WD e-Newsletter – 12/15/2006

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WESTERN DIOCESE E-NEWSLETTER
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Bible Readings
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Diocesan News
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DIRECTOR OF THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA MEETS WITH PRIMATE

On Monday, December 11, 2006 in the morning, Mr. Bryan Ardouny, the
Director of the Armenian Assembly of America met with the Primate in
his office. ( =292)

DEDICATION OF PRAYER SERVICE HONORING YOUTH

On Sunday, December 10, 2006, at St. Peter Armenian Church in
Glendale, an event organized by Fr. Vasken Movsesian was held to honor
the Sacrament of Prayer.
( y.php?id=291)

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS CONCERT HELD AT ST. JAMES

The Holiday Season sparkled at St. James Armenian Church as guests sat
spellbound at the Annual Christmas Concert hosted by the St. James
Ladies Society on December 10 in the Church sanctuary. For the 14th
year the celebrated Santa Barbara Choral Society and Orchestra
performed Handel’s Messiah and `The Christmas Story According to
St. Luke,’ conducted by JoAnne Gondjian Wasserman.
( tory.php?id=290)

ARMENIAN DEMOCRATIC LEAGUE HOLDS 85TH ANNIVERSARY LUNCHEON

On Sunday, December 10, 2006 at the Besh Gurtarian Hall in Pasadena,
the 85th Anniversary of the Armenian Democratic League was held.
( php?id=289)

FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN DANCE ENSEMBLE

On Sunday, December 10, 2006 at 5:00 p.m. at the Glendale Elementary
School, the Armenian Dance Ensemble celebrated its 5th Anniversary.
( /story.php?id=288)

FUNDRAISING FOR CHURCH EXPANSION

On December 10, 2006, in Newport Beach at the Bayside Restaurant, the
Primate presided over an event to raise funds for St. Mary Church
hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Palandjian.
( story.php?id=287)

PRIMATE PERFORMS DIVINE LITURGY AT ST. MARYÂ’S CHURCH IN COSTA
MESA

On Sunday, December 10, 2006, His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian
celebrated Divine Liturgy at St. Mary’s Church in Costa Mesa.
( php?id=286)

HAROUT SASOUNIAN HONORED

On Saturday, December 9, 2006 the Regional Council of the Armenian
Democratic League held a Special Banquet hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Shahe
Ganimian. ( =285)

WESTSIDE ARARAT GUILD HONORS LILY BALIAN

On Saturday, December 9, 2006 at the Beverly Hills Hotel a Gala
Christmas Luncheon hosted by the Westside Ararat Guild of the Ararat
Home of Los Angeles, was held to honor `The Angel of the Year,’ Lily
Balian. ( =284)

ARMENIAN REVOLUTIONARY FEDERATION LEADERS MEET WITH THE PRIMATE

On Thursday, December 7 at 6:00 p.m., Armenian Revolutionary
Federation leaders, Mr. Avedik Izmirian and Mr. John Kosakian met with
the Primate at his Diocesan Office.
( y.php?id=283)

SPECIAL REQUIEM SERVICE FOR EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS

On Thursday, December 7, 2006, a Special Requiem Service was held in
the Armen and Gloria Hampar Room at the Diocesan Headquarters.
( s/story.php?id=282)

ECUMENICAL SERVICE HELD AT ST. PETER ARMENIAN CHURCH IN VAN NUYS

On Wednesday, December 6, 2006, the Armenian Apostolic Church and the
Episcopalian Church held an Interfaith Service presided by His
Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian..
( story.php?id=281)

THE PRIMATE VISITS SANTA CLARITA Introduces plan to reorganize.

His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, accompanied with Very
Rev. Fr. Baret Yeretsian, visited the Santa Clarita Parish on December
4, 2006. ( =280)

ARMENIAN EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION HOLD DINNER DANCE

( y.php?id=279)

SHUSHI DANCE ENSEMBLE PERFORMS IN PASADENA

( tory.php?id=278)

85TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION OF THE GUILIGUIAN SCHOOLS

( ory.php?id=277)

