Minsk Group Co-Chairs Call On Parties To Implement The Provisions Of

MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS CALL ON PARTIES TO IMPLEMENT THE PROVISIONS OF THE CEASEFIRE

armradio.am
11.05.2009 16:06

The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Ambassador Yury Merzlyakov
of Russia, Ambassador Bernard Fassier of France, and Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State Matthew Bryza of the United States – today issued
the following statement:

"Fifteen years ago large-scale hostilities ceased in Nagorno-Karabakh,
in what had become the most violent conflict on the territory of the
former Soviet Union. The leaders at the time made a courageous and
farsighted decision to instruct their military commanders to sign an
agreement on an immediate ceasefire with no fixed term.

Unfortunately, this ceasefire has been imperfect and tragically
every year lives are lost along the front lines. We sincerely hope
that a peace settlement, towards which the parties are now working,
will allow new generations to grow up in Armenia, Azerbaijan and
Nagorno-Karabakh without experiencing the horrors of war.

Until then, we call on the parties to implement the provisions of
the ceasefire, the "Proposals on strengthening the ceasefire in the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict" agreed in 1995, as well as the Co-Chairs’
proposals at the 2008 Helsinki Ministerial Conference to pull back
snipers from the front lines.

We express our hope that the present leaders will be able to overcome
the complex causes and difficult consequences of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict and create an atmosphere of security, trust, cooperation and
fruitful communication between peoples in the region, allowing them
to live in peace as good neighbors. We further hope the leaders will
succeed, in cooperation with the Minsk Group Co-Chairs, in finalizing
their Basic Principles for a peaceful settlement."

Armenia celebrates Victory Day

Armenia celebrates Victory Day
09.05.2009 16:30

Lena Badeyan
`Radiolur’

People have been visiting the Eternal Flame at Haghtanak (Victory) Park
since morning to celebrate the 64th anniversary of the victory in the
Great Patriotic War.

It was hard for Paylak Chobanyan, 81, to come to the park and lay
flowers at the Eternal Flame, paying tribute to the memory of his
brothers-in-arms. Paylak Chobanyan remembers well how he went to defend
the motherland when he was 17, he recall the details of different
battles, and of course, like any veteran, he remembers how he speny May
9th, 1945.

`I come here every year on May 9, but I think, this is the last time. I
will bid farewell and go, I can’t walk any more,’ the veteran told
`Radiolur.’

The leadership of the republic headed by the Prime Minister and the
Speaker of the National Assembly also visited Haghtanak Park today.
There was a short parade, the memory of the killed soldiers was honored
with a minute of silence.

University Challenge: The Future

UNIVERSITY CHALLENGE: THE FUTURE

The National
9/FOREIGN/705089824/1002
May 9 2009
UAE

BEIRUT // From his fifth floor office in College Hall, Peter Dorman
has a sweeping view of the azure Mediterranean. It is perhaps a fitting
location for the 15th president of the American University of Beirut,
once one of the region’s most formative educational establishments.

Prof Dorman was inaugurated last week, kicking off a month-long series
of events commemorating AUB’s historic and political past.

But the challenges Prof Dorman faces are a world away from those
of his predecessors, including his great great grandfather, the Rev
Daniel Bliss, who founded the university in 1886.

When John Waterbury, Prof Dorman’s predecessor, took the role in 1998,
College Hall was still a building site, having been devastated by a
car bomb just after the end of the civil war in 1991.

Mr Waterbury was the first president to return to the campus after the
assassination of his predecessor, Malcolm Kerr, in 1984 apparently
by Islamic jihad militants protesting against the American military
presence in Lebanon.

By contrast, Prof Dorman, who grew up in Beirut, said he did not even
consider the security situation. "It never occurred to me, or my wife,
or my family."

AUB’s student politics were once seen as so important to American
national interests that the vice president of the CIA-funded National
Students Association was sent there in 1963.

But as Ralph Lauren-clad undergraduates swarm the spot where Leila
Khaled, a Palestinian commando notorious for successfully hijacking
a TWA plane, once gave an address, one cannot but wonder, are the
AUB’s days as the intellectual crucible of Arab politics behind it?

Headlines in the student newspaper, Outlook, which in 1974 thundered
statements like "Ready for Battle" (referring to a clash between the
student body and university authorities) are now rather less exciting:
"Survey Concludes AUB-ites Happy with Their Spending".

Established by American missionaries in the late 19th century,
the university’s non-sectarian charter and international teaching
standards soon drew students from all over the Arab world. The liberal
educational ideals of its founders also made it a unique forum for
free speech, at a time when Arab governments backed by colonial powers
were clamping down on nationalist dissent.

