Turkey Silencing The Guns — And Critics

TURKEY SILENCING THE GUNS — AND CRITICS

CNN Wire
May 29, 2013 Wednesday 10:40 PM EST

By Emma Sinclair-Webb
(CNN)

Editor’s note: Emma Sinclair-Webb is a senior Europe researcher at
Human Rights Watch who focuses on Turkey.

(CNN) — Sevan Nisanyan, a Turkish-Armenian journalist, wrote a blog
entry last September stating that critical comments about religion
don’t constitute hate speech. “Making fun of an Arab leader who
claimed he contacted God hundreds of years ago and received political,
financial and sexual benefits is not hate speech,” he said. “It
is an almost kindergarten-level test of what is called freedom of
expression.”

An Istanbul court disagreed and on May 22 — for these very words —
sentenced him to 13 months in prison for “insulting the religious
values of one section of the population.” What makes his prosecution
even more chilling is the fact that it followed public comments by
Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag recommending that Nisanyan should
be prosecuted.

There have been dramatic developments in Turkey in recent months
as the government embarks on a bold attempt to end the entrenched
conflict with the armed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and to start
down the long road to peace with the Kurdish minority. While the sight
of uniformed and armed PKK fighters — male and female — retreating
to camps over the border in Iraqi Kurdistan is tangible evidence of
progress toward peace, the Turkish authorities and judiciary are
still cracking down on people who express dissent in words rather
than with an AK47.

One of Turkey’s most fundamental human rights problems is in fact
intolerance of free speech. Politicians regularly sue journalists for
defamation. Editors and publishers are mostly unwilling to permit
much criticism of the government for fear of harming their bosses’
other business interests.

The largest group of people being prosecuted for criticizing the
government are accused of illegal political activism. The police,
prosecutors and courts label their activities “terrorism,” despite
scant evidence of involvement in violence or material support to armed
resistance. A couple of thousand local Kurdish activists are in jail.

These are people who opted for non-violent political struggle in the
Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), which has members in parliament.

Among them are elected mayors, journalists, students and human rights
defenders, and many lawyers.

But not all of those targeted are even accused of terrorism. The
targets of this clampdown include people who offend the government
with satirical and even trivial criticisms.

Nisanyan’s conviction, which he has appealed, followed the conviction
on April 15 of the well-known pianist Fazil Say, who received a
10-month suspended sentence on the same charge for several tweets and
retweets poking fun at Islam. The public was divided, as it was in
Nisanyan’s case, but the real discussion should have been about whether
what either of the two men said actually threatened the public order,
amounted to hate speech or deserved to be restricted on those grounds.

The European Court of Human Rights has found over and over that Turkey
has violated free speech. But prosecutors, courts, and government
figures are still applying different standards to Turkey, muzzling
views they don’t want to hear. Most recently, there has been the
spate of cases against people deemed to have denigrated the religious
sentiments of the Sunni Muslim majority.

On May 30, the feminist lawyer Canan Arin faces a trial hearing for
critical comments she made to lawyers at a meeting of the Antalya Bar
Association in 2011 on the subject of violence against women. She
homed in on the problem of early and forced marriage. After Arin
cited the Prophet Muhammad and President Abdullah Gul as examples of
men who married child brides, she was prosecuted both for “insulting
religious values” and “insulting the president.” She faces a possible
five year prison sentence.

It is unlikely that any of these three will go to prison in the end,
but the fact that they were prosecuted at all demonstrates that the
political transformation of Turkey to a rights-respecting democracy
over the past decade is incomplete. The authorities have used the
criminal justice system to muzzle or punish criticism of the state
and official history throughout the republic. Rather than moving away
from this model, the present government seems to be happy to continue
the tradition by using the courts to fight a battle with anyone who
touches on the subject of religion in ways they don’t like.

The political breakthrough with the PKK offers an important
chance of securing progress on human rights for all of Turkey’s
people. But as jailed Kurdish political activists and critics facing
charges for offending someone in government have found out, that’s
only part of what’s needed to secure progress on human rights for
everyone. Moving toward a tolerant and democratic society also means
that the authorities and the courts need to stop trying to silence
their unarmed critics.

The views expressed are the writer’s own.