ST. JAMES ARMENIAN CHURCH CELEBRATES 65TH ANNUAL NAME DAY

On Sunday, December 3, 2006, His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian,
Primate, celebrated the Divine Liturgy and delivered the sermon at
St. James Armenian Church of Los Angeles in recognition of its 65th
Annual Name Day. During Church services, the Primate ordained Gary
Kemkemian and Robby Kemkemian as Acolytes and Levon Kemkemian as a
Sub-Deacon. The Primate was assisted at the altar by His Eminence
Archbishop Vatche Hovsepian, Archpriest Rev. Fr. Arshag Khatchadourian
and Rev. Fr. Baret Dz. V. Yeretsian.
( tory.php?id=276)

THIRD ANNUAL CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION OF THE WESTERN DIOCESE

On the evening of Saturday, December 2, 2006, the Third Annual
Christmas Ball of the Western Diocese took place at the Diocesan
Headquarters. Over 450 guests attended and enjoyed an evening of
camaraderie, dining and dancing.The highlight of the evening was the
presentation of the `Philanthropist of the Year’ Award to Mr. and
Mrs. Berj and Belet Shahbazian, noted humanitarians and benefactors.
( /story.php?id=275)

CANDIDATES FOR THE PRIESTHOOD OF THE WESTERN DIOCESE

( ory.php?id=274)

THE PRIMATE VISITS THE MANOOGIAN-DEMIRJIAN SCHOOL

( ry.php?id=273)

Upcoming Events
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1/6: Annual Armenian Christmas Reception
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The Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America, providing
spiritual guidance and leadership to the Armenian Apostolic community,
is a 501 (c)(3) non-profit, tax-exempt organization comprised of 47
churches in 16 western states. It was established in 1898 as the
Diocese of the Armenian Church encompassing the entire United States
and Canada. In 1927 the Western Diocese was formed to exclusivly serve
the western United States.

3325 North Glenoaks Blvd. Burbank, CA 91504
Tel: (818) 558-7474 Fax: (818) 558-6333
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

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Armenian Patriarch Warns European States Not to Fail Turkey Talks

AZG Armenian Daily #241, 16/12/2006

Diaspora

ARMENIAN PATRIARCH OF CONSTANTINOPLE WARNS THE EUROPEAN STATES NOT TO
FAIL THE QUESTION OF TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP

The EU Summit at Brussels is to finish up today. As it is well known
the participants of the summit were inclined to stop negotiating the 8
terms of Turkey’s membership and to delay the determination of a
certain date for Turkey’s commitments on Cyprus. In this respect, the
Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, Mesrob II Mutafian addressed the
heads of the European states.

The Patriarch’s message, dated December 12, was published on "Abhaber"
(Turkish version of Euronews) website. On December 14 "Miliet" also
responded to this message.

The Turkish newspaper says that on December 15, 2006 the Patriarch
addressed the kings, queens, Presidents, Prime Ministers and Foreign
Ministers of Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, France, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovakia, Spain,
Sweden, Netherlands and the UK, expressing his attitude to the issue
of Turkey’s membership in the EU. "On December 14 the EU is to make a
vital decision concerning Turkey’s membership. That decision will
have a multiple effect," "Milliet" reports Mesrob II’s words. The
Patriarch expressed his concerns with the difficulties in EU-Turkey
relations. To his opinion EU membership is a priority for the people
of Turkey and that the promises of the EU have brought forth
considerable progress in the country. Due to the reforms the
situation with the rights of the Turkish citizens and religious and
ethnic minorities has improved. The Patriarch assured that the
progressive reforms are likely to proceed. He said that Turkey’s
membership will have positive effect not on Turkey only but also on
the whole Europe. He expressed hope that the EU will not fail Turkey’s
attempts for membership achievement by the means of imposing newer and
newer demands.

By Hakob Chakrian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Strike in Gyumri

A1+

STRIKE IN GYUMRI
[07:52 pm] 15 December, 2006

Today the teachers of the Gyumri school N15 have gone on strike. Only
five teachers have decided to keep working. According headmaster
Hamazasp Khachatryan, the teachers demand their salary which they have
not received for a year.

On December 12 the headmaster asked them to wail a little longer as
the school has debts. Mr. Khachatryan considers this step of the
teachers hasty. Nevertheless, the teachers claim they should have
taken it earlier. According to teacher of physics Tamara Araqelyan,
she has to get more than 320 thousand AMD for 2005 and 2006.

The headmaster avoided answering questions about the volume of the
debt to the teachers.

The teachers try to solve the problem through the Shirak
governor. They claim if there is no solution they will go to higher
instances.

