EuroVision Song Contest: Armenia: Two official remixes online!

esctoday.com
May 2 2009

Armenia: Two official remixes online!

Two official remixes of the song Jan Jan, the Armenian 2009 Eurovision
Song Contest entry, are now available online! They are called Electro
and soulfull mix and are released by DP Project.

Sisters Inga and Anush, who will represent Armenia this year in
Eurovision left for Moscow on 25th of April and have already started
the rehearsals with Fresh Art and Miguel who will be responsible for
the choreography of Jan jan. The sisters took part in many TV
programms, also had an interview with Channel One Russia.

Two official remixes of the song Jan jan were released by DP Project
and are available now.They are called Electro and Soulfull mix.

You can download all versions of Jan Jan here.

You can watch the interview to Channel One Russia here.

http://www.esctoday.com/news/read/13860

Over 70% Of Armenian Companies Not Represented In Global Network

OVER 70% OF ARMENIAN COMPANIES NOT REPRESENTED IN GLOBAL NETWORK

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.04.2009 17:05 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Within the frames of "INFO.AM" project, "Master"
Center of International Integration Support has conducted marketing
research in Armenia. Over 70% of Armenian companies turned out to
be unaware of the opportunities offered by the Global Network. The
leadership of over 40% of companies have absolutely no idea about
the advantages of using the Internet, the INFO.AM press release
reports. "Another great problem is that only over 15% of companies
having Internet sites periodically update their Web pages. The
remaining 85% cannot afford it due to different reasons," the
reports says.

The project aims to represent Armenian companies on the Internet. To
achieve that, INFO.AM prepares and posts Armenian companies’ Web sites
on the Internet. The activities are carried out in the frames of the
Government program aimed at enhancing business atmosphere. There are
currently 100 organizations participating in the project.

Deaths In Azeri University Shooting

DEATHS IN AZERI UNIVERSITY SHOOTING

Al-Jazeera
news/europe/2009/04/200943071838953121.html
April 30 2009
Qatar

At least 13 people are reported to have been killed after armed men
opened fire at a university in Azerbaijan.

Ten people were also wounded after two men shot at students at
the State Oil Academy in Baku, the capital, on Thursday, medical
sources said.

Local media reported that special forces had surrounded the university
building after the attacks were launched just after classes began at
9am (0400GMT).

Police special forces and ambulances rushed to the scene and access
roads were closed.

Mursal Gamidov, the head of the Baku ambulance service, said that one
of the assailants had committed suicide, but this was not corroborated
by the government.

Gamidov said that it appeared one gunman was a student of the academy.

Bekir Belek, a Turkish student, said from a hospital in Baku: "We
were in an exam, we heard gunshots, we went out of the classroom in
panic and saw a gunman opening fire on everyone, three of my friends
were shot."

"Everywhere was covered in blood, all corridors. There are many
wounded," Belek said.

"We were trying to escape but had to return when my friends were shot,
we took them to hospital."

Al Jazeera’s Matthew Collin, in Tblisi, the capital of neighbouring
Georgia, said the motive for the shootings was unknown.

Oil and gas-producing Azerbaijan, a largely Muslim ex-Soviet Republic
that borders Russia, is officially at war with neighbouring Armenia
but there has been no recent incidents of violence over relations
between the two nations.

http://english.aljazeera.net/

Vartan Oskanian’s Remarks on April 24 in Beirut

PRESS RELEASE
The Civilitas Foundation
One Northern Ave. Suite 30
Yerevan, Armenia
Telephone: +37410.500119

VARTAN OSKANIAN’S REMARKS ON APRIL 24 IN BEIRUT

Delivered by Vartan Oskanian, President of the Board of the Civilitas
Foundation, in Beirut, Lebanon, at the United Commemorative Event,
April 24, 2009

Dear Friends,

On this April 24, I have come from Armenia where I live and whose citizen I
am, through Syria where I was born, to Lebanon where I’ve always felt at
home, to say this.

All of us together live in an interdependent world and we should act like
it.

All countries live in a global community and we should all sustain it.

All neighbors should cross borders to build cooperation and understanding,
not close them and fuel hostility and fear.