Settlement Of Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict To Promote South Caucasus St

SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT TO PROMOTE SOUTH CAUCASUS STABILITY – ALIYEV

ITAR-TASS, Russia
May 29, 2013 Wednesday 05:24 PM GMT+4

– Settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will help ensure
prosperity and stability in the South Caucasus, Azerbaijan’s
President Ilham Aliyev said here on Wednesday, addressing the
Azerbaijani-American Forum “Vision of the Future”.

“The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is the biggest threat to regional
peace. The region must be stable, secure and more integrated,”
the president said. He noted that international efforts aimed at
settlement of the conflict “have not yet yielded results.” “We hope,
however, that the conflict will be settled thanks to the efforts of
the OSCE Minsk Group,” Aliyev said.

He noted that Azerbaijan and the United States are partners in matters
of ensuring security in the region and the world. “We interact as
regards ensuring global security. Azerbaijan is a reliable partner
of the United States in the region and we corroborate in this by
practical deeds,” the president went on. He said, specifically, that
40 percent of cargoes of the coalition forces meant for Afghanistan
are carried via Azerbaijan’s territory. “This is the most stable way,”
Aliyev added. He also stressed that the fight against international
terrorism and ensurance of Europe’s energy security are important
aspects of cooperation of the two countries.

Regarding the Southern Gas Corridor project, the president noted that
it makes it possible “to bring Azerbaijan’s huge energy resources to
the European markets,” to diversify gas delivery sources and increase
the country’s export potential. “This stream of gas will not go to the
American market directly, but the United States supports this project,
as it promotes diversification of gas sources, and Azerbaijan is a
new source of gas,” Aliyev added.

The forum is attended by representatives of 42 US states -senators and
congressmen, influential politicians, experts, and political analysts.

The debates focus on prospects for bilateral relations, energy
cooperation, Eurasian security, and other questions.

From: A. Papazian

Beirut: Aridi, Hout Announce New Direct Beirut Yerevan Flights

ARIDI, HOUT ANNOUNCE NEW DIRECT BEIRUT YEREVAN FLIGHTS

National News Agency Lebanon (NNA)
May 29, 2013 Wednesday

NNA – Caretaker Minister of Public Works and Transportation Ghazi
Aridi and the Middle East Airlines Chairman Muhammad Hout launched
at a press conference on Wednesday the new direct airline between
Beirut and Yerevan, Armenia.

Direct flights linking the two cities will kick off on July 6 with
an average of two flights per week, on Mondays and Fridays.

From: A. Papazian

Baku Bolsters Its Military Potential

BAKU BOLSTERS ITS MILITARY POTENTIAL

WPS Agency, Russia
May 29, 2013 Wednesday

Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, No 105, May 29, 2013, p. 1

PROJECTILES ARE TO BE MASS-PRODUCED IN AZERBAIJAN; Azerbaijan increases
its military might.

Jet-propelled projectiles are to be mass-produced in Azerbaijan. What
information is available to this newspaper indicates that the
Azerbaijanis launched this project together with Roketsan, a
Turkish company. The Turks are responsible for engines. All the
rest (including launchers and assembly as such) will be done by the
Azerbaijanis themselves.

The range of the 112mm caliber projectiles will be twice that of the
analogous systems (including Grads) currently used by the Azerbaijani
army. As for the range of the 107mm caliber projectiles, it will be
4 kilometers longer than the range of Russian and Ukrainian analogs.

Azerbaijan constantly increases import of arms. It is the only country
in the region whose military import rose 155% (!). Azerbaijani military
budget this year amounts to $3.7 billion.

This emphasis on national defense is a corollary of the
Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. “Armenia wants
to preserve status quo. A fair solution to the problem is the last
thing it needs. As for intermediaries, they are mostly focused on
measures of trust and stabilization along the contact line… and
not on what the negotiations ought to be about,” said President of
Azerbaijani Ilham Aliyev.

Aliyev continued, “This state of affairs is unacceptable and
intolerable… Territorial integrity of Azerbaijan is accepted and
recognized by the international community. It must be restored. All
occupiers must be withdrawn from the Azerbaijani territories.”