"The student body was very composite in those days," said Emeritus
Prof Kamal Salibi, who graduated from the AUB in 1949, and who taught
there from 1953 to 1997.

"There were people from Jordan, Syria, Iraq, Saudi, Yemen and
Palestine. People from Iraq were able to voice opposition to British
influence here and get the cause espoused."

The first ever Arab nationalist organisation was founded at the AUB
in 1918, and the underground movement subsequently created by one
of its advisers, Constaine Zurayk, influenced a new generation of
intellectuals, who went on to play prominent roles after graduation
in their individual countries’ nationalist struggles. These included
George Habash, the founder of the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, and the Kuwaiti opposition leader Ahmad al Khatib.

In the 1960s and 70s, the AUB student council was taken over by
allies of the Palestinian group Fatah, and it became a platform
for the Palestinian national struggle, clashing frequently with
authorities. In a grim foretaste of the 15-year-long civil war which
was to ensue, Rabita, an anti-Palestinian student group, attacked
Palestinian students in the university canteen with slingshots and
marbles in 1973, and armed police stormed the campus to restore order.

It is hard to imagine scenes of such violence today as students sip
their lattes beneath the pine trees.

Elections for the student body are still fought on party political
platforms. Although parties are forbidden from operating on campus,
many of the university’s social clubs have known affiliations, and
the division between the anti-Syrian March 14th alliance and the
Hizbollah centred March 8th, which has caused sporadic outbreaks of
violence in Lebanon since 2005, is reflected here. Inside the campus
walls however, there have not been any clashes.

This is partly due to the efforts of university authorities, who
forbid distribution of political materials on campus, and partly due
to the self-restraint of the students themselves.

"After the civil war, there was a sense of ‘look where all that 60s
and 70s activism got us’," said Nathalie Allam, the current editor
of Outlook.

But Allam also argued that the current political debate between March
8th and March 14th has failed to stimulate intellectual engagement
in the way that Arab nationalism and the Palestinian issue did. "A
lot of people don’t think for themselves, if you look back at old
editions of Outlook you can see people don’t argue as well as they
used to. They fall back on these clan-like positions."

Students speak of a gulf between the party-affiliated activists,
who push their party messages, and the wider student body, who are
increasingly turned off by them.

"There are two types of people, people who are affiliated with
political parties, and people who are engaged with student
politics, and we are losing the second half," said Samir Maleeb
of the Communications Club, linked to Walid Jumblatt’s Progressive
Socialist Party.

"There is no motivation any more – people just want to study."

For many AUB students, campus politics is just as uninspiring as
national politics, even against the backdrop of the forthcoming
general election in June.

"Even the new groups on the scene are led by Bashir [Gemayel]’s son,
Gibran [Tueni]’s daughter …I wouldn’t get involved in any of it,"
said Natasha Khalat, a 19 year-old business student.

Student apathy is not just a response to Lebanese politics, however.

"I think it’s because we’ve become a consumer society – people don’t
care about reading and discussion, they just care about the latest
trends. Coming to AUB is like going to a fashion show," said Allam,
in a complaint familiar to student activists across the world.

"Leftism in Lebanon has been reduced to wearing a red T-shirt."

Allam is currently running an investigation in to the cost of the
inauguration ceremony, questioning whether that money could have
been put to better use providing financial aid for students unable
to afford tuition fees (about two thirds of the students depend on
such assistance).

But, she says, "no one cares".

Although its radical fires may have been extinguished, by providing
a genuinely diverse space which is not dominated by any one sect or
party, the AUB continues to play an important role in the political
development of Lebanon’s youth.

Whereas most other institutions have a religious or sectarian
character or, in the case of the Lebanese University, are state-run,
and therefore subject to political influence, the AUB is celebrated,
even by its more radical members, for its tolerant atmosphere.

"It offers quality of education and makes every sect and social
background want to send their children there, which is why it is so
diverse," said Alamjad Salameh from the Cultural Club of the South,
a "pro-resistance" organisation with links to Hizbollah.

Rami Ollaik, now an agriculture professor at the AUB, recalled
a formative encounter with the institution’s diversity as an
undergraduate in the 1990s. "I was Hizbollah’s representative on
campus, and I wanted to turn the AUB in to a stronghold for Muslims,"
he said. Then he got involved in a coalition organising a protest
against a proposed increase in tuition fees.

