of safety in Europe and supported the
French President’s idea on launch of negotiations on the issue while
delivering a speech at the annual meeting of the OSCE foreign ministers
in Helsinki.

Armenian foreign minister said that it would be symbolic to lay
efficient solutions to the settlement of conflicts in Helsinki. Armenia
is interested in a constructive cooperation with all international
organizations on the issue of settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.

Armenia has occupied 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory, Nagorno-Karabakh
and seven surrounding regions. The occupation began in 1988. Azerbaijan
lost the Nagorno-Karabakh, except of Shusha and Khojali, in December
1991. In 1992-93, Armenian Armed Forces occupied Shusha, Khojali and
Nagorno-Karabakh’s seven surrounding regions. In 1994, Azerbaijan
and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which time the active
hostilities ended. The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group (Russia,
France, and the US) are currently holding peaceful, but fruitless
negotiations.

Nalbandyan said that the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
took a new impulse in Moscow and intensified the process. On 2 Nov,
the Presidents of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russian met in Moscow. The
Moscow declaration was signed in the result of the meeting.

According to the Armenian Foreign Minister, Azerbaijan interprets
wrong all points of the Moscow declaration. Azerbaijan considers
that declaration on peaceful settlement does not rule out the use
of force. At the same time, Nalbandyan expressed bewilderment due to
the OSCE member-countries did not react adequately upon the massive
arming of Azerbaijan. Touching upon the Armenian-Turkish ties,
the minister said that the ties are needed to normalize in order to
achieve stability in Europe.

Armenia: Quake Victims Bitter At Empty Promises

ARMENIA: QUAKE VICTIMS BITTER AT EMPTY PROMISES
By Naira Bulghadarian

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Dec 4 2008
UK

Twenty years after disaster, many in north of country remain homeless.

People made homeless by the Spitak earthquake, which devastated
towns and villages across northern Armenia exactly two decades ago,
say they no longer believe government promises to clear up the mess.

Some 25,000 people died when the 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck the
then-Soviet republic on December 7, 1988, destroying 21 towns and 341
villages. Around 6,000 people are without homes in towns scarred by
ruined houses and hastily built shacks.

Last year, Serzh Sargsian, then prime minister and now president,
promised the government would finally fix the damage by 2013.

But some people in the town of Vanadzor, which was one of the worst
affected, did not celebrate. Such promises have been frequent over
the 20 years since their homes were destroyed.

"In these 20 years, if they’d wanted to, all traces of the earthquake
could have been taken away. Now it’s hard to believe that this will
all end by 2013," said Suren Grigorian, a 72-year-old.

His 64-year-old neighbour Suren Aghababian was even more cynical.

"Why couldn’t they do this in less time? They should have spent less
money on their cars, their bodyguards and their houses, and restored
the damaged area instead," he said.

The two men could easily remember the events of 1988, when the Soviet
government vowed to sort the wreckage in just two years. But the scale
of the disaster, which destroyed almost all the housing in the Lori
and Shirak regions, defeated their attempts.

Redevelopment efforts got off to a promising start.

"Every day, 360 railway wagons full of building materials arrived,"
remembered Levon Aslanian, now an adviser to the governor of the
Lori region.

However, after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the Armenian
economy could no longer support the reconstruction, especially after
Azerbaijan and Turkey imposed an economic blockade when the war
started in Nagorno-Karabakh.

"It is easy now to criticise everyone and everything for the fact
that two years expanded to fill 20," said Aslanian.

He said that the authorities have done much to replace the 15,000
apartments and 7,000 houses lost in the Lori region, and the 22,500
homes destroyed in neighbouring Shirak.

According to official figures, buildings containing 26,000 apartments
have been built in the two regions. Separately, almost 18,500
certificates giving people the right to buy accommodation have been
handed out.

More houses will now be built, the government has said, with
certificates being awarded to people who, like the Saribekian family,
remain homeless.

Alvard Saribekian’s shack is in a temporary settlement on the site
of the Vanadzor Chemical Factory. Most of the people who lived there
have now received housing, and her family is one of the few still
waiting its turn.

Saribekian lived with her five children in a two-room apartment
when the earthquake hit. After her building was rendered unsafe,
residents were sent to the Russian town of Kharkov for a while. When
they returned to Armenia, their block had been demolished.

