BAKU: Sweden Ready To Support Peaceful Settlement Of Armenia-Azerbai

SWEDEN READY TO SUPPORT PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN, NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

The Azerbaijan State Telegraph Agency
Feb 6 2015

06.02.2015 [15:14]

Baku, February 6, AzerTAc Chairman of the Azerbaijan Council of State
Support for NGOs Azay Guliyev has met official of the Swedish Ministry
of Foreign Affairs Therese Hyden, the head of Swedish International
Development Cooperation Agency Mirja Peterson and Charge de Affairs
of Embassy of Sweden to Azerbaijan Tomas Danestad. The Chairman
highlighted the activity of the Council. They exchanged views on
Azerbaijani and EU relations within the Eastern Partnership Program,
as well as the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Therese
Hyden noted Sweden recognized Azerbaijan`s territorial integrity,
adding the country was ready to support peaceful settlement of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

http://azertag.az/en/xeber/830258

BAKU: Sweden Ready To Back Peaceful Settlement Of Nagorno-Karabakh C

SWEDEN READY TO BACKS PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Feb 6 2015

6 February 2015, 16:00 (GMT+04:00)

Azerbaijani and EU relations within the Eastern Partnership Program,
as well as the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict were
mulled in Baku.

Azay Guliyev, Chairman of the Azerbaijan Council of State Support
for NGOs has met Therese Hyden, official of the Swedish Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, Mirja Peterson, head of Swedish International
Development Cooperation Agency and Tomas Danestad, Charge de Affairs
of Embassy of Sweden to Azerbaijan.

Hyden noted Sweden recognized Azerbaijan`s territorial integrity,
adding the country was ready to support peaceful settlement of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Armenia occupied over 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally
recognized territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent
regions, after laying territorial claims against its South Caucasus
neighbor that caused a brutal war in the early 1990s. Long-standing
efforts by U.S, Russian and French mediators have been largely
fruitless so far.

As a result of the military aggression of Armenia, over 20,000
Azerbaijanis were killed, 4,866 are reported missing and almost
100,000 were injured, and 50,000 were disabled.

The UN Security Council has passed four resolutions on Armenian
withdrawal from the Azerbaijani territory, but they have not been
enforced to this day.

http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/77284.html

BAKU: Moscow Concerned Over Tension On Armenia-Azerbaijan Contact Li

MOSCOW CONCERNED OVER TENSION ON ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN CONTACT LINE

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Feb 6 2015

6 February 2015, 13:37 (GMT+04:00)
By Mushvig Mehdiyev

Russia has called on the parties to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to
avoid actions leading to escalation on the contact line.

Armenia and Azerbaijan should take effective measures aimed at reducing
tension, said Alexander Lukashevich, Spokesperson for Russian Foreign
Ministry, reported Tass, a Russian media outlet.

“Russia is concerned over the escalation on the contact line of the
Armenian and Azerbaijani armies,” Lukashevich added.

He said the very difficult situation on the frontline has resulted
in an intensification of a large number of ceasefire violations,
clashes and actions of sabotage groups.

The data provided by the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe’s monitoring commission revealed that 12 people were
killed and 18 others wounded in wake of the skirmishes in January,
noted Lukashevich.

“It goes without saying that the numbers can be higher,” he added.

Lukashevich said the statement issued by the OSCE Minsk Group middlemen
based on the outcomes of the meeting with Azerbaijani foreign minister
in Krakow on January 27 this year includes a call to the conflicting
sides to follow the ceasefire agreement.

“We strongly call on Armenia and Azerbaijan to take effective
measures to reduce the tension and to avoid steps that could lead to
escalation,” he noted.

Armenia is keeping Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent territories,
historical and internationally recognized lands of Azerbaijan, under
occupation for over two decades.

Following a lengthy war that sparked in early 1990s based on a
falsified territorial claim against Azerbaijan, Armenian armed forces
invaded in 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory, killing hundreds and
displacing over a million of ethnic Azerbaijanis.

Peace negotiations mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group have not brought
a happy end to the conflict so far. The Armenian side ignores its
obligations under the ceasefire agreement signed in 1994, keeping on
armistice infringements, sabotage incursions to flare up the tension
on the contact line.

Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions
on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions.