"For the first time I stood against something not as a party member,
and I realised that maybe there might be a cause outside the Shia
community."

If the AUB is no longer the theatre for historical political struggles,
its pluralistic governance model and liberal educational ideals do
perhaps still exert an influence on the politics of the region.

Kamal Salibi, an unashamedly partial alumnus, believes it is still
unique in this respect. "It is the only university between Rome and
Tokyo where people are taught to think."

http://www.thenational.ae/article/2009050

After Gul Meeting, Sarkisian Claims Preconditions ‘Out Of The Questi

AFTER GUL MEETING, SARKISIAN CLAIMS PRECONDITIONS ‘OUT OF THE QUESTION’

Asbarez
kish-armenian-presidents-in-%e2%80%98useful%e2%80% 99-talks/
May 8th, 2009

PRAGUE (Combined Sources)-Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian late on
Thursday insisted that preconditions in negotiations between Armenia
and Turkey are "simply out of the question" after what he called
"useful" talks with his Turkish counterpart President Abdullah Gul
in Prague.

The two leaders met on the fringes of a European Union summit in the
Czech capital for a third time in eight months. The meeting came two
weeks after Ankara and Yerevan announced that they have "identified
a roadmap" for establishing diplomatic relations and reopening the
Turkish-Armenian border.

Sarkisian told journalists after the talks that Armenia and Turkey
remain committed to normalizing bilateral relations soon. "We agreed to
honor our agreements," he said, adding that the two sides will "move
towards normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations without preconditions
and within reasonable time frames."

But Sarkisian has already accepted at least some of the Turkish
preconditions by discussing the Karabakh conflict with the Turks
and agreeing to the creation of a Turkish-Armenian commission of
historians. The commission would reportedly focus on the Armenian
Genocide-a Turkish ploy designed to keep more countries of the world,
notably the United States, from officially recognizing the crime
against humanity.

Sarkisian’s conciliatory policy toward Turkey has been met with harsh
criticism by Armenians-both in the Diaspora and Armenia-weary of the
political and economic consequences that may follow if relations are
normalized based on Turkey’s demands on Armenia.

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation strongly condemned the April
22 roadmap agreement and left the governing coalition, citing
"insurmountable, fundamental disagreements" over the government’s
approach toward normalizing relations with Turkey.

The negotiations process has seen Yerevan make major concessions to
Ankara, according to the ARF, which has repeatedly warned that Turkey
is exploiting the process to become an actor in the Nagorno-Karabakh
peace talks and to deter the United States from officially recognizing
the Armenian Genocide.

It, however, still remains unclear when the Armenian and Turkish
governments plan to establish diplomatic relations and reopen the
border. Neither government has officially disclosed the framework yet,
keeping the lid tight on the entire negotiation process.

What is clear, according to the former foreign minister of Armenia,
Vartan Oskanian, is that "both the issue of the joint commission and
diplomatic relations are on the Turkish-Armenian negotiation agenda,
and agreement in principle has been reached on these issues."

"Today, Turkish diplomacy has succeeded in formulating its blunt
preconditions in such a way as to make them palatable to the
international community. The precondition of abandoning genocide
recognition has assumed the form of an offer to set up a joint
commission of historians. The territorial issues have taken the
form of reciprocal recognition of borders through establishment of
diplomatic relations," Armenia’s longtime chief diplomat said in an
op-ed, titled "Time to Take Stock," published earlier this week in
the Armenian media.

Gul, not surprisingly, seemed satisfied with his discussions with
Sarkisian obut did not comment on possible dates for border opening.

He said the two leaders also discussed regional security issues,
stressing the importance of both the Turkish-Armenian dialogue and
the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process. "I think that improved relations
in the Caucasus will stem from everyone’s interests," the Turkish
president told reporters.

Gul cited in that regard Sarkisian’s meeting earlier in the day with
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev which international mediators
said marked further progress towards a Karabakh settlement. He did
not specify whether such a settlement is a necessary condition for
the normalization of Turkish-Armenian ties.

But Turkey’s Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as well as Turkey’s
powerful military and National Security Council have all repeatedly
and forcefully stated in recent weeks that Ankara will not reopen
the Armenian border as long as the Karabakh dispute remains unresolved.

