Reactions Differ: Russia’s Recognition Of South Ossetia And Abkhazia

REACTIONS DIFFER: RUSSIA’S RECOGNITION OF SOUTH OSSETIA AND ABKHAZIA HAS SPARKED A LOT OF REACTION IN NAGORNYY KARABAKH
by Kristine Khanumyan

Haykakan Zhamanak
Aug 29 2008
Armenia

The NKR [Nagornyy Karabakh republic] foreign ministry has issued
a statement, welcoming "the fact of Ossetia’s and Abkhazia’s
independence" and emphasizing that it "fully complies with the
fundamental principles of people’s right to self-determination and
international law, prescribed in the documents of the UN, OSCE and
other international organizations".

Vahram Atanesyan, the chairman of the NKR parliament’s foreign
relations committee, told us that hearings will be held in parliament
today [29 August] with the participation of the parliamentary factions
and political forces not represented in parliament. Atanesyan said
that the hearings are connected with Russia’s recognition of South
Ossetia and Abkhazia and, in that context, the steps towards the NKR’s
recognition. What should be decided is, if Karabakh were to appeal
to Russia with a request to recognize the NKR, or if Karabakh were
to approach Armenia with that request, whether diplomatic relations
should be established with South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Official positions of Armenia and Karabakh over the recognition
of South Ossetia and Abkhazia have sparked mixed reaction in the
NKR. Atanesyan, for example, says that Karabakh foreign ministry’s
statement was appropriate and in line with the international
practice. When asked if Armenia should recognize the NKR, Atanesyan
said: "I am not in the position to assess what Armenia’s position
would be. I can only speak about the NKR’s appeal to Armenia. This
is something that can’t be agreed upon in one day. But such a moment
may come".

The NKR parliament’s only independent member Gegham Baghdasaryan says
the NKR foreign ministry’s statement was not normal. "The statement
came very late. Initially they made very soft statements, and there
was no clear position."

Armenian Nuclear Plant Suspends Work Due To Maintenance

ARMENIAN NUCLEAR PLANT SUSPENDS WORK DUE TO MAINTENANCE

ArmInfo News Agency (in Russian)
Sept 8 2008
Armenia

Yerevan, 8 September: The operation of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant
[NPP] has been suspended for 85 days at 0050 on 5 September [1950 gmt
4 September] due to a complete overhaul, the director-general of the
NPP, Gagik Markosyan, told our correspondent today.

Markosyan said that it was planned to unload nuclear fuel and inspect
the nuclear reactor’s core. The major overhaul of the nuclear reactor
is carried out once in four years. He added that it was also planned to
carry out a chemical washing of all the six steam generators, install
and put into operation a new leak detection system on the reactor,
repair diesel generators, which is carried out once in eight years,
as well as to carry out other maintenance work.

Edvard Nalbandian And Goran Lenmarker Discuss Karabakh Conflict Sett

EDVARD NALBANDIAN AND GORAN LENNMARKER DISCUSSED KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT PROCESS

DeFacto Agency
Sept 8 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 08.09.08. DE FACTO. The issues referring to the Karabakh
conflict settlement process were discussed on September 6 at the RA
FM Edvard Nalbandian’s meeting with the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly
Special Representative for Karabakh conflict issues Goran Lennmarker.

According to the RA MFA Press Office, in the course of the meeting
Minister Nalbandian noted Armenia attached great importance to
parliamentary diplomacy considering it to be a serious field for the
development of relations between the nations.

Presenting the situation around Karabakh talks on Goran Lennmarker’s
request, Minister Nalbandian noted that after a meeting held in
St. Petersburg RA and AR Presidents had commissioned the two countries’
FMs to continue talks within OSCE Minsk group frames on the basis of
Madrid proposals.

The parties noted the problems should be settled only via peace
talks. Edvard Nalbandian noted Armenia had always been for the
settlement of all problems via talks and that Armenia’s foreign policy
was targeted at strengthening stability, security and cooperation in
the region.

In the course of the meeting the parties discussed the issue of
Armenian-Turkish relations’ establishment, as well as other regional
problems.

Sergei Karaganov: Russia Wants Turkey-Armenia Reconciliation

SERGEI KARAGANOV: RUSSIA WANTS TURKEY-ARMENIA RECONCILIATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.09.2008 13:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia is interested in normalization of the
Armenian-Turkish relations, said Sergei Karaganov, chairman of the
presidium of the council for foreign policy and defense.