Meanwhile, the Armenian armed forces have broken the ceasefire with
Azerbaijan for 85 times in numerous positions in the last 24 hours,
according to Defense Ministry.

http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/77255.html

ANKARA: Armenian President Reads Out Pan-Armenian Declaration, Calli

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT READS OUT PAN-ARMENIAN DECLARATION, CALLING ON TURKEY TO ACCEPT ‘GENOCIDE’

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Feb 6 2015

February 06, 2015, Friday/ 17:32:59/ TODAY’S ZAMAN / ANKARA

President Serzh Sarksyan, on Jan. 29, read out the Pan-Armenian
Declaration on the 100th Anniversary of the alleged Armenian genocide,
before submitting it to the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, calling
on Turkey “to face its own history and memory through commemorating
the victims” of what it claims is the “Armenian genocide.”

According to the Office of the President of Armenia, following a
meeting of the State Commission, President Sarksyan, Catholicos of
the Holy See of Cilicia of the Armenian Apostolic Church Aram I, and
Patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church Karekin II were joined by
commission members to lay a wreath at Tsitsernakaberd, the Armenian
Genocide Memorial Complex dedicated to the memory of Armenians killed
during World War I. There, Sarksyan read the declaration calling on
Turkey to “recognize and condemn the Armenian Genocide committed by
the Ottoman Empire, and to face its own history and memory through
commemorating the victims of that heinous crime against humanity and
renouncing the policy of falsification, denialism and banalizations
of this indisputable fact.”

The declaration, based on the Declaration of Independence of Armenia
of Aug. 23, 1990, and the Armenian Constitution, also condemns what
it calls Turkey’s illegal blockade of Armenia, and its “anti-Armenian
stance in international forums and the imposition of preconditions
in the normalization of interstate relations.”

The declaration commemorated what it calls “the 1.5 million innocent
victims of the Armenian Genocide and bows in gratitude before those
martyred and the surviving heroes who struggled for their lives and
human dignity.”

The declaration also “considers the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide an important milestone in the ongoing struggle for historical
justice under the motto, ‘I remember and demand.'”

The declaration comes at a time when Turkish-Armenian ties are
particularly strained, especially after Turkey decided to commemorate
the Gallipoli Campaign of World War I on April 23-24 this year,
coinciding with the Armenians’ centennial commemoration of what they
call the “Armenian genocide.” The Turkish government sent invitations
to more than 100 leaders around the world, whose soldiers fought in
World War I, including Armenian President Sarksyan.

In an open letter addressed to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Sarksyan
immediately rejected the invitation to the Gallipoli commemoration
ceremonies, adding that the invitation itself shows that Turkey
continues to pursue its policy of denial of the Armenian genocide.

Yerevan commemorates the mass killings of Armenians every April 24
and often uses the anniversary as an opportunity to lobby Western
countries to brand the killings as genocide. Ankara denies claims that
the events of 1915 amounted to genocide, arguing that both Turks and
Armenians were killed when Armenians revolted against the Ottoman
Empire during World War I in collaboration with the Russian army,
which was then invading Eastern Anatolia.

Turkey expressed its first condolences to the Armenians for the 1915
events in April of 2014. Though this was regarded as promising, it was
not warmly accepted by Armenians as the message failed to reference
the events as genocide nor did it refer to other ethnicities who also
suffered during the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

http://www.todayszaman.com/diplomacy_armenian-president-reads-out-pan-armenian-declaration-calling-on-turkey-to-accept-genocide_371972.html

ANKARA: Turkey Welcomes Parole Rejection Of Diplomat’s Murderer

TURKEY WELCOMES PAROLE REJECTION OF DIPLOMAT’S MURDERER

Turkish Press
Feb 6 2015

Friday, February 6, 2015

ANKARA – Turkey has welcomed the rejection of parole to a convicted
murderer of a Turkish diplomat serving jail time in the U.S.

Armenian-origin Hampig Sassounian killed Turkish Consul General
Kemal Arikan in Los Angeles on Jan. 28, 1982. Authorities rejected
Sassounian’s request for bail.

“We welcome that the request for release on parole of the terrorist
Sassounian, who on 28 Jan.1982 assassinated Arikan in a treacherous
attack has been rejected at the parole hearing held on Friday,”
Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“We consider this rejection decision as appropriate in terms of
universal principles of justice as well as necessary for an effective
and uncompromising stance against terrorism,” Spokesman Tanju Bilgic
said in the statement.