WPS’2013

[Translated from Russian]

Armenian Plans New Road To Disputed Area Of Nagorno-Karabakh

ARMENIAN PLANS NEW ROAD TO DISPUTED AREA OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Bloomberg / Business Week
May 30 2013

By Sara Khojoyan

Armenia’s plans to build a second main road to the breakaway region of
Nagorno-Karabakh, a move that underscores that country’s unwillingness
to compromise with Azerbaijan over disputed territories.

If Armenians build a second main road to Nagorno-Karabakh it may
mean that Armenia “will be more uncompromising about Kelbajar,”
Tatul Hakobyan, a political analyst with Civilitas Foundation in
Yerevan, said by phone today in a reference to the adjacent region
in Azerbaijan that the road will cross.

The road will connect Gegharkunik in northeastern Armenia to Martakert
in northern Nagorno-Karabakh passing through Shahumyan-Kelbajar, one
of seven territories around the breakaway region under the control
of Armenian forces. Shahumyan’s return to Azerbaijan is among the
most controversial points in deadlocked talks over a peace agreement
mediated by U.S., Russia and France.

Construction of the 114-kilometer (71-mile) road will start next
year after the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund, financed by the Armenian
diaspora, raises $30 million, according to Gevorg Gevorgyan, spokesman
for the fund.

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-05-30/armenian-plans-new-road-to-disputed-area-of-nagorno-karabakh

Armenia’s Economy Revives

ARMENIA’S ECONOMY REVIVES

The Messenger, Georgia
May 30 2013

The Armenian Prime Minister, Tigran Sargsyan has stated that the
economy grew by 7.2% in 2012. The Prime Minister highlighted the
contribution of industry in this regard and also mentioned that the
diversification of economic development is taking place in Armenia
as well. Meanwhile, Armenia’s state loan is 3.7 billion USD. This
represents 37% of the GDP of the country. Mr. Sargsyan said that
since it is not more than 50% of GDP, it can be handled.

Serzh Sargsyan Meets With Russian Railways President

SERZH SARGSYAN MEETS WITH RUSSIAN RAILWAYS PRESIDENT

BSR Russia
May 30 2013

Posted by Jezreel Jann Villaruel Yañez on Thursday, 30 May 2013 17:38
Published in Road & Rail Transport

President Serzh Sargsyan met Tuesday, May 28, with Vladimir Yakunin,
chairman of the Board of Directors of South Caucasus Railways,
President of Russian Railways OJSC, which has assumed the trust
management of the Armenian railway, presidential press service
reported.

Serzh Sargsyan said Armenia is keen on consistently strengthening and
developing the Armenian-Russian strategic partnership, an important
component of which is the cooperation in the field of transport.

According to the President, the ongoing cooperation with the Russian
Railways should be seen in this very context. Thanking Vladimir
Yakunin for constructive and fruitful work, the President stressed his
personal contribution to the development of transport infrastructures
in Armenia.

To begin with, Vladimir Yakunin congratulated Serzh Sargsyan on
Republic Day, wishing him every success. He briefed the President on
ongoing and completed Armenian railway modernization and refurbishment
activities, noting that as attended by Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan
and other officials, a rolling stock maintenance unit and a locomotive
depot had been commissioned earlier today in Gyumri, supposed to
provide new jobs for the local population.

President Serzh Sargsyan and Vladimir Yakunin also took the opportunity
to discuss issues relating to the current status of the Armenian
railway, the prospects of development, as well as the compliance
with the commitments assumed by Russian Railways OJSC under the
concession contract.

http://www.bsr-russia.com/en/transport/item/3820-serzh-sargsyan-meets-with-russian-railways-president.html

Vanadzor-Fioletovo And Armenia-Iran Railways Construction On Governm

VANADZOR-FIOLETOVO AND ARMENIA-IRAN RAILWAYS CONSTRUCTION ON GOVERNMENT’S AGENDA

BSR Russia
May 30 2013

Posted by Jezreel Jann Villaruel Yañez on Thursday, 30 May 2013 17:42
Published in Road & Rail Transport

The construction of Vanadzor-Fioletovo and Armenia-Iran railways
remain on the government’s agenda, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan
told reporters on Tuesday.