This is today’s world, this is the world I want to live in, and my years
in
the foreign ministry simply reinforced my conviction that Armenians, whose
country has been trampled through history, must initiate regional
cooperation and must work for rapprochement with all our neighbors and
transcend all complex issues of the past.

I know this as a student of history, as a diplomat, as someone who believes
that politics is the art of the possible.

This year, after 94 years of commemoration and remembrance, this year, we
cautiously thought we might note April 24 a bit differently, a bit more
hopefully, a bit less bitter, slightly less alone in our grief, less
distrustful of neighbors, less guarded about our choices, less abandoned in
our search for justice. This was the year when we wanted to look our
neighbor in the eye and see the beginnings of a willingness to recognize the
burden of history. But it didn’t happen. On the contrary, today, I am filled
with more suspicion, more misgiving, than I have since our independence.

Dear Friends,

I am by nature an optimist. In all the years that I’ve addressed audiences
on April 24, I have been careful to say that we do not link the government
and people of today’s Turkey with the Ottoman perpetrators.

In all the years since independence, we have spoken about establishing
normal bilateral relations with Turkey, without conditions and in a spirit
of compromise. In response to our desire to transcend this together, Turkey
has offered years of delay, doubletalk and, most recently, gestures.

Dear Friends,

Being willing to open a border with an intransigent neighbor is a
compromise. Extending a hand to cooperate with a government that finances
the denial of the genocidal actions of its predecessors is a compromise, a
serious, grave, potentially consequential security compromise.

We expect the world to understand the real implications of a genocide that
goes unrecognized and uncondemned. We expect governments to realize that
living next door to a powerful neighbor, historically unrepentant, endlessly
challenging political and historical truths is cause for security concerns.

Let’s for a second look back and see what demands and conditions they have
repeated consistently since our independence.

First, that Armenia and Armenians relinquish genocide recognition. Recently
this was fashioned in the form of a proposal to establish a historical
commission. Clearly the purpose was to question the veracity of the genocide
and also endlessly delay the process, by an open-ended discussion. What
historical commission are they talking about? Let’s face it: outside of
Turkey, the question is not at all a historical one. It is only in Turkey
where history is questioned. If there are still countries who are reluctant
to recognize the Armenian genocide, it’s because of their concerns about
the
political and economic consequences and not because they question the facts
of the genocide.

I have no problem with establishing an intergovernmental commission which
crosses open borders, meets under normal circumstances, and discusses
various issues, including issues of the past — not to prove whether they
were genocidal or not, not to question history — but to find ways to
transcend history together. But accepting a commission or a subcommission to
study genocide and determine whether what happened was indeed a genocide or
not is absolutely not an acceptable option.

Their second demand is that Armenia and Armenians renounce any territorial
demands of Turkey. This could eventually manifest itself in the form of
reciprocal recognition of borders as part of the establishment of diplomatic
relations. To provide an accurate assessment of this, we must distinguish
between historical realities and political realities. The world recognizes
us, Turkey and Armenia, with our current borders and that’s a political
reality. For Armenia to normalize relations with Turkey, we must recognize
Turkey’s current borders. But this political reality must not eclipse our
right to talk and discuss our historical past or in any way dim our hopes to
achieve justice, one day.

Let’s not forget that it is a historical reality that Armenians lived on
these lands for thousands of years, and Armenia’s borders changed a great
deal over the millennia. No one should be surprised that Ararat is on our
state seal. At one time, an Armenian kingdom stretched from sea to sea. The
last change came at the beginning of the 20th century. By the provisions of
the Treaty of Sevres, the territory of Armenia was 10 times what it is
today. Turkey defied the treaty which had been signed by its own government,
and by force, created a new de facto situation, which led to the signing of
the Treaty of Lausanne which defines our current borders. Once again, I do
not see a problem with recognizing current borders, but without
relinquishing our history or our hopes for the future.

