Armenian Refugees Receive Housing Certificates

ARMENIAN REFUGEES RECEIVE HOUSING CERTIFICATES

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Sept 26 2007

YEREVAN, September 26. /ARKA/. Twenty-two refugee families from
Azerbaijan received housing certificates worth 175mln AMD ($520,000)
in Yerevan. RA Minister of Urban Development Vardan Vardanyan said
that the certificates will allow the refugees to purchase flats and
improve the living conditions.

According to him, the cost of the certificates was calculated in
conformity with cadastral prices. Vardanyan pointed out that housing
certificates will be issued to 815 families in 2007 against 715
families in 2006.

"About 1.6bln AMD (some $4.7mln) have been budgeted this year for this
purpose," the Minister said. He reported that the issue of certificates
in the Kotayk region has been completed, and this process is going
on in the other regions of the country.

Vardanyan also added that over 2,000 refugee families from Azerbaijan
and families in the disaster area need better housing conditions.

According to the Minister, 1.bln AMD will be budgeted for housing
certificates next year.

Vladimir Kazimirov

Vladimir Kazimirov:

AzatArtsakh
PanARMENIAN.Net.
20-09-200 7

The Nagorno Karabakh conflict is gradually transforming into ‘an
eternal issue’. The efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group have not produced
effect yet and Azerbaijan’s statements on change of format are heard
more and more frequently. Although, there is no guarantee that
transfer of the issue in UN can introduce changes in the process.
PanARMENIAN.Net requested former Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group,
Ambassador Vladimir Kazimirov to comment on the situation. The Azeri
Foreign Ministry’s statements on skirmishes and casualties at the
NKR-Azeri frontline have become more frequent recently. The Armenian
side often refutes the statements. Would you comment on the difference
of the parties’ assessments of the situation? Divergence of the kind
is not a novelty. There are plenty of mutually excluding statements.
It’s not hard to clarify their essence. How do skirmishes influence on
the situation? First of all, it’s a cynical means to aggravate tension
and incite hatred toward the adversary, to test the positions and
efficiency. Incidents emerge by another reason as well. Refusing to
move away the frontline, Baku preserved the previous distance between
the armed forces (several hundreds meters, as it used to be during the
war) and even tried to shorten it lately. Not only soldiers and
officers but also civilians die. Here a question arouses: what is more
important – people’s life or maintenance of tension? Which side is
interested in strained atmosphere at the contact line? Isn’t it the
one threatening with revenge? There is one more aspect. On Russia’s
initiative, February 4, 1995 all three parties to the conflict signed
a ceasefire agreement under the aegis of the OSCE. They undertook to
communicate in order to localize and settle the conflict as well as
prevent development of enemy propaganda. The document was signed by
the Defense Ministers with the approval of Heydar Aliyev, Levon
Ter-Petrosian and Robert Kocharian. However, the sides fail to obey
the agreement. When I pointed out to the anomaly, Armenia’s Serge
Sargsyan and NK’s Seyran Ohanyan over 2 years ago publicly announced
they are ready to fulfill the provisions of the agreement if Baku does
the same. However, Safar Abiyev was not capable to utter anything,
except for threats. Even tactful Elmar Mammadyarov drags out the
problem until final resolution of the conflict. Baku doesn’t seem to
need either Karabakh’s participation in the agreement or close
contacts between the sides. And finally, it seems quite uninterested
in settling the incidents. You said the agreement was concluded under
the OSCE aegis. Why doesn’t the organization insist on its fulfillment
by the sides? That’s a reasonable question. It proves inaccuracy and
feebleness of those who pressed for MG’s leading role in the Karabakh
settlement. By the way, this agreement signed by the parties is the
OSCE’s only asset. Even Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, who has conducted
monitoring of the frontline twice a month for 10 years, came to know
about it in 2003, thanks to an article of mine. The Co-chairs
mentioned about the agreement in their London statement in 2005 but
failed to urge its implementation. Political will is needed for it.
But is it directed correctly? If Baku rates it as imperfect, so it
could be amended. At worst, a new one could be developed. The problem
is pressing: people die, tension generates. Informing of incidents
almost every day, Baku pretends to be badly concerned about the issue.
But where is the logic? Where are proposals? Or must it just be so?
GUAM is aspired to raise the issue of frozen conflicts at the 62nd
session of the UN General Assembly. It’s an attempt to attract states
which have no idea about the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. How can this
factor influence on the settlement process? The less they are informed
the better is for the initiators. However, Azerbaijan will not derive
clear profit from this move. Azeris will mount their hobby-horse and
urge implementation of the UN Security Council’s resolution on
Karabakh. But how are they going to conceal that they failed to
fulfill all UN demand except for ceasefire. It’s worth mentioning that
this provision was observed partially, for hostilities have been
suspended but incidents are still provoked. It was Baku that upset 4
agreements in 1993-94. Documents are available. It’s not accidental
that after Baku’s violating the ceasefire in 1993, the UN Security
Council stopped to issue resolutions on Karabakh. What is a year of
war? How many people died? How many people left their homes? The
Azerbaijani population suffered from non-fulfillment of the
resolutions most of all. Not the resolutions but the fear of complete
collapse made Baku agree to ceasefire. Other facts can also come to
light in the UN General Assembly. So, GUAM member states will not have
an easy deal in New York. How can the conflict be settled if
Azerbaijan isn’t ready to compromise and doesn’t observe agreements
even after singing them? As a matter of fact, ability of the parties
to the Karabakh conflict to make agreements and fulfill commitments is
questioned. Threats to resume hostilities run counter to the
commitment to resolve the conflict peacefully, as urged by the Council
of Europe entry condition. Verbal threats are transformed into real
deeds through armament race and incitement of hatred towards the
neighbor nation. Two out of three parties cannot agree on settlement
‘principles’. However, to sign an agreement does not mean to implement
it. That is why the OSCE should take it into account and refrain from
superfluous ‘tolerance’ in the Karabakh issue. Presently, Armenians
make use of Azerbaijan’s obvious irresponsibility as regard the UN
resolutions. But democracy is not the only point for competition. The
state’s consistency is also an important factor at the international
arena.