Armenuhi Minasyan

TV Company `Tsayg’

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Balance in the Region Depends on the Settlement of the NK Conflict

A1+

BALANCE IN THE REGION DEPENDS ON THE SETTLEMENT OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT
[01:15 pm] 15 December, 2006

`The Assembly regrets that, despite the three meetings between the
Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan organised in 2006 and the
increased efforts by the Co-Presidents of the Minsk Group, no
significant progress can be registered to date towards a peaceful
settlement in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’, says the Provisional
version of the draft resolution `Honouring of obligations and
commitments by Armenia’ adopted by PACE’s Monitoring Committee at its
meeting in Paris on 13 December 2006.

The report will be discussed the the January session. It adds that
`it is in the interest of both countries to end this conflict as soon
as possible, ruling out the use of force, in accordance with the
commitment entered into at the time of their accession. Without a
final settlement, prospects for stability and prosperity in the entire
region remain precarious’.

`The Assembly itself is committed, notably through the "Ad Hoc
Committee of the Bureau on the implementation of Resolution 1416
(2005) on the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region dealt with by
the OSCE Minsk Conference", to help engender a positive negotiating
climate and foster dialogue at the parliamentary level and between the
populations of the two countries concerned, and also with the
population of Nagorno-Karabakh, while refraining from interfering in
the negotiation process’.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

EU Needs Our Political Will

A1+

EU NEEDS OUR POLITICAL WILL
[06:25 pm] 15 December, 2006

«We want South Caucasus to be closed to the EU. WE are sure that we
can have many achievements cooperating with South Caucasus countries
within the framework of the Action Plans», said EU special envoy to
South Caucasus Peter Semneby who has arrived in Baku today.

According to him, the three countries must approach the EU
simultaneously. `With this aim we have an individual plan with each of
them. But the realization of the plan depends on the political will of
the authorities of those countries’.

The EU representative will also arrive in Yerevan within the framework
of the regional visit.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Nagorno-Karabakh: Between Vote And Reality

NAGORNO-KARABAKH: BETWEEN VOTE AND REALITY

Open Democracy, UK
Dec 14 2006

Nagorno-Karabakh has followed Transdniestria and South Ossetia
in holding an independence referendum. But democracy in these
"non-recognised entities" is not so simple, reports Sabine Freizer
of the International Crisis Group.

On 10 December 2006, Nagorno-Karabakh held a referendum in which
close to 75,000 people, or 83% of voters, approved the entity’s
first constitution. The document calls Nagorno-Karabakh a "sovereign
democratic" state. The date of its approval is significant: the poll
took place fifteen years to the day after the mountainous Caucasian
enclave’s Armenian population voted overwhelmingly for independence.

But neither the 1991 referendum nor that of 2006 is recognised as
legitimate abroad. Nagorno-Karabakh may have been establishing
state-like institutions since 1991, but it continues to be
internationally considered as part of Azerbaijan, and no state –
not even Armenia – has ever recognised its statehood.

The long-running Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is the most significant
obstacle to peace and regional cooperation in the south Caucasus.

Fighting from 1992 to 1994, when a ceasefire came into effect, caused
at least 30,000 deaths and over a million Azeris and Armenians were
displaced. Ceasefire violations and casualties continue to occur
monthly along the line of contact. Exiles from Nagorno-Karabakh and
seven other occupied territories around the enclave have been unable
to return to their homes and continue to live in miserable conditions
elsewhere in Azerbaijan.

Today, Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto authorities demand independence
and international recognition, citing their right to national
self-determination. Azerbaijan pledges that Nagorno-Karabakh’s
population will be provided with the highest form of self-government
but within the country’s frontiers. It claims the sanctity of
international borders and its right to preserve its territorial
integrity. It also blames Armenia for supporting Nagorno-Karabakh
militarily and economically, in effect participating in the annexation
of Azerbaijani land.

A year of stasis

Since 1992, Azerbaijan and Armenia have been negotiating to find a
solution. Talks have been facilitated by the Organisation for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk group, chaired by France, Russia
and the United States. In 1997, 1998 and 2001 it seemed as though the
sides were close to agreeing on a comprehensive settlement. However,
each time, hopes were dashed.

The same occurred in 2006. Two summit meetings between Azerbaijani
president Ilham Aliyev and Armenian president Robert Kocharian were
held in the first half of the year. The two were supposed to sign
a short agreement on principles to launch more substantial talks on
the details of a full accord. They failed to do so. In the summer,
the Minsk group co-chairs expressed their deep frustration, issuing
a hard-hitting statement announcing they saw no point in continuing
their intensive shuttle diplomacy or initiating further meetings
between the presidents. They called on both leaders to summon the
political will necessary to clinch a deal and sell it to their deeply
sceptical publics.

