Two Ex-Officials Of Armenian Consulate Arrested

TWO EX-OFFICIALS OF ARMENIAN CONSULATE ARRESTED
By Sue Doyle

Contra Costa Times
i_12934114
July 28 2009
CA

Federal authorities have arrested five people – including two former
Armenian Consulate officials – suspected of selling documents to at
least 24 convicted Armenian felons in the U.S. to help them avoid
deportation to Armenia.

The five, accused of obstructing U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement proceedings, appeared Tuesday in U.S. District Court
downtown.

The arrests that began Monday followed a two-year investigation of
the scheme, which was allegedly generated by word of mouth through
the Armenian community.

Felons allegedly paid up to $35,000 each for the documents.

"The charges raised in this case are extremely serious and very
troubling," said Robert Schoch, special agent in charge of ICE
investigations in Los Angeles.

"The defendants allegedly exploited their community ties and knowledge
of the immigration system to help dangerous criminals, among others,
avoid deportation."

The arrests include Norair Ghalumian, 52, of Burbank, who served as
the Armenian consul in Los Angeles from 1999 to 2003.

Hakop Hovanesyan, 54, of Glendale, another former employee of the
Armenian Consulate in Los Angeles, was arrested Monday.

Ghalumian and Hovanesyan were not working for the Armenian Consulate
when they were allegedly engaged in the suspected crimes, said Thom
Mrozek, U.S. Attorney’s Office spokesman.

Other arrests include Margarita Lazarian, 41, of Glendale, who works
as an immigration

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Adver tisement

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attorney for Inman and Associates in Beverly Hills. Elvis Madatyan,
47, of Glendale and Oganes Nardos, 36, of Valencia are also accused.

The charges carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

Authorities allege the five worked independently using contacts in
the Armenian government to get letters issued from the former Soviet
Union republic stating there was no record of these people being
Armenian citizens.

But federal officials believe these are Armenian citizens who
are subject to deportation. Nearly all had felony convictions in
U.S. courts, which led to deportation procedures, Mrozek said.

Mrozek said there are likely more people who paid thousands of dollars
for fraudulent letters.

Through search warrants, immigration officials have confiscated
additional refusal letters and official stationery from the Armenian
Consulate from homes and offices of the five arrested.

"These defendants endangered the safety and security of United States
residents," said U.S. Attorney Thomas P. O’Brien.

Meanwhile the future of the felons who allegedly paid for the bogus
letters remains unclear.

Officials will review the people involved on a case-by-case basis,
said ICE spokeswoman Virginia Kice.

http://www.contracostatimes.com/california/c

Karabakh Peace Prospects Uncertain After Latest Armenian-Azeri Talks

KARABAKH PEACE PROSPECTS UNCERTAIN AFTER LATEST ARMENIAN-AZERI TALKS
Emil Danielyan

Jamestown Foundation
July 29 2009

Prospects for the resolution of the Karabakh conflict look more
uncertain following the latest round of negotiations between the
presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Contrary to the international
community’s expectations, Presidents Serzh Sarksyan and Ilham
Aliyev appear to have failed to clear the remaining hurdles to sign
an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord that would have far-reaching
implications for the entire region. International mediators hope that
the two leaders will achieve a breakthrough at their next meeting
expected this fall.

Sarksyan and Aliyev met in Moscow on July 17 for the sixth time in just
over a year to try to build on significant progress that was apparently
made during their two previous meetings in Prague and St.Petersburg
on May 7 and June 4 respectively. U.S., Russian and French mediators
expressed hope that in Moscow they would resolve their remaining
disagreements over the "basic principles" of a Karabakh settlement
put forward by the OSCE’s Minsk group. Deputy-Assistant Secretary
of State Matthew Bryza, the group’s U.S. co-chair, said that would
enable the conflicting parties to agree to a framework peace deal
"by the end of the year" (Reuters, June 22).