"Today, it is obvious that Armenia has been involved in a process that
it no longer controls and on which it has no leverage," Oskanian said,
echoing longtime concerns put forth by the ARF. "By publicly announcing
the existence of the Roadmap without any indication about its content,
Armenia has ended its role in the negotiations, and left the process,
its interpretation, and its future evolution to the Turks."

www.asbarez.info/2009/05/08/tur

ACBA-Credit Agricole Bank, Ardshininvestbank, Unibank, Armeconombank

ACBA-CREDIT AGRICOLE BANK, ARDSHININVESTBANK, UNIBANK, ARMECONOMBANK, AMERIABANK TOP ARKA NEWS AGENCY’S QUARTERLY PRESS RATING

ARKA
May 7, 2009

YEREVAN, May 7. /ARKA/. ARKA News Agency has issued its Q1 2009 press
rating of Armenian banks.

During the period under review, Armenia’s top five commercial banks
were ACBA-Credit Agricole Bank (1), Ardshininvestbank (2), Unibank
(3), Armeconombank (4) and Ameriabank (5).

The agency observed a considerable decline in media coverage of banks
in Q1 2009, compared to the same period last year.

Media reports of banks fell 21.9% year-on-year by end-Q1, with negative
coverage of the banking sector reaching 5.8%, compared to 4.2% during
the same period last year.

Quarterly reports on Armenia’s bank customers and services rose from
1.2% to 8.9% year-on-year. General information about local banks rose
from 47.1% to 61% during the reporting period. Opinions and economic
forecasts of bankers dropped from 4.2% to 3.8%. Coverage about
tasks and programs for strategic development decreased from 32.4%
to 18.5%. Information about banking activities in figures went down
from 15% to 7.7%.

According to the quarterly press-rating of ARKA, ACBA-Credit Agricole
Bank became the leader of the heading General (71.68). Ameriabank
topped the heading Bank Development Policy (76.9). Unibank led the
headings Banking Activities in Figures (30.76) and Clients and Services
(51.2). Armeconombank topped Opinions and Economic Forecasts (7.68).

Two banks were included in all the headings in Q1 2009, compared to
one bank in Q1 2008.

The press-rating of the ARKA News Agency makes it possible to determine
banks’ communication policy and other development trends in the banking
system. The press-rating is based on the principle of multifunctional
application of initial data. The press-rating of banks reveals their
communication policy, willingness for contacts with clients, being
an essential image-making factor, and can help consumers in finding
their bearings in Armenia’s banking system.

The press-rating does not contain any recommendations on operations
conducted by the banks in question. It is based on public sources,
with the ARKA News Agency not being responsible for their reliability.

To learn more about the quarterly Press Rating of the Banks, read
Issue #02(41), Q1, 2009.

Pilgrimage To Turkish-Occupied Sourp Magar Monastery To Take Place I

PILGRIMAGE TO TURKISH-OCCUPIED SOURP MAGAR MONASTERY TO TAKE PLACE IN THIS SUNDAY 10 MAY

Gibrahayer
May 6, 2009
Nicosia

The second pilgrimage to the Turkish-occupied Armenian Monastery of
Sourp Magar – organised by the Office of the Armenian MP Vartkes
Mahdessian and the Armenian Prelature of Cyprus – will take place
this Sunday 10 May.

The convoy of buses will leave at 11:00 am from the Armenian Prelature
and participants are once again reminded not to forget their IDs
and passports. Community members, wishing to participate in the
pilgrimage – who have not signed up yet – may do so by driving to
the monastery with their own vehicles and joining the rest of the
community members there.

Georgian Opposition May Block Border Checkpoints

GEORGIAN OPPOSITION MAY BLOCK BORDER CHECKPOINTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.05.2009 19:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Georgian opposition may really block border
checkpoints in case Mikheil Saakashvili fails to meet their demand. But
the opposition does not yet take any step in that direction, Georgian
political scientist and project manager of Development and Cooperation
Centre Paata Zakereishvili told a PanARMENIAN.Net correspondent. "After
yesterday’s developments, the Georgian opposition decided to delay
realization of such plans. I think the opposition leaders will give
up the idea, since blocked checkpoints will cause harm to neighboring
states," he stressed.

Georgian opposition leader Gubaz Sanikidzde recently declared of
pro-opposition activists’ intention to block all border checkpoints
in case of President Sahakashvili’s failure to meet their demand of
resigning from post till May 11. "We apologize to Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Turkey and other countries that will not have a transit route via
Georgia," Mr. Sanikidze told journalists in a Monday meeting near
Tbilisi Parliament House.

Washington Will Soon Know If The Road Map Signed Without Preconditio

WASHINGTON WILL SOON KNOW IF THE ROAD MAP SIGNED WITHOUT PRECONDITIONS OR NOT

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.05.2009 21:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Apparently, there was a combination of factors
resulted in not using by the U.S. President Barack Obama the word
Genocide in his April 24 address, said the chairman of the Board of
Trustees of the Armenian Genocide Museum of America and member of
the Trustees Board of the Armenian Assembly of America.

"With the benefit of time and conversations since April 24, it
is now clear that that there were a combination of factors and
different writers involved in the drafting process which led to
the actual statement issued by President Obama," Van Krikorian told
PanARMENIAN.Net.

According to him, the biggest factor was the Administration’s goal to
normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey. In this regard, we
will soon know whether the implicit rather than explicit use of the
Armenian Genocide term, as well as the reference to that diplomatic
process in the statement were risks worth taking.

"We obviously feel they did much more harm than good, and hindered
the cause of genocide prevention globally, as well as Turkish-Armenian
reconciliation," said Mr. Krikorian.

He emphasized, that in no more than six weeks, the Obama Administration
will need to reevaluate as we discover if the roadmap is indeed,
as reported, without preconditions and is subsequently signed by
both parties.

According to Van Krikorian, another factor not to be discounted is
that there are officials within US Administration and influential
lobbyists who disagree with the President’s record and the policy on
explicit use of the Armenian Genocide term. "Wittingly or unwittingly,
they are part of the genocide denial campaign which has been waged for
decades-some. Some of them are paid and some act with the expectation
of being paid in the future," he said.

According to him, as usual, the U.S. political context and the impact
of Turkish threats also played a role, especially in the wake of the
U.S. agenda with Turkey.

"At the same time, it seems that a pattern is developing where new
administrations try to solve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Even though
there is not supposed to be any preconditions or linkage between
Armenian-Turkish reconciliation and settlement of Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, there are parallel tracks of negotiations. Although despite
the statements of Barack Obama, the US administration did not intend
to harm Turkish civil society efforts to come to terms with their
history," Mr. Krikorian concluded.

BETHLEHEM: Israel orders demolition of church extension in Jerusalem

Ma’an News Agency website, Bethlehem, Palestine
April 30 2009

Israel orders demolition of church extension in Jerusalem

["Israeli Municipality Issues Demolition Order on Renovated Housing in
Old City Monastery" – Ma’an headline]

Jerusalem -Ma’an -Orders have been made to demolish a two-floor
addition to a monastery and church in the Old City of Jerusalem, Aide
for Jerusalem affairs Hatem Abd Al-Qader reported on 29 April.

The orders were made by the Israeli municipal government of Jerusalem,
and target structures such as a two story addition to the Armenian
Catholic Church. Clergy from the order have requested help in fighting
the order.

The addition was built to house religious figures visiting Jerusalem
from Vatican City. The 150-year-old structure is built on land owned
by Belgium’s monarchy.

Abd Al-Qader described the order as a challenge against holy sites in
the Old City, and said the order was particularly concerning ahead of
Pope Benedict XVI’s May visit. He noted that the issue would be
brought up with the Holy Father.

The attack on the church is seen as yet another attempt to wipe
Palestinian religious presence from the Old City in an effort to
judaize the area.

ANKARA: Turkish OM To Visit Azerbaijan This Month: Ambassador

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 2 2009

Turkish Prime Minister To Visit Azerbaijan This Month: Ambassador

Saturday, 2 May 2009
Azerbaijan, Baku, May 2/Trend News, J. Babayeva/

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is expected to visit
Azerbaijan in May, Turkish ambassador to Azerbaijan Hulusi Kilij told
reporters.

"The issues that that both countries are interested will be discussed
during the meeting," Kilij said.

Turkey and Armenia are holing talks to re-open borders.

Turkish media reported that the "Road Map" singed between Ankara and
Yerevan comprises 5 paragraphs. According to the document, Armenia
must accept the Kars agreement signed between Turkey and USSR in
1921. A joint commission of historians must be set up to investigate
Armenians’ "genocide" claims and the third country can join the
commission. The Armenia-Turkey borders will be opened and relevant
documents will be signed to launch trade relations. Direct diplomatic
relations will be established after Armenia and Turkey accredit their
ambassadors to Georgia to Ankara and Yerevan mutually. Parliament will
directly discuss the issues of the "road map" which must be confirmed
by any legislative body. Although the document does not comprise the
Karabakh issue, the two countries will normalize ties simultaneously
with the resolution of the conflict.

Turkey closed borders with Armenia in 1993 shortly after Armenia
occupied Azerbaijani lands.

Saturday, 2 May 2009
Trend News Agency