He voiced hope that cooperation between the two states can ensure
stability in the region. "Hostility between Armenia and Turkey has
always been a factor influencing the world policy. This presidential
meeting is a historical event, which means that the ice has been
broken," he told the Echo of Moscow.

"It’s evident that the two countries are trying to reconcile because
they feel the necessity to unite to face new challenges and regional
instability," he said.

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul was in Yerevan on Sept. 6 to watch
a World Cup qualifier between the Armenian and Turkish national
teams. Before the match, the heads of state discussed possibilities
to normalize bilateral relations.

Pro-Power Candidates Won At Yesterday’s Election Of Prefects Of Kana

PRO-POWER CANDIDATES WON AT YESTERDAY’S ELECTION OF PREFECTS OF KANAKER-ZEYTUN, ARABKIR, NUBARASHEN AND EREBUNI YEREVAN COMMUNITIES

arminfo
2008-09-08 15:35:00

ArmInfo. Pro-power candidates won at yesterday’s election of prefects
of Kanaker-Zeytun, Arabkir, Nubarashen and Erebuni Yerevan communities
As spokeswoman of RA Central Election Committee Tatev Ohanyan told
ArmInfo today, 12042 out of 21 737 voters in Kanaker-Zeytun community
voted for the Republican party representative Araik Kotanjyan. 16
591 out of 31 827 voters in Arabkir community voted for a non-party
Albert Yeritsyan. The chair of Nubarashen community’s prefect will
be taken by member of ‘Prosperous Armenia’ party Mher Hovhannisyan
(3 290 votes) and that of Erebuni community – by a republican Armen
Harutyunyan who received 21 184 votes, T. Ohanyan said.

Armenian Foreign Minister: First And Most Important Step Is Made In

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTER: FIRST AND MOST IMPORTANT STEP IS MADE IN ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

arminfo
2008-09-08 17:27:00

ArmInfo. The first and most important step has been made in the
Armenian-Turkish relations, Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandyan
told journalists, Monday, when commenting upon Turkish President
Abdullah Gul’s visit to Yerevan. "There is such an expression: the
first step is half a step. The presidents of Armenia and Turkey made
this first step. The rest has to be done by us, diplomats. I hope
that this process will have good continuation and a good result",
Nalbandyan said.

To recall, on September 6 Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a visit
to Yerevan at Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s invitation.

ANKARA: Soccer sows seeds of new era between Turkey and Armenia

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 8 2008

Soccer sows seeds of new era between Turkey and Armenia

President Abdullah Gül’s brief yet still landmark visit to
Armenia raised hopes for dialogue that could eventually restore
relations between the two estranged neighbors and help bury an almost
a century old hostility over history.

"My visit broke psychological barriers in the Caucasus," Gül
told reporters on his way back to Turkey on Saturday night after
watching a World Cup qualifying match between the national teams of
the two countries in Hrazdan Stadium. During his brief stay in
Yerevan, Gül also had a one-and-a-half-hour meeting with his
Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan, who had invited him to watch the
game.

The visit has huge symbolic importance: It is the first time ever
a Turkish president has set foot in Armenia since it declared
independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. It is also a landmark step
because Turkey and Armenia have had no formal ties since 1993, when
Turkey severed relations and closed its border with Armenia in protest
of Armenian occupation of a chunk of Azerbaijani territory over a
dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh. But the origins of dispute go much
deeper in history. Armenia claims the Ottoman Turks killed 1.5 million
Armenians in eastern Anatolia during the World War I years as part of
a systematic campaign of genocide.

Both Gül and Sarksyan were hopeful that the visit could
break the ice and open the way for dialogue to resolve
differences. "We hope we will be able to demonstrate goodwill to solve
the problems between our countries and not leave them to future
generations," Sarksyan told a news conference after meeting with
Gül on Saturday. Gül, alongside Sarksyan, said he was
"leaving optimistic."

"If we create a good atmosphere and climate for this process, this
will be a great achievement, and will also benefit stability and
cooperation in the Caucasus," he told reporters after the game, which
Turkey won 2-0.

Sarksyan said he would attend the return match in Turkey in October
2009, and that the invitation to do so suggested Gül "also has
some expectations that there will be some movement between these two
meetings."

Gül left Foreign Minister Ali Babacan in Yerevan for several
more hours for "technical discussions" with his Armenian counterpart,
Eduard Nalbandiyan, on how to normalize ties. There was no statement
on their talks, which lasted into the early hours of Sunday morning,
but diplomatic sources said both sides had agreed at the meeting that
"full normalization" in relations must be achieved. Officials of the
two countries will meet again at UN General Assembly, scheduled for
the end of September, sources said, without specifying whether the
meeting will be at the presidential level.