First Discussion Of Draft Strategy Of Information Technology Sector

FIRST DISCUSSION OF DRAFT STRATEGY OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SECTOR DEVELOPMENT TO BE HELD IN NOVEMBER

Noyan Tapan
Aug 24, 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 24, NOYAN TAPAN. It is envisaged to hold the first
discussion of the new concept on Armenia’s IT sector in November of
this year. The document is being developed by the interdepartmental
working group set up in accordance with the RA president’s order
of July 3, 2007 and headed by the RA minister of trade and economic
development Nerses Yeritsian. NT correspondent was informed about it
by Bagrat Yengibarian, director of the Enterprise Incubator Foundation
(EIF), member of the above mentioned group.

To recap, the last cocept of developing Armenia’s IT industry was
adopted in 2001.

B. Yengiarian expressed an opinion that it would be correct if the
new concept addressed problems of formation of the information society
and technological zones. "It is important that we involve our society
in the development of the IT sector and improve the literacy of IT
use. And the development of the information society should create an
opportunity for extending the domestic market," he noted.

He attached importance to outlining the ways of creating technological
zones in the new concept of the IT sector’s development from the
point of view that they will become the respective infrastructure or
environment for implementation of the concept. "A technological zone
or technopark is an environment where certain conditions have been
created, and certain services, as well as tax and other privileges
are provided," the EIF director explained.

In his opinion, the approval of the concept on developing the IT sector
by the government will be followed by the appropriate legislative
proposals and by approval of the concept implementation schedule and
the financing program.

ANKARA: Uncomfortable neighborhood — the fight for Nagorno-Karabakh

August 22, 2007

do?kn=3D69

AMANDA AKCAKOCA

[email protected]

Uncomfortab le neighborhood — the fight for Nagorno-Karabakh

In Turkey’s difficult neighborhood Azerbaijan has always been a friend
and Ankara continues to support Baku in its ongoing conflict with
Armenia over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh (NK) — a
region recognized by nobody but NK’s government. The word "Karabakh"
has Turkic and Persian roots and means "black garden" — a good
description for this mountainous area of 4,400 square kilometers of
striking beauty, scarred by a violent history.

It’s a long journey from the outside world to this putative nation —
a winding road from Armenia, six hours from that country’s capital of
Yerevan, built with money from the Armenian diaspora after the 1988 to
1994 war between ethnic Armenians and Azerbaijan.

