ISTANBUL: Azerbaijan’s neighborhood challenge

Today’s Zaman , Turkey
Dec 10 2011

Azerbaijan’s neighborhood challenge

by Amanda Paul

While Azerbaijan may have a key strategic location at the crossroads
of Europe and Asia, and be the key to Caspian gas, at the same time
the country finds itself in a particularly challenging neighborhood
and Baku has had to formulate a shrewd foreign policy to maintain
equilibrium.

Turkey remains Azerbaijan’s closest `friend.’ While relations have not
been without their problems, most recently over Turkey’s effort at
rapprochement with Armenia, Azerbaijanis and Turks are united in their
shared Turkic identity and have warm relations, with the two
leaderships continuing to deepen ties, particularly economic and
security cooperation.

While during a recent visit to Brussels, Azerbaijan’s foreign minister
declared that Azerbaijan and Russia have `pretty good’ relations,
built on mutual interests and respect. I think it’s fair to say that
most Azerbaijanis do not trust the Russians, with many continuing to
resent the role Moscow played in the Nagorno-Karabakh war in the early
1990s. Clearly, with Azerbaijan being the most important country in
the South Caucasus, Russia is always looking to increase its
engagement in the country in every which way, including in the energy
and security sectors. However, Azerbaijan has played this carefully,
being cautious over how far and how deep to go with Moscow.

Iran, which Minister Elmar Mammadyarov described as being very close
to Azerbaijan historically, culturally and linguistically, remains a
tricky neighbor, and Baku would like to build a more predicable
relationship with Tehran. With around 30 million ethnic Azeris living
in Iran, in the event of a military strike as a result of Iran’s
nuclear program, Azerbaijan would be the first country affected.

Tehran also remains obsessed about separatism, closely monitoring
Azerbaijan’s policies for signs that Baku is `encouraging’ such a
thing while at the same time Iran is also continuing its efforts to
import its type of Islam to Azerbaijan — one way or another — which
is not welcomed by Baku and creates tensions between the two
countries.

There have also been troubles in the Caspian. In July 2001,
Azerbaijani research ships and an Iranian gunboat had a confrontation
across their maritime border in a disputed oil field. Since the
incident, both sides have worked to establish the boundary in the
southern Caspian through diplomatic means. However, with the
announcement of troika talks between Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan with
the EU over a Trans-Caspian Pipeline, Tehran has once again been
rattled. Whether or not Iran would return to gunboat diplomacy in the
event of an eventual construction of this pipeline remains to be seen.

The border between Azerbaijan and Iran is also problematic, with
numerous Azerbaijani border guards being killed each month as a result
of drug trafficking from Afghanistan. Armed gangs test the border
every night, with huge shootouts taking place.

However, Iran is important for contact with the Azerbaijani province
of Nakhchivan, which cannot be reached from the rest of Azerbaijan due
to an Armenian blockade. Therefore goods and people transit Iran to
reach Nakhchivan, meaning that Iran could always use this as leverage
against Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s biggest problem remains the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
with neighbor Armenia and the inability of the two sides to find a
resolution. While Nagorno-Karabakh is an internationally recognized
part of Azerbaijan, Armenia claims it as a historic territory and in
recent times it has had a predominantly ethnic Armenian population.
The tug of war over Nagorno-Karabakh has been exacerbated by Armenia’s
continued occupation of seven other Azerbaijani territories which they
hold as a `buffer zone’ although four UN resolutions request their
withdrawal. Yerevan has made it clear there will be no withdrawal
until a final settlement has been agreed.

There had been high hopes of an agreement being reached at a July
Summit in Kazan. Unfortunately this did not happening and the dynamic
in the negotiations fizzled out.

During his comments in Brussels, Minister Mammadyarov said that
Azerbaijan recognized the need to rebuild contacts and trust between
the peoples of the region, stating that Baku proposed a visit of
Karabakh Armenians to Baku and other parts of Azerbaijan, while
members of Karabakh’s Azerbaijani community, who are presently
displaced from their homes, could visit Karabakh.

However, while people-to-people contacts and other confidence-building
measures are important, until now there has been no precedent for a
bottom-up type of solution. It has always been top-down. Therefore, it
is the responsibility of the two leaderships to do more to prepare
their societies for concessions that will be required if a solution is
ever to be found. Unfortunately, with the region entering a cycle of
elections it seems unlikely that 2012 will bring any progress.
However, Baku continues to reiterate that while Azerbaijan is
frustrated by the lack of progress, Baku remains committed to
resolving the problem by diplomatic means.