Despite the difficulties, the building blocks of the potential
settlement are well-known. The International Crisis Group spelled
them out in two reports in 2005, and the mediators’ summer statement
confirmed the details: all sides would renounce the use of force;
Armenian troops would withdraw from parts of Azerbaijan surrounding
Nagorno-Karabakh; displaced persons would be allowed to return; and
both sides would commit to holding a referendum – whose results would
be recognised by all – in Nagorno-Karabakh on final status, with the
participation of Karabakh Armenians and Azeris. In the meantime, the
entity would have an interim status, and the international community
would provide substantial assistance, including peacekeepers – for
this, the only "frozen conflict" in Europe without international
monitors.

The Montenegro example

In a surprise turnaround after a brief meeting between the Azerbaijani
and Armenian presidents on the sidelines of the CIS summit in Minsk
on 28 November, President Aliyev optimistically declared, "we are
approaching the final stage" of the negotiations process. Azerbaijani
foreign minister Elmar Mammadyarov added that only one matter remains
a source of disagreement.

What could this be? In the past, negotiations have stalled over
several issues, including the future of two land corridors linking
Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia (Lachin and Kelbajar), and the
modalities of the future referendum and its conditioning on refugee
return. After the Minsk meeting, Aliyev also stated "Azerbaijan’s
negotiating position remains unchanged." As Baku has refused to
consider granting Nagorno-Karabakh any status outside Azerbaijan,
the remaining sticking-point in the negotiations is likely to be
the modalities of the referendum; and more specifically whether it
would allow Nagorno-Karabakh to gain independence and international
recognition or not.

(On 5 December 2006 the OSCE ministerial council issued a statement
on Nagorno-Karabakh saying: "we are encouraged that negotiations
in 2006… have brought the sides closer to agreement on the basic
principles for the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict…We
urge the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan to redouble their
efforts in the coming year to finalise these basic principles as soon
as possible.")

Allowing Nagorno-Karabakh to hold an internationally accepted
referendum on its future status, with the participation of Karabakh
Azeris and Armenians, is a key element in any resolution to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Such a deal would be comparable to what
Serbia agreed to in signing the Belgrade agreement in 2002, which
created the "State Union of Serbia and Montenegro". A clause was
inserted into the Belgrade agreement stating that Montenegro could
begin independence procedures in 2006, culminating in a referendum.

During those four years, Montenegro did not waste time: it set
up a multi-ethnic government, established good relations with its
neighbours, founded a self-sufficient economy, engaged in a serious
fight against organised crime, strengthened the rule of law, and began
"stabilisation and association" talks with the European Union.

Most importantly, it obtained Belgrade’s consent that if 55% of
Montenegro residents voted in favour of independence, Serbia would
accept the result. When the referendum was held on 21 May 2006, all
sides had agreed on its modalities and pro- and anti-independence
groups were given equal rights to campaign.

Montenegro’s successful referendum has helped launch a series of
copycat efforts in non-recognised entities in the post-Soviet space,
including the breakaway Moldovan region of Transdniestria, South
Ossetia (a splinter of Georgia), and now Nagorno-Karabakh. On 17
September, Transdniestria voted on independence. It was followed by
presidential elections the same weekend as Nagorno-Karabakh’s vote.

On 12 November, two parallel referendums were organised in South
Ossetia, one backed by the de facto authorities in the breakaway
capital of Tskhinvali, the other by Tbilisi. In the first, South
Ossetians voted overwhelmingly for independence; in the second, voters
called for a resumption of dialogue with Georgia on the creation of
a federal state. Two parallel presidential elections were also held.

Amongst the region’s non-recognised entities, only Abkhazia has
abstained from the holding a referendum on independence in 2006.

According to Abkhazia’s de facto minister of foreign affairs, Sergei
Shamba, it has no need to repeat an exercise it already held in 1999.

At that time, a referendum adopting the constitution of Abkhazia as a
"sovereign, democratic and legally based state" passed with a large
majority of current Abkhazia residents, though it failed to include
those forced to flee the province during the 1992-93 war, and the
vote was never recognised internationally.