A report in daily Hürriyet said yesterday that the regular
consulting mechanism between Turkey and Armenia will be improved and
that negotiations between the two countries will be raised to the
foreign ministerial level.

The report also said the efforts to establish a joint commission of
historians for resolving the dispute over Armenian claims of genocide
would speed up and that a separate commission would be formed to
address the economic field. In 2005, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip ErdoÄ?an took a first step towards resolving the issue by
proposing that a joint commission of historians launch an
investigation and publish their conclusions, but the proposal was
rejected by Yerevan.

Sarksyan raises Nagorno-Karabakh, no mention of `genocide’

Gül, speaking aboard the plane en route to Turkey, said there
was not even a veiled reference to the "genocide" issue during his
talks with Sarksyan. In contrast, the Armenian president raised the
issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, Gül said. "I wasn’t expecting we
would discuss the issue at such length," he added.

The Azerbaijani government has refrained from publicly criticizing the
visit, but politicians and newspapers lamented what they see as a
"betrayal" of the alliance with Turkey. But others say Turkish
dialogue with Armenia could help a solution in the Nagorno-Karabakh
dispute, a row that has remained unresolved for 15 years.

Turkish officials have said they were in contact with Azerbaijani
officials and that they have raised no objection to Gül’s visit
to Armenia.

Gül also said on Saturday night that the issue of opening the
border was not on the agenda of the talks. "If this atmosphere is
maintained, everything will be back on track, will normalize. But
there is no such thing at this moment," he said. In an interview
earlier, Babacan also indicated that reopening the border with
Armenia, a major barrier to the landlocked state’s economic
development, may take longer, noting that the closure was linked to
the Armenian military presence in Azerbaijan.

Gül flew to Armenia and the official vehicles Gül and
the Turkish delegation used during their stay in Yerevan traveled to
Armenia through Georgia, instead of by way of the closed border.

The government’s initiative to have contacts with Armenia, which
received serious criticism from the opposition parties at home, has
gained new impetus since Russia’s war with Georgia last month, which
raised fears for the security of energy supplies from the Caspian Sea
to Western Europe.

The establishment of normal relations could have huge significance for
Turkey’s role as a regional power, for energy flows from the Caspian
Sea and for Western influence in the South Caucasus. Landlocked
Armenia, a Soviet republic until 1991, could also derive enormous
benefit from the opening of the border with its large neighbor and the
restoration of a key rail link. Western-backed pipelines shipping oil
and gas from the Caspian Sea to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast bypass
Armenia and bend north instead to go through Georgia. With that route
looking vulnerable after the Russian intervention, Armenia could be an
attractive alternative.

"Now is the time to talk about the problems openly, boldly and to try
to find solutions," Babacan said in an interview with Reuters ahead of
Gül’s meeting with Sarksyan. "We don’t have diplomatic
relations right now with Armenia. What are we going to do about that?
That’s another issue for discussion."

Asked whether a restoration of ties could be an outcome of the visit,
he said: "I don’t want to raise expectations that much. We are ready
for more dialogue. This all has to be discussed."
İstanbul/Yerevan Today’s Zaman

08 September 2008, Monday
EKREM DUMANLI / SÃ`LEYMAN KURT YEREVAN

ANKARA: Soccer diplomacy brings Turkey’s Gul to Armenia

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 6 2008

Soccer diplomacy brings Turkey’s Gül to Armenia

The presidents of Turkey and Armenia went to a soccer match together
on Saturday during a landmark encounter in Yerevan designed to help
end almost a century of hostility and aid security in the Caucasus.

Abdullah Gül became the first Turkish leader to visit Armenia. The
neighbours have no diplomatic ties but a relationship haunted by
whether ethnic Armenians killed during World War One were victims of
systematic genocide.

Security was tight. Helicopters escorted Gül’s jet on arrival and
hundreds of demonstrators lined the streets of the Armenian capital.

But the two presidents expressed hope the World Cup qualifier, the
first match between the two national sides, would help thaw relations
and foster dialogue.

The initiative has gained new impetus since Russia’s war with Georgia
last month, which raised fears for the security of energy supplies
from the Caspian Sea to western Europe.

"We hope we will be able to demonstrate goodwill to solve the problems
between our countries and not transfer them to future generations,"
Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan told a news conference after
receiving Gül.

Gül said he hoped the game — which Turkey won 2-0 — would aid
rapprochement and contribute to regional peace and security.

