BAKU: Violation Of Ceasefire New Provocation By Armenia, First Vice-

VIOLATION OF CEASEFIRE IS NEW PROVOCATION BY ARMENIA, FIRST VICE-SPEAKER

AzerTag
March 5 2008
Azerbaijan

"Armenian leadership is resorting to provocation to divert attention
of citizens and international community from the situation inside
the country by breaching ceasefire", said Ziyafet Asgarov, First
Vice-Speaker of the Azerbaijan Parliament, March 5.

He pointed out that the situation in Armenia was aggravated after
presidential elections. "People were killed and wounded there", he
said. Asgarov stressed Armenia must hear demands of international
community and observe ceasefire.

RA Parliament Condemned Opposition Forces’ Actions

RA PARLIAMENT CONDEMNED OPPOSITION FORCES’ ACTIONS

DeFacto Agency
March 4 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 04.03.08. DE FACTO. March 2, in the course of an extraordinary
sitting of Armenia’s National Assembly, the deputies adopted a
statement in connection with the events that had taken place in
Yerevan March 1.

The statement runs, in part, that the RA Parliament condemns
incitements to barbarities carried out in the capital city on March
1, as a result of which there have been casualties, while Yerevan
sustained tangible moral and material losses; propaganda of hatred
and evil in political processes; any actions undermining the country’s
stability, international reputation and national unity.

The RA Parliament mentioned the importance of reestablishment of law
and order in the capital city, neutralization of danger that threatens
the people’s life and property, the settlement of political issues
on the basis of a dialogue.

RA National Assembly "considers a decree of the President of the
Republic of Armenia signed on March 1, 2008, on imposing state of
emergency, to be necessary and legitimate; urges our compatriots to
restraint and common sense to rapidly overcome the situation, return
the country’s life to normal channel".

VATICAN: Cardinal Bertone Heads To Armenia

CARDINAL BERTONE HEADS TO ARMENIA

Vatican Radio
ticolo.asp?c=190776
March 4 2008
The Vatican

(4 Mar 08 – RV) Pope Benedict XVI has sent the Holy See’s Secretary
of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, to Armenia, for ecumenical
encounters and visits with the leaders and faithful of the Church in
full communion with Rome. The Cardinal-Secretary’s visit comes at a
politically tense moment in the country, after election disputes at
the week-end erupted into violence and the military was called in to
restore order. The Apostolic Nuncio to Armenia, Archbishop Claudio
Gugerotti spoke with us about the ongoing tension and the importance
of the Cardinal Secretary’s visit…

http://www.oecumene.radiovaticana.org/en1/Ar

Bloody Crackdown Ends Armenian Post-Election Unrest, For Now

BLOODY CRACKDOWN ENDS ARMENIAN POST-ELECTION UNREST, FOR NOW
By Ashot Azatian

Eurasia Daily Monitor
March 4 2008
DC

The unrest sparked by Armenia’s February 19 presidential election,
praised by the West but considered fraudulent by many Armenians,
could have hardly had a worse denouement. At least eight people were
killed and more than a hundred others wounded on the night of March
1-2, as security forces put a bloody end to daily demonstrations
staged in Yerevan by supporters of Levon Ter-Petrosian, the country’s
former president and the main opposition presidential candidate. The
United States and the European Union have stopped short of explicitly
condemning the unprecedented use of firepower against opposition
demonstrators, saying that both the Armenian authorities and
Ter-Petrosian are responsible for the violence.

The authorities had already been emboldened by Western observers’
generally positive assessment of their handling of the election,
which was controversially won by Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian.

Official results gave him 52.8% of the vote and put Ter-Petrosian in
a distant second place with 21.5%.

The former Armenian president refused to concede defeat, alleging
widespread fraud and demanding a rerun of the ballot. Tens of thousands
of his supporters rallied in Yerevan for eleven consecutive days. More
than 2,000 of them joined Ter-Petrosian in keeping a round-the-clock
vigil in a tent camp set up in the city’s Liberty Square on February
20. Riot police, interior troops, and other security forces used
truncheons and electric-shock devices to clear the square in the early
morning of March 1. Scores of protesters were beaten and detained
on the spot, while Ter-Petrosian was forcibly taken home and placed
under house arrest.