The Southern Caucasus is home to three frozen conflicts, one of the
most intractable being NK. With the start of perestroika in the Soviet
Union in 1988, the local assembly in the capital of NK, Stepanakert,
passed a resolution calling for unification with Armenia. Violence
against local Azeris was reported, triggering massacres of Armenians
in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait. Legally speaking, NK is part of
Azerbaijan but the majority of inhabitants are ethnic Armenians (75
percent). The region’s attempt at secession was rejected by Azerbaijan
and sparked a period of violence which resulted in hundreds of
thousands of refugees. Once the Soviet Union collapsed, NK’s
governance declared outright independence and now enjoys a de facto
independence, though neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan recognize the
republic’s territorial sovereignty. In 1992 a full-scale conflict
broke out between Azerbaijan and Armenia and by the middle of the year
Armenia had taken control over the majority of NK, pushed further into
Azerbaijani territory and established the so-called Lachin Corridor —
an umbilical cord linking the breakaway republic with Armenia. By 1993
Armenian forces occupied almost 20 percent of the Azeri territory
surrounding NK and expelled hundreds of thousands of ethnic Azeris. In
1994 Russia brokered a cease-fire and that is how the situation has
remained for more than a decade. Nowadays NK and the surrounding
region remain under Armenian control and nearly 20 percent of
Azerbaijan is under Armenian occupation. Around 700,000 Azeri refugees
— just under 10 percent of Azerbaijan’s entire population — remain
displaced in the region, living in tents. NK boasts a standing army of
25,000 — nearly a quarter of its population.

When war broke out Turkey closed its 268-kilometer border with Armenia
and Azerbaijan did the same. Neither border has opened since. All
three countries have suffered, but it has been Armenia that has
suffered the most.

Armenia remains something of a black hole, is hopelessly poor and its
only realistic avenue for trade with the West is through a small
border with Georgia, hundreds of kilometers north of the capital. It
has missed out on the massive oil and gas projects that have taken
place in the region recently, frustrated its efforts to integrate
closer with the West and continue to be a country with one of the
highest immigration levels in the Western world.

A solution looks as distant as ever. International talks carried out
under the auspices of the MÝNSK Group — an arm of the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) chaired by Russia, the
United States and France — have gone nowhere and bilateral talks
between the two foreign ministers and presidents always seem to end in
stalemates. All three sides — Armenia, Azerbaijan and
Nagorno-Karabakh — refuse to budge until the others make a
concession. Azerbaijan wants Armenia to end its occupation first and
withdraw its forces before discussing the republic’s final status,
which it clearly sees as NK remaining part of Azerbaijan but with the
highest level of autonomy. Armenia is seeking a resolution first on
the status question before pulling out its forces and Nagorno-Karabakh
wants its independence officially recognized prior to all other
negotiations.

Azerbaijan continues to refuse to talk with NK officials.

In my opinion, Russia is a big obstacle. Russia has an unhealthy and
dominating role in Armenia. Armenia is dependent on Russia for most of
its energy and trade, and Russia keeps a significant military force in
Armenia — even the Turkey-Armenia border is manned by Russian
soldiers. Russia sees Armenia as its backyard and the last thing
Russia wants is stability in the Southern Caucasus. Russia is
determined to keep its claws into as many as its former republics as
possible and the key to this is maintaining instability. If Russia
wanted, it could easily persuade Armenia to do the right thing and
remove itself from Azeri territory. Azerbaijan also sees France as
being pro-Armenian due to the massive diaspora community that France
is home to. The United States, even though it too has a large Armenian
diaspora community, has become more impartial due to Azerbaijan’s
massive energy potential which it wants to tap. Indeed the composition
of the MINSK group is questionable and as a result it has a very weak
role.

With frustration growing and defense spending in the region
skyrocketing, fear has been expressed over a possible new military
conflict taking place.

The massive flow of petrol dollars Azerbaijan has received has meant
that it has been able to significantly increase its military
capabilities. But even if they were to take military action, Baku
would have to consider that the Russians may help out Armenia since
that the two states have a military alliance and more than $1.5
billion worth of Russian military capabilities sit on Armenian soil.

There is also some hope that the European Union could have a greater
role to play in the region now that the Southern Caucasus is part of
the EU’s European Neighborhood Policy (ENP) and the EU has appointed a
special representative. So far the EU has tried to take a neutral
stance on the conflict, which is not necessarily useful. It would be
far better for the EU — in line with declarations made by the United
Nations — to call on Armenia to withdraw from Azeri territories.

