BAKU: Oskanyan: There Is No Need For Azerbaijani And Armenian Presid

OSKANYAN: THERE IS NO NEED FOR AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S MEETING

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 25 2006

Azerbaijani and Armenian Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and
Vardan Oskanyan held five-hour meeting with the participation of
OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in Paris on October 24, Tahir Tagizadeh,
the chief of Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry Press and Information Policy
Department told the APA.

They discussed new principles of the settlement of Nagorno Garabagh
conflict suggested by co-chairs. The conflict sides expressed their
positions.

"The co-chairs and ministers agreed to meet in Brussels on November
14 to bring the negotiations one step forward. After the meeting the
co-chairs will visit the region," he said.

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan told to Radio Liberty that
Paris meeting was very constructive.

"Azerbaijan’s and Armenia’s positions are coming closer. We tried
to discuss the new principles suggested in Moscow meeting. Nagorno
Garabagh Republic was also familiarized with the documents, but it
does not mean that they agree with all the items of the document. We
have divergence with co-chairs," he said.

Oskanyan also said that there is no need for Presidents’ meeting.

"We might discuss their meeting in Brussels on November 14," the
minister said.

BAKU: France Satisfied With Level Of Bilateral Relations With Azerba

FRANCE SATISFIED WITH LEVEL OF BILATERAL RELATIONS WITH AZERBAIJAN
Author: S.Agayeva

TREND, Azerbaijan
Oct 25 2006

Prior to the forthcoming State visit to France in January 2007of the
Azerbaijani President, Ilham Aliyev, development of the bilateral
relations is very satisfactory, the French Foreign Minister Flip
Dust-Blazi stated during his meeting with the Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister, Elmar Mammadyarov, Trend reports with reference to the
statement of the French Embassy in Azerbaijan.

The French Foreign Minister commented on the successful development
of trade relations. Last year the amount of trade turnover between
the two Countries increased three-fold and reached ~@500,000,000.

According to the Minister, French companies are well represented in
Azerbaijan, and a significant co-operation has begun between the two
Countries regarding civil defense and culture.

Together with the USA and Russia, France is also the Co-chair in the
OSCE Minsk Group regarding the regulation of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict. In this respect, the meeting of Foreign Ministers of
Azerbaijan, Armenia and France togetherwith the co-chairs of the Minsk
Group, may lead to progress in the process of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, the Minister stated.

The Karabakh Issue Is In The 12th Place

THE KARABAKH ISSUE IS IN THE 12TH PLACE

A1+
[05:16 pm] 25 October, 2006

International sociological organization "Gallop" has realized
interesting surveys the results of which are already made public. The
surveys were organized among RA citizens in August of the current year.

Asked the question "What must the RA Government do in order to get
the support of the people" the majority answered that they must create
new workplaces. The raise of the level of democracy is in the second
place and the raise of pensions and salaries is in the third. The
necessity to unite Karabakh with Armenia is only in the 12th place.

86% of the participants of the survey see Azerbaijan as an enemy, 80%
see opponents in Turkey, 19% find enemies in Georgia, and 12% – in
the USA. Russia is considered to be a friend by 85%, and enemy – by 5%.

Asked the question if Armenia must open the borders with Turkey if they
recognize the Genocide 39% answered positively and 57% – negatively.

As for the main problems of Armenia, 43% think it is unemployment, 26%
think it is the development of economy, 13% think it is corruption,
11% think it is democracy and human rights, 8% – immigration, 6% –
foreign affairs, and 4% – the recognition of the Genocide.

Armenian-Azeri Talks Again Inconclusive

ARMENIAN-AZERI TALKS AGAIN INCONCLUSIVE
By Harry Tamrazian in Prague

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 24 2006

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan met in Paris
Tuesday for talks that again produced no breakthrough but kept
open the possibility of a crucial Armenian-Azerbaijani summit on
Nagorno-Karabakh before the end of this year.

Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said he and his Azerbaijani opposite
number Elmar Mammadyarov discussed "new ideas" on how to break
the current deadlock in the peace process that were suggested by
international mediators during their previous talks held in Moscow
on October 6. He told RFE/RL that they agreed to hold yet another
meeting three weeks later.

Oskanian said he and Mammadyarov presented their governments’
responses to the unspecified ideas put forward by the American,
French and Russian co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. "I can’t say
that there is full congruence in positions," he said. "There are
differences. But there are also possibilities to bring our positions
closer. So we need to continue to work on it."

