Menendez Condemns President Aliyev’s Release Of Axe Murderer

MENENDEZ CONDEMNS PRESIDENT ALIYEV’S RELEASE OF AXE MURDERER

Congressional Documents and Publications
September 6, 2012

Calls on Aliyev to Apologize and for the International Community to
Demand Safarov’s Return to Hungary to Complete his Life Sentence;
Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) News Release

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Robert Menendez, a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, today released a statement decrying the
release of convicted axe murderer Ramil Safarov and condemning Azeri
President Aliyev’s decision to pardon, promote, and glorify Safarov
for his heinous murder of Armenian Gurgen Markarian. On August 31,
Hungary extradited Safarov — who brutally murdered his colleague,
Armenian officer Gurgen Markarian, in his sleep – to Baku to serve
no less than 25 years of the life sentence imposed by the Hungarian
justice system.

“I am aghast at the decision of President Aliyev to pardon Ramil
Safarov for his heinous crime. I am outraged and disgusted by the
reception that Safarov was given upon returning to Azerbaijan –
a hero’s welcome, a free apartment and a promotion. This blatant
disregard for justice is unacceptable and I condemn Aliyev’s actions
in the strongest way possible. I am also troubled by Hungary’s decision
to extradite Safarov and believe that, given the breach of extradition
agreement, Hungary must now demand the return of Safarov to complete
his life-sentence,” Menendez commented.

“At this moment, with relations in the Caucasus region as tense as
ever, the highly deplorable actions of President Aliyev undermine
the credibility of his government and his commitment to work toward a
peaceful resolution of differences with Armenia. I call on President
Aliyev to apologize to the family of Gurgen Markarian and for the
international community to demand Safarov’s return to Hungary to
complete the remainder of his life sentence. It is clear that the
Azeri government cannot be counted on to adhere to its international
or bilateral obligations with respect to this matter.”

Read this original document at:

From: A. Papazian

http://www.menendez.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/?id=06e1f7d4-2c1a-4513-a084-acd34cd2cc4a

Armenia ready to maintain cooperation with NATO – Sargsyan

ARMENIA READY TO MAINTAIN COOPERATION WITH NATO – SARGSYAN

ITAR-TASS
September 6, 2012 Thursday 04:13 PM GMT+4
Russia

Armenia is ready to preserve and develop cooperation with NATO,
President Serzh Sargsyan said.

After the talks with NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen
on Thursday, Sargsyan said the third document of the Armenia-NATO
Individual Partnership Action Plan for 2011-2013 was being carried
out now.

According to the president, “the level of cooperation between
Armenia and NATO allowed the republic to make its contribution to
the international security system.” “At present, Armenia takes part
in NATO-led peacekeeping operations in Afghanistan and Kosovo,”
Sargsyan stressed.

“Present challenges require a comprehensive and common approach from
NATO countries and its partners [participants in NATO’s Partnership
for Peace],” the Armenian president stressed. He also said relations
with the partners “play a big role in the Alliance’s success to build
an up-to-date security system”.

From: A. Papazian

Tbilisi, Stockholm And Warsaw Alarmed By Growing Tension Between Arm

TBILISI, STOCKHOLM AND WARSAW ALARMED BY GROWING TENSION BETWEEN ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN

Interfax
Sept 6 2012
Russa

Georgia is interested in stability and growing cooperation in the
region, Georgian Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze said at a Wednesday
joint press conference with colleagues from Poland and Sweden.

“Georgia is interested in all problems in the region being settled
by peaceful means because any tension leads to war and this is
unacceptable for both our government and people,” he said of the
growing tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

He said that the Georgian government is taking steps for the extreme
line in relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia not to be crossed.

Meanwhile, Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt thinks that Armenia
and Azerbaijan share the understanding that the situation should not
be driven to the limit of tension. “All sides realize that war is not
in the interests of a single side and the international community is
taking the necessary steps,” he said.

He also commented on the upcoming Russian army exercise Caucasus-2012.

“The exercise should not become an additional subject of concern for
Georgia and other countries of the region, because it is a routine
exercise,” Bildt said.

Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski stressed that all countries
of the region should make their contribution to the cause of stability.