The brutal use of force triggered a wave of popular indignation
that manifested itself just hours later. Hundreds of opposition
supporters began gathering in another part of the city center, a
major street intersection outside the Yerevan mayor’s office, later in
the morning. Riot police attacked them as well, but met with fierce
resistance and left the scene altogether as the angry crowd swelled
dramatically in the afternoon. The protesters, most of them angry men
in their 20s and 30s, began arming themselves with sticks, metal rods,
and stones and blocking all streets leading to the sprawling site with
vehicles seized from police and public transportation buses. By late
afternoon opposition leaders took charge of the spontaneous protest,
urging tens of thousands of people to stay put until the authorities
let Ter-Petrosian leave his residence and address them.

By 9 pm legions of riot police were deployed on two nearby street
intersections. From one of them, special police units began firing
tracer bullets in the direction of the crowd before interior troops
in full riot gear charged towards the opposition barricades to face a
hail of stones and Molotov cocktails. The pitched battles ended by 10
pm with a hasty police retreat from the scene. Some of the protesters
pursued the fleeing troops, burning dozens of police vehicles and
private cars and looting several shops.

The police gunshots that sparked the violent scene were apparently
fired not only into the air. According to eyewitness accounts, the
gunfire, which lasted for more than 40 minutes, left one and possibly
two opposition protesters dead. The London-based Institute for War and
Peace Reporting (IWPR) quoted on March 3 a Yerevan-based foreigner
who had witnessed the street battle from his balcony as saying,
"There were special-forces snipers with black ski masks mixed in with
the young, scared policemen, who were not masked. While the police
shot tracers into the air, these riflemen directly aimed at and shot
protesters. I saw two men fall on the ground below me, one with a
massive hemorrhage to his head."

This is what appears to have made barricade defenders go on a rampage
that departing President Robert Kocharian used as a pretext for
declaring a 20-day state of emergency and sending army units into
the city center. The move forced Ter-Petrosian to urge (by phone)
the crowd of several thousand people remaining outside the Yerevan
municipality at around 4 am to go home.

Speaking at a late-night news conference, Kocharian defended the
imposition of emergency rule, saying that Ter-Petrosian supporters
were the first to open fire. Armenian officials point to an interior
troop officer who was killed in the initial clash by a hand grenade,
which they say was thrown from the barricades. However, journalists
present at the scene did not witness any protesters carrying weapons.

Troops and armored vehicles have since been patrolling all major
squares in central Yerevan amid a new wave of arrests of Ter-Petrosian
allies, including at least two members of parliament, accused of
plotting a coup d’etat. The state of emergency means not only a
complete ban on all public gatherings in the Armenian capital, but
also makes it a crime for local media to report anything other than
government and police statements. The information blackout has led to
the temporary closure of all independent and pro-opposition newspapers
and online news services.

As far as the international community is concerned, the Armenian
regime has essentially gotten away with its bloody crackdown on the
opposition. While expressing serious concern at the dramatic events
in Armenia and calling for the lifting of emergency rule, neither
the United States, nor the European Union have condemned the use of
lethal force against protesters. The Americans, in particular, urged
the Kocharian-Sarkisian duo to "ensure that this peaceful situation
continues" just two days before the break-up of the Liberty Square
protest (Statement by the U.S. Mission to the OSCE, February 28).

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried and his deputy, Matt Bryza,
had a phone conversation with Sarkisian on March 2, before or during
the violent standoff in Yerevan. Judging from an Armenian government
press release on the conversation, Sarkisian was not under strong
pressure to avoid using force. A statement issued by a U.S.

State Department spokesman right after the massacre called "on all
sides" to avoid further violence.

Meanwhile, Ter-Petrosian, who remains under de facto house arrest,
told foreign journalists that he would have prevented bloodshed had
the authorities allowed him to leave his mansion located just outside
the city center (Regnum, March 2). He also said the authorities
deliberately provoked the worst-ever street violence in Armenia’s
history and pledged to continue his campaign for a repeat presidential
election.