These post-Soviet referenda, like Nagorno-Karabakh on 10 December,
are in no way comparable to Montenegro’s. They did not meet the same
conditions: most importantly, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Moldova never
gave their consent for them to occur. The Azerbaijani ministry of
foreign affairs said that the Nagorno-Karabakh referendum "interferes
with an ongoing peace process", and the vote could not be considered
legitimate until the area’s ethnic Azeris were able to return.

An agreement for all

But there is another aspect to the Nagorno-Karabakh vote. It was
after all a referendum on a constitution, a basic law which will
govern the state, help assure democracy and human-rights protection.

In an interview with the Associated Press, Nagorno-Karabakh’s de
facto deputy foreign minister Masis Mayilian suggested that the
constitutional referendum was "necessary to formalise the already
existing foundations of state system and relations between the state
and its citizens." As a vote on how self-government will be temporarily
exercised in Nagorno-Karabakh until there is a comprehensive settlement
to the conflict, the referendum has at least internal legitimacy
and utility.

Since the early 1990s, Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia, South Ossetia
and Transdniestria have been left in limbo, isolated from the
outside word, unsure of their future, with few contacts to their
former metropolitan states. De facto authorities have been elected,
have set up governmental institutions, have started providing social
services, have organised defence forces, have tried to restart local
economies, and in the Abkhaz case, have even allowed some 40,000
Georgian returnees and adopted the language of international minority
rights protection. They should not be blamed for refusing to allow the
lack of progress in international negotiations, especially on status,
to stall democratisation and reform in their entities.

Ultimately, the people still living in Nagorno-Karabakh and the other
non-recognised entities are better served by accountable government
protecting the rule of law (according to the Freedom House Index,
for example, Nagorno-Karabakh ranks as "partly free"). Only if they
can demonstrate commitment to democratic values will the de facto
authorities in Stepanakert, Sukhumi, Tskhinvali and Tiraspol be treated
as legitimate partners in negotiations. It is also in the best interest
of the international community and the metropolitan states to have
responsible leaders in the entities to defuse instability and join in
dialogue. Participatory and pluralist politics in the non-recognised
entities will help build the peace constituency essential to the
eventual implementation of any peace settlement.

But what of the Karabakh Azeris, who were unable to participate on
10 December in deciding the future of Nagorno-Karabakh’s internal
arrangements? According to international norms, these former
inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh should not be deprived of their right
to participate in the entity’s political life.

If Stepanakert wants to be gain legitimacy, it needs to show the
international community not only that it can organise orderly and
fair referendums, but also that it allows all those who should be
eligible to vote to actually cast their ballots. In other words,
they must begin to accept the return of the 40,000 Karabakh Azeris
who were forced to flee in 1991-92.

aucasus/nagorno_reality_4184.jsp

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-c

Armenia: Arrest Of Government Critic On Coup Charges Prompts Concern

ARMENIA: ARREST OF GOVERNMENT CRITIC ON COUP CHARGES PROMPTS CONCERNS
Onnik Krikorian

EurasiaNet, NY
Dec 14 2006

As political tensions in Armenia rise ahead of next year’s
parliamentary elections, the arrest of a former Nagorno-Karabakh
military commander critical of the Armenian government’s talks
with Azerbaijan is raising fresh concerns about how the vote will
be conducted.

In a December 10 raid carried out by masked agents of Armenia’s
National Security Service (NSS) at a Yerevan restaurant, Zhirayr
Sefilian, an ethnic Armenian from Lebanon, was taken into custody on
charges of plotting a government coup. Sefilian, a former commander in
Armenia’s war with Azerbaijan over the predominantly ethnic Armenian
breakaway territory of Karabakh, is a decorated, hard-line war hero. He
is an outspoken opponent of any deal with Azerbaijan that includes the
return of territory currently under Armenian control. [For background
see the Eurasia Insight archive].

The press service of the NSS, the successor to Armenia’s Soviet-era
State Security Committee (KGB), has alleged that Sefilian "planned
to interfere in the upcoming political processes [2007 parliamentary
elections] with the use of force." Sefilian has been accused of
"conspiring to overthrow the constitutional order" under Article 301
of the Criminal Code. On December 12, a Yerevan court, in a closed
session, ruled that Sefilian could be jailed for two months while
the NSS further investigates the case.

Pro-opposition media outlets have reported that dozens of members of
Sefilian’s Union of Armenian Volunteers, a small nationalist group
opposed to concessions with Azerbaijan, were also temporarily detained
in separate raids.

