BAKU: Armenia Reports On Detention Of Azerbaijani Soldier – Version

ARMENIA REPORTS ON DETENTION OF AZERBAIJANI SOLDIER – VERSION 2

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
Aug 3 2007

The State Commission, in connection with military captured and missing
persons, has begun investigations regarding the Azerbaijani soldier
who was captured by Armenians on 2 August.

The Armenian media has reported that the Azerbaijani citizen was
detained on 2 August whilst trying to pass to Karabakh territory in
the north-east direction of the Armenia-Azerbaijani border.

He stated his name as Aliyev Anar Marifoglu 28, and is a citizen of
the Azerbaijani Mir-Bashir village.

Currently two other Azerbaijanis have been captured by the Armenians.

Samir Mammadov, a soldier with the Azerbaijani Armed Forces has
been held prisoner for eight months. The other person captured is
a civilian.

OSCE Minsk Group Working On New Proposals On Karabakh – Diplomat

OSCE MINSK GROUP WORKING ON NEW PROPOSALS ON KARABAKH – DIPLOMAT

Central Asia General Newswire
August 3, 2007 Friday 1:51 PM MSK
BAKU

The cochairmen of the OSCE Minsk group are studying the positions of
Azerbaijan and Armenia in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in order to
formulate new settlement proposals, U.S. cochairman Matthew Bryza said.

He told the press on Friday that he was in Baku to examine the
positions of the sides on behalf of the Minsk group cochairmen.

He said that the cochairmen are at the stage of formulating new
settlement proposals.

Bryza said he expected new proposals to be made and expressed hope
there will be progress in the conflict settlement.

He expressed disappointment with the outcome of the St. Petersburg
meeting of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan. However, after
visiting Yerevan and Baku, he believes that the process continues,
he said.

Azerbaijan lost control over Nagorno Karabakh in an armed conflict
with Armenia in the 1990s. The OSCE Minsk group, representing the
United States, Russia and France, is trying to settle the conflict.

Atmosphere, River And Lake Pollution Growing In Armenia

ATMOSPHERE, RIVER AND LAKE POLLUTION GROWING IN ARMENIA

arminfo
2007-08-02 12:13:00

Ecologists say concentration of harmful substances in atmosphere in
the capital of Armenia, as well as in the towns of Gyumri, Vanadzor,
and Ararat is growing, say the data of the National Statistical
Service of Armenia.

The source reports that environment monitoring in June 2007 revealed
that average monthly concentration of nitrogen peroxide in Yerevan
as against May wax exceeded 1.2 times, that of ozone – 1.3 times. In
Vanadzor the average monthly concentration of sulfur dioxide grew 1.3
times and nitrogen peroxide grew 1.8 times as compared with May. In
Vanadzor nitrogen peroxide grew 1.2 times. The maximum permissible
concentration of dust in Gyumri was exceeded 2.0 times, in Hrazdan 8.0
times, in Ararat – 5.8 times. No significant changes on average monthly
dust concentration are observed in these towns as compared with May.

At the same time, surface-water quality monitoring in the rivers of
Akhtala, Hrazdan, Karkachun, and Getar in June revealed excess of the
maximum permissible concentration of sulfate ions and mmonium. Lack of
oxygen was observed in the rivers of Gegharot, Hrazdan and Karkachun.

Turkey Set For A New Start After Tough Polls

TURKEY SET FOR A NEW START AFTER TOUGH POLLS
Sebnem Arsu, For The Straits Times

The Straits Times (Singapore)
August 1, 2007 Wednesday

ISTANBUL – LAST week’s elections show that for the largely secular
Turkish people, the pro-Islamic ruling party’s ability to run a stable
economy trumps its tendencies to introduce a more Islamic lifestyle.

Voters handed the Justice and Development Party (AKP) another five-year
term, while at the same time diversifying the voices of the opposition
by giving parliamentary seats to staunchly nationalist groups as well
as independent candidates from the Kurdish minority.

Overcoming accusations that it was a threat to secularism, the AKP
won 46.4 per cent of the popular vote, an increase of 12.2 percentage
points over the 2002 election results.

In the late 1990s, the AKP was floundering in Turkish politics. Its
unsuccessful attempts to limit the use of alcohol in public areas and
criminalise adultery, among other initiatives, had incited fears that
it had a hidden agenda to turn the country into a more Islamic one.

But it managed to win over the masses in 2002 and again last week.

This is because it caters to the needs of the poor, delivering health
services, stabilising food prices and reducing bank interest rates.