The whole region would benefit from a resolution. With a little bit
of compromise and vision, years of hatred and fear could be turned
into something positive. Once the upcoming presidential elections set
to take place in Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2008 are over, a new window
of opportunity will come about and Armenia should take the first steps
by pulling out of Azeri territories.

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/yazarAd.

Chinese Analyze "Anush"

CHINESE ANALYZE "ANUSH"

Panorama.am
20:02 20/08/2007

For already one year the Sanskrit department of the faculty of Eastern
languages in Peking State University has been giving beginning classes
in Armenian. This was informed to a panorama.am journalist in China by
Vahagn Vardanyan, expert in foreign studies and lecturer in Armenian
at the university. Currently, he says, three Chinese students are
enrolled, and are studying the Armenian language and literature.

Vardanyan adds that books, as well as information from the Internet,
are used for the classes. "They can already read and write in
Armenian. They are learning to speak, yet need the right environment
to advance," the expert stated.

During the most recent examination, students were asked to analyze
Tumanyan’s "Anush" poem.

"Most of them didn’t know anything about Armenia," Vardanyan
said. "This is the reason so few enrolled in the classes."

According to Vardanyan, government assistance is needed for the
course to advance. "There is an Armenian embassy in China. It is
almost impossible to do this alone," he stressed.

Yerevan Press Club Represents Brochure On Hinghlighting Parliamentar

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB REPRESENTS BROCHURE ON HIGHLIGHTING PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS 2007
By Gohar Gevorgian

AZG Armenian Daily
12/07/2007

Yesterday, the Yerevan Press Club represented "Observation of
Highlighting the Parliamentary Elections 2007 in Armenian Mass
Media" brochure at the "Congress" hotel. The results that the
Yerevan Press Club Observations carried out during the elections
were currently represented at various press conferences. The brochure
includes the results of two stage observations, held both during the
pre-electoral period and during the very elections. The observations
represent the network of the mass media sources, as well as various
suggestions and approaches. The Yerevan Press Club carried out the
observations with the financial assistance of the Armenian Branch of
the Open Society Institute and "Team" center. The brochure includes
observations on 14 broadcasted mass media sources, as well as 4
newspapers, namely, "Hayastani Hanrapetutyun," "Respublika Armenii,"
"Aravot," and "Haykakan Zhamanak." Boris Navasardian, chairman of
the Yerevan Press Club, stated that if our legislation was concrete,
we would be able to avoid a number of problems. Mesrop Haroutiunian,
YPC expert, touched upon the legislative grounds for the mass media
activities. Elina Poghosbekian, coordinator of YPC observation group,
held a report on highlighting the elections in the Armenian mass media.

Crossfire War – Exchange of Fire on Armenia/Azerbaijan Border

NewsBlaze, California
Feb 16 2007

Crossfire War – Exchange of Fire on Armenia/Azerbaijan Border
By Willard Payne

Crossfire War – TEHRAN – BAKU WATCH – South Caucasus – Caspian
Theatre: Tehran – Ankara – Baku/Yerevan – Moscow – Berlin –
Washington; Exchange of Fire Between Armenia/Azerbaijan – Tehran

Support of Baku Designed to Create Another Front Against Moscow

Night Watch: YEREVAN – RIA reports Armenia has claimed one of its
soldiers was killed by an Azerbaijani sniper on Armenia’s northeast
border with its hated enemy Azerbaijan. Baku denied the accusation
and says it was Yerevan that began the exchange of fire when Armenian
units opened small arms fire on Azerbaijan positions. This is a
continuation of the war between the two countries that began in 1988
over the Azerbaijan territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. However, the
territory is inside Azerbaijan most of its population is Armenian.
More than 30,000 lives were lost before the 1994 ceasefire but more
than 100 people have been killed in various armed incidents since
then. [RIA]

Tehran – Ankara realize this is another front they can use to engage
Russian forces in the hope Moscow and the West will be prevented from
controlling the resources in this strategic crossroads of energy
pipelines. It is no coincidence the latest shooting comes just one
month after crossfirewar.com reported increased military cooperation
between Tehran-Baku. Berlin-Washington have increased their military
cooperation and support of Moscow to make certain when Russia
responds to these conflicts in the South Caucasus the impact will be
felt by Tehran and Ankara.