Sargsyan noted, on the request of the Armenian side, the specialists
from different institutions, under the auspices of the Russian
Railways, consulted the government of Armenia concerning the efficiency
of the Fioletovo and Armenia-Iran projects.

“The experts introduced us with several possible scenarios, and they
are on our agenda today,” Sargsyan responded to ARKA.

North-South railway connects Armenia with Iran which will allow to
use alternative ways of transportation of energy resources and other
goods. Currently railway communications of Armenia with foreign
countries is provided only through the territory of Georgia.

In November 2011, former Armenian transport and communications minister
Manuk Vardanyan said the project is ready, and a group of experts
headed by deputy transport minister of Armenia, Iran and Russia,
is working on it.

According to the experts, the project total budget will stand at
1.7-2.8 billion dollars. The project is currently discussed by Russia,
Iran and China. The interest was also shown by the World Bank and
the Asian Development Bank.

In December 2012, former economy minister of Armenia Tigran Davtyan
said the project of Vanadzor-Fioletovo railway construction will not
be implemented in the near future. Earlier, General Director of SCR
Viktor Rebets said the estimated cost of the project varied within
$250-500 million.

South Caucasus Railways, a 100-percent subsidiary of Russian Railways,
runs Armenian Railway.

Armenian Railways was handed over to the South Caucasus Railways on
February 13, 2008 for 30-year concession management with a right to
prolong the management term for other 10 years.

http://www.bsr-russia.com/en/transport/item/3823-vanadzor-fioletovo-and-armenia-iran-railways-construction-on-government%E2%80%99s-agenda.html

IWPR: Armenia-Azerbaijan: Behind The Rhetoric

ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN: BEHIND THE RHETORIC

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
IWPR Caucasus Reporting, #689
May 30 2013

Virtual discussion brings experts together to discuss impasse of
talks, and possible ways forward.

By IWPR – Caucasus

IWPR’s offices in Yerevan and Baku provided a rare opportunity for
open Armenian-Azerbaijani debate when they hosted a joint discussion
on the issues behind the hostile relationship between the two states.

Nijat Melikov, head of social affairs at the Zerkalo newspaper and
spokesman for the REAL (Republican Alternative) movement, went on
Skype to link up with IWPR’s Yerevan office, which hosted Stepan
Grigoryan, a political analyst who heads the board of the Centre for
Globalisation and Regional Cooperation,

The discussion was moderated by journalist Arshaluys Mgdesyan.

Grigoryan and Melikov began by discussing the current state of
negotiations on the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, which ended in 1994
with a truce but no political settlement. The protracted talks process
is being mediated by the OSCE’s Minsk Group, chaired by Russia, the
United States and France.

As well as diplomacy, Melikov and Stepanyan looked at the upsurge in
frictions on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Over many
years, sporadic shooting incidents have generally been a feature of
the “line of control” around Karabakh, but more recently there have
been casualties further to the north, on the state border.

They also touched on the case of Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani soldier
who killed an Armenian studying on the same course as him and was
jailed in Hungary. Extradited to Azerbaijan last autumn, he was
swiftly pardoned and accorded a hero’s welcome. (IWPR reported on the
case here). The incident worsened the country’s already poor
relationship with Armenia.

Following are excerpts from their remarks:

TALKS AT A STANDSTILL

Stepan Grigoryan: The reality is that there hasn’t been a meeting
between the Armenian and Azerbaijan presidents in the last year. Even
our foreign ministers haven’t meting recently. You’ll be aware that
there was an attempt to get the foreign ministers to meet in Paris,
but actually they met the co-chairs of the Minsk Group, but not each
other. So the general picture seems to be that the talks process is at
an impasse.

Recently the central issues of the Karabakh conflict have been
evolving, expanding, and shifting to a different plane.

Previously we’d have been talking about ceasefire violations along the
line of contact, shootings, snipers and people killed – it was largely
about the line of contact between the Azerbaijan army and the Karabakh
self-defence forces. Now we’re hearing more about what’s going on in
Noyemberyan district [border area in Armenia], about Khojali
[Azerbaijani civilians killed in 1992 during Karabakh conflict], about
Sumgait [1988 killings of Armenian civilians in town near Baku], the
Safarov case, and the current issue around Stepanakert airport [which
Karabakh authorities plan to reopen; opposed by Baku]. In other words,
we’re hearing more about these things than about anything directly
connected with a resolution to the Karabakh conflict.