The foreign ministers of Sweden and Poland are taking part in the
annual meeting of heads of Georgian diplomatic missions abroad in
Tbilisi. On Thursday the meeting will be attended by NATO Secretary
General Anders Vogh Rasmussen.

From: A. Papazian

Hundreds Protest Pardon Of Man Who Killed Armenian Military Officer

HUNDREDS PROTEST PARDON OF MAN WHO KILLED ARMENIAN MILITARY OFFICER

Los Angeles Times

Sept 7 2012
CA

Roughly 400 people protested Thursday outside the consulates of Hungary
and Azerbaijan, decrying the release and pardon of an Azerbaijani
soldier convicted of killing an Armenian military officer with an ax.

The murder of Gurgen Markarian occurred in 2004 at a military academy
in Budapest set up by NATO.

The Azerbaijani soldier, Ramil Safarov, was convicted of the murder
and sentenced to at least 25 years in prison without the possibility
of parole.

He was extradited to Azerbaijan last month after officials there
pledged to uphold his sentence, but upon arriving on his native soil,
he was released and pardoned. The Armenian parliament subsequently
suspended ties with Hungary. Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked
in a violent conflict over disputed border territory for more than
two decades.

The demonstration Thursday was organized by a number of groups,
including the Armenian Youth Federation and Unified Young Armenians,
and attracted hundreds of people waving signs with slogans calling
for justice on behalf of Markarian, the Glendale News-Press reported.

“Hungary has to apologize about its decision and has to require that
Azerbaijan return the criminal to prison,” said William Bairamian,
director of the Armenian National Committee-Western region.

From: A. Papazian

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/09/hundreds-protest-pardon-of-man-who-killed-armenian-military-officer.html

Armenian Parliament Cuts Ties With Hungary Officials

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT CUTS TIES WITH HUNGARY OFFICIALS

The China Post
Sept 7 2012

YEREVAN, Armenia — Armenia’s Parliament has terminated all ties with
Hungary’s legislators to protest the country’s decision to repatriate
an Azerbaijani military officer who murdered an Armenian soldier
in 2004.

The officer, Lt. Ramil Safarov, was sentenced to life for killing the
Armenian while both were attending a NATO course in Hungary. After
being freed, the officer was pardoned upon returning home Friday.

Hours later, Armenia broke diplomatic relations with Hungary.

Armenia’s Parliament voted 96-1 on Wednesday night to end ties with
Hungary’s Parliament, saying in a statement that Hungarian authorities
“are also responsible” for the pardoning.

Tensions are strong between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of Azerbaijan controlled by Armenian troops
and ethnic Armenian forces since 1994. International negotiators said
the pardoning harms peace efforts there.

On Thursday U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon implicitly criticized
Azerbaijan for pardoning and freeing Safarov, despite having promised
Hungary that his life sentence would be enforced. U.N. spokesman
Martin Nesirky expressed Ban’s concern in New York. Nesirky quoted
Ban as saying all U.N. members have a responsibility “to adhere to
international standards and principles of rule of law in criminal
cases in order to ensure accountability and fight impunity.”

From: A. Papazian

http://www.chinapost.com.tw/international/europe/2012/09/08/353590/Armenian-Parliament.htm

Azerbaijani President Defends His Pardon Of Officer Who Murdered Arm

AZERBAIJANI PRESIDENT DEFENDS HIS PARDON OF OFFICER WHO MURDERED ARMENIAN OFFICER

Calgary Herald

Sept 7 2012
Canada

BAKU, Azerbaijan – Azerbaijan’s president on Friday vehemently defended
his pardon of a military officer who murdered an Armenian officer
with an axe, a decision that has drawn strong international criticism.

Last week’s pardon of Ramil Safarov has aggravated tensions between
the two countries and raised concerns about resumption of fighting
over a separatist region of Azerbaijan that has been under Armenian
control since 1994.

Safarov killed the Armenian in 2004 while both were in Hungary on
a NATO language course. He was sentenced to life imprisonment, but
Hungary repatriated him, saying Azerbaijan promised that he would
serve out his sentence at home.

But Safarov was pardoned immediately by Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliev upon his arrival in Azerbaijan’s capital of Baku. He was even
promoted from lieutenant to major and given back wages for the years
he spent in Hungarian custody.