‘They’ve built good roads, given civil servants full access to private
hospitals, distributed free schoolbooks to our kids, what more can
I ask for?’ said Istanbul resident Israfi Sair, 36, a former civil
servant and father of one.

Turkey’s 80 million people are overwhelmingly Muslim, but the country
has held high its secular, modern outlook even as it has pursued its
aim of joining the European Union (EU).

Despite some EU members questioning its compatibility with Europe,
Turkey has long been integrated with global financial markets and
trade.

In stark contrast with other Muslim countries in the Middle East,
it stands out as the only Western-style democracy.

While increasingly aware of their Islamic identity, Turks guard their
secular outlook, tolerating women in headscarves as well as those
who prefer Western clothes.

Indeed, the recent elections, originally scheduled for November,
were called as a result of turmoil surrounding the ruling party’s
nomination in April of Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as its
presidential candidate.

The furore centred on the fact that his wife wears the headscarf –
a symbol that 51 per cent of the staunchly secular Muslim population
finds disturbing and not appropriate for the highest state office,
according to a survey by the Istanbul-based Turkish Economic and
Social Studies Foundation.

A broad coalition of groups reacted to the news of Mr Gul’s nomination
by pulling out the stops to campaign against the ruling party.

The largest opposition party, the Republic People’s Party (CHP), the
voice of the higher echelons of the state bureaucracy, worked alongside
the army, the constitutionally mandated guarantor of the secular state.

Both raised concerns that the AKP was moving Turkey towards becoming
an Islamic state. The military even hinted that, if necessary, it
might have to act.

However, the election results proved that the alarmist rhetoric
over the threat to secularism did not persuade voters, who went with
the AKP.

But the election results also provided no shortage of opposition
lawmakers to keep an eye on the ruling party and any tendency towards
anti-secular practices.

Although the AKP increased its share of the vote, it now has fewer
seats – 340 in a 550-seat Parliament. A third party which had no
seats in the previous parliament, the Nationalist Action Party (MHP),
garnered 14.3 per cent of the vote and 71 seats.

Analysts agree that the MHP’s improved showing reflected voters’
reaction against continuing Kurdish separatist terror in the
south-east, the war in Iraq and the double standards shown by the EU
towards Turkey’s membership bid.

The Nationalists’ previous lack of representation in parliament has
been seen as a source of frustration and blamed for violence that
has erupted throughout the country.

Attacks reached a tragic climax when a gunman shot dead leading
Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in a crowded Istanbul street in January.

Analysts believe the MHP’s presence in Parliament will help to
neutralise the polarised factions and curb violence.

The election results also reflected a desire for peaceful co-existence
between the Turkish people and minority groups, with the inclusion
of 27 independents, mostly Kurds.

The latter have said they want to focus on finding a solution to
the armed conflict between the Kurdish separatist group, labelled as
terrorists internationally, and the Turkish army. The struggle has
cost more than 30,000 lives in over 20 years.

For many, it is hard to imagine parties like MHP and CHP, with their
strong ideas of Turkishness and integrity of Turkish land, finding
common ground with politicians who once expressed sympathy for the
Kurdish separatist movement.

But for Kurds, this is a start. They have not had parliamentary
representation since 1991.

‘We expect mutual compromise from both MHP and Kurdish politicians
for peace and resolution in the south-east,’ said Mr Nurullah,
a 26-year-old Kurd who did not want to give his full name.

Mr Baskin Oran, a 62-year-old political science professor who ran
as an independent candidate, believes that the people’s questioning
attitude towards the role of the military and the strength of the
elitist status quo as well as the public will for diverse political
parties opened a new page in Turkey’s democratic process.

The real victor of one of the toughest elections in Turkish history
was Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Before cheering crowds at his party’s headquarters in Ankara on
election night, he showed his party’s will to embrace the masses
despite their political choices.

‘We consider your different choices as the richness of your democratic
life. Be content, we will also safeguard your trust in the future,
as we have done so far,’ he said.

His words will be tested soon enough, when his party presents its
presidential nominee to the new Parliament, which opens this month.

A re-nomination for Mr Gul could potentially incite tensions once
again.

If AKP introduces a new nominee with a less religiously conservative
lifestyle, Mr Erdogan’s words would find traction.

It would be considered the first step of a government aiming at
overall public consensus and peace.

Armenia Does Not Want Turkey And Western World Have Good Relations

ARMENIA DOES NOT WANT TURKEY AND WESTERN WORLD HAVE GOOD RELATIONS

Source: REUTERS
Echorouk Al Yaoumi, Algeria
July 30 2007

The armenians and after they secured good ties with the Siniora’s
Lebanon, is trying to put pressure on the western world for the
"good ties" it dared having with Ankara.