And the Madrid Principles [new framework for Karabakh talks devised in
2007] have been entirely forgotten over the last six months. As you’re
aware this was a foundation document that didn’t offer a solution but
was nevertheless something around which there were official
negotiations, disputes, disagreement and agreement.

There have always been a lot of historical references – we Armenians
and Azerbaijanis are very fond of citing history. But now everything
is about history, genocides and so on.

I have to say openly that this creates a very difficult environment;
it increases the level of pessimism. I recall being in Baku in
December 2010 for a major conference on the European Union and the
South Caucasus. There was a degree of optimism there.

Now its much harder to say anything optimistic. Terms like
“compromise” and “concession” have almost become swearwords for the
Armenian public – I don’t know about Azerbaijan – and I try to use
them with care, or not at all.

Nijat Melikov: On the issue of why the talks have reached an impasse –
that was only to be expected. It’s the continuation of a trend that’s
been evolving over the last 20 years, in which there is some kind of
talks process, there are proposals on the table, and there are some
basic principles that at least make negotiations a possibility. But
all this – international law, the various proposals and conditions –
are stuck in a dead end.

In reality it isn’t about agreeing principles; often it’s about how
ready the public is to accept any kind of compromise, and how it would
receive them. Also, there’s the question of the quality of the
political elites that have conducted these negotiations over all this
time.

It isn’t clear how to take things forward, what process nto pursue in
these negotiations. The OSCE Minsk Group and the countries involved in
it [Russia, US and France] play a significant role but to many people
that process has looked like a sham over many years. There’s long been
a public perception that it’s a pretend process; that it’s talks about
talks.

Grigoryan: That point about the quality of the elite is excellent…. I
don’t just mean the political elite but all the rest, from the
historians to the academics and technocrats. The logic they apply is
most often drawn from the communist way of thinking – that everything
should be resolved by force.

Unfortunately, the elite is being replaced only slowly, so many of the
people at the top in this country and in yours belong to the old
elites. They aren’t inclined to heed or react to changing realities.

On the positive side, there are the analysts and NGOs.

DOES ANYONE WANT PEACE?

Melikov: Sometimes one asks oneself who is actually interested in
resolving the dispute. I mean the parties to the conflict, the
international mediators and the regional geopolitical actors. How
interested are Armenia, Azerbaijan or the Minsk Group members?

Grigoryan: I think it’s worth examining the role of external factors.

Take Russia – it may be playing a positive role at the moment, in the
sense that it doesn’t want war in the region. But at the same time, it
doesn’t have a massive interest in seeing a rapid resolution to the
Karabakh conflict. If that were to happen, both Armenia and Azerbaijan
would become a lot more independent.And it’s obvious which way we’d
turn. Our two nations are sensible and they want a decent life, and
they’d achieve that by moving towards Europe.

I’ve been quite surprised by the American position recently. In
2005-06 you’ll recall that they wanted a rapid resolution. When you
meet Americans these days and ask them what they see happening on
Karabakh, they just look away. It’s very close to the Russian
position.

BORDER CLASHES

Arshaluys Mgdesyan: I’d like to turn to a more down-to-earth question.

In this specific sector, Noyemberyan and Tavush [Armenian districts
adjoining Azerbaijan], there are clashes, shootings and fatalities.

Who has an interest in that happening? Who benefits?

Melikov: First one should probably ask who is provoking these shooting
incidents. The Azerbaijani side will say the Armenians are provoking
it, while the Armenians will say no, it’s the Azerbaijanis. It all
comes down to how possible it is to monitor the situation . and again
we have to ask what the OSCE Minsk Group and other international
organisations are doing. It all comes down to “who started it?”, every
time.

Grigoryan: Why is this [tension] reflected in shootings in
Noyemberyan, in other words on the border between Armenia and
Azerbaijan rather than just around Karabakh?

When the media here report that the Azerbaijanis have committed 355
ceasefire violations, I always look at the Azerbaijani media and they
report that the Armenians have committed 355 violations. I believe the
truth lies somewhere in between. We violate the ceasefire, and you
violate it too.