Bilgic also said that Turkey paid tribute to Arikan and other Turkish
diplomats and citizens who were victims of terrorism.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.turkishpress.com/news/422534/

ANKARA: US Envoy Indirectly Joins Presidential System Debate In Turk

US ENVOY INDIRECTLY JOINS PRESIDENTIAL SYSTEM DEBATE IN TURKEY

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Feb 6 2015

The American administrative system, composed of three separate
but co-equal branches of government, is the result of 238 years of
experimentation and refinement, with a rigorous set of checks and
balances so power is distributed across all three branches, the U.S.

envoy to Ankara has said, indirectly joining an intense local debate
launched by the ruling party over how the Turkish presidential system
should be.

“Our president is our head of state and our head of government,
but he does not exercise full power to do anything, anywhere, at any
time. He is bound by a set of laws, he has to live within the budget
that is approved by Congress and his actions are subject to oversight
and scrutiny by Congress,” the U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, John Bass,
told NTV in an interview Feb. 6. “So, for us, we have found that to
be a very effective system, and, obviously, if others see value in our
structures for their societies, that is a matter for them to decide.”

Bass’ statement came at a time when President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
is gearing up his efforts to highlight the need to change the
administrative system from the current parliamentarian one to a
presidential system, either like France’s semi-presidential model or
the U.S. presidential system.

“It is an issue for Turkish citizens to decide. It properly, from our
perspective, should be a matter of public discussion and debate and
one that involves respect for as wide a range of views as possible
while changes are considered and evaluated in society,” Bass said.

The following is a summary of Bass’ responses during the interview
with NTV:

On the Ankara-Washington relationship: “It is important for us to
continue to work together. We do have our differences sometimes on
tactics and on priorities, but that is why we continue to work so
closely together to address them, because we believe we are always
stronger when we work together. (…) We are still strategic partners.

As I said, we have differences over tactics. We have differences
over relative priorities of some of the threats we face. But the
things that we share in common are still fundamentals and they are
the foundation of the relationship.”

On U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gulen’s deportation: “I cannot
comment specifically about an individual. What I can tell you is
that in every case in which one of our allies and partners presents a
request for extradition, or a request for a legal proceeding against
one of their nationals who is present in the United States, we look
at that and evaluate it very carefully, very rigorously, involving
two of our three separate but co-equal branches of government – in
this case, the ministry of justice and the court system. And we would
evaluate the evidence that was presented and make a determination.”

On the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) as the priority:
“From our perspective, we believe that the most acute threat we face
and that the region faces right now is the threat posed by DAESH
[ISIL]. That’s why we are putting such a weight of effort behind
supporting all of those parties in the region who are working through
the coalition to combat this problem, to increase support to the Iraqi
government, to increase support to those elements in Syria that are
already fighting DAESH and are prepared to do more in that fight,
even as we continue to take steps to strengthen the moderate Syrian
opposition to pressure the [Syrian President Bashar] al-Assad regime
to come back to the table.”

On reactions against the United States: “I would say a couple things.

First, I think our record of support for people of this region seeking
to choose their own futures has been quite strong through this period.

I have to say I am disturbed by some of what I read and hear in the
Turkish press from many people in this society, alleging or asserting
that somehow Western policy or attitudes in the United States or in
Europe are responsible for the rise of this group of people who are
hijacking a religion for their own cynical, violent political ends.

And again, I think this is an issue where it is useful to take a
look at the facts and not simply concentrate on opinion. The fact
of the matter is that the United States spends $7 billion a year in
foreign assistance to five Muslim majority nations. Five of our top
six recipients of U.S. foreign assistance are Muslim nations. So, the
notion that this is somehow the result of a perspective in the United
States that opposes Islam simply could not be further from the truth.”

On meeting with Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) head Selahattin
DemirtaÃ…~_: “I meet with a wide range of people in society, in
government, outside of government. It is part of our effort to
understand what is going on in Turkey. I met with Mr. DemirtaÃ…~_,
along with the heads of many of the political factions. The choices
that the HDP is making are theirs to make. And they are clearly
evaluating the electoral landscape and making, from their perspective,
an informed decision. We will see how they do in the election. I
think the important thing here is that the election occurs, and the
campaign occurs, in a way that allows for every citizen of Turkey
who will be voting to have an opportunity to hear from a range of
parties and a range of perspectives and to make an informed choice
when they go to vote.”