On July 10 the United States, Russia and France, all of which co-chair
the Minsk group, underscored their renewed optimism concerning a
possible settlement of the Karabakh issue in a joint statement issued
by their presidents on the sidelines of the G8 summit in L’Aquila,
Italy. "We urge the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve the
few differences remaining between them and finalize their agreement on
these basic principles, which will outline a comprehensive settlement,"
the statement said.

Neither Aliyev nor Sarksyan made any public statements on July 17 after
several hours of discussions, partly attended by Bryza and his fellow
negotiators from Russia and France. The mediators told journalists
afterwards that the meeting did not live up to their expectations
(, July 18). According to Yuri Merzlyakov, the chief Russian
negotiator, the two presidents held a more productive meeting with
their Russian counterpart, Dmitry Medvedev, the next day. "There are
interesting solutions which the presidents found in the trilateral
format," Merzlyakov told the Azerbaijani Trend news agency on July
22. "I think that this could produce a positive result in the future."

Sarksyan likewise spoke of "progress" in the negotiating process
as he received Sweden’s Foreign Minister Carl Bildt in Yerevan
on July 20 (Statement by the Armenian presidential press service,
July 20). Azerbaijani officials’ reaction to the Moscow talks was
contradictory. Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov’s cautious optimism
contrasted with statements made by Novruz Mammadov, Aliyev’s chief
foreign policy aide. Mammadov accused the Armenian side of showing
"hypocrisy" and scuttling the long-awaited agreement (Zerkalo,
July 23).

The Minsk group co-chairs, meanwhile, began preparations for the next
Aliyev-Sarksyan encounter, which they hope will take place in early
October on the sidelines of a CIS summit in Moldova. In a joint July
21 statement, they said they will also start working on an "updated
version" of their basic principles.

The proposed framework agreement became the basis of
Armenian-Azerbaijani talks before it was formally submitted to
the parties in Madrid in November 2007. Aliyev and Sarksyan’s more
hard-line predecessor, Robert Kocharian, came very close to accepting
it in early 2006. The so-called Madrid principles, disclosed in
general terms by the mediating powers, call for a phased settlement
of the Karabakh conflict that would start with a gradual liberation
of the seven districts in Azerbaijan which were fully or partly
occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces during the 1991-1994 war. In
return, Karabakh’s predominantly Armenian population would determine
the disputed enclave’s status in a legally binding referendum. The
would-be agreement stipulates that Karabakh would remain under an
internationally recognized Armenian control until the two sides set
a date for holding such a vote.

According to U.S. and Armenian officials involved in the peace process,
Aliyev has essentially agreed to this formula despite his constant
public assertions that Baku will never come to terms with the loss
of Karabakh. Accordingly, some highly-placed Armenian sources claim
that the main sticking point in the talks (both under Kocharian
and now) relates to Armenian withdrawal from Kelbajar and Lachin,
the Azerbaijani districts wedged between Karabakh and Armenia. The
Kocharian administration, they argue, insisted that these territories
should be returned to Azerbaijan only after the Karabakh referendum on
self-determination, something which was unacceptable to Baku. Also,
while agreeing to ensure unfettered transport communication between
Armenia and Karabakh through a 30-kilometer-wide corridor, the
Azerbaijani side rejected Armenian demands for that overland link to
be formally incorporated into Karabakh.

There have been some indications that Sarksyan could show greater
flexibility on these issues. In an interview with the Russian Vesti
TV channel on June 20, Aliyev said that Kelbajar and most of Lachin
would be placed under Azerbaijani control five years after the Armenian
pullout from the other occupied lands surrounding Karabakh. However,
their failure to finalize the peace accord in Moscow might mean
that Yerevan insists on the referendum linkage. Mounting uproar from
Armenian nationalist groups opposed to any territorial concessions
to Azerbaijan preceded these talks.