But why is it happening there [on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border]? I
don’t have an answer. I honestly don’t understand how the Noyemberyan
clashes benefit either us or the Azerbaijanis.

Grigoryan: There’s a stereotypical and fairly widespread view that the
status quo is to Armenia’s advantage but not to Azerbaijan’s. So the
Azerbaijani government launches initiatives in international
organisations, or tries to move discussion of the Karabakh issue
beyond the Minsk Group to other institutions like the United Nations.

I think this is true in a sense. It seems to me that Azerbaijan fears
that the Minsk Group process isn’t working, so it constantly tries to
raise the Karabakh issue with other institutions, the UN or the
Organisation of the Islamic Conference.

There’s also a view that for the same reason, Azerbaijan refuses to
withdraw its snipers from the line of control.

Moroever, in Armenia there’s a very strong stereotypical view that the
status quo is to our advantage. I take a different view. But I often
encounter this view when people ask me why I’m proposing some
initiative to make rapid progress or offer compromises, when they
believe we should just wait and see what happens.

I understand the logic of the Azerbaijani position. It’s that if
everything carries on by the force of inertia, everyone will forget
about the Karabakh conflict, especially in the context of events in
Syria and Egypt – regional states with immense influence. So there’s a
concern to keep raising the issue and keep on reminding people about
it.

The dominant logic in Armenia, and one that I think has grown even
stronger, is equally understandable – why take sudden steps? Let’s
just wait and see.

Yet I don’t believe it’s in our strategic interests or in those of
Azerbaijan and Georgia to leave this issue unresolved.

CONTRADICTORY DOMESTIC DYNAMICS

Melikov: Certain sections of the Azerbaijani public often take the
view that the authorities use the Karabakh issue as a political and
moral instrument for drumming up domestic political support. They
suspect that efforts to raise the issue in the international arena are
a PR exercise to cover up domestic problems with human rights and
freedom of speech.

Grigoryan: What’s interesting is that the opposition in Armenia takes
a harder line on Karabakh than the government does. At least publicly,
the government says it’s prepared to engage in negotiations. The
opposition comes along, in the shape of its main figure at the moment,
Raffi Hovhannesyan, and says no, we just have to recognise Karabakh as
independent.

THE SAFAROV CASE

Grigoryan: I stopped using the word “compromise” after the Safarov
case. I don’t want to go into it or rake it up again. It’s a really
sad story.

Afterwards, it really became hard to suggest to Armenians [in
Karabakh] that they might agree to live under Azerbaijani rule. That’s
a very hard argument to make, believe me.

There are some events that qualitatively change the situation. I can’t
think of another event that has cause so much stress in our society as
the Safarov case. You understand the gist of it – “if you kill an
Armenian you’re a hero”, crudely speaking. At one stroke, it
undermined anyone inclined towards democracy and compromise.

Melikov: I wouldn’t say society was totally divided on the issue. Of
course most people saw him if not as a hero, then as a positive
figure. But among the more active section of society [NGOs] it was
hotly disputed and there wasn’t a homogenous view….Everyone had their
own opinion. There wasn’t a blanket view that Safarov was a national
hero for Azerbaijan.

WHAT NOW?

Melikov: The public must come to the view that in order to resolve the
Karabakh conflict, war is not a necessary evil; and that peace is the
essential good for which we must strive.

The argument needs to be made that Azerbaijan and Armenia do not need
to have conflicting interests in any solution to the Karabakh problem
. Of course that will be difficult to achieve, since it will initially
appear that their interests have nothing in common and are completely
opposed.

Grigoryan: What might we consider doing? One idea that we’ve discussed
several times, as have some of our Azerbaijan partners is to jointly
call for the snipers to be withdrawn, without going on about who’s to
blame.

As public figures, we would propose withdrawing the snipers. It would
reduce the number of fatalities. Every death is a step further away
from a solution.

http://iwpr.net/report-news/armenia-azerbaijan-behind-rhetoric

Armenia Today

ARMENIA TODAY

Ahram Online, Egypt
May 30 2013

As Armenia celebrates the 95th anniversary of its restored statehood,
the country is working to improve its domestic development and security
in the region, writes Armen Melkonian [Armenian ambassador to Egypt]

Armenia today is celebrating the 95th anniversary of the restoration
of its statehood. The struggle for independence was not an easy one.