Finally, Turkey expects a Nagorno Karabakh resolution. The problem is that
their expected solution is diametrically different from what we expect.
There are no overlapping areas of agreement. Furthermore, since Turkey
understands that a comprehensive solution to Nagorno Karabakh is distant,
they insist that territories under Armenian control around Nagorno Karabakh
be returned to Azerbaijan. If in the case of the previous two
pre-conditions, some middle ground could have been found through some
diplomatic formulation to achieve understanding, in this case there is none.
The very territories that protect us from a repetition of 1915 in 2015 are
the territories that Turkey wants us to relinquish so that they open the
border.

Dear Friends,

Our losses from the genocide are enormous and incalculable – territorial,
human, cultural, psychological. These are unrecoverable.

But of course over time, instead of healing, they are becoming deeper and
heavier because of Turkey’s policy of denial.

Denial of genocide is continuation of genocide. Turkey insists that labeling
the events of 1915 as genocide is an insult to the Turkish people. It seems
to me that a mature society that believes in free speech is beyond insults.
But be that as it may, it can safely be said that the Turkish state created
its own image, its identity, its modern history based on something less than
reality. Now, with that gap in public knowledge, they are afraid that their
own people will be insulted by the truth. Fortunately, there are more and
more in Turkish society who are looking for ways to come to terms with their
own and our shared past. Let’s not kid ourselves, their numbers are small,
but they are wise, sincere and courageous. Inspired by the memory of Hrant
Dink’s commitment, and moved by their own morality, they are working to
traverse the chasm between us. No one expects this will be quick or easy.
But we have always known for it to be successful, it would have to come from
within Turkish society.

Their greatest obstacle is their own government. It is absurd that 94 years
later, Turkey continues to insist that the claims of genocide by Armenians
have never been historically or legally substantiated.

In addition to denying their history and their responsibility, Turkey is
also ably manipulating the Armenian government’s well-intentioned overtures.
I don’t want to doubt that the desire of the Armenian government was sincere
when they wanted to normalize relations with Turkey. But from that point of
departure to today, the situation has changed so much, so many preconditions
have been placed and sounded that the whole process is shrouded by a veil of
uncertainty. The last expression of this was the two foreign ministries’
announcement, just two days before the anniversary of the genocide.

If such a statement on the eve of April 24 is pure coincidence, then this is
testimony that our authorities are indifferent to our collective emotions.
This is incomprehensible. But if this was done intentionally, at someone’s
proposal or perhaps insistence, and with expectations of something in
exchange, that means that we have turned the genocide recognition issue into
an object of give and take. That is no longer incomprehensible, but
unacceptable.

Dear Friends,

Every Armenian administration since independence has managed to resist the
combined efforts of Turkey and Azerbaijan to extract concessions from
Armenia. I hope that today’s Armenian leadership, too, will also have the
necessary wisdom, courage and determination to do the same.

Dear Friends,

In the 20th century alone, there have been 15 genocides; each group of
victims have their own names for the places of infamy. What the French call
`les lieux infames de memoire’ are everywhere. They are places of horror,
slaughter, of massacre, of the indiscriminate killing of all those who have
belonged to a segment, a category, an ethnic group, a race or a religion.
For Cambodians they are the killing fields, for the children of the
21stcentury, it is Darfur. For Armenians, it is the desert of Der Zor.

I was in Der Zor earlier this week, and I saw that only luck and sand stood
between life and death for our grandparents. I asked, how is it possible
that 94 years later, we are still publicly calling for acknowledgment and
recognition, so that by 2015, we can gather together only for remembrance.
What are the values of humanity if we the victims are still explaining to
the world and to the descendants of the perpetrators that we want nothing
more of them than a recognition of a wrong done in the past, and a
willingness to do right in the future?

www.civilitasfoundation.org

Is Nagorno Karabakh Left Aside Of Turkey-Armenia Rapprochement? Azer

IS NAGORNO KARABAKH LEFT ASIDE OF TURKEY-ARMENIA RAPPROCHEMENT? AZERBAIJAN CONCERNED

armradio.am
29.04.2009 13:35

During a meeting in Brussels the President of the European Commission
Jose Manuel Barroso, and the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev
discussed the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement.

"Our position is that we never intervene in the affairs of other
states and the relations between the two sovereign countries. This is
the decision what Turkey and Armenia can make. It’s their choice how
to continue their relations," Ilham Aliyev told a press conference
following the meeting, Azeri Press Agency reported.