The former USSR republic criticized NATO and the European Union on
Friday for turning a blind eye to Turkey’s long-running blockade of its
borders, saying Ankara’s refusal to open land routes was costing the
small, landlocked state a third of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

"Europeans are shy over these issues. They love to talk about human
rights, about democratic values but it’s much easier to talk rather
than to implement anything," Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan told
Reuters in an interview.

Turkey shut its borders to Christian Armenia in 1993 to protest against
the capture by Armenian forces of territory inside Azerbaijan, Ankara’s
historic Muslim ally, during fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region

Ankara says it will not reopen its frontier until Armenia reaches a
peace agreement with Azerbaijan.

The blockade, coupled with similar measures by Azerbaijan, means
Armenia has to route its trade through its land border with Georgia,
or over treacherous mountain passes that link it to Iran. Those
difficulties greatly increase costs.

Sarksyan said Armenia wanted to resume relations with Turkey without
preconditions and would not obstruct Turkey’s desire to join the EU
because this might make Ankara "more predictable".

"Although NATO officials tell us that Turkey is predictable as it’s a
member of NATO, I don’t believe it because even before our blockade
Turkey was a member of NATO when it occupied Cyprus," the prime
minister added.

Armenia and Turkey have a long history of enmity, arising from the
killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman empire
in 1915-17.

Armenians and some European nations describe the deaths as genocide.

Turkey says they were part of a partisan conflict during World War
One. It is a crime in Turkey to refer to the killings as a genocide.

RUSSIAN TROOPS NEEDED

Sarksyan, tipped by analysts as a likely future president of Armenia,
said Armenia still needed help from its strategic ally Moscow to
defend itself. Russia has 5,000 troops stationed here.

"I do not think that the Turkish threat has disappeared and our Russian
military base is a guarantee against the Turkish threat," he added.

Sarksyan also said that if Western nations granted independence to
the Serbian province of Kosovo, they "could not fail to recognise"
the right of the majority Armenian territory of Nagorno-Karabakh
to self-determination.

Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous region located within Azerbaijan’s
internationally recognised borders, broke away from Azeri control
during a war in the 1990s and has proclaimed independence, though
this has not been accepted internationally.

Talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the future of
Nagorno-Karabakh have dragged on for years. A meeting between the
presidents of the two nations in St Petersburg last month ended with
no breakthrough.

The Azeris want Armenian forces to withdraw from all territory
surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh before starting substantial talks on
the enclave’s status.

"I see the solution of this issue based on compromise but I do not
see any steps or reactions from the Azeri side," Sarksyan said. "We
have done all we can".

Asked about his own political ambitions, Sarksyan said it was "likely"
he would be the presidential candidate of Armenia’s ruling Republican
party, although a final decision would not come until a party congress
in the autumn.

Armenia holds presidential elections next year and incumbent President
Robert Kocharyan cannot stand after serving two terms.

The elections that gave Kocharyan his second term in 2003 were marred
by allegations of ballot-stuffing although international monitors
deemed this year’s parliamentary elections won by Sarksyan’s party
an improvement.

Pearls, Pastry, Prophecy:Armenian Pastry And Gift Offers A Variety O

PEARLS, PASTRY, PROPHECY:ARMENIAN PASTRY AND GIFT OFFERS A VARIETY OF INDULGENCES
By Monty Tayloe

TimesCommunity.com, Fairfax County, VA
July 31 2007

"The coffee at Starbucks is like beer. This is like a shot of fine
cognac! You have one and you are good all day," scoffs Kourosh Dastan,
setting down an intricately detailed, tiny cup of Turkish-style coffee.

Dastan is half owner of Armenian Pastry and Gift, Vienna’s only
combination coffee shop and jewelry store. Located at 165 E. Maple
Avenue, this unique take on a cafe opened just four months ago.

"She likes the coffee shop, and I like jewelry, so we combined,"
explains Dastan, referring to his partner, Hasmic Avedisian. Both are
Armenian by way of Iran and they’re doing their best to get Vienna
hooked on the shop’s unique charm.

It’s pretty safe to say that no other store combines Turkish coffee,
fine jewelry, Russian chocolate and French pastries the way Armenian
Pastry and Gift does. If they make an appointment beforehand, customers
can even get their future told in the fine grounds left in the bottom
of their coffee cup, similar to the tea leaf reading more familiar
to westerners.