"There was nowhere to live. We were given this little shack in 1995,
and we still live here," she said. Although her family has added two
small rooms, it is still cramped for her, her mother and her daughter
who all live together. The daughter’s three sons are all in the army,
otherwise they too would be there.

President Sargsian has expressed confidence that the country has
the resources to house families like hers in the next five years,
and has even suggested three years could prove sufficient. But at
the current rate of building – which stands at 70 homes a year –
that looks optimistic.

In Vanadzor, 26-year-old Haykuhi Harutiunian said that building was
behind schedule.

"In these conditions, they won’t achieve anything by 2013," she said.

To date, the government has concentrated on helping people in towns,
leaving villages largely untouched. In the villages of the Lori region,
more than 1,800 families still live in shacks and temporary structures,
while in the Shirak region the situation is even worse.

"Construction is definitely proceeding slowly, but we hope that the
new government will be able to speed up the rate," said Edic Hovsepian,
an adviser to the region’s governor.

Naira Bulghadarian is a correspondent from the Vanadzor newspaper
Civil Initiative and the online weekly Armenianow.

K. Cyrus Melikian, An Inventor With A Coffee Focus

K. CYRUS MELIKIAN, AN INVENTOR WITH A COFFEE FOCUS
By Sally A. Downey

Philadelphia Inquirer
Dec 5 2008
PA

K. Cyrus Melikian, 88, an innovative entrepreneur who made coffee
drinking a convenient pastime, died of heart failure Nov. 27 at home
in Haverford.

Mr. Melikian conceived the concept for a coffee vending machine while
serving in the Army Air Force at Wright Field in Ohio during World
War II. He and an officer, Lloyd K. Rudd, were annoyed that the PX
was not serving coffee.

After their discharge in 1946, the men went to work in
Mr. Melikian’s parents’ garage in Mayfair to devise an automatic
coffee dispenser. They tested the machine at an Eagles football game,
selling coffee for 10 cents a cup. "We couldn’t make it fast enough,"
Mr. Melikian told an Inquirer reporter.

In the late 1950s, to improve on the instant coffee that Rudd Melikian
Inc. used, Mr. Melikian developed a frozen liquid coffee concentrate.

In 1967, he and Rudd sold their company. Mr. Melikian and his sons then
established Automatic Brewers & Coffee Devices. At ABCD, Mr. Melikian
developed pods for single or double orders of espresso, coffee-pod
packaging machines and brewers, and coffee-bean grinders integrated
into brewers. His other inventions included a commercial microwave
oven and an ice dispenser for soda cups in vending machines. He was
responsible for numerous patents, his son Robert said.

Mr. Melikian’s parents escaped the 1919 Armenian massacre and
immigrated to Philadelphia shortly before he was born. After graduating
from Northeast High School, he attended the University of Pennsylvania
before serving in the military. Last year, he was interviewed for a
PBS special on World War II veterans.

An award-winning marksman, Mr. Melikian helped found the trapshooting
program at Aronimink Golf Club. He was a member of several gourmet
societies, and was the founder and chairman of the Philadelphia
chapter of the International Bacchus Society. In 1961, he and Rudd
coauthored The Wonder of Food. In the 1970s, Mr. Melikian wrote a
syndicated newspaper feature about the history of famous dishes,
and in the 1990s he established and taught at a chef’s training school.

He consulted for the Economic Community of West African States and
for the Bank of Liberia, and was a partner in a wine importing and
distributing company.

In addition to his son, he is survived by his wife of 63 years, Roxie
Bozoian Melikian; daughters Karen Harrison and Michele Lockwood;
and six grandchildren. A son, K. Cyrus Jr., died in 1979.

Friends may call from 5 to 7 p.m. today at Chadwick & McKinney Funeral
Home, 30 E. Athens Ave., Ardmore, and after 10 a.m. tomorrow, followed
by a funeral at 11 at St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Apostolic
Church, 8701 Ridge Ave. Burial will be in George Washington Memorial
Park, Plymouth Meeting.

Memorial donations may be made to the Armenian Students Association
to benefit the K. Cyrus Melikian Memorial Scholarship, 333 Atlantic
Ave., Warwick, R.I. 02888.