From: Baghdasarian

Former army corps of engineers sentences to 20 months in prison

US Fed News
December 9, 2011 Friday 4:56 PM EST

FORMER ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS EMPLOYEE SENTENCED TO 20 MONTHS IN
PRISON FOR ACCEPTING BRIBES FROM IRAQI CONTRACTORS

WASHINGTON, Dec. 9 — The U.S. Department of Justice’s Criminal
Division issued the following news release:

A former employee of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers stationed in
Baghdad, Iraq, was sentenced today in the Eastern District of Virginia
to 20 months in prison for conspiring to receive bribes from Iraqi
contractors involved in the U.S.-funded reconstruction efforts,
announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride for the
Eastern District of Virginia and Assistant Director in Charge James W.
McJunkin of the FBI’s Washington Field Office.

Thomas Aram Manok, 51, of Chantilly, Va., was sentenced by U.S.
District Judge Anthony J. Trenga. In addition to his prison term,
Manok was sentenced to three years of supervised release. Judge Trenga
ordered a forfeiture hearing to be held on Jan. 13, 2012. Manok
pleaded guilty on Sept. 19, 2011.

Manok admitted to using his official position to conspire with Iraqi
contractors to accept cash bribes in exchange for recommending that
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers approve contracts and other requests
for payment submitted by the contractors to the U.S. government.
According to court documents, in March and April 2010, Manok agreed to
receive a $10,000 payment from one such contractor who had been
involved in constructing a kindergarten and girls’ school in the Abu
Ghraib neighborhood of Baghdad and had sought Manok’s influence in
having requests for payment approved by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers. According to court documents, Manok was to receive an
additional bribe payment from the contractor once the contractor’s
claim had been approved. Manok also admitted that he intended to
conceal the payments from authorities by transferring them, via
associates, from Iraq to Armenia.

This case was investigated by the FBI’s Washington Field Office, the
Department of Defense Office of the Inspector General, the Army
Criminal Investigation Command and the Defense Criminal Investigative
Service, as participants in the International Contract Corruption Task
Force. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul J.
Nathanson of the Eastern District of Virginia and Trial Attorney Mary
Ann McCarthy of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section.

This prosecution is part of efforts underway by President Barack
Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama
established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to
wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate
and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes
representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory
authorities, inspectors general and state and local law enforcement
who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and
civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve
efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local
partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes,
ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate
financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial
markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For
more information about the task force visit:

From: Baghdasarian

www.stopfraud.gov.

Sleiman returns from Armenia

NOW LEBANON
Dec 10 2011

Sleiman returns from Armenia
December 10, 2011

President Michel Sleiman and a Lebanese delegation returned to Beirut
from Armenia on Saturday after a three-day official visit, the
National News Agency reported.

Sleiman wrapped up his visit by meeting with his Armenian counterpart
Serzh Sargsyan, the report said.

The NNA also said that Sleiman voiced the importance of strengthening
the agreements signed between the two countries, adding that Sargsyan
voiced the importance of the depth of Lebanese-Armenian relations.

-NOW Lebanon

From: Baghdasarian

Orhan Pamuk in love with an Armenian?

Orhan Pamuk in love with an Armenian?

December 10, 2011 – 16:29 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Famous Turkish writer, Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk
was seen in New York while taking a stroll with an Istanbul-based
Armenian artist Karolin Fisekci.

`What can I say? What you see in the photos is true. I’ve known Pamuk
for a long time,’ Fisekci told reporters in Istanbul.

Karolin Fisekci, 32 is a graduate of a reputed Mimar Sinan University
of Fine Arts.

From: Baghdasarian

Ombudsman awaits ARF-D’s appeal

Ombudsman awaits ARF-D’s appeal

03:20 pm | Today | Politics

The ARF-Dashnaktsutiun still hasn’t appealed to the Human Rights
Defender to file an appeal on the Armenian government’s misuse of
activities to the Constitutional Court.

This is what RA Ombudsman Karen Andreasyan told “A1+”, adding that he
couldn’t give evaluations until the appeal wasn’t presented.

“First, I would like to inform that the Ombudsman can appeal to the
Constitutional Court exclusively in relation to the issues referring
to the Human Rights Defender stated in the 2nd chapter of the
Constitution. In other cases, the Defender can’t interfere or appeal
to the Constitutional Court,” he said.