On the U.S. position on the mass killing of Armenians: “I cannot speak
to how the events will be characterized in whatever the president or
Congress chooses to say on the anniversary, but, I can tell you that
our policy hasn’t changed. Our policy is that we believe that a full,
frank and just acknowledgement of the facts surrounding those terrible
massacres and tragedies in 1915 is in the interest of the citizens of
Turkey, it is in the interest of the citizens of Armenia and it is in
the interest of the descendants of people who suffered in that period.”

On U.S. participation in the 100th anniversary of the Battle of
Gallipoli: “It is too early to say how we will be represented
in Gallipoli. I would say, with respect to the timing of the
commemorations, you know there is so much depth of feeling and so much
suffering that occurred in 1915 among many populations that, I think,
from our perspective, we think that commemorations should occur in
a way that allows every community that suffered to commemorate the
events in a way and in a manner that is respectful of the dead and
that allows them in their own ways to acknowledge that suffering and
to commemorate their dead respectfully.”

February/06/2015

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/us-envoy-indirectly-joins-presidential-system-debate-in-turkey.aspx?pageID=238&nID=77992&NewsCatID=338

ANKARA: Azerbaijani Soldier Dies In Clashes With Armenian Troops

AZERBAIJANI SOLDIER DIES IN CLASHES WITH ARMENIAN TROOPS

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Feb 6 2015

6 February 2015

Armenian forces have allegedly violated the cease-fire at least
86 times using heavy weapons and mortars, the Azerbaijani Defense
Ministry says. An Azerbaijani soldier died Friday after sustaining
serious injuries in border clashes with Armenian forces Thursday night,
Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said.

According to the ministry statement Friday, Farid Aghayev succumbed
to his wounds at a hospital.

A separate statement from the ministry said that a woman was also
wounded in clashes and a house was burnt down in Azerbaijan’s western
province of Tovuz, which came under an alleged Armenian attack for
about four hours.

Armenian forces allegedly violated the cease-fire at least 86 times
using heavy weapons and mortars, the ministry added.

On May 12, 1994, a cease-fire agreement was signed between Azerbaijan
and Armenia after two decades of conflict over the disputed territory.

In February 1988, the regional parliament in Nagorno-Karabakh,
which is largely populated by ethnic Armenians, voted to declare its
independence from Azerbaijan. Armenia’s parliament voted to recognize
the independence, a move that prompted a forceful evacuation of over
200,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis from Armenia. Thousands of Azerbaijani
civilians lost their lives in the resulting conflict.

6 February 2015

AA

http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/179886/azerbaijani-soldier-dies-in-clashes-with-armenian-troops.html

ANKARA: Armenia Committed To Reducing Tensions In Nagorno-Karabakh C

ARMENIA COMMITTED TO REDUCING TENSIONS IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Cihan News Agency, Turkey
Feb 6 2015

BAKU – 06.02.2015 11:18:24

A good meeting was held with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian to discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement as
part of the Munich Security Conference, the US Co-chair of the OSCE
Minsk Group James Warlick wrote in Twitter Feb. 6.

He said that Nalbandian expressed commitment to reducing tensions in
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“We welcome his commitment to reducing tensions,” Warlick wrote.

Armenian armed forces have broken the ceasefire with Azerbaijan 86
times in numerous positions in the last 24 hours, Azerbaijani Defense
Ministry said on Feb.6.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan.

As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied
20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and
seven surrounding districts.

The two countries signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The co-chairs
of the OSCE Minsk Group, Russia, France and the US are currently
holding peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions
on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding regions.

http://en.cihan.com.tr/news/Armenia-committed-to-reducing-tensions-in-Nagorno-Karabakh-conflict_0076-CHMTY3MDA3Ni80

[cenn] CENN Vacancy Announcement: GIS Specialist for the Program Was

PRESS RELEASE
Caucasus Environmental NGO Network
28, Chovelidze street
Tbilisi, 380008, GEORGIA
Tel: ++ 995 32 99 63 28, 995 99 57 77 22
E-mail: [email protected], [email protected]
Web:

CENN Vacancy Announcement

GIS Specialist for the Program

Waste Management Technologies in Regions (WMTR), Georgia

CENN is looking for a GIS Specialist for the Program Waste Management
Technologies in Regions (WMTR), Georgia.