"That’s why we agreed to hold another round of talks, most probably
in Brussels around November 13, so that we continue our discussions
to narrow down the differences," continued Oskanian. "If that
materializes, it will make possible a meeting between our presidents
during this year. There is also a possibility that the co-chairs may
come to the region in preparation for the presidents’ meeting."

Mammadyarov and other Azerbaijani officials did not immediately
comment on the Paris talks that began in the presence of French
Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy.

According to Oskanian, the talks continue to center on the basic
principles of a Karabakh settlement that were discussed by Presidents
Ilham Aliev and Robert Kocharian during their two face-to-face meetings
this year and were disclosed by the mediators afterwards.

They call for the conflict’s gradual resolution that would culminate
in a referendum on Karabakh’s status.

Oskanian said the mediators’ "new ideas" are aimed at bridging Baku’s
and Yerevan’s differences on some key elements of the proposed peace
deal. He did not give details, saying only that he visited Stepanakert
following the Moscow talks to discuss the issue with Karabakh’s ethnic
Armenian leadership. "In Karabakh, we managed to formulate a common
position on those new ideas," he said.

Karabakh officials have repeatedly expressed serious misgivings about
the proposed peace formula, unlike official Yerevan which seems to
find it largely acceptable.

Russia’s Blockade Of Georgia Affects Trade With Armenia – Belarus PM

RUSSIA’S BLOCKADE OF GEORGIA AFFECTS TRADE WITH ARMENIA – BELARUS PM

Belapan news agency, Minsk,
23 Oct 06

Minsk, 23 October: Belarusian Prime Minister Syarhey Sidorski has
said that Russia’s transport blockade of Georgia has affected trade
between Belarus and Armenia.

He told reporters in Yerevan on Monday [23 October] that the Belarusian
authorities are keeping a close eye on all transport routes that are
essential to the country’s foreign trade.

Russia cut all transport links with Georgia, which are located to
the north of Armenia, in early October.

Sidorski said that in January-July trade between Belarus and Armenia
increased by 37 per to 14.9m dollars cent year-on-year, which is
500,000 dollars less than in the entire previous year, with Belarusian
exports rising by 28 per cent and imports by 120 per cent.

He said that trade grew at a fast pace but that the growth was still
very insignificant in monetary terms.

Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan told the news conference
that the two countries’ governments should seek to create favourable
conditions for cooperation between businesses.

While commenting on Sidorski’s talks in Yerevan, he said that the
Armenian authorities had to drop plans to lease Belarusian machinery
because of its high prices. The Belarusian delegation suggested
opening a maintenance and repair centre for Belarusian-made machinery
in Armenia, Markaryan said, noting that the project might prove sound.

Belarus mainly supplies Armenia with machinery and buys jewellery
and cognac from it.

[Belapan reported at 1028 gmt today that eight accords aimed at
boosting Belarusian-Armenian trade and economic cooperation were
signed in Yerevan after Sidorski’s talks with Markaryan.]

Aram A Catholicos Congratulates Cyprian Armenian Mario Karoyan On Oc

ARAM A CATHOLICOS CONGRATULATES CYPRIAN ARMENIAN MARIO KAROYAN ON OCCASION OF BEING ELECTED AS PARTY LEADER

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Oct 23 2006

ANTELIAS, OCTOBER 23, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Catholicos of
the Great Cilician House Aram A congratulated State Deputy of Cyprus,
Mario Karoyan, on the occasion of being elected as leader of the
Democratic Party of Cyprus.

Aram A Catholicos considered this as a great credit for the Armenian
people, in particular, for the Armenian community of Cyprus, and
wished Karoyan success in his mission. According to the Press Service
of the Catholicosate of the Great Cilician House, M.Karoyan had played
a great role in the above mentioned party for many years. He has been
elected as a State Deputy by the party list lately.

Minister Oskanian Speaks on 15th Anniversary of Independence in Wash

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: 374.10.523531
Email: [email protected]
web:

Minister Oskanian Speaks on 15th Anniversary of Independence in Washington
DC at Embassy Sponsored Gala Banquet

Speech by
H. E. Vartan Oskanian
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Republic of Armenia
At the 15th Anniversary Celebration
Of Armenia’s Independence
Washington DC
October 21, 2006

I am pleased, honored, and still a little awed by the fact that I can
stand before you, as foreign minister, at the official celebration of 15
years of Armenia’s independence. The fact that we are celebrating in this
important capital, with the representatives of a strong, active,
prosperous, proud and engaged Diaspora, in the presence of several of
Armenia’s ambassadors, is still the stuff of dreams.