For six centuries, the people of Armenia, whose history and cultural
heritage go back millennia, making their ancestors the contemporaries
of the ancient Assyrians and Babylonians, were deprived of their own
state due to the continuous invasions of foreign conquerors.

Consecutive generations of Armenians sacrificed their lives to put an
end to the sufferings of their people and to achieve the sacred goal
of independence. Finally, on May 28, 1918, following the nightmare
of the atrocities of WWI and the Armenian Genocide under the Ottoman
Empire, which claimed as many as 1.5 million innocent lives, the First
Republic of Armenia was formed as an independent and sovereign state.

However, soon afterwards Armenia found itself integrated into the
Soviet Union as one of its constituent republics. Soviet Armenia
was not a sovereign state, but it played an important role in
the preservation of Armenian statehood until the aspirations of
independence were realised once again on the eve of the collapse of
the Soviet Empire with the emergence of the Third Republic of Armenia
in 1991.

Since then, and bearing the lessons of history in mind, Armenians
have been crafting their present and their path towards the future
on the basis of universal values and the principles of democracy,
human rights, social justice and the free-market economy. After 22
years of independence, we are able to speak proudly about irreversible
progress and the significant successes that have been made along the
path of state-building. We already have mature institutions of public
administration and local government, an emerging civil society and
free media, a growing economy and improving social conditions.

Notwithstanding these achievements, we are still pursuing policies
that will lead to a better, fairer, freer, and more prosperous country,
with the aim of overcoming the current challenges and moving forwards
towards a more dignified and prosperous livelihood for every citizen
and each family.

Economic development is a core priority in this regard. We are still
facing a whole array of problems, including unemployment, poverty and
emigration, the solutions for which are still to be found. However,
there have also been great achievements, despite the permanent blockade
imposed by Azerbaijan and Turkey.

GDP growth in 2012 was slightly more than seven per cent, which is one
of the best performances for that year in the world. We are looking
forward to 6.2 per cent economic growth in 2013. The government
of Armenia is promoting high-productivity industries utilising new
technologies, attaining favourable terms for domestic producers and
exporters in external markets, developing free economic zones within
the country, attracting efficient foreign investments, and systemically
reforming the business environment.

Armenia has also declared an “open door” investment policy. There
are no restrictions on the participation of foreign investors in any
economic activity in Armenia. According to the Heritage Foundation’s
Index of Economic Freedom, Armenia’s economy was the 32nd freest
economy in the world in 2012.

In order to increase the country’s economic competitiveness and
ensure sustainable economic growth, the government has declared the
development of a knowledge-based economy to be its core long-term
strategic objective, while simultaneously developing a range of sectors
with strong export potential, like mining, metallurgy, machinery,
pharmacology, biotechnology, chemicals, precision engineering,
textiles, and jewellery.

There is also great potential for IT, agriculture, tourism, health and
education. Lacking fuel resources, Armenia places great emphasis on
the development of its own renewable energy sources, such as hydro,
wind and solar energy. About 40 per cent of Armenia’s electricity is
produced by the Medzamor nuclear power plant.

The establishment of a fair state that will guarantee equal
opportunities, ensure and enhance competition, while at the same time
protecting the most vulnerable social groups, is another priority
for the government. A wide package of reforms has been introduced
to further consolidate democratic institutions, strengthen the rule
of law, protect and promote human rights and fundamental freedoms,
improve electoral procedures and relevant legislation, strengthen
the independent judicial system and expand the role of civil society.

The recent presidential elections in Armenia in February 2013,
followed by the municipal elections in the capital Yerevan in May,
were assessed by international monitors to be in full compliance with
the highest democratic standards. They are the most eloquent evidence
of the great successes of both the government and people of Armenia
in pursuing the on-going processes of democratisation and ensuring
full respect for the rule of law and for human rights.