We remind that the ARF-D had presented an interpellation to the
National Assembly, calling on the NA to join their appeal and demand
the government’s resignation. Since the NA has denied the ARF-D, the
party is holding a petition and needs the signatures of 27 MPs. If the
ARF-D is able to collect that many signatures, it will be able to
appeal to the Consitutional Court and won’t need the Ombudsman’s
protection.

Karen Andreasyan assured that the Human Rights Defender’s Office would
wait for the ARF-D’s appeal to understand whether it can appeal to the
CC or not.

“We are willing to exercise all legislative powers for anybody, any
political figure or any organization that appeals to us, that is, of
course, if the issues stated in the appeals are legally correct and
can be presented literately,” the Ombudsman underlined.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.a1plus.am/en/politics/2011/12/10/ombudsmen

L’Allemagne Alloue 4 Millions D’Euros Pour Le Programme D’Etablissem

L’ALLEMAGNE ALLOUE 4 MILLIONS D’EUROS POUR LE PROGRAMME D’ETABLISSEMENT D’UNE RESERVE DE BIOSPHERE DE SHIKAHOGH
Stephane

armenews.com
samedi 10 decembre 2011

Le Gouvernement allemand va allouer a l’Armenie une aide d’un montant
de 4 millions d’euros pour le programme visant a etablir une reserve
de biosphère de Shikahogh.

L’accord a ete signe entre le ministre des Finances Vache Gabrielyan,
le ministre en charge de la Protection de la Nature Aram Harutyunyan
et le representant du ministère federal de la Cooperation economique
et du developpement d’Allemagne (BMZ) Friedel Eggelmayer.

Le ministre armenien Aram Harutyunyan a dit aux journalistes qu’après
la signature du document, il est envisage d’ameliorer la situation
ecologique et des infrastructures ecologiques dans la region.

Le programme est prevu pour les annees 2011-2015 et suppose la creation
de petites et moyennes entreprises dans le domaine de l’agriculture et
l’elevage qui vont produire sous la marque ” Reserve de la Biosphère
” ainsi que la fourniture d’une assistance dans le traitement et
la commercialisation et des programmes sur le developpement de
l’ecotourisme.

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Department Chief Of Presidential Administration: "OSCE Is Grad

DEPARTMENT CHIEF OF PRESIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATION: “OSCE IS GRADUALLY LOSING CREDIBILITY”

APA
Dec 9 2011
Azerbaijan

Baku. Azer Mustafayev – APA. “Sooner or later we will liberate our
lands from occupation. We demonstrate great will for it and try
to settle the conflict peacefully and by means of negotiations”,
said Chief of international relations department of the Presidential
Administration Novruz Mammadov in his interview to the website of
the New Azerbaijan Party (YAP), APA reports.

Mammaddov said that Armenia had always looked for pretext in order to
protract the negotiations process: “The world community, international
organizations, especially Armenia’s present adventurists must know that
the main work for them is the peaceful settlement of the conflict,
or else Armenia will find itself on the edge of the abyss and this
will cost them much. Therefore the international community and OSCE
should accomplish a strong mission. It has been impossible to take
steps forward on the conflict for 20 years. In this case, OSCE is
gradually losing credibility. The co-chair countries should think
that why the steps taken by them don’t give an effect in front of
little Armenia. I consider that no matter which processes go in such
situation, we must the intensification of the negotiations.

From: Baghdasarian

Armenian Supporters Skeptical Of Ties Between Turkey, Indian Tribes

ARMENIAN SUPPORTERS SKEPTICAL OF TIES BETWEEN TURKEY, INDIAN TRIBES
Michael Doyle

Miami Herald

Dec 9 2011
FL

WASHINGTON – The perennial political fighting between
Armenian-Americans and Turkey has migrated to Indian country.

In a diplomatically creative but controversial move, Turkey wants
preferential access to start commercial ventures on selected U.S.

tribal lands. In theory, tribes would get business and Turkey would
gain friends.

“We’re trying to build bridges with other communities,” G. Lincoln
McCurdy, the president of the Turkish Coalition of America, said in
an interview. “If this works, it would be good for everybody.”

But not everybody thinks so. Lawmakers in states with large
Armenian-American populations, such as California and New Jersey, think
a legislative proposal that’s now before the House of Representatives
extends an undeserved favor to a country still associated with a
long-ago slaughter.

“We could not let that pass … without some acknowledgment of the
Armenian genocide,” Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., said Friday.

The bill in question would allow six Indian tribes to lease land to
Turkish companies without securing the usual, often time-consuming
Bureau of Indian Affairs approvals. The tribes would be selected
competitively by the Interior Department, and would develop their
own guidelines for leasing land him.

In this Capitol Hill fight, regional loyalties and ethnic politics
could matter more than party lines.

When the House Natural Resources Committee approved the legislation
Nov. 17 on a 27-15 vote, Costa and Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif.,
united in opposition. The Democrat and the Republican represent
portions of California’s Central Valley, which is heavily populated
by Armenian-Americans.

On the other side, bill supporter Republican Rep. Don Young is a
longtime champion of his home state’s Alaska Natives. The bill’s
author, conservative Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., is a member of the
Chickasaw. Another supporter, liberal Democratic Rep. Jay Inslee of
Washington state, is running for governor in that state, which is
home to 103,000 American Indians.

Like much that happens on Capitol Hill, the bill dubbed the Indian
Tribal Trade and Investment Demonstration Project Act of 2011 rides
atop multiple motives. It now goes to the full House for a vote.

“It definitely broadens (Turkey’s) political base,” McCurdy said,
“and it increases the opportunity for Turkish companies to establish
operations in this country.”

A broader political base, in turn, could aid Turkey in recurring
Capitol Hill conflicts with Armenian-Americans. In raw population,
Armenian-Americans widely outnumber Turkish-Americans. Turkey, though,
enjoys considerable high-level clout as an important NATO country.

Nearly every year, these competing forces are on display as lawmakers
press for an Armenian genocide resolution that takes note of the
massacres that took place during the Ottoman Empire’s dying days. The
resolution routinely fails but keeps coming back; this year’s version
has 84 House co-sponsors.

It’s in this context that the Native American investment bill reflects
Turkey’s cultivation of tribes.

Over the past two years, Turkey has sponsored a number of visits by
Indian leaders. In November 2010, for instance, it hosted some 20
Native Americans for a week, including representatives of Idaho’s
Coeur d’Alene Tribe and Washington state’s Confederated Tribes of
the Colville Reservation.

“This is the first foreign country that has shown interest in investing
with – cooperation with – a tribe to improve their economic lot,”
Young said at the House committee hearing Nov. 17.

In a similar vein, Turkish universities sponsor scholarships for
Native American students, and Turkish officials have met with Indian
leaders in Los Angeles and Seattle. Last March, a top Turkish Trade
Ministry official became the first foreign representative to speak at
an annual Las Vegas conference on Native American economic development.

“I have no idea why they’re being so nice to Native Americans,” Rep.

Frank Pallone, D-N.J., said during the House hearing. “I’m sure there’s
some bad underlying reason or something that they’re trying to gain.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/09/2539276/armenian-supporters-skeptical.html

Armenia Should Protect Armenians Living In Near East, Thinks Ruben S

ARMENIA SHOULD PROTECT ARMENIANS LIVING IN NEAR EAST, THINKS RUBEN SAFRASTYAN

Mediamax
Dec 8 2011
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Director of the Institute of Oriental Studies of
the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia Ruben Safrastyan said
today that Republic of Armenia should serve a protector of all the
Armenian communities and Armenians living in Near East in particular.

He noted that “after “Arab Spring” it’s important for the Armenians
of the Near East to feel that the Armenian authorities are ready to
protect them”, Mediamax reports.

“Armenia should be ready if certain steps are needed to be taken. We
should send signals already now and state that Armenia will protect
the interests of all Armenians”, noted Ruben Safrastyan.

He also added that the Armenian authorities should think about
Armenians of Syria in the light of their possible migration to Armenia
if the situation in this country aggravates.

According to Ruben Safrastyan, these issues are becoming more urgent
taking into account the growth of intolerance towards the Christian
population of the Near East and establishment of the Islamist power
in these countries.

From: Baghdasarian

Franck Muller CEO To Become Armenia’s Consul General In Marseilles

FRANCK MULLER CEO TO BECOME ARMENIA’S CONSUL GENERAL IN MARSEILLES

Mediamax
Dec 7 2011
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan left on a working
visit to Marseilles today.

According to Mediamax’s information, on December 8, the President
is going to take part in the opening of Consulate General of Armenia
in Marseilles.

According to Nouvelles d’Armenie, Swiss businessman of Armenian
descent, co-founder and CEO of Franck Muller Swiss watch brand,
Vartan Sirmakes, will hold the post of Consul General of Armenia
in Marseilles.

Mediamax reports that Vartan Sirmakes was once one of the owners of
Yerevan Ararat football club.

On 1 December 2011, the government of Armenia approved the President’s
draft law on establishing a Consulate General in Marseilles.

From: Baghdasarian