CoE Sec. Gen. Calls On Armenian Political Forces For Dialogue

COE SEC. GEN. CALLS ON ARMENIAN POLITICAL FORCES FOR DIALOGUE

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.03.2008 17:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "I am very concerned about the latest developments
in Yerevan and the declaration of the state of emergency. I am shocked
to learn that at least 8 people have been killed, and I call on the
authorities to investigate all these deaths and the allegations of
excessive use of force. Obviously, the investigations should focus on
finding the perpetrators of crimes and should not be used to harass
political opponents," said a statement by Secretary General of the
Council of Europe, Mr Terry Davis.

"Both the authorities and the opposition should do everything they
can to prevent any further violence.

"I hope that the state of emergency will be lifted very
soon. Meanwhile, I call on the authorities to review the justification
for the restrictions imposed – especially on media, political parties
and non-governmental organizations. These restrictions are an obstacle
to political dialogue, which is the only way to find a political
solution to the present situation.

"The state of emergency suspends the application of several rights and
freedoms protected by the European Convention on Human Rights. Under
Article 15 of the Convention the Armenian Government must inform me of
the measures which it has taken and the reasons therefore. I expect
that they will do so without any delay," the Council of Europe press
division reports.

Not A Single Foreign Observer Stripped Of Accreditation – CEC

NOT A SINGLE FOREIGN OBSERVER STRIPPED OF ACCREDITATION – CEC

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS
March 2, 2008 Sunday
Russia

The Central Elections Commission (CEC)

has not stripped a single international observer monitoring Russian
presidential election of accreditation.

"Not a single foreign observer has been stripped of accreditation,
even though there were reasons, as you know," CEC member Igor Borisov
said in Moscow.

He gave a generalized portrait of an international observer monitoring
the election.

Borisov said that the average age of the observer is 50, with the
oldest being a CIS observer from Belarus, who is 70, and the youngest,
21, from Armenia.

He said all international observers have a college or university
degree. He said 42 of the observers, or 18%, are women.

"Over 70% of the observers have experience working as international
or foreign observers in foreign countries," Borisov said.

He said that 235 accredited observers from 32 counties followed the
Sunday election and planned to visit 40 Russian territories.

"Withdrawal of Azerbaijani peacekeepers from Kosovo is right"

"Withdrawal of Azerbaijani peacekeepers from Kosovo is right"

ANS
28.02.2008 18:13

Azerbaijani National Independence Party leader Etibar Mammadov:
"The conditions being changed, deployment of Azeri peackeepers in
Kosovo is not in the interest of Azerbaijan"

– The discussions on withdrawal of Azerbaijani peacekeepers from
Kosovo have started. What do you think, should Azerbaijani peacekeepers
recalled from Kosovo?

– Withdrawal of Azerbaijani peacekeepers from Kosovo is a right
step. It is a right decision. Peacekeeping forces in Kosovo were
deployed there under the decision of UN. And Azerbaijan is represented
there according to this.

But Kosovo authorities have declared independence
unilaterally. Therefore, representation of Azerbaijani armed forces
there is not advisable, as the attitude of Azerbaijan to this
independence isn’t positive.

– Namely, the conditions have changed…

– Yes, of course, as the conditions have changed, deployment of Azeri
peackeepers in Kosovo is not in the interest of Azerbaijanis. The
most important thing is that Azerbaijan must not let deployment of
peacekeepers in Qarabaq unless Daqliq Qarabaq conflict is settled.

– Namely, the same fate may await us?

– Of course, not may, but will await. If peacekeepers are deployed
there.

– What do you think, the forces we can count on will be China and
Russia, or other states of Security Council?

– We must try to have much more allies. Apart from that, we must try
to have allies not only among separate states, but among the world
community as well. Essentially, we must have enough power so that to
prevent pressures of that kind.

– The political situation in Armenia has become strained recently. Can
we have progress in direct contacts with Armenia in near future?

– More the situation is challenged in Armenia, more it should be
in interest of Azerbaijan as it is an enemy state. Is there is a
confrontation between Qarabaq and Yerevan, we can benefit from this.

– There was the same situation in 1920. Mikoyan and Atabekyan said
that they would never subject Shusha to Yerevan. Can the same situation
be formed again?