Vacancy Reference #: GIS/CENN/GEO/150206

Employer: CENN – Caucasus
Environmental NGO Network

Post(s) Title: GIS Specialist for the
Program Waste Management Technologies in Regions (WMTR), Georgia

Deadline for Applications: 18:00, February 20, 2015

Duty station: Tbilisi, Georgia

Duration: 01.03.2015-01.03.2016
with potential prolongation period

Full staff: 8 hours a day

Working hours: 9:00-18:00, 5 days a week

Specific responsibilities include:

* Create maps and graphs, using GIS software and related equipment.
* Conduct Research to locate and obtain existing databases.
* Gather, analyze, and integrate spatial data from staff and determine
how best the information can be displayed using GIS.
* Compile geographic data from a variety of sources including
censuses, field observation, satellite imagery, aerial photographs, and
existing maps.
* Analyze spatial data for geographic statistics to incorporate into
documents and reports.
* Design and update database, applying additional knowledge of spatial
feature representations.
* Enter new map data through use of a digitizer or by direct input of
coordinate information using the principles of cartography including
coordinate systems, longitude, latitude, elevation, topography, and map
scales.
* Analyze geographic relationships among varying types of data.
* Prepare metadata and other documentation.
* Operate and maintain GIS system hardware, software, plotter,
digitizer, color printer, and video camera.
* Move, copy, delete, and add files, drawings, and maps to output
reports in hard copy or electronic transfer.
* Retrieve stored maps.

Necessary Qualifications:

1. Education: Post graduate degree in ICT/Geology/Geography/
Environment Science & Management with degree/diploma in GIS based
applications.

2. Experience: At least 2 years’ experience of GIS; should have strong
understanding about the application of geospatial technologies.

3. Abilities and Skills:

* Geography, Geology – Knowledge of various methods for describing the
location and distribution of land, sea, and air masses including their
physical locations, relationships, and characteristics.
* Communication, Written, Oral, and Cartographic – The ability to
convey GIS/spatial information to non-GIS/technical people.
* Analytical Skills – The ability to solve problems using the GIS
suite of tools.
* Information Gathering – Knowing how to find information and identify
essential information, and validate the information.
* Information Ordering – The ability to correctly follow a given rule
or set of rules in order to arrange things or actions in a certain order.
* Computer Science – Using and developing computer programs to solve
problems.

4. Languages: Fluency in written and spoken English and Georgian.

5. Personal characteristics – active, open-minded, management skills,
friendly, flexible, sense of responsibility and ability to work
independently.

Interested and qualified candidates please send a resume (CV) and cover
letter proving your abilities and describing your interest in this position
(in English language) by 18:00, February 20, 2015, to the following e-mail:
[email protected]

Note: All applications must include the Vacancy Reference # of position for
which you are applying.

Only short-listed candidates will be contacted.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.cenn.org/

Minsk Group Co-Chairs called for the resumption of presidential dial

Minsk Group Co-Chairs called for the resumption of presidential dialogue

23:02, 06 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group (Ambassadors Igor Popov of the
Russian Federation, James Warlick of the United States of America, and
Pierre Andrieu of France) met with Foreign Minister of Armenia Edward
Nalbandian 5 February in Munich. The Personal Representative of the
OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, also
participated in the meeting.

We noted with alarm the rising number of incidents along the Line of
Contact and Armenia-Azerbaijan border, including in civilian areas. We
also discussed with the Minister proposed measures to reduce the
likelihood of such incidents. In particular, it is imperative for the
sides to take steps to prevent a repeat of the November 12 helicopter
downing.

The violence and tensions between the sides underscore the necessity
of starting comprehensive negotiations as soon as possible to reach a
lasting settlement. We urged the Minister to show more flexibility so
such negotiations can begin.

We raised the importance of implementing the Presidents’ agreement now
to exchange data on missing persons under the aegis of the ICRC. This
data exchange can build trust between the sides and facilitate the
reconciliation process.

In addition, we called for the resumption of presidential dialogue at
the earliest opportunity.

The Co-Chairs will travel to the region later this month.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/06/minsk-group-co-chairs-called-for-the-resumption-of-presidential-dialogue/