Aliev told a news conference Friday the pardon was allowed by the
constitution and that “the decision to pardon him is correct from
the legal viewpoint and is well-founded.”

The U.N.’s top human rights official, meanwhile, strongly criticized
the pardon for Safarov.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay’s spokesman, Rupert
Colville, told reporters Friday in Geneva that “ethnically motivated
hate crimes of this gravity should be deplored and properly punished.”

He added the U.N. hopes this won’t harm efforts to end the dispute
between ex-Soviet neighbours Azerbaijan and Armenia over the
Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

Aliev’s pardon of Safarov has angered Armenia and raised concerns
about a possible resumption of hostilities.

The Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan and some adjacent territory
has been under the control of Armenian troops and local ethnic Armenian
forces since a 1994 cease-fire. That agreement ended a six-year war
that killed an estimated 30,000 people and drove about 1 million from
their homes.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.calgaryherald.com/life/Azerbaijans+president+defends+pardon+officer+murdered+Armenian/7205954/story.html

S. Sargsyan: I Went Through The War – That Is Why I Do Not Want A Ne

S. SARGSYAN: I WENT THROUGH THE WAR – THAT IS WHY I DO NOT WANT A NEW WAR

Today, President Serzh Sargsyan received the OSCE Ambassadors who
are in Yerevan in the framework of a regional visit. Press service
of Armenian President informs about this.

At the meeting, discussed were issues pertinent to the regional
security and the NK peace process. At the request of the guests,
President Serzh Sargsyan the steps taken by the Armenian authorities
in recent years and future programs aimed at the safeguarding of the
Republic’s security, implementation in our country of the democratic
and institutional reforms.

Armenian President delivered a speech during the meeting as well. He
especially said:

“Distinguished Ambassadors, Ladies and Gentlemen, I am glad to greet
you in the Presidential Palace and welcome you to Armenia.

OSCE is a very important organization for Armenia not only because this
Organization has in its framework several institutions – the Minsk
Group, the High-level Planning Group, the OSCE Chairman-in-Office’s
Personal Representative – all of them dealing with the Nagorno Karabakh
problem, but also because the OSCE principles and the comprehensive
concept of security fully correspond to our vision. It is extremely
important that in the framework of this Organization we agreed that
security of one country cannot be provided at the expense of security
of another country. We meticulously implement all our commitments.

However, recently an event has taken place, which makes us to seriously
reconsider some of our approaches. As you know, in Azerbaijan pardon
was immediately granted to a creature which committed a horrendous
crime; unfortunately, in our view this event was not the last case in
a row. Everything started when in 2007 the OSCE Minsk Group presented
its proposal for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Many
would recall how Azerbaijan rejected the document; then it made a
declarative statement that the document in general was acceptable,
but afterwards it was trying to give its own interpretations to the
principles enshrined in the document. You can recall how they were
trying to interpret the people’s right to self-determination. You
remember how they were trying to interpret the term “referendum.” And
then a show began which was meant to gain time, to accumulate huge
amount of armaments so that at the opportune moment the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict could be solved through the military means.

In our view, pardoning a murderer was not intended to increase
Aliyev’s rating at home – it was an attempt to test the response of the
international community to Azerbaijan’s outrageous moves. It cannot be
any other way because in Azerbaijan and among its leadership, there
are, I believe, many people who could clearly see the consequences
such a move could have entailed. And the testing of the international
community’s patience, as I said, has started long ago: many years
ago, when Azeris began to blatantly violate the obligations provided
by the CFE Treaty (Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe),
and nobody responded to those blatant violations.

When the Azeri President publicly instructed his Academia to write a
history for Azerbaijan where Armenians must not be mentioned at all,
nobody paid attention to that fact. When Aliyev stated publicly that
Yerevan and the entire territory of Armenia is the Azeri soil, nobody
reacted to that statement. When Aliyev declared publicly that their
number one enemy is the Armenian people world-wide and that the enemy
must be destroyed, again there was no retort. In response to all our
warnings, all requests we have made to the Co-chairs, to the rest
of the world that it was a beginning of a very dangerous process we
were receiving improper responses that Aliyev’s statements were meant
for domestic consumption. Such a discrepancy between the domestic
and external audiences simply cannot be true – a person cannot think
one way in the morning, and another way in the evening; one way on
Monday, and another way on Thursday. Seeing such lenience toward these
statements, Aliyev took up actions. The first one took place during
the regional visit of the US Secretary of State: several subversive
actions were instigated not only on the Line of Contact but also at
the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. And again the response was a weak one.