One of these groups, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF, also
known as the Dashnak Party), organized a conference of like-minded
hard-line forces in the Karabakh capital Stepanakert on July 10-11
to warn the Yerevan government against signing up to the Madrid
principles (Yerkir-Media TV, July 11). Karabakh Armenian leaders also
attended the high-profile gathering, again exposing their reluctance to
embrace the proposed settlement. Even Armenia’s first President Levon
Ter-Petrosian, who was forced to resign in 1998 after advocating a
similar deal with Azerbaijan, is not averse to exploiting the issue in
his continuing standoff with the ruling regime. In a July 14 statement,
Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress alliance cited "dangerous"
developments in the Karabakh peace process to again demand Sarksyan’s
resignation.

Sarksyan also has to reckon with Kocharian’s opinion. The latter
would hardly approve of Armenian concessions to Azerbaijan and,
despite keeping a very low profile, might wield more influence than
the Armenian opposition to undercut his successor and longtime
ally. Sarksyan, who is still reeling from the 2008 post-election
unrest in Yerevan, will thus need to tread a delicate line in the
months ahead.

www.tert.am

Opposition Tycoon To Stay In Hiding

OPPOSITION TYCOON TO STAY IN HIDING

Armenialiberty.org
tml
July 29 2009

Armenia — Khachatur Sukiasian, a fugitive opposition MP and
businessman.

Khachatur Sukiasian, a fugitive businessman and opposition
parliamentarian, said through his lawyers on Wednesday that he will
not after all surrender to Armenian law-enforcement authorities
despite the possibility of being granted amnesty.

Sukiasian was among several opposition figures who went into hiding
in March 2008 to avoid prosecution for their role in post-election
demonstrations in Yerevan that were suppressed by the authorities. Like
three other members of Armenia’s parliament arrested in the government
crackdown, he was charged with plotting to "usurp the state authority"
and organizing "mass riots" that left ten people dead. State
prosecutors dropped the coup charges against them in April this year.

An amnesty bill approved by the National Assembly on June 19 gave
Sukiasian and other fugitive oppositionists until July 31 to turn
themselves in and face trial. They will be set free if found guilty
and sentenced to up to five years in prison. Two of the fugitives
have already surrendered to the police.

In a July 6 statement, Sukiasian indicated that he could emerge from
hiding and hope to avoid imprisonment. Law-enforcement officials made
clear, however, that he would be kept in detention at least until
the end of his trial.

The tycoon’s lawyers said on Wednesday that he is "not preparing"
to go on trial and risk imprisonment. "I have no problem with
surrendering to the authorities because I didn’t commit any crime
and was not stripped of my parliamentary immunity from prosecution,"
he said in a statement circulated by the lawyers.

Sukiasian and the other opposition lawmakers were stripped of that
immunity in March 2008. They say that prosecutors had to obtain a
fresh arrest permission from the National Assembly after significantly
revising the criminal cases against them in March 2008. The prosecutors
claim the opposite.

One of Armenia’s wealthiest men, Sukiasian got in trouble with the
authorities in late 2007 after publicly voicing support for former
President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s bid to return to power. Many of his
businesses were raided by tax authorities and fined for alleged tax
evasion. One of them, the Bjni mineral water company, was effectively
confiscated by the government late last year.

http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/1788275.h

BELGRADE: Tadic And Sargasjan – Full Consent On Conflict Resolution

TADIC AND SARGASJAN – FULL CONSENT ON CONFLICT RESOLUTION

Radio Srbija
July 29 2009
Serbia

Serbian President Boris Tadic and Armenian PM Tigran Sargsjan agreed
that sustainable solutions to regional conflicts, both in Caucasia
and in the Balkans, namely to Nagorno Karabah and Kosmet issues,
can be found only within negotaitions, without the use of force and
in accordance with the principles of international law. Any imposed
solutions are absolutely unacceptable and we fully agree on that,
Tadic said. Potentials for the promotion of bilateral cooperation in
politics and economics have been emphasized. Issues of promotion of
bilateral and intragovernmental relations have been discussed and so
have been business ties.

BELGRADE: Tadic Met With Armenian Patriarch

TADIC MET WITH ARMENIAN PATRIARCH

Radio Srbija
m_content&task=view&id=8032&Itemid=26
July 29 2009
Serbia

Serbian President Boris Tadic met in Echmiadzin, the spiritual
centre of Armenians and the seat of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
with the Patriarch of all the Armenians, Karekin II. Tadic said he
hopes relations between the Serbian Orthodox Church will continue
further. The Armenian Patriarch emphasized there are friendly and good
relations between the two countries and peoples. He greeted Serbian
Patriarch Pavle and members of the Serbian Orthodox Church Synod.

http://glassrbije.org/E/index.php?option=co

Armenian And Serbian Ministers On Economic Cooperation

ARMENIAN AND SERBIAN MINISTERS ON ECONOMIC COOPERATION

BSANNA NEWS
July 29 2009
Ukraine

BELGRADE, July 29 (Tanjug) . Serbian Minister of Trade and Services
Slobodan Milosavljevic and Armenian Economy Minister Nerses Yeritsian
discussed Wednesday the ways of promoting economic cooperation between
the two states, Ministry of Economy of the Republic of Armenia stated.

Milosavljevic is currently in Yerevan, as a member of the Serbian
delegation headed by Serbian President Boris Tadic which is in two-day
visit to Armenia.

According to the statement published on the ministry’s website, the
two ministers discussed many issues, particularly the cooperation in
the domain of information technologies, agriculture, food industry,
pharmacology and tourism and the possibility of realizing joint
projects.

Yeritsian and Milosavljevic expressed willingness to support every
initiative that could give an impetus to the trade and economic
relations between Serbia and Armenia, the Armenian news agency
Armenpress reported.

Armenian Roots Run Deep In St. Peters Official

ARMENIAN ROOTS RUN DEEP IN ST. PETERS OFFICIAL
By Latreecia Wade

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
/articles/2009/07/29/stcharles/news/doc4a704f83639 49941206880.txt
July 29 2009
Missouri

In the last several decades, Holocaust survivors have been speaking
out to community groups and schools to make sure that genocide is
not forgotten.

But there was another genocide in Europe a few decades earlier,
one that few people in St. Charles County may have heard about.

It was the Armenian genocide of 1915, during World War I.

And the family of St. Peters community relations director Lisa Bedian
lived through it.

The genocide, which was ordered by the Turkish government and killed
about 1.5 million Armenians, forced Bedian’s grandparents from Turkey.

Bedian, who does public and community relations for the city, remembers
what her grandparents have told her about the experience.

The Turkish government used deportation tactics forcing Armenians to
march through the wilderness and deserts under horrendous conditions,
she said. Boys, some as young as 13, were forced into the military,
Bedian said.

"If they refused, the soldiers would take them out of the villages
and kill them," she said.

After he heard about Bedian’s grandparents, Mayor Len Pagano earlier
this year set aside an official day to honor Armenians affected by
the genocide. The day is Apr. 24.

In May, the Board of Aldermen passed a resolution in support of a
national bill recognizing the Armenian genocide. About 20 St. Charles
County residents of Armenian descent were there. Rev. Stepan Baljian
of St. Gregory Armenian Church in Granite City, Ill., offered an
invocation during the meeting.

The Turkish government does not acknowledge the genocide.

Bedian’s grandfather, Asadour Bedian, and a cousin escaped from
the Turkish town of Divrik at age 20 as word of the Ottoman Turkish
atrocities spread across the country, Bedian said.

Asadour Bedian, who was later called "Oscar," made three attempts to
come into the United States. He traveled to the South American country
of Bolivia before making it in through Cuba, Lisa Bedian said. Many
in his family were killed.

"He went out west to work on railroad construction with his cousin,"
she said.

Asadour Bedian later settled in Granite City, Ill., and worked in
the steel mills there. His cousin settled in Lynn, Mass.

"A lot of the immigrants went to work in East St. Louis and Granite
City," Lisa Bedian said. "It was the only place a non-English speaking
person could find a job."

As a single man, he sought an Armenian girl to marry. With the
help of a local woman, he sent a letter to an Armenian orphanage in
Constantinople, Bedian said. The woman wrote the letter on behalf of
Asadour Bedian and another man seeking Armenian wives.

"The orphanage sent two photos for my grandfather to pick from,
and he picked my grandmother’s picture," Lisa Bedian said.

Her name was Elizabeth Eghiassarian.

The soon-to-be groom sent money to pay for Elizabeth’s voyage by
ship to America and some clothing. He met her as she docked in the
at Ellis Island, Lisa Bedian said. They were married the next day at
an Armenian Church in New York City.

"She was 15 years old when she came here," Bedian said. "Can you
imagine what that must have been like? So young and to marry someone
you didn’t even know."

After their wedding in September 1921, they had three children, Arthur,
who is Lisa Bedian’s father, Caroline and Sue. Asadour Bedian died
in June 1971 at age 80. Elizabeth passed away in May 1976. She was
71. The couple were married nearly 52 years.

http://suburbanjournals.stltoday.com

Sarkisyan Wants "Real Steps" From Ankara To Open The Turkish Border

SARKISYAN WANTS "REAL STEPS" FROM ANKARA TO OPEN THE TURKISH BORDER

TurkishNY
rkisyan-wants-qreal-stepsq-from-ankara-to-open-the -turkish-border.html
July 29 2009

Armenian President Serge Sarkisian said Tuesday he would only agree
to attend a football match in neighboring Turkey if Ankara takes
"real steps" to open their border.

Sarkisian was invited to the return leg of the World Cup qualifying tie
between Turkey and Armenia on Oct.14 when Turkish President Abdullah
Gul was in Yerevan last year to attend the first leg.

"I will only accept this invitation if previously made agreements are
fulfilled, if there are real steps. I will visit Turkey if we have
re-opened the borders and if we are on the verge of an end to the
blockade," Sarkisian was quoted by AFP as saying at a press conference
in Yerevan with Serbian President Boris Tadic.

"We expect that we will soon see constructive steps our [Turkish]
colleagues will make to create the conditions for the Armenian
president’s visit," Tadic said.

Ankara cut diplomatic links with Yerevan and closed the border in
a show of support to Azerbaijan in 1993 after 20 percent of its
territory was invaded by Armenia in the disputed region – a frozen
conflict legacy of the Soviet Union known as Nagorno-Karabakh.

Ankara and Yerevan, however, have been engaged in a normalization
process, including the reopening of the border, since Gul’s landmark
visit to Armenia as the first Turkish leader to visit the neighboring
country.

The two countries agreed in April on a "road map" deal for normalizing
ties after months of U.S.-backed talks, but there have been few signs
of progress since the announcement.

Turkey has said it will not open its border with Armenia before
the neighboring country ends its occupation of the disputed
Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Negotiations on Nagorno-Karabakh have been continuing since a
cease-fire in 1994. International mediators have said repeatedly
in recent months that they are close to a breakthrough, but there
is little sign of when it might come or whether an agreement can be
implemented on the ground.

http://www.turkishny.com/en/english-news/12478-sa

Why Remember?

WHY REMEMBER?

Huffington Post
/why-remember_b_247404.html
July 29 2009

Leslie Gilbert-Lurie. Author of the memoir Bending Toward the Sun

September of this year marks the 70th anniversary of the start of World
War II. There is no agreed upon moment, however, when the Holocaust
began. Some date it to Hitler’s coming to power in 1933. Others mark
the onset to Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass, in November
of 1938. Since the Holocaust was undeniably a component of World
War II, however, it seems fair to say that next month also marks the
anniversary of its inception.

It is clear why we note the beginning of World War II. We won. The
forces of good beat the Axis of Evil, and the "best generation"
came home victorious. Less obvious is why it’s important to mark the
anniversary of the Holocaust. Why continue to look back at one of
humankind’s bleakest moments? There were no winners and far too few
heroes. Isn’t it enough that some of us have read Anne Frank’s diary
or seen Schindler’s List? I think not. In the course of writing and
teaching about the Holocaust, I have discovered that the Holocaust
is rich in lessons to sustain our humanity.

The Holocaust is a cautionary tale about leaders and cowards, heroes
and victims. In examining it, we delve into the darkest parts of
ourselves and reflect upon how we might have acted, what we could
have done, had we been present. Would we have taken a job in the
Nazi Party if we were unemployed? Would we have followed orders at
work in order to get promoted? Would we have risked our own lives,
or those of family members, in order to hide or protect others? Would
we have spoken up in the face of injustice? The Holocaust provides
an opportunity for each of us to consider how we would or should act
the next time we see others robbed of their fundamental rights.

The Holocaust is also an enlightening tale about political systems
and a horror story about the abuses of power. Adolf Hitler took
office in a democracy which, at its core, was similar to the one in
which we feel so safe today. In the blink of an eye, he converted
his government into a totalitarian regime, in which all oaths were
pledged to him. Overnight, Hitler began eviscerating the rights of the
communists, the homosexuals, the disabled, the gypsies, the Catholics,
and of course, the Jews. What does this tell us about the ability of
a democracy to protect the rights of vulnerable minorities? Lest we
forget that our own democracy, not so long ago, tolerated slavery. It
also endorsed euthanasia for the disabled and forbade women from
voting. Those educated in the abuses of power that took place leading
up to and during the Holocaust will be better equipped to vigilantly
protect the democratic values we so treasure today in our own country.

In our country, education is cherished. It is viewed as a ticket to
success and key to a civilized, informed society. Authors, politicians,
and educators espouse the importance of American youth studying hard,
in part to compete with industrious students around the world. Yet at
the same time, we must keep in mind that the Hall of Shame from the
Holocaust was filled with doctors, engineers, and lawyers. Without
judgment and compassion, without an awareness of the dangers of
following orders without reflection, we are just one election, evil
leader, or disastrous economic cycle away from another Weimar Republic
of the early 1930’s. We must teach our children to be thoughtful,
proactive citizens. In learning about the Holocaust, students can
see where a past generation failed and what role they will play in
the tragedies of their own generation.

Today, in Sudan’s Darfur region, another ethnic cleansing is taking
place. The Janjaweed militia, supported by the Sudanese government, is
systematically murdering the region’s black tribes. Outside Darfur, in
other parts of Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and South America, strife
and violence are rampant. Both World War I and World War II taught
us that under the stresses of war, prejudices are often heightened.

In 1915, not long after the start of World War I, authorities in
the Muslim Ottoman Empire turned against the Armenians, a Christian
minority that had lived for generations within the region. The world
politely turned away as a million or more Armenians were massacred over
the next eight years. Our country, along with many others, again looked
the other way, over and over again, as Hitler’s campaign ramped up in
the 1930’s. In 1936, at the summer Olympics in Berlin, for example,
not only did the United States agree to attend the games, but coaches
from this country pulled two Jewish runners from the relay team at the
eleventh hour, at least in part so as not to offend Hitler. In 1939,
intellectuals in our country and throughout Europe passively looked on
as Jewish professors were unceremoniously fired from the University
of Frankfurt, the most liberal university in Germany. And again,
that same year, over 900 Jewish men, women, and children aboard
the ship the St. Louis, after desperately fleeing Nazi Europe and
arriving on the shores of Cuba, were denied entry not only in that
country but also in the United States, and forced to turn back. Each
of these events emboldened Hitler. He had good reason to believe that
the world’s leaders would not object to his gross violation of human
rights. Yes, some individuals spoke up. And sometimes, when they did,
lives were spared. But mostly we were a world of bystanders, paving
the way for many more bystanders over the six ensuing years of the
Holocaust. Studying the Holocaust helps each of us to comprehend the
downside of being a bystander, or of acting at the eleventh hour,
rather than at the first opportunity. It makes us better prepared to
be good, humane citizens in today’s world.

The Holocaust occurred not so long ago and in a land not so far
away. As the 70-year anniversary approaches, we are in a race against
time. When young people today hear a Holocaust survivor speak, they are
bearing witness to that which their own children are never likely to
experience the same way. And as the voices of the Holocaust survivors
quiet, those of the ones who insist that the Holocaust never happened
will grow louder and, perhaps, more persuasive. To continue to mark
its existence, to study its implications, is to honor its victims and
better protect humankind in the future. As we vow that such a tragedy
will not occur again, we must remember that there is an awful lot of
suffering taking place in the world this very moment.

Leslie Gilbert-Lurie is the author of Bending Toward the Sun: A Mother
and Daughter Memoir.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leslie-gilbertlurie

BELGRADE: Tadic Ends Armenia Visit

TADIC ENDS ARMENIA VISIT

B92
ticle.php?yyyy=2009&mm=07&dd=29&nav_id =60797
July 29 2009
Serbia

YEREVAN — Serbia and Armenia agree that conflicts can be solved only
through negotiations, said President Boris Tadic today as he wrapped
up his visit to Armenia.

On the second day of the trip, he met with Armenian Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan. The two concluded that there was spirit of full
agreement between the two countries that sustainable, compromise
solutions for regional conflicts, in the Caucasus just as in the
Balkans, can be found only through negotiations, without imposed
solutions and use of force.

"It is absolutely unacceptable to impose any solutions. We are in
absolute agreement on that and I am satisfied because of that fact,"
Tadic said.

Members of his delegation also stated that the meeting heard there
was great potential for improvement of cooperation between the two
countries in the sectors of politics and economy.

The Armenian government press service said in a statement this
Wednesday that Tadic and Sargsyan considered issues of Armenian-Serbian
relations and stressed especially the importance of strengthening
the ties between the two governments, establishing mutual contacts
and business relations.

The statement also said that the meeting took place in a friendly
atmosphere, and that the two top officials agreed that agriculture
is the sector with most potential for bilateral cooperation.

The government in Yerevan believes that the centuries-long friendship
between Armenian and Serb people, and activation of cultural ties
will provide a good basis for a boost and new quality to the bilateral
relations.

Tadic was also scheduled to travel to Etchmiadzin, the spiritual
center of Armenia and the seat of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
to meet with Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians His
Holiness Garegin II.

On the first day of his visit, the president and his Armenian
counterpart Serzh Sargsyan agreed that regional conflicts, such as
those in Kosovo and Nagorno Karabakh, must be resolved without the use
of force and only by peaceful means in keeping with international law.

Sargsyan told a press conference after the meeting that there is
no universal solution for all conflicts and that each conflict has
its history.

There can be no just and stable solution to conflicts if this fact is
not taken into account, he said, adding that a sustainable solution
can be found only by peaceful means in keeping with international law.

Tadic also noted that challenges Serbia and Armenia are facing require
sustainable solutions.

Serbia upholds the formula of peace talks Armenia is conducting in
the Caucasus and Serbia in the Balkans as the only way of reaching
sustainable and stable solutions, Tadic said, according to Armenian
media.

Armenia has not recognized the Kosovo Albanian unilateral declaration
of independence.

Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic said in Yerevan on Wednesday, after
talks with Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian, that Serbia is
interested in enhancing cooperation with Armenia in all areas.

The official visit to Armenia by the Serbian president opens a new page
in the bilateral relations and is evidence of Serbia’s interestedness
in strengthening and deepening cooperation with Armenia in all areas,
JeremiÄ~G said, as carried by the Novosti Armenia news agency,
quoting the Press Service of the Armenian Foreign Ministry.

JeremiÄ~G and Nalbandian discussed an entire series of topics,
including the holding of consultations between the two ministries,
cooperation in international organizations, economic and cultural
cooperation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-ar