To accompany the coffee and the divination, Avedisian carries an
extensive range of Armenian style bakery items, from the familiar
baklava to nazook, an Armenian sweet bread. The store also sells
Armenian videos and CDs. Dastan’s collection of Bob Dylan records is
prominently displayed in the store.

"I just like Bob Dylan," he said.

On the jewelry side, Dastan, a trained jeweler, takes consignments
and exchanges, and also custom orders. He knows about selling jewelry
in Vienna, because he used to own a pawn shop in town. According to
Dastan, his current store is more fun.

"They come in for the chocolate, and they look at the jewelry,"
he said.

This is Avedisian’s first business, and she sees the store primarily
as a source of fun.

"I want to make it sweet for everyone," she said.

BAKU: Matthew Bryza to visit Azerbaijan

Azeri Press Agency
July 28 2007

Matthew Bryza to visit Azerbaijan

[ 26 Jul 2007 18:11 ]

Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, OSCE Minsk Group co-chair
Matthew J. Bryza will visit Azerbaijan next week, the US Embassy
public affairs officer Jonathan Henick told APA.

Mathew Bryza will first visit Yerevan. The diplomat said that the
main aim of he co-chair’s visit is not to debate the Nagorno Karabakh
as a co-chair.
Bilateral relations will mainly be discussed at the meetings in
Yerevan and Baku.
Jonathan Henick said anyway peaceful solution to the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict will be one of the main topics of discussions.
OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs will have talks in Moscow on August 2. US
co-chair Mathew Bryza will also join the meeting. /APA/

Youth Radio Of Javakhk Restarts Its Activity

YOUTH RADIO OF JAVAKHK RESTARTS ITS ACTIVITY

Noyan Tapan
Jul 26, 2007

AKALKHALAK, JULY 26, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Youth Radio
of Javakhk again restarted its activity after three-week break,
reports Javakhk-Info.

The reason of the radio broadcast, according to the Youth Radio
Director, Eduard Alvertsian, was the technical disorder: the
transmitter which is situated on the nearest hill of Akhalkalak got
out of order during the broadcast from March 12 to July 4.

It should be mentioned that the Youth Radio of Javakhk has been
operating since April 2002. At first mainly the cultural-entertainment
programs were broadcast, and from 2004 news programs were also
included. During its 5-year activity it broadened its broadcast
radius up to 45 kilometers, due to which 70% of the population of the
Ninotsminda and Akhalkalak regions got an opportunity to listen to it.

Ark Hunters Left High And Dry

ARK HUNTERS LEFT HIGH AND DRY
By Jen Waters, The Washington Times

The Washington Times
July 26, 2007 Thursday

Search for Noah’s boat generates flood of questions, few real answers

Forty days and 40 nights of rain, two of all living creatures, a
dove with an olive leaf and a rainbow. The story of Noah’s ark has
intrigued for generations, says author Eric H. Cline.

"I’m fascinated by people’s fascination in Noah’s ark when there are
many more solvable mysteries out there, and yet that might be exactly
what draws them to it. They know it’s inherently unsolvable," says
Mr. Cline, an associate professor of ancient history and archaeology
at George Washington University in Northwest and author of "From Eden
to Exile," recently published by National Geographic.

According to the book of Genesis, God observed humankind’s wickedness,
and it grieved him. He decided to wipe mankind from the face of the
earth. However, a righteous man named Noah found favor with God. So
God told him to build an ark to save himself and his family. After
the flood passed, God made a covenant with Noah, promising never
again to destroy all living creatures by the waters of a flood.

In literature, many civilizations have a flood narrative, including
multiple versions of the same story from ancient Mesopotamia, says
Mr. Cline, who holds a doctorate in ancient history.

"I don’t know if that helps or hurts the story of Noah," Mr. Cline
says. "Stories like that were floating around, if you pardon the pun,
even before the Bible. Maybe you don’t believe the biblical story
because you have the other ones, or maybe you do believe the biblical
story because other stories exist."

There is no geological or archaeological evidence of a universal flood,
says Lloyd Bailey, the Barrow professor of biblical studies at Mount
Olive College in Mount Olive, N.C. He has a doctorate in Hebrew and
cognate studies. After all, a wooden ark would tend to rot, he says.

"There is a question of the historicity of the flood," Mr. Bailey
says. "Was it a local flood or a universal flood? Was there a Noah?

Who survived?"

However, there is a lot of evidence for smaller floods, Mr. Cline
says. For instance, in 1998, William Ryan and Walter Pitman, two
geologists from Columbia University, estimated that a flood took
place about 5500 B.C., starting from the Black Sea.

"A local flood could have been really bad," Mr. Cline says. "The
world as you knew it could have been flooded to the horizon. Think of
[Hurricane] Katrina and what happened with New Orleans."

But then whatever happened to the boat? Although many explorers have
set out to find Noah’s ark, it has not been found, Mr. Cline says.

"I’m not so sure anyone is ever going to find it," Mr. Cline says.

"Even if it did exist, it’s thousands of years old by now. If it ever
existed, by this point, it’s long gone."

There have been many theories about what happened to the boat, he
says. Probably the only way it would have been preserved would have
been if it had been buried in sand the way the Egyptians preserved a
few of their royal boats. It also could be at the bottom of the Black
Sea or a similar body of water at a depth where there is no oxygen,
he says.

"Everyone is looking on the top of Mount Ararat in the snow line,"
Mr. Cline says. "It’s very unlikely it would be freeze-dried or
petrified. It’s a one-in-a-gazillion chance, but that doesn’t stop
people from looking for it."

Furthermore, the Bible says the ark "rested in the seventh month,
on the seventeenth day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat,"
not Mount Ararat, he says. The mountains of Ararat cover roughly
100,000 square miles, according to Armenian scholars.

"There is this quest," Mr. Cline says. "It’s amazing how many people
keep going to look for it and how many people are willing to give
them money to do it."

No one has ever used radar to look underneath the entire icecap on
Mount Ararat, says Rex Geissler, president of ArcImaging, a nonprofit
foundation based in Highlands Ranch, Colo.

Because of the icecap, Mount Ararat is the only peak in the
mountains of Ararat that would enable the ark to be hidden, if it
has survived, he says. It has not been found in any other location
through satellite. Therefore, Mr. Geissler plans to explore 17 square
miles of ice-covered ground on Mount Ararat with ground-penetrating
radar, providing the Turkish military gives permission. He had an
archaeological expedition in the area in October and November 2001.

"We’re not assuming the ark is intact," Mr. Geissler says. "We are
looking for anomalies on the radar. Then we plan to go back and dig
down to anomalies to see what we would find."

If the boat has survived, Mr. Geissler would like to look for any
type of archaeological information in the ark, he says. However,
he says he is under no illusions about finding the boat.

"I’m not a treasure hunter," Mr. Geissler says. "I’m confident we
will find a lot of archaeological artifacts; whether it pertains to
Noah and his family, I can’t say that. It may also help the Turks
with geology. They have problems with earthquakes. We may be able to
find some indicators of faults as well."

Despite good intentions, critical examination needs to be taken
of people who misinterpret science and the Bible when it come to
Noah’s flood, says Hugh Ross, president of Reasons to Believe, an
interdenominational ministry in Pasadena, Calif., established to
communicate the factual basis for belief in the Bible. He also holds
a doctorate in astronomy and is author of "The Genesis Question."

"The ark was very large, a minimum of 450 feet long," Mr. Ross says.

"It was made of ‘gopher wood.’ It would have been a very strong
timber. The lumber of Noah’s ark wouldn’t have been left lying
around. It would have been quickly exploited after the flood."

Further, the flood could have been universal without being global,
Mr. Ross says. In the Bible, God told humanity to disperse throughout
the earth. However, Mr. Ross says mankind disobeyed God and remained
in the area of Mesopotamia.

A universal flood can be local if humanity is local, he says. The
Bible also has many examples in which "the whole world" is used to
describe a local area. For instance, kings and queens supposedly came
from throughout the entire world to hear of Solomon’s wisdom.

"They actually came [from] as far as Ethiopia," Mr. Ross says. "In
1 Kings 10, the Queen of Sheba came the farthest, and she only had
to travel 1,500 miles, roughly. In the New Testament, Paul says the
faith of the Roman Christians has been heard throughout the whole
world. He meant throughout the entire Roman empire."

RA MFA: Azerbaijan Lacks Political Will For Karabakh Conflict Settle

RA MFA: AZERBAIJAN LACKS POLITICAL WILL FOR KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.07.2007 16:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Baku’s aspiration to draw the Karabakh issue out
of the framework of current talks will have a negative impact on the
peaceful process, said RA MFA Acting Spokesman Vladimir Karapetian.

"This move proves the absence of political will in Azerbaijan," he
said when commenting on Baku’s urge towards discussion of the Karabakh
issue in the UN General Assembly," the RA MFA press office reported.

Armenia, like the EU, NATO and OSCE, thinks that talks held in the
framework of the OSCE Minsk Group is the only format suitable for
the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.