RA President to sign agreements in Hungary

RA President to sign agreements in Hungary
07.11.2009 15:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan is departing for
Hungary on a three-day state visit on November 8. The delegation
includes Foreign Minister Edward Nalbanidian, Diaspora Minister
Hranush Hakobyan, Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosyan, Agriculture
Minister Gerasim Alaverdyan and other high ranking officials.

A formal ceremony will be followed by a presidential meeting behind
closed doors. A number of agreements will be signed.

President Sargsyan is also expected to see the sights of the Hungarian
capital and lay a wreath to a khachkar commemorating the Armenian
Genocide victims.

RA President to visit Kaliningrad

RA President to visit Kaliningrad
07.11.2009 16:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On invitation of Kaliningrad oblast governor Georgy
Boos, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan will visit Kaliningrad on a
short-term working visit. Serzh Sargsyan will meet with the governor
and representatives of Armenian community. He will attend the ceremony
of opening of Armenian cultural center and lay flowers to a khachkar.
The Armenian delegation will return to Yerevan on November 11, the RA
leader’s press office reported.

BAKU: Garabagh negotiators hold talks with Azeri leaders

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
Nov 6 2009

Garabagh negotiators hold talks with Azeri leaders

06-11-2009 04:46:48
OSCE mediators brokering settlement to the Armenia-Azerbaijan
conflict over Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh have started another visit to
the region from Baku. The visit aims to set the stage for the next
meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders.
The co-chairs – Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia, Bernard Fassier of France,
and Robert Bradtke of the United States ` met with President Ilham
Aliyev on Thursday. The current state of peace talks and prospects for
settling the long-standing conflict were discussed, according to the
presidential press-service. The intermediaries also had talks with
Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov.
The co-chairs will continue discussing Garabagh settlement in the
Armenian capital Yerevan on Friday.
The latest meeting between Presidents Ilham Aliyev and Serzh Sarkisian
was held in Chisinau, Moldova in October 8 and was described by the
mediators as constructive.
Armenia and Azerbaijan waged a war over the mountainous region of
Upper Garabagh in the early 1990s, which claimed some 30,000 lives and
displaced about a million Azerbaijanis. Armenia has been occupying
over 20% of Azerbaijan’s internationally-recognized territory since
then. The ceasefire accord was signed in 1994, but the OSCE-brokered
peace talks have been fruitless so far.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Moscow ready to act as `guarantor’ of Garabagh settlement

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
Nov 5 2009

Moscow ready to act as `guarantor’ of Garabagh settlement

05-11-2009 05:16:59
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigori Karasin has said Moscow is
ready to back a solution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict that would
suit all sides involved and act as a guarantor of a settlement if a
compromise is reached.
`A solution of the problem that will allow bringing back stability and
tranquility in the trans-Caucasia region will be viable,’ Karasin told
Respublika Armenia newspaper.
`Such a solution should help to maintain the historically-shaped
geo-political balance of forces in the region in the post-conflict
period, without simultaneously turning this region into a stage of
international political and military rivalry,’ said Karasin.
The deputy minister reminded that Russia has been actively involved in
brokering a settlement to the Garabagh conflict since peace talks
began.
`Currently, Russia is fulfilling these duties on a multilateral basis,
acting, along with the U.S. and France, as a co-chair of the OSCE
Minsk Group, the main international forum for seeking a political
solution to the Garabagh settlement,’ Karasin said, adding that
Moscow’s mediating efforts are also being made through bilateral
discussions in Baku and Yerevan.
He said that it is not by mere chance that Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev, hosting his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sarkisian in Moscow
on October 12, regarded Russia’s involvement in the process of
Garabagh settlement as `a very important dimension of our relations.’
`We see our role in assisting the process of settling the Upper
Garabagh conflict, the sides’ seeking mutually acceptable upshots on
key issues, but [doing so] without imposing any external recipes on
the parties to the conflict,’ Karasin said, adding that the brunt of
responsibility for making a final choice rests with Azeris and
Armenians proper.
According to Karasin, the parties have achieved certain progress in
agreeing upon the basic principles of the conflict settlement, and
Moscow is ready to continue doing everything in its power to move this
process forward.
Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a lengthy war that ended with the
signing of a cease-fire in 1994, but Armenia continues to occupy Upper
Garabagh and seven other Azerbaijani districts in defiance of
international law. Peace talks have not yet resulted in resolving the
conflict.
Touching upon Turkey-Armenia relations, the Russian deputy minister
said no aspect of the recently-reached bilateral agreement could be
interpreted as hurting the interests of a third party. He noted that
Ankara and Yerevan’s signing protocols on mending ties last month
indicates the two countries’ decisiveness to establish good
neighborliness ties.
Karasin added that Moscow was ready to support the Turkish-Armenian
rapprochement by implementing economic projects in the future, in
particular, those in the energy and transport sectors.
Turkey, Azerbaijan’s ally, and Armenia signed protocols to establish
diplomatic relations and reopen their borders in Zurich on October 10,
after decades of hostility. The move has raised concerns in
Azerbaijan.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Artak Shakaryan: Turkey frustrating Azerbaijan’s plans

Artak Shakaryan: Turkey frustrating Azerbaijan’s plans
07.11.2009 16:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish-Azerbaijani controversy on normalization of
Armenia-Turkey relations is often taken for a political game aiming to
press on Armenia and compel it to compromise but, actually, it’s not
so, according to an Armenian expert.

`Turkey is not a pro-Azerbaijani country any longer. Earlier,
Islamists were trying to gain power with arms. Now they are doing it
with economic tools,’ Artak Shakaryan told a news conference on
Saturday.