And as I have said, unfortunately, this is not the end of it.

You know that I went through the war – that is why I do not want a new
war. I personally felt on my own skin the consequences of the war,
its impact. And I believe that no State concerned with security in
our region wants a war either. However, that desire is not enough –
actions should be and those actions must begin with calling spade a
spade. The so-called “diplomatic correctness” in this case is simply
detrimental for the security of this region.

Recently, in Armenia a sarcastic joke appeared. It sounds like this:
after these events, the international X organization calls upon
Armenia and Azerbaijan not to axe each other in sleep. And this is
not a joke to cheer you up; it reflects our people’s attitude towards
those international organizations which are trying to introduce
parity between the victim and the perpetrator, between the guilty
and the innocent. And that is extremely bad. I request you, I urge
your Governments and our Organization to substantially deal with
this issue”.

07.09.12, 18:31

From: A. Papazian

http://times.am/?l=0&p=12122

Armenian Teens Happiest In World – Report

ARMENIAN TEENS HAPPIEST IN WORLD – REPORT

news.am
September 06, 2012 | 16:29

The happiest teens live in Armenia, Macedonia and Israel, the report
released by the World Health Organization (WHO) operating within the
UN reads. The report was conducted in 34 states.

The report by the WHO claims that the countries where the most nervous
teens live include Turkey, which leads the rating. The situation
is better in Greece, Romania, Armenia and Israel, Times of Israel
reports adding the WHO publish the report in late September.

In addition, the unhappiest teens live in Turkey, Ukraine, Poland
and Canada.

From: A. Papazian

Turkish Soldiers Kill 26 Kurdish Rebels In Two Days

TURKISH SOLDIERS KILL 26 KURDISH REBELS IN TWO DAYS

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 7, 2012 – 22:45 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkish soldiers have killed 26 Kurdish rebels in
two days in an offensive involving over 2,000 troops, as well as F-16
fighter planes operating on both sides of the Turkey-Iraq border,
Reuters reported citing security sources.

The operation against the rebels from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party
(PKK) began in Sirnak, a southeasterly province bordering Iraq and
Syria and the site of frequent clashes between rebels and Turkish
troops.

This summer has been one of the bloodiest in Turkey since the PKK
took up arms against the state in 1984 with the aim of carving out
a Kurdish state.

Turkish security sources told Reuters on Friday, Sept 7, that 26
militants had been killed since the start of the offensive.

“The intense operation is continuing,” the sources said.

The operation has largely focused on Kato mountain, a remote area
of Sirnak, but Turkish security sources as well as Iraqi residents
said planes had bombed areas inside northern Iraq’s semi-autonomous
Kurdistan region.

There were no reports that Turkish ground troops had crossed the
border into northern Iraq, although Turkey has sent soldiers into
the region in the past.

From: A. Papazian

Speaker Of Armenian Parliament Meets With OSCE Ambassadors To Armeni

SPEAKER OF ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT MEETS WITH OSCE AMBASSADORS TO ARMENIA

arminfo
Friday, September 7, 21:44

Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Hovik Abrahamyan met on Friday
with a group of OSCE ambassadors to Armenia.

According to the press service of the Armenian Parliament, Abrahamyan
told the ambassadors about Armenia’s position on the Nagorno-Karabakh
problem.

He said that the OSCE Minsk Group is the only format for the peace
talks and pointed out that Azerbaijan keeps torpedoing the efforts
of the mediators.

Concerning the Ramil Safarov case, Abrahamyan said that a country that
welcomes a man who has brutally killed another man because he was an
Armenia cannot be a guarantor of the physical security of the Nagorno-
Karabakh people.

He said that the shameful deal between Hungary and Azerbaijan may
have curb the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and may shatter peace
and stability in the region.

The ambassadors agreed with Abrahamyan that the OSCE MG is the only
format for the Nagorno-Karabakh peace talks and condemned Hungary
and Azerbaijan for extraditing and pardoning Ramil Safarov.

From: A. Papazian