– Yes, it was so then. But it is needed to work so that the same
situation be formed. Sit and wait when there Armenians will be
divided. It is not a serious position. And the best is to reveal the
forces, who are interested in being subject to Baku. This is a very
important issue. /ANS PRESS/

ANKARA: France to mend fences with ‘Turkish season’

France to mend fences with ‘Turkish season’

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 1 2008

After a long period of deterioration in its ties with Turkey, France
is now hoping to build bridges of friendship with Ankara by holding a
"Turkish season" next year.

The first meeting of a joint Turkish-French committee in charge of
organizing the Turkish season was held earlier this week in Paris.

The Turkish season will begin in July 2009, right after elections
for the European Parliament, and will continue until March 2010.

Exhibitions, concerts and other activities promoting Turkey will take
place throughout this period. Many of the activities are expected to
be held in Lille in northern France. A ship departing from Turkey’s
Aegean province of Ýzmir will visit Marseilles and other French
cities as part of the activities. The CEO of the French company AXA,
Henry de Castries, and former Turkish Ambassador Necati Utkan will
co-chair the committee organizing the events.

Ties with France have deteriorated sharply in recent years over a
French Parliament decision to recognize Armenian claims of genocide
at the hands of the Ottoman Empire and subsequent attempts to
criminalize denial of the alleged genocide. Ties are also strained
over French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s outright objection to Turkey’s
accession to the EU. Sarkozy proposes instead the establishment of a
"Mediterranean Union" of countries with close ties with the EU and
says Turkey should join this club. Ankara rejects any proposal short
of full EU membership.

01.03.2008

Ali Ýhsan Aydýn Paris

–Boundary_(ID_vr6aa+/6H/hmxduZnYKyiA)–

Police disperse demonstrators at French Embassy

Police disperse demonstrators at French Embassy

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.03.2008 12:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Police dispersed the opposition at the French
Embassy in Yerevan.

Earlier, a group of demonstrators gathered at the Embassy after
dispersal of the rally in Liberty Square. In response to police’s
urgent requests to abandon the site, they said "no one will dare to
beat them before the eyes of Embassy employees" and shouted "Levon"
and "Unity."

The Embassy is cordoned by the Police, traffic is blocked.

One of the demonstrators, who lost consciousness, was taken to
hospital.

The oppositionists put up resistance to the police operation that
started at 6.20 a.m. and then were forced to scatter. Presently,
Liberty Square is surrounded by policemen.

According To Alexander Manasian, Way Out Of Current Crisis Can Be Fo

ACCORDING TO ALEXANDER MANASIAN, WAY OUT OF CURRENT CRISIS CAN BE FOUND ONLY THROUGH POLITICAL DIALOGUE

Noyan Tapan
Feb 29 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 29, NOYAN TAPAN. There is no concrete new political
policy or ideololigal basis in the slogans voiced from the Freedon
square, there are only unreal and tempting promises. This opinion was
expressed by political scientist Alexander Manasian, the Chairman
of the "Political research academy" non-governmental organization,
during the meeting with journalists.

"We have no serious politological thought, that is why slogans built
upon a mere demagogic and emotional wave have appeared on the Freedom
square," he said.

The political scientist sees a way out of the created situation through
a political dialogue. However, the process shows that the organizers of
the mass meeting aviod it, which a sign of aggressiveness," he said. In
his opinion, the figures on the Freedom square can irrespective of
their will create an ungovernable and aggressive crowd, which is
very dangerous.

A. Manasian expressed readiness to take part in the political dialogue,
if it is conducted at a level giving a scientific meaning to the
developments of the political events and not with demagogic slogans
or by the principle of offencing each other.

In the words of Manasian, political dialogues are necessary for
disputable issues not to become conflict ones, however, that form of
the political culture is lacking today. The reason for the absence,
according to him, is, first of all, the fact that political parties
are not enough well-grounded and the second reason is the national
character, in his words, "burst and emotionality peculiar to the
mentality of Armenians."

According to the political scientist, the political parties of Armenia
are not enough well-grounded and have no live connection with real
political processes. "Parties are based on those political figures,
who unite around themselves not those supporters, who are saturated
with their thoughts, but their friends, relatives and families." He
mentioned that ideology is an important condition for a political
party, and there is no well-grounded party in Armenia, which has
adopted a political ideology. "Is there as much ideology in the world
as many parties there are today in Armenia?" the political scientist
mentioned.