In order to achieve our goals, extensive and dynamic engagement in
international political and economic relations is essential. Our
bilateral and multilateral international cooperation is progressing
steadily. We are advancing relations with all the power centres and
leading states of the world, strengthening our alliance and strategic
partnership with the Russian Federation, expanding and strengthening
our friendly partnership with the US and our rapprochement with Europe,
deepening our traditional cooperation with the CIS Member States
and our immediate neighbours of Georgia and Iran, while developing
relations with Arab and other friendly countries.

We are looking forward to expanding the already existing
cooperation with Egypt, to which we are tied by a traditional and
historically-formed friendship. Since the establishment of diplomatic
relations between Armenia and Egypt in 1992, there have been plenty
of activities, as well as official visits and contacts in different
fields and on all levels. More than 40 agreements and protocols have
been signed and joint governmental commissions of economic cooperation
have been set up.

The Armenian community, famous for its significant input into
the public and cultural life of Egypt, is nowadays also actively
contributing to the strengthening of Armenian-Egyptian cooperation
and friendship.

Armenia has become an active participant in leading international
organisations and political processes, including the UN, the OSCE,
the COE, the CIS, CSTO, BSEC, WTO and TRACECA. We are observers at the
AL, NAM and AU. Just two weeks ago, Armenia assumed the presidency of
the committee of ministers of the Council of Europe, a position which
the country will hold for the next six months. The priorities of our
presidency are combating racism, intolerance and xenophobia, promoting
intercultural dialogue and fostering democracy and human rights.

As part of our policy of creating stronger relationships with Europe,
we are actively involved in the EU Neighbourhood Policy Eastern
Partnership Programme, and we have already entered into the final
stages of negotiations on the Association Agreement, as well as on
the Agreement on the Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Area. We are
also contributing to international peacemaking: Armenian troops are
participating in peacekeeping operations in Afghanistan and Kosovo.

We are pursuing the issue of reinvigorating the process of the
international recognition of the Armenian Genocide and addressing its
consequences. In 2015, the international community will commemorate the
centenary of the Genocide. For us, the recognition and condemnation of
the Armenian Genocide is not just a matter of justice and retribution
or a moral debt to be paid to our ancestors: it also has a security
dimension. Without Turkey’s sincere repentance, security in our region
will always be endangered. We believe that true reconciliation does
not consist of forgetting the past, but of the ability to cooperate
in the elimination of the consequences of past crimes.

Lasting peace and stability in our region very much depend on the
fair and peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. The
conflict started when Azerbaijan tried, by ethnic cleansing and then
by unleashing a large-scale war, to suppress the right of the people of
Nagorno-Karabakh to exercise their legal right of self-determination.

In the face of imminent elimination, the Nagorno-Karabakh population
resorted to self-defence and in the end forced Azerbaijan to conclude
a ceasefire agreement in May 1994.

Since then, Armenia has been exerting its efforts towards the
settlement of the conflict exclusively through peaceful means and on
the basis of the purposes, principles and norms reflected in the UN
Charter and the provisions of statements made by the three co-chairs
of the countries of the OSCE Minsk Group: France Russia and the US. We
believe that any settlement must be based on the recognition of the
Nagorno-Karabakh people’s right to self-determination.

Like the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, which is the only
internationally mandated negotiating forum for this conflict, Armenia
has many times urged respect for the ceasefire agreement and abstention
from hostile rhetoric that fosters feelings of enmity and increases
tension. Unfortunately, the Azerbaijani side has rejected all the
proposals presented by the mediators, and it poses a threat to the
security of the region by constantly increasing its military build-up
and threatening the use of force against Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Azerbaijan rejects all proposals for confidence-building measures
and the consolidation of the ceasefire. It systematically provokes
violations of the ceasefire and performs ceaseless acts of vandalism
towards the Armenian historical and cultural heritage. Such an
approach is endangering the negotiating process and the fragile peace
on the ground. Instead of instilling anti-Armenian hysteria into its
own society and multiplying its military budget on account of its
large oil revenues, the leadership of Azerbaijan should realise that
there is no alternative to the peace settlement and it should adopt
a constructive position within the negotiation process.

Notwithstanding the existing problems, Armenia is confidently
developing, looking to its future and strengthening its role in
the region.

The writer is the Armenian ambassador to Egypt.

http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/2741/21/Armenia-today.aspx