"I reiterate that we do not have such a position to create obstacle
for further development of relations between these two countries or
prevent it. I want to mention that we also have a right to form our
policy according to the new realities in the region and we will use
this right, he said.

As for the road map, the Azerbaijani President said "the world,
the region and the people of Azerbaijan have the right to know what
happens. Is Nagorno Karabakh problem left aside of Turkey-Armenia
rapprochement?"

Armenian Government ‘Lacking Mandate’ To Mend Ties With Turkey

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT ‘LACKING MANDATE’ TO MEND TIES WITH TURKEY
Ruben Meloyan

RFE/RL
28.04.2009

Levon Zurabian, a leader of the opposition Armenian National Congress.

Armenia’s government will fail to sell any ground-breaking agreements
with Turkey to the domestic public as long as it holds dozens of
"political prisoners" and refuses to engage in dialogue with its
political opponents, the main opposition Armenian National Congress
(HAK) said on Tuesday.

"It is impossible to carry out a process of Turkish-Armenian
reconciliation, which requires serious public support, without
a process of internal Armenian reconciliation," said Levon
Zurabian, a top HAK representative. "Today any consideration of the
Turkish-Armenian roadmap is meaningless. One must first consider a
roadmap for internal national reconciliation."

Zurabian referred to the April 22 statement by the Armenian and Turkish
foreign ministries on a gradual normalization of strained relations
between the two neighboring states. Both the HAK and another major
opposition force, the Zharangutyun party, have demanded the immediate
disclosure of the "roadmap" announced by the two ministries. The
Armenian authorities have so far refused to do that.

According to Zurabian, although the HAK does not trust government
assurances that the announced framework is good for Armenia, it will
reserve final judgment on the deal u ntil it is made public. In
any case, he said, the authorities lack the popular mandate to
normalize ties with Turkey and accept a compromise solution to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict because of their continuing crackdown on
the opposition stemming from the troubled presidential election of
February 2008.

Zurabian pointed to the continuing imprisonment of 55 opposition
members arrested in the wake of the vote and "police repressions"
against other HAK activists. "The authorities do not realize that
until the domestic political crisis is resolved progress in any
process fateful for the Armenian people will not be possible," he
told journalists.

Echoing statements by the HAK’s top leader, former President Levon
Ter-Petrosian, Zurabian suggested that the authorities are exploiting
the ongoing rapprochement with Turkey and the Karabakh peace process to
get the West to "turn a blind eye" to their poor human rights record.

"We have serious reason to suspect that the processes of
Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and Karabakh settlement are used by
Serzh Sarkisian for securing the international community’s support
or consent for crushing the opposition," he said.

The Turkish-Armenian dialogue and Karabakh talks were on the agenda
of Zurabian’s meeting late on Monday with the visiting U.S. Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza and Marie Yovanovitch,
the U.S. ambassador to Armenia. Yovanovitch held a separate meeting
with Ter-Petrosian on April 22, in a further sign that Washington finds
opposition support important for the success of the Turkish-Armenian
and Armenian-Azerbaijani talks.

"It’s a time when Armenia needs unity," Bryza told RFE/RL on Monday. "I
hope that the entire country will remain unified or will become unified
in supporting an agreement that will improve everyone’s life," he said.

Chances of such unity decreased further on Monday as the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) announced its decision
to leave Armenia’s governing coalition in protest against President
Sarkisian’s conciliatory policy on Turkey. Leaders of the nationalist
party believe that the year-long dialogue with Ankara has produced
no tangible results for Yerevan and has only complicated greater
international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide.

Zurabian described Dashnaktsutyun’s exit as a "first sign that this
regime is not viable" and will show deeper cracks in the coming months.

He said the HAK will be ready to cooperate with Dashnaktsutyun only
if it acts like "real opposition." "They need to earn the right to
be a real opposition," he said.

Dashnaktsutyun leaders, who had been in strong opposition to the
Ter-Petrosian administration in 1991-1998, have sounded even more
skeptical about chances of such cooperation . The influential party
unequivocally endorsed the government crackdown on the opposition
and, in particular, the bloody suppression of Ter-Petrosian’s massive
post-election demonstrations in Yerevan.

The NA Intends Discussions On The Armenian-Turkish Relations

THE NA INTENDS DISCUSSIONS ON THE ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

ARMENPRESS
APRIL 28, 2009
YEREVAN

The National Assembly will by all means refer to the prospects of
Armenian-Turkish relations the NA Speaker Hovik Abrahamian said in
response to the suggestion of the MPs of "Heritage" faction to discuss
the issue in an extraordinary or special session of the NA.

The NA Speaker noted that it has not yet been decided when and in
what format the discussions will be held: during the upcoming two
days they will consult with factions and decide. "I suggest it to
be a constructive discussion", – the NA Speaker added. At the same
time he added that he defends the foreign policy held by the Armenian
authorities.

More than four dozens of issues are involved in the plenary session
of the parliament which kicked off April 27.

Armenia’s grief

Armenia’s grief

FT
April 26 2009 20:01

The agreement between Turkey and Armenia on a `road map’ to normalise
their relations is very good news. Their historic animosity since the
slaughter and mass deportation of Armenians from the collapsing Ottoman
empire in 1915 has destabilised the region, poisoned internal politics,
isolated and impoverished Armenia, and cast a shadow over Turkey’s
relations with Europe and America. Now there is a chance of beginning
to heal the wounds.

Yet first a word of caution. Last week’s declaration gave no clues to
the precise terms of the agreement, nor a timetable. It seems to have
been rushed out to enable Barack Obama, US president, to issue a
statement commemorating the 1915 massacres without using the word
`genocide’ to describe them. That marked a sensible retreat from his
election campaign position in order not to alienate Turkey.

The prize of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation is worth it, but the
process remains fragile and bedevilled by mistrust. Both sides are
still only inching forward, and both face strong resistance at home to
making any concessions at all.

The deal would provide for diplomatic recognition, and reopening of the
border between them, which was closed by Turkey in 1993 after ethnic
Armenian forces seized control of Nagorno-Karabakh in neighbouring
Azerbaijan. Both moves would be done gradually to build confidence.
That is sensible.

On two vital points, however, there is still no clarity. A historical
commission is to be set up to investigate the events of 1915. How will
it be constituted and how will it work? If it decides that the
massacres did amount to genocide, or did not, it will still be
politically explosive unless there is agreement to abide by its
results. Second, what progress needs to be made on resolving the
Karabakh dispute for Turkey to reopen the border fully?

There seems to be a serious intent in both Ankara and Yerevan to find a
way forward in spite of opposition, including from the influential
Armenian diaspora in the US and European Union. But pressure on them
both from Washington, Brussels and ` most significantly ` from Moscow
for more progress and a clear timetable is still essential.

The one country that might try to scupper progress is Azerbaijan,
fearful that reopening the border would take away pressure for Armenia
to do a deal over Karabakh, or at least to withdraw from the buffer
zone where 500,000 Azeri refugees used to live. But the 19-year border
closure has done nothing to hasten an agreement on that score. All
sides have an interest in reconciliation, not confrontation.

Obama Denies Armenian Genocide, Breaks Campaign Promise

Atlas Shrugs
April 24, 2009 Friday 6:14 PM EST

Obama Denies Armenian Genocide, Breaks Campaign Promise, prefers
"Great Atrocities"

Pamela Geller

Apr. 24, 2009 (Atlas Shrugs delivered by Newstex) —

More taqiyya from the Mohammaden president. Refraining from the true
meaning of the word GENOCIDE and it didn’t happen at the end of the
war either. Perhaps he or one his laughable incompetents, should read
Armenian Golgotha – must read post here. (oh, it tells the truth,
that’s right. Can’t tell the truth and hurt Muslim feelings…)

Bush referred to it as"’one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th
century’ (which I railed against here) but then again Bush didn’t lie
and break a campaign promise.