Night Watch Information Service

http://newsbl aze.com/story/20070215171529payn.nb/newsblaze/OPIN IONS/Opinions.html

http://www.crossfirewar.com

Turkish Ex-Legislator Receives Suspended Sentence For Aiding Crimina

TURKISH EX-LEGISLATOR RECEIVES SUSPENDED SENTENCE FOR AIDING CRIMINAL GANG
The Associated Press
International Herald Tribune, France
Nov 13 2006
ANKARA, Turkey: A former lawmaker who was at the center of a major
corruption scandal in Turkey 10 years ago was given a one-year
suspended sentence on Monday for aiding a criminal gang.
Sedat Bucak, a legislator until 2002, was the only survivor of a
car crash in 1996 that set off investigations and revealed cozy and
profitable alliances between state officials and mobsters.
Passengers in the wrecked Mercedes included Istanbul’s No. 2 police
officer and a fugitive hit man. Bucak first went on trial in 2003 on
charges of aiding a criminal gang after he lost his seat in parliament,
which had shielded him from prosecution.
The court acquitted him of the charge, but a higher court overturned
the conviction and ordered a new trial.
An Istanbul court, concluding the retrial Monday, sentenced Bucak to
one year and 15 days in prison, but suspended the term. Bucak would
only be imprisoned if he commits another crime.
Investigations into the scandal, dubbed “Susurluk” after the town where
the crash occurred, confirmed suspicions that officials were using
ultranationalist thugs and criminals to intimidate or kill perceived
enemies of the state. A 1997 government report accused political
and police officials of hiring hit men to target Kurdish rebels,
journalists and anti-Turkish Armenian activists since the 1980s.
Many participants in the dirty war eventually joined Mafia-style
groups to win state contracts and other concessions, the report said.
One of the assassins reportedly on Turkey’s payroll was Abdullah Catli,
one of three people who died in the 1996 car accident.
Bucak was a clan chieftain-turned-legislator whose family once ran
a private army of 2,000 government-armed village guards fighting
Kurdish rebels in southeastern Turkey.

Armenian Leader Says Recognition Of NK Self-Determination Key To Sol

ARMENIAN LEADER SAYS RECOGNITION OF NK SELF-DETERMINATION KEY TO SOLUTION
Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan, in Armenian
21 Sep 06
Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has said the Nagornyy Karabakh
problem can be resolved if only rights of the people in Karabakh to
self-determination is respected and recognized.
In an address of nation on the 15th anniversary of Armenia’s
independence, which was broadcast live by Armenian Public TV on
21 September, Kocharyan said: “The resolution of the Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict is Armenia’s priority task. It can only be based
on the respect and recognition of the Karabakh people’s right
to self-determination. Nothing should threaten the security and
development of the Nagornyy Karabakh republic.”
The president said that the Armenian army is a “reliable defender”.
The president hailed the country’s economic development and described
Armenia as a “stable and reliable partner” in its foreign policy.
A military parade was staged in Yerevan on Independence Day.

Armenian Speaker Submits Resignation, MP Says

ARMENIAN SPEAKER SUBMITS RESIGNATION, MP SAYS
Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
11 May 06
Yerevan, 11 May: The speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia,
Artur Bagdasaryan, has decided to resign, and his party Orinats Yerkir
(Law-Governed Country Party) will quit the ruling coalition.
Ovannes Markaryan, a member of the Orinats Yerkir parliamentary
faction, said this in a live appearance on Yerevan’s Shant TV channel,
Mediamax news agency reports. He said that the speaker’s decision
to resign and his party’s decision to quit the ruling coalition was
adopted tonight at an expanded session of Orinats Yerkir’s political
council and was unanimous.
Markaryan said that Artur Bagdasaryan will hold a news conference at
1400 [1000 gmt] tomorrow and officially declare his resignation and
Orinats Yerkir’s decision to quit the coalition.
Several MPs quit the Orinats Yerkir faction in the last few days,
Mediamax reports.
Orinats Yerkir is a member of the ruling coalition along with the
Republican Party of Armenia and the Dashnaktsutyun Party on the basis
of a memorandum signed after the 2003 parliamentary election.