"This match is important beyond being the first match between the
Turkish and Armenian national teams," Gül said on departure from
Ankara. "It has a significance that will present important
opportunities."

Turkey has never opened an embassy in Armenia and in 1993 Ankara
closed their land border in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan, a
Turkic-speaking ally which was fighting Armenian-backed separatists
over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

ALTERNATIVE ENERGY ROUTE

But even as the two presidents took their seats together in the
Hrazdan stadium, the challenges were obvious.

Armenian fans booed the Turkish national anthem, and dozens of
demonstrators held torches and flowers in silent vigil at an imposing
monument to the World War One killings on a hillside behind the
stadium.

Protesters in the streets held banners that read:"1915 – Never Again ,
and "We Demand Justice."

Armenia says 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of Ottoman Turks,
and Yerevan insists Ankara should recognise the killings as
genocide. Turkey rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians
along with at least as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged
when the Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

But Russia’s decision last month to send its forces into Georgia, an
ex-Soviet state which borders both Armenia and Turkey, has convinced
many that it is time for Ankara and Yerevan to put their differences
aside.

Gül said the events made his trip "especially important ." Sarksyan
said Gül had invited him to the return game next year.

Establishment of normal relations could have huge significance for
Turkey’s role as a regional power, for energy flows from the Caspian
Sea and for Western influence in the South Caucasus.

Landlocked Armenia, a Soviet republic until 1991, could also derive
enormous benefits from the opening of the frontier with its large
neighbour and the restoration of a key rail link.

Western-backed pipelines shipping oil and gas from the Caspian Sea to
Turkey’s Mediterranean coast bypass Armenia and bend north instead to
go through Georgia.

With that route looking vulnerable after the Russian intervention,
Armenia could be an attractive alternative.

06 September 2008, Saturday
TODAY’S ZAMAN WITH WIRES İSTANBUL

ARF Goal is To Once More Raise Issue of Genocide Before Turkish Pres

GOAL OF ARFD’S ACTIONS IS TO ONCE MORE RAISE ISSUE OF GENOCIDE BEFORE
TURKISH PRESIDENT, ARMEN RUSTAMIAN SAYS

Y EREVAN, SEPTEMBER 4, NOYAN TAPAN. Armen Rustamian, a representative of
the ARFD Armenian Supreme Body, assured that the actions to be
initiated by Dashnaktsutiun on the day of Turkish President Abdullah
Gul’s visit are not aimed either against the foreign policy of Serzh
Sargsyan inviting him to Armenia or against A. Gul’s visit. As he
stated at the September 4 press conference, the goal of
Dashnaktsutiun’s actions is to once more raise the issue of Genocide
before Gul and to personally present the demand of recognition of the
fact of Genocide to him. According to A. Rustamian, unless such actions
are organized, on the very day following the visit the Turks will
announce all over the world that in the presence of their President
Armenians "did not say a word" about the issue of Genocide. After that
Turkey, according to A. Rustamian, the international community will say
that its observations that the Genocide is the problem of the Armenian
Diaspora and not of Armenia were right.

The ARFD figure informed those present that party’s activists will
start their actions on September 5, from the moment of A. Gul’s
arrival, at the airport. The next day, the day of Armenia-Turkey
football match, the demonstrants will visit Tsitsernakaberd Memorial
Complex and will keep lighting torches there during the whole game. And
appeals to recognize the Genocide will be voiced at the stadium during
the game. Meanwhile A. Rustamian stressed that ARFD calls its
supporters for not yielding to provocations and not making clashes with
Turkish football fans.

He classed as "extreme" the mood in Armenian society in connection with
the anticipated visit of the Turkish President. "They are so happy that
one forms an impression that we are meeting our missing brother," A.
Rustamian said. According to him, it was also unnecessary that the
Football Federation very quickly changed its logo replacing the image
of Mount Ararat by the image of a ball.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117028

ROA can recognize Abkhazia, S Ossetia with guarantees of NKR recog.

Armenia can recognize independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia only
in case of serious guarantees of the NKR recognition by Russia,
Armenian political expert thinks

2008-09-06 15:21:00

ArmInfo. Armenia can recognize independence of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia only in case of serious guarantees of the NKR recognition by
Russia, Armenian political expert, rector of Linguistic University
after Bruysov told journalists today.

He also added that in this context Russia’s role is very much important
as a guarantor that Georgia will not start blocking Armenia by stopping
cargo and gas transit via its territory. ‘Only in this case we can
positively reply to possible demands of Moscow’, – Zolyan concluded.