Armenia’s main opposition parties see the arrest as a warm-up for
crackdowns against government critics prior to the country’s May 2007
parliamentary elections, or against those who would question the vote’s
conduct. In a December 11 statement, they accused the government
of resorting to Soviet-style repression to stamp out political
dissent. The government has not yet responded to the accusation.

The arrest has also set off alarm bells in nationalist circles,
which see Sefilian’s detention as linked to his position on the
Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations. Recent statements from the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the talks’ mediator,
indicatedthat the basic principles for the resolution of the conflict
are close to being finalized. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive].

A December 5 statement from the OSCE after a meeting in Brussels
between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers urged both
countries to "double their efforts in the coming year to finalize
these basic principles as soon as possible."

Although possible breakthroughs in the negotiations are regularly
reported, this time a flurry of other reports about a possible deal
suggest that certain agreements are being reached, albeit behind closed
doors. Last month, for example, the Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya
Gazeta added fuel to such speculation when it published details of
what it said was the peace deal currently being discussed by the
Armenian and Azerbaijani sides. According to that information, as
well as periodical leaks from both Armenian and Azerbaijani officials,
most of the seven Azerbaijani regions currently under Armenian control
surrounding Karabakh would be returned to Baku. A 40-kilometer wide
"corridor" through the strategic town of Lachin, now known as Berdzor,
would remain under Armenian control, connecting Karabakh to Armenia
proper.

Lending credibility to such speculation are a series of articles
published this summer by the local and international media,
including EurasiaNet, reporting that the area around Lachin is
experiencing a massive exodus of ethnic Armenians. [For details,
see the Eurasia Insight archive]. A few weeks after these reports
surfaced, Sefilian accused the authorities in Yerevan and Stepanakert
of pursuing a deliberate policy to clear the region in preparation
for a concessionary peace deal with Azerbaijan.

Speaking for the Protection of Liberated Territories organization,
Sefilian, who holds the rank of a retired lieutenant colonel, alleged
that the population of what is now called the Kashatagh region by
Armenians had declined to 7,500. In 2001, the number of settlers
in what are the Armenian-controlled Lachin, Zangelan and Qubatli
regions of Azerbaijan was around 15,000. A 2005 census, however,
put the population at just under 10,000.

Official sources speaking to EurasiaNet on condition of anonymity
put the number as low as 6,000.

In November, other groups of Karabakh war veterans also made similar
accusations and threatened a campaign of civil disobedience if any
of these territories were returned to Azerbaijan. A written statement
by one such group, the Brotherhood of the Liberation Struggle, urged
all war veterans to unite "to save Armenia and Armenians and restore
justice in all spheres. The lands that we liberated are in danger
today. We urge all our compatriots . . . [to] stop our homeland from
falling into an abyss."

The Armenian newspaper Zhamanak Yerevan already sees a connection
between Sefilian’s arrest and official fears that Karabakh war
veterans might involve themselves in political life ahead of next
year’s parliamentary elections. "It was no coincidence that they
arrested Zhirayr Sefilian, a representative of the defiant section
of the freedom fighters, on the same day that they advised members
of the Yerkrapah Union [of Karabakh War Veterans] to stay away from
politics," the paper wrote on December 12.

In March 2006, the Iravunk newspaper reported that Sefilian had been
warned by the NSS to refrain from criticism of the government’s
position, and of Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian, at the risk
of possible expulsion from the country. Another newspaper, Azg,
similarly quoted opposition politician Albert Bazeyan as saying that
"threats […] to deport Zhirayr Sefilian, former commander of [the]
Shushi battalion, is conditioned by […] recent tendencies in the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement."

Undaunted by such threats, Sefilian upped the ante in July by calling
a press conference in which he declared that a "group of former
civil guardsmen" had "already agreed upon certain steps which will
allow us take real and drastic measures to avert vote rigging at the
coming parliamentary and presidential elections." He also spoke of
realizing a "power shift to avert the launching of a new military
conflict with Azerbaijan."

Following Sefilian’s arrest, the NSS issued a written statement stating
that it had irrefutable proof that the ex-commander was planning an
armed uprising to "prod the country’s opposition into staging violent
anti-government protests." No evidence to support this claim has yet
been made available, however.