It has been 15 years since our independence. This came at the end of a
difficult century and an even more difficult millennium. Armenians take
great pride in their millennia of history. The leitmotifs that run through
our recollections of our past are fraught with a search for silver
linings.

We have outlived the empires of the Babylonians and Assyrians, the
Hittites and Medes, the Byzantines, the Mongols and the Ottomans. We
shared the gods of the Greeks and the Romans, until St. Gregory
illuminated the path to Christianity. We translated the Bible not just
into Armenian, but also into Chinese. We recorded the history of Armenians
and of Western civilization in beautifully illuminated manuscripts. We
welcomed the Crusaders to our Kingdom in Cilicia, and accompanied European
traders to the exotic East. Instead of fortifications, we built
monasteries and centers of learning which have withstood invaders and
earthquakes.

In the 18th century, when first the American colonies, and later the
people of France were upholding liberty, equality and fraternity, our
students and merchants in Europe, were watching and learning. They knew
that they had rights and liberties as subjects of three different empires,
and used the formulations and vocabulary of the leaders of the Western
enlightenment to articulate them. It wasn’t that they wanted to overthrow
those governments which abused or usurped their rights, but to reform
them. It didn’t work.

The Sublime Porte, which ruled over the majority of Armenians, made its
Armenian minority the scapegoat for its own inability to govern. The
Genocide followed. The remnants of the Armenian people who emerged
following the Genocide had independence hoisted upon them in 1918. A
population of refugees, insufficient resources with which to govern and
protect, an elite that did not live in Armenia, and an army composed of
well-meaning patriots – that was Armenia’s first modern attempt at
independence. It was a valiant effort to first wrestle with the social and
existential dangers from within, and later to fight against the direct
physical threats from without. The First Republic of Armenia survived
independently long enough that, when it fell, it fell as a legitimate,
independent, political entity. That entity was subsumed into the Soviet
Union as the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic.

That was the journey that brought us to today and to the improbability of
our independence – the improbability that this surviving nation would
witness the fall of yet another empire – this time Lenin’s. And that the
homeland would be born again, free and independent.

In Armenia, and in the Diaspora, too, where you are still overwhelmed at
the improbability of Armenia’s independence, you sometimes suffer from the
reverse: because we’ve never really had independence, we sometimes believe
that we don’t deserve to have it or that it will necessarily be taken away
again. I want to tell you that Armenians are not only worthy of
independence, we are also capable of independence, aware of the demands of
independence, responsive to the expectations of independence and accepting
of the burdens of independence.

But we were ready. Armenia’s Democratic Movement, the Environmental
Movement, the Karabagh Movement were not just the product of a changed
Soviet Union, but they also accelerated the transformation of the USSR.

Independence is borne of high ideals. We believed that freedom is the
secret to a prosperous nation, a healthy nation, a fair and just nation,
and a stable future. We believed that freedom isn’t just the right to do
what you want, it’s the opportunity to do what you want, it’s the
opportunity to make choices, the right choices.

We made the basic choice – we chose the way of a liberal society – open
markets and democratic institutions. That was the first choice.

And today, as we celebrate independence, we are celebrating that choice.
We are celebrating in Washington, the capital of the country that proved
that a liberal economy in a democratic republic is a winning combination.
Americans are the people who set out to design a political system that is
built around the individual, his liberties and capacities.

In other words, the American Declaration of Independence is about rights.
It is a testament to the rights of individuals, of peoples, of society.
But no man was ever endowed with a right without being at the same time
saddled with a responsibility.

We are privileged to be the generation that is consolidating independence.
We do have wide and generous opportunities to turn a dream into a country,
a stable country with a promising future.

And to that end, I want to propose a declaration of responsibilities. Our
responsibilities. This generation’s responsibilities. The responsibilities
of Armenia and Diaspora, of all those who call themselves Armenian.

— We have a responsibility to empower our people to confidently
participate in building their democracy.

— We have a responsibility to create an even playing field for every
Armenian citizen.

— We have the responsibility to continue on the diffcult but necessary
path of political and economic reforms.

— We have a responsibility not to take Armenia for granted, but to work
to create an Armenia that makes real the promises of democracy and
freedom.

–We have a responsibility to remember our past, without being bound by
it, because the future is ours.

— We have a responsibility to reach a just and lasting resolution of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict based on mutual compromise.

— We have a responsibility to make the Diaspora an extension of the
homeland – not a permanent dislocation, not a destructive dispersion.

— We have a responsibility to welcome and embrace every Diasporan who
calls himself or herself an Armenian.

— We have a responsibility to rally every bit of our resources –
individual and collective, private and public.

— We have a responsibility to stand united, to work united, to go forward
united in the face of new challenges, we can win together, and not lose
separately.

These responsibilities come with independence, with freedom, with liberty.
Demanding freedom means recognizing the responsibility to ourselves, for
ourselves. Freedom is also the right to make mistakes, to learn from those
mistakes. It remains for those who have greater experience in freedom to
be patient as we sort out the options and freely choose the one that is
right for us.

We believed that independence may be bestowed, but freedom must be
achieved. Independence meant rights. Liberty means responsibility.

Thank you.

http://www.armeniaforeignministry.am

National League Of Human Dignity And Security Protection Opens In Ye

NATIONAL LEAGUE OF HUMAN DIGNITY AND SECURITY PROTECTION OPENS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Oct 23 2006

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, NOYAN TAPAN. Opening of Armenian National League
of Human Dignity and Security Protection took place on October 23
in Yerevan. The League will operate within the framework of the
International League of Security Protection. As Valentin Varennikov,
International League’s Chairman, said at the press conference held
the same day, Armenia is the 13th state joining the International
League. He said that another 20 countries have expressed willingness
to join this NGO. V.Varennikov said that the International League is
anxious about the policy of U.S. that applies dual standards. In
his words, NATO’s position also causes anxiety, as it becomes
an instrument in the hands of a country, U.S., in particular, in
connection with the events in Jugoslavia and Iraq. The International
League considers that the problems should be solved exclusively in a
political way. V.Varennikov said that in the Nagorno Karabakh issue
the International League is for the problem’s political solution. At
that, the solution should be found in consideration of the interests
and wishes of the population living there. V.Varennikov said that
the Azerbaijani Ambassador on Special Commissions has met with him
and said about Azerbaijan’s willingness to join the League. He also
said he would like the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan to
be the way they were in the Soviet years.

Chirac Se Disculpa Ante =?unknown?q?Turqu=EDa?= Por La Ley Que Casti

CHIRAC SE DISCULPA ANTE TURQUíA POR LA LEY QUE CASTIGA LA NEGACION DEL GENOCIDIO ARMENIO
Octavi MartÍ

El Pais, España
16 octubre 2006
Andalucía Edicion

La normativa genera protestas en Estambul y Ankara y el boicoteo de
productos franceses

Jacques Chirac, presidente de la República francesa, llamo por
telefono el pasado sabado al primer ministro turco, Recep Tayyip
Erdogan. Chirac se excuso por la ley aprobada por los diputados
franceses -pendiente de ratificacion por el Senado- que convierte
en delito la negacion de la existencia de un genocidio contra los
armenios. Aunque Chirac tildo la ley de "innecesaria e inoportuna",
al mismo tiempo insistio en que Turquía tiene que revisar su pasado y
asumir su responsabilidad historica en la muerte de miles de armenios
en 1915, según fuentes oficiales.

Chirac, según declaro un miembro del gabinete de Erdogan,fue mas
lejos en sus palabras y se comprometio a "hacer todo lo que este en
su mano para reorientar el proceso" de ratificacion de la ley.

La colonia armenia en Francia -estimada en unas 500.000 personas- ha
celebrado que las consecuencias legales del negacionismo del genocidio
de que fue víctima su pueblo sean identicas a las vigentes en los
casos en que se niega la existencia de los campos de exterminio nazis.

No obstante, este regocijo no fue acompañado por la gran mayoría de los
medios de comunicacion y por muchísimos políticos -la ley fue aprobada
con la presencia de menos de un tercio de los diputados en la Asamblea
Nacional-, que lamentan que la representacion parlamentaria nacional
"se empeñe en convertir la verdad historica en material legislativo".

En Ankara y en Estambul la protesta popular no ha movilizado multitudes
pero inquieta. Las estaciones de gasolina de la petrolera francesa
Total han sido objeto de boicot y un diputado conservador ha solicitado
que su coche oficial deje de ser un Peugeot.

En algunos supermercados los productos franceses han desaparecido de
los estantes y el consulado frances en Estambul fue atacado por unos
400 manifestantes que lanzaban huevos contra la fachada.

Los intercambios comerciales entre ambos países aportan a Francia
unos 4.700 millones de euros anuales, apenas un 1,5% de su comercio
exterior. Mas importante para Francia es que, a raíz de una crisis
estrictamente ideologica, pueda perder algunos contratos públicos
importantes, como el de la construccion de centrales nucleares entre
2010 y 2020, contratos a los que aspira la sociedad Areva.

Por otra parte, la posicion turca difícilmente puede radicalizarse
sin poner en peligro las negociaciones de Ankara para que su país sea
admitido en la UE. Para Chirac, que durante años parecía partidario
del ingreso de Turquía en la UE, el genocidio de los armenios se
ha convertido en una piedra de toque que le evita tener que seguir
defendiendo una posicion que se ha revelado impopular entre la derecha.

Hace quince días, en Erevan (Armenia), Chirac repetía que "Ankara
tiene que reconocer su responsabilidad en el genocidio armenio de 1915"
y ponía ese gesto como "una condicion previa" al ingreso turco en la
Union Europea.

–Boundary_(ID_O4Epeb/TrzbeyIUmBlV1OA)–

DIKO Elects New Leader Today After Weeks Of Acrimony

DIKO ELECTS NEW LEADER TODAY AFTER WEEKS OF ACRIMONY
By Elias Hazou

Cyprus Mail
22 Oct 2006

RULING DIKO goes to the polls today to elect a new party leader,
ending an acrimonious campaign with no shortage of low blows.

Back in August, Tassos Papadopoulos dropped a bombshell when he
announced he was standing down.

Papadopoulos said he had decided to step down because his duties
as President did not allow him fully to respond to his duties as
DIKO chairman.

However, his resignation was also seen as kick starting the 2008
presidential race. In a farewell speech earlier this month,
Papadopoulos appealed for unity within DIKO, but subsequent
developments have been anything but harmonious.

Papadopoulos took over the reins of DIKO in 2000 from the late founder
Spyros Kyprianou. But the day-to-day running of the party was delegated
to no.2 Nicos Cleanthous A lawyer by profession, Cleanthous, regarded
as toeing the "Papadopoulos line", now faces off against the younger
Marios Karoyian, a former presidential spokesman.

Karoyian is portraying himself as a link between the old and new
guards inside DIKO. He has pledged to open up the party and improve
its functioning, which he says has grown stale.

In this respect, Karoyian’s endeavour has been likened to that of
PASOK leader George Papandreou in Greece: more power to ordinary
party members.

On a live radio show this week, Karoyian – derided by detractors as
an upstart – indirectly criticised Cleanthous, saying that DIKO could
have done better in May’s legislative elections.

Cleanthous countered, noting that the party received 17.8 per cent
of the popular vote, and that in all fairness he should be given at
least some of the credit.

"Why is it that I am saddled with the negative things, never the good
things?" Cleanthous complained.

The campaign had turned nasty early on, when members of the Cleanthous
camp started picking on Karoyian’s Armenian descent.

In a letter printed in a newspaper, a Cleanthous supporter accused
Karoyian of not doing his military service – Armenians are not called
up to the National Guard – and cast a shadow over his patriotism.

Sources close to Karoyian dismissed this as racist behaviour and a
dishonest attempt at prejudicing DIKO members.

Cleanthous has denied all along any connection to this rumour peddling,
even speaking out against it.

But Karoyian’s cohorts have also managed to dig up dirt on Cleanthous:
they say that at one time Cleanthous "left" DIKO to join the ranks
of another political grouping, Enosis Kentrou (Union of the Centre).

The accusation struck a raw nerve with Cleanthous.

"I did not abandon DIKO, I merely became inactive for a while,"
he said.

"And this was at a time when the party came to power. Show me another
politician who would forsake the spoils of power."

At a gathering of supporters at Nicosia’s Hilton Hotel this week,
Cleanthous appealed to DIKO members’ sense of responsibility.

"Do the right thing," was his slogan, implying he was the man to
ensure stability and continuity.

Commentators note that the new party chief will have a tough task
ahead: the municipal elections – which strained relations between
the government coalition -are just around the corner.

Already, cracks have been shaping inside the party: members of the
Nicosia district branch are disgruntled at having been left out of
the decision-making process. They say that the mayoral candidates
for the Nicosia district have been imposed on them from the top.

Karoyian is almost certain to tap into this disaffection.

The party has also been rocked by allegations from former heavyweight
Nicos Pittokopitis, who claims he was robbed of the Paphos mayorship.

Pittokopitis threatened to unleash a "political typhoon" of revelations
regarding the wheeling and dealing between DIKO, EDEK and AKEL for
the municipalities.

Tomorrow’s election will be followed by a vote in DIKO’s Central
Committee to nominate an alternate chairman.