Obama brands Armenian killings `great atrocities’ Breitbart

WASHINGTON (AP) – President Barack Obama on Friday refrained from
branding the massacre of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey
a "genocide," breaking a campaign promise while contending his views
about the 20th century slaughter had not changed. The phrasing of
Obama’s written statement attracted heightened scrutiny because of the
sensitivity of the issue and because the two countries are nearing a
historic reconciliation after years of tension. The Obama is wary of
disturbing that settlement.

Marking the grim anniversary of the start of the killings, the
president referred to them as "one of the great atrocities of the 20th
century."

Riffing Bush here.

"I have consistently stated my own view of what occurred in 1915, and
my view of that history has not changed," Obama said. "My interest
remains the achievement of a full, frank and just acknowledgment of
the facts."

What a full of shitnik.

"The best way to advance that goal right now," Obama said, "is for the
Armenian and Turkish people to address the facts of the past as a part
of their efforts to move forward."

How can you address the facts when you refuse the facts? […] "I
strongly support efforts by the Turkish and Armenian people to work
through this painful history in a way that is honest, open, and
constructive," he said.

Yeah, they can’t do that if their genocide is denied.

Why is everyone covering up this atrocity? Because it was Muslims?

Sargsyan: I’ll Be Happy To Accept Invitation To Visit Turkey’s Presi

SERZH SARGSYAN: "I WILL BE HAPPY TO ACCEPT INVITATION OF TURKEY’S PRESIDENT TO VISIT TURKEY TO WATCH THE RETURN FOOTBALL GAME IF BY THAT TIME THE BORDER IS OPEN OR AT LEAST WE ARE VERY CLOSE TO THAT"

ArmenPress
April 24 2009
Armenia

YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS: President Serzh Sargsyan gave an
interview to the Russian – Russia Today TV. Bellow is the full text
of the interview.

– The first question, I would like to address is the following: what
is the meaning of the date of April 24 for you as the President of
the Republic of Armenia.

– The history of the people of Armenia is calculated in thousands
of years. Throughout that history we’ve had victories and defeats;
we have had gains and losses. But throughout our history there
is one turning point which is a dividing line. And that point is
the April 24 of 1915. After that we deal with absolutely different
reality. Hundreds of thousands and millions of people were living and
creating a cultural heritage and their daily life in their homeland,
but were made to leave those lands – part of which were massacred and
the other part had to escape to survive. And today in the world there
is no, almost no country where are no Armenians. The population of
today’s Armenia, almost half of it, are the heirs of the survivors of
the genocide. And these are realities which are in our life every day.

Today if you move from Yerevan 15-20 km towards Turkey you would see
the last closed border of Europe. Armenia gained its independence in
1991. And for 18 years now that border is closed. I cite this example
not to say that we are under blockade, but to make it clear that April
24 of 1915 is everyday present in our lives. April 24 is officially
announced as the day of the victims of the genocide. But even before
being officially recognized as such a date, April 24 has always been
for our people such a day of memory and remembrance, also for me as
one of the representatives of our people.

But for me as the President of Armenia it is my duty to take measures
to soften the impact of that terrible tragedy and to take measures
to make sure that such crimes will not repeat in the future. And
the most efficient way for that is the international recognition of
the genocide.

– These days many believe that the President of the United States
Barack Obama is likely to recognize the Armenian genocide as he had
promised during his election campaign. What is the reason Armenians
attach such a big importance to the genocide recognition?

-Firstly, the recognition of the genocide is the most efficient way
for the prevention from such crimes in the future. Secondly, justice
means much for the Armenian people. And recognition of the genocide
is also affected by that belief. There is no single Armenian in the
world that is not affected somehow by that genocide. And obviously
each Armenian wants to see justice in that regard.

The United States has been extensively present in the Ottoman
Empire through their diplomatic corps, through their missionaries,
businesspeople. We all know they had insurance companies functioning in
the Ottoman Empire. And for the US there is no doubt about the historic
nature of the genocide as it has taken place. They do not need any
additional proves or witnesses from us. I want to remind that 42 states
of the US have recognized the genocide. I want to remind that when the
US Congress Foreign Affairs Committee was hearing the case and they
do it on regular basis discussing the issue of the Armenian genocide –
it is almost unanimous recognition that there was genocide. But some of
the congressmen say: "Yes, there has been genocide, and the US has to
recognize that reality". And the others say: "Yes, it has taken place,
but now it is not in the national interests of the US to recognize it."

-Mr. President, you described the border with Turkey as the last closed
one in Europe. In what degree the events of 1915 hinder your relations
with Turkey nowadays, about 100 years after the Genocide? What are
the current perspectives of normalization of relations?

-As I have mentioned, April 24 1915 has everyday presence in our
live. But also as you know I have invited the President of Turkey
Mr. Gul to come to Yerevan last year in September to jointly watch
the football game between Armenia and Turkey and also to talk about
our relations. And as you know Mr. Gul accepted that invitation and
visited Yerevan. We have started an intensive negotiation stage with
Turkey to establish diplomatic relations.

We base ourselves on the fact that there has been genocide,
but non-recognition of that genocide by Turkey is not watched
by us as an insurmountable obstacle for the establishment of the
relations. We are in favor of having relations with Turkey without
any preconditions. As you know before Gul`s visit to Armenia Turkey
was offering two preconditions. One of them – genocide related and the
other – Nagorno Karabakh problem. In the negotiations that we have had
since, we both, Armenia and Turkey, took stance that our negotiations
shall proceed without any preconditions: establishment of relations
without preconditions and then discussion of any questions that might
be of interest to the parties.

And as you know Mr. Gul invited me to Turkey to jointly watch the
return football game and I will be happy to accept that invitation
and will visit Turkey, if by that time the border is open or at least
we are very close to that. Till recent period of time, everyone
was convinced that we have significantly progressed and there was
some expectation that would allow having a historic breakthrough,
but recently there have been statements by the Prime Minister of
Turkey to the effect that the Armenian-Turkish relations can improve
if Armenia compromises on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We watch this
as a step back from the existing agreements and as a precondition
being put forward. I believe that in our relations we have progressed
sufficiently. And now the ball is on the Turkish side of the field. And
if we use the football terminology (as this process has been labeled as
"football diplomacy" by the media) then we can say that any football
game has a certain timeframe that limits it.

-Mr. President, you mentioned the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. What
are the perspectives of peaceful settlement of Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict and normalization of relations with Azerbaijan – another
important neighbor?

-As you know, the problem of Nagorno-Karabakh is dealt with by the
Minsk group and its co-chairs: Russia, the US and France. And from
the beginning of the presidency, I have had three meetings with my
Azeri counterpart Mr. Ilham Aliev. And I think this one year has been
a sufficient period for us to understand each other’s positions,
clarify those positions, and make our judgments on them. I think
now it is the right time to speed up the whole process and to move
towards mutually acceptable solutions. And as you know the key point
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is the right to self determination
of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. If this issue is solved, then all
the other issues of concern can be solved.

I am happy that most recently the leadership of Azerbaijan has been
talking about solving this conflict on the basis of all principles of
the international law. A few days ago the President of Azerbaijan has
met the President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and he has talked to the
Russian media and reiterated that this problem has to be solved on
the basis of all principles of international law. And to remind you
I want to tell that for a long time the leadership of Azerbaijan has
been talking about solving this Nagorno-Karabakh conflict either by
military means or only on the principle of the territorial integrity.

In general when I hear people speaking about territorial integrity
in many cases not knowing the substance of the conflict or due to
political considerations many people prefer to say things that put
them into a very delicate condition – in many cases I start to think
that there are not only double, but also triple standards. Within
the last twenty years, the membership of the United Nations has been
increased by forty sovereign states. Forty out of 192 member states
of the UN have joined the organization in the last twenty years. How
could one then speak about inviolability of frontiers? Of course, I am
in favor of, and I can never be against the principle of territorial
integrity of states and we have never had any territorial claims
towards Azerbaijan. The problem is being deformed here.

It is the initiative of self determination of the people of
Nagorno-Karabakh that has been represented as a territorial
claim of Armenia towards Azerbaijan, which is of course not
true. Nagorno-Karabakh was merged to Azerbaijan in the Soviet period
by the decision of the Communist Party Body and even in that case the
Constitution of the Soviet Union was straightforwardly providing for
the autonomous status of Nagorno-Karabakh as a district. In other
words, it was recognized as some national state arrangement. And
Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous district succeeded from the Soviet Union
and Azerbaijan according to the legislation of the Soviet Union. When
Azerbaijan today is speaking about the occupation of the part of
its territory, to put it in a most soft way, they forget how these
events unfolded. In 1991, along with Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh
succeeded from the Soviet Union after which it suffered an aggression
from Azerbaijan and as the result of the military actions that were
imposed by Azerbaijan we have what we have today.

Indeed, today forces of self-defense of Nagorno Karabakh control
also such territories which in the past have not been part of
Nagorno Karabakh autonomous district, but it should be remembered,
that people of Nagorno Karabakh call those territories "security
zone". Despite the fact that the cease-fire stands for 15 years,
the cause-consequences relationships in that conflict have not
changed. From those territories on a daily bases thousands of shells
were thrown on peaceful inhabitants of Nagorno Karabakh, and it is
not right to accuse the people of Nagorno Karabakh, Armenians that
they have been able to secure their right for life by a heavy price
of their blood, and to call that an ‘occupation.’ I don’t think it
is a just approach.

I want to repeat that I am very happy that the President of Azerbaijan,
a few days ago, when he was speaking about international law principles
he also spoke about the fact that this also has to be addressed on
the basis of all founding principles of the UN and OSCE. Of course,
this is the way to move forward. As we all know, the most recent
ministerial summit of OSCE that took place at the end of 2008 in
Helsinki has stated three principles: the right to self determination,
territorial integrity and non-use of force as the guiding principles
for the solution of this conflict. And these principles are the basis
for the negotiations also incorporated into the framework document
offered to us by the Minsk Group co-chairs. So, if we look from this
perspective we have advanced significantly. There are possibilities
and chances that situation can greatly change as well. -Mr. President,
there is an opinion that many problems in the post soviet area can
be resolved through CIS structures. According to another opinion,
CIS has already exhausted itself. Do you think that this is true or
are there resources to be used?

-I do not think that the CIS has exhausted its resources and I have
to state that the cease fire that has been signed in 1994 has been
signed exactly under the auspices of the CIS. And this once again comes
to prove that the CIS is definitely needed. Any organization can be
only what its members want to see and make out of it. We have lived
within one country for 70 years. And many countries for decades had
been the part of the Russian Empire before that. And to immediately
interrupt all those connections and ties – I do not think it is right
or productive. If countries like Canada or Australia till now keep
their connections and do not cut their ties with the United Kingdom,
with the Royal dynasty of the UK – it does not mean that Canada or
Australia are less sovereign states than we are. Within decades and
centuries they have created ties and connections that can be very
beneficial within the Commonwealth. Here much depends on Russia. If
Russia believes that the CIS is an important and needed structure,
I think that the resources of the CIS are increasing.

-Mr. President, Russia is actively voicing the idea of the need to
review the existing system of European security and stressing the
necessity to sign a new Treaty on European security. In what degree
official Yerevan shares this approach?

-I understand the motivation of my Russian colleagues. I understand
the position of the Russian Federation. The security system that
we see today was formed decades ago, when it was difficult to take
into account all the realities, when the threats and challenges
were significantly different from what we face today. And exactly
for that reason there is need for some amendments and changes to the
security system. Let me bring a few examples. If we speak about the
efficiency of OSCE, as you know, there is an agreement regulating
the conventional forces in Europe and providing for certain quotas
for each signatory country.

For a long period of time, Azerbaijan is significantly violating those
quotas. It was violating these quotas by getting supplies from one or
a few countries which are parties to the same treaty. And it seems that
no one is ready to take necessary steps to show us mechanisms for those
quotas. Security systems are usually being formed at the time of global
shocks – and the two world wars were the shocks like that. There are
analysts who even believe that it is a precondition for the formation
of a new security system – there should be a global shock before a
new international security architecture can be formed. But I hope,
that at the time of this global economic crisis the big powers of the
world will consider this as the major international shock that would
allow changing the security architecture as well within the European
model of security.