Few analysts believe that the Armenian or Azerbaijani presidents
would risk a nationalist backlash over a deal ahead of sensitive
parliamentary and presidential polls in both countries during 2007
and 2008. However, with the lack of public evidence against Sefilian
and a recent assertion by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev that
negotiations are entering their final phase, suspicions about the
authorities’ actions continue to grow.

"I don’t exclude the possibility that he was arrested in connection
with the liberated lands, but I don’t think that any document connected
with Karabakh will be signed in the near future," one of Sefilian’s
associates, Armen Aghaian, stated on December 13.

Commented opposition parliamentarian Grigor Harutiunian, secretary
of the People’s Party: The government’s handling of the case against
Sefilian provides "the basis for some serious conclusions."

Editor’s Note: Onnik Krikorian is a freelance journalist
and photographer working for a variety of publications and
international organizations in Armenia. He has a blog at

http://oneworld.blogsome.com.

Last Train Carrying Russian Garrison Property Leaves Georgia

LAST TRAIN CARRYING RUSSIAN GARRISON PROPERTY LEAVES GEORGIA

RIA Novosti, Russia
Dec 14 2006

TBILISI, December 14 (RIA Novosti) – A fourth and final train
transporting equipment and ammunition left Russia’s garrison in
Vaziani, outside the Georgian capital, on Thursday.

Russian military bases are being withdrawn from the post-Soviet
Caucasus state in keeping with Moscow’s commitment to remove them by
the end of 2008.

The remaining hardware will be taken out of the base later in December,
and moved to the 102nd Russian military base in neighboring Armenia.

The Vaziani garrison will be pulled out before the end of the year,
ahead of the earliest of the withdrawal deadlines for Russian forces
in the South Caucasus state, set for 2007. Russia’s defense minister
decided on an early pullout in mid-October, amid a diplomatic feud
between the former Soviet allies.

The Vaziani base had about a hundred items of equipment and 350 metric
tons of ammunition before the first consignment left.

A third trainload left the town on December 1. The garrison’s 387
service personnel will leave once the equipment pullout has been
completed.

Russia and Georgia have been locked in a bitter diplomatic dispute
since September, when four Russian army officers were briefly detained
in Tbilisi, on suspicion of espionage.

The move outraged Moscow, which cut transportation and postal links
with its neighbor in response, deported hundreds of Georgian migrants
and shut down Georgian-run businesses for alleged violations of
Russian law.

Georgia’s Western-leaning leadership, which seeks to join NATO, is
uneasy about Russia’s continued military presence, and has repeatedly
urged Moscow to close its Soviet-era bases.

Under a bilateral agreement signed in March 2006 and ratified by
Russia’s parliament in October, the pullouts from Russian bases in
the southern city of Akhalkalaki and in Batumi, western Georgia, are
to be completed by October 1, 2007, and October 1, 2008, respectively.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Shukputov: Kazakhstan Supports Azerbaijan’s Territorial Integr

ANDAR SHUKPUTOV: KAZAKHSTAN SUPPORTS AZERBAIJAN’S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Dec 14 2006

Kazakhstan Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Azerbaijan
Andar Shukputov’s exclusive interview to the APA

– You are celebrating the 15th anniversary of Independence of
Kazakhstan. How will you characterize the importance of this date?

– On December 16, 1991 Kazakhstan adopted Constitutional law on the
independence day of the Republic of Kazakhstan. This law was adopted
in the hard periods of Kazakhstan. The economic indicators were low
during those years and the main institutions were not working. But
Kazakhstan’s government had a serious aim and as the result of policy,
we achieved to go out of the crisis. The reforms had been carried
out in all spheres and these reforms contributed to the flourishing
of our country.

– How do you evaluate the work of Azerbaijani Diasporas in Kazakhstan?

– As far as I know the representatives of 130 nations live in
Kazakhstan. During the collapse of the empire, Kazakhstan could
prevent the leaving of its citizens. Even now the number of the
nations living in our country has increased by several times. There
are Azerbaijanis among them too. There is an organization called
the Assembly of Kazakhstan nations. This organization settles
the problems of the development of the statehood. The Azerbaijanis
living in Azerbaijan has a social organization called Turan. Besides,
Azerbaijanis have different social organizations in every region,
such as Gobustan, Vatan, Heydar and others. The leader of the Turan
Azerbaijanis Congress visited Azerbaijan together with Kazakhstan
President Nursultan Nazarbayev last year. As to the problems of the
Azerbaijanis living in Kazakhstan, market economy relations exist
in this country. Everybody can improve his way of living using the
opportunities created for the citizens.