`Turkey is no longer willing to defend Azerbaijan’s interests as it
did before. These two countries are not an unsplittable unity. The
closed Armenian-Turkish border was a fundamental principle for
Azerbaijan in the Karabakh issue. Normalizing relations with Armenia,
Turkey breaks the current state of affairs,’ he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Funds to study Armenian monuments outside the country TBA

Funds to study Armenian monuments outside the country to be allocated next year
07.11.2009 17:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "In 2010 all major cultural programs will be carried
out, despite 27 per cent budget cut this year, or reduction by 355
million AMD," Armenia’s culture minister Hasmik Poghosyan told a
press conference on November 7.

The budget of the ministry of culture in 2010 will amount to AMD 7
billion 953 million, and all the major programs of the ministry will
be carried out, except technical equipment projects for theaters and
concert halls.

Rehabilitation of architectural and historical monuments program will
be reduced by 30 per cent. The minister stressed, it is necessary to
re-assess the strategy of monuments restoration.

In 2010, for the first time funds will be allocated to study Armenian
monuments outside the country.

BAKU: Iranians visit occupied Azeri region – report

AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
Nov 5 2009

Iranians visit occupied Azeri region – report

05-11-2009 05:09:33

Iranian representatives included in a group on friendship with
Armenia have visited the South Caucasus republic and further
Azerbaijan’s Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh region it occupies, Iranian ISNA
news agency reported.
The delegation reportedly held talks with Armenian business leaders to
discuss economic cooperation between the two countries. The Iranian
representatives said they were ready to invest in a slew of sectors of
Armenia’s economy, including solar energy, the development of
communications, urban infrastructure, environmental protection, and
agriculture.
The members of the Iran-Armenia Friendship Society are expected to
stay in Armenia and Upper Garabagh until Friday.
Upper Garabagh has been occupied by Armenia since a 1994 cease-fire
ended separatist hostilities that killed an estimated 30,000 people
and ousted about one million Azerbaijanis from their homes. Armenia
continues to occupy Upper Garabagh and seven other Azerbaijani
districts in defiance of international law. Years of peace talks have
brought few tangible results.*

Turk initiatives to restore Armenian churches game for superpowers

Turkish initiatives to restore Armenian churches game for superpowers
07.11.2009 17:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey and Azerbaijan are alike, since both built
their countries on historical Armenian lands, said Samvel Karapetyan,
director of Research on Armenian Architecture NGO.

`Reconstruction of Armenian churches in Turkey is a game played for
superpowers. While Turkish workers were reconstructing Holy Cross
Church on Akhtamar island, a Turkish bulldozer razed to the ground an
Armenian domical church 5 km away,’ he said.

Asked by a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter whether Turkish authorities will
hamper reconstruction of St. Kirakos Church in Diarbekir by the
Armenian community and whether they can be involved in the
organization of the recent fire in the church, he said, `You can’t
imagine how irritated the Turkish authorities are about the presence
of an Armenian church in Van or Mush. Armenians are prevented from
building a hotel, not to speak of churches.

For his part, expert Artak Shakaryan emphasized that reconstruction of
Armenian churches is nothing but a PR campaign. `An Armenian church
was lately consecrated in Kesaria, where 3 Armenians live. Anyway,
even such a game may help preserve Armenian architecture and culture
in Turkey,’ he said.

Ahmadinejad: EU should ask Turkey to become one of its members

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad: EU should ask Turkey to become one of its members
07.11.2009 17:16 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that the
European Union (EU) should ask Turkey to become one of its members.

President Ahmadinejad said Turkey’s EU membership process that new
conditions and environments had emerged in the world and the era of
humanity, culture and moral had begun. He said that states with
deep-rooted cultures and civilizations such as Turkey and Iran would
develop in that period.

President Ahmadinejad said that the EU should ask Turkey to become one
of its members since Turkey’s accession would rise the Union’s
credibility with its history, culture and civilization.

He said that Turkey should also improve its relations with the eastern
countries, adding that it would not mean Turkey’s cutting its ties
with the west.

Calling on Muslim countries to support each other, President
Ahmadinejad said that Turkey, Iran, Egypt, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
Nigeria, Malaysia and Indonesia could create a big market with their
great populations and economies, Anatolian news agency reported.

Protocols to be ratified by Turkey either in February-March, or…

Protocols to be ratified by Turkey either in February-March, or in a few years
07.11.2009 17:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ All decisions in respect to South Caucasus are made
by superpowers, not the region, the Armenian turkologist Artak
Shakaryan told a press conference in Yerevan today. In particular,
according to him, decisions over normalization of Armenia-Turkey
relations are made with permission of superpowers. "The President of
Armenia invited the Turkish president to football match in Moscow,
while the Armenian-Turkish protocols were signed in Switzerland. There
is "foreign trace" everywhere,? the Armenian turkologist said.

Open Armenian-Turkish border will have a positive impact on Armenia
only if there certain changes in tax, customs and immigration
legislation are made. Otherwise the country is not ready for the
opening of the border. "We need to establish direct contact with the
Turkish society. Turks should get information about us not through
Azerbaijani mass media," Armenian turkologist suggested.

?Ankara is not so easy to make concessions and will try to delay the
ratification process to avoid another April 24,? Artak Shakaryan said.
According to him, protocols will be ratified by Turkey either in
February-March, or in a few years. In 2011 parliamentary elections are
scheduled in Turkey. "The ratification of the protocols before
elections would be political suicide for the current authorities,?
Artak Shakaryan said.