– Azerbaijan-Kazakhstan political relations have always differed
by stability…

– The root of our history and culture is the same. Therefore there
have always been relations between these countries and it continues.

Heydar Aliyev and Nursultan Nazarbayev’s friendship paved the way
for the new stage of relations between the two countries. Azerbaijani
president Ilham Aliyev within three years of his presidentcy visited
Kazakhstan three times. Kazakhstan President also visited Azerbaijan
last year. The activity of Azerbaijan-Kazakhstan intergovernmental
commission has intensified.

– Are you satisfied with the economic relations between the countries?

– The economic relations between our countries are based on the
realization of bilateral projects. We use Baku-Batumi line for
transportation of Kazakhstan’s oil. Within Ilham Aliyev’s visit to
Kazakhstan the presidents signed a treaty on the transportation of
Kazakhstan’s oil by Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. I am often asked
when Kazakhstan will join Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. The terms
are being agreed on the transportation of Kazakhstan’s oil by the
pipeline. These terms include price, volume and other issues.

Baku-Tbilisi-Akhalkalak-Gars railway project is the second great
project for Kazakhstan. If this railway is built from Baku till Gars
and we get an outlet to Europe. Another great project is connected
with the grain production. There is a big grain terminal in Aktau.

Kazakhstan produces 16 million tons grain a year, 6-7 tons of which
can import to Azerbaijan.

– How does the official Astana estimate the latest processes in the
settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict?

– We have expressed our position on Nagorno Karabakh conflict several
times. Kazakhstan supports Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and
highly estimates the activity of OSCE Minsk Group. We are for the
peaceful solution to Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

PACE To Demand Free Elections In Armenia

PACE TO DEMAND FREE ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Dec 14 2006

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) will likely
demand that Armenia "at last" hold elections recognized as democratic
by the international community when it meets for a regular session
next month, it emerged on Thursday.

The demand is contained in a draft resolution that was approved by
the PACE’s Monitoring Committee this week and is widely expected to
adopted by the Strasbourg-based assembly without major amendments
in late January. It stresses the "particular importance" of proper
conduct of the next Armenian parliamentary and presidential elections
due in early 2007 and 2008 respectively.

"It is essential that the next ballot should at last comply with
European standards for free and fair elections, as proof of Armenia’s
progress along the road to democracy and European integration,"
reads the document posted on the PACE website. It deplores Yerevan’s
failure to ensure the freedom and fairness of the previous elections.

The Monitoring Committee report urges the Armenian authorities to
display the "political will" to prevent a repeat of serious fraud
reported by local and Western observers in the past. "A clear message
must be conveyed that in the next elections fraud will simply not be
tolerated," it says.

Still, the proposed resolution makes a largely positive assessment of
the fulfilment of Armenia’s Council of Europe membership obligations,
singling out the passage of a raft of amendments to the Armenian
constitution in a disputed November 2005 referendum. "The revised
constitution is now consistent with European standards and principles
of democracy and the rule of law and offers a new foundation for
developing the democratic functioning of Armenia’s institutions,"
it says.

The Monitoring Committee will specifically ask the PACE to welcome
greater powers given to Armenia’s parliament, cabinet of ministers,
judiciary and local governments. It will also note the fact that
Armenians are now able to challenge government decisions and laws in
the Constitutional Court.

Armenia’s main opposition forces are highly skeptical about the
positive impact of the Western-backed changes, saying that the
administration of President Robert Kocharian has repeatedly violated
the constitution to cling to power. They point to the authorities’
handling of the constitutional referendum which was strongly criticized
by Council of Europe observers.

The draft PACE resolution acknowledges that the enacted amendments
alone will not make Armenia a more democratic country. "Simply
passing legislation is not enough to implement democratic reforms,"
it says. "The Assembly calls on the Armenian authorities to take the
necessary steps so that the law is effectively applied, which does
not always appear to be the case at present."

In particular, the resolution voices concern at widespread reports of
police torture and the authorities’ continuing grip on the Armenian
electronic media. "The limited number of complaints lodged which result
in members of the police being found guilty of abuse of authority
or of exceeding their authority, as well as the greater number of
allegations concerning which no complaint is lodged for fear of
reprisals, continue to fuel the feeling that impunity prevails,"
it says.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress