PACE Representative’s Visit To Karabakh Again Impeded By Azerbaijan

PACE REPRESENTATIVE’S VISIT TO KARABAKH AGAIN IMPEDED BY AZERBAIJAN

Karabakh open
Oct 2 2007

Russell Johnston, head of the PACE committee on the Karabakh conflict
met with Davit Harutiunyan and Sammed Seyidov, heads of the Armenian
and Azerbaijani parliamentary delegations visiting Strasburg for the
fall session of the PACE, Regnum reported. The head of the Armenian
delegation underlined the importance of the longed-for visit of
the committee to Karabakh and regretted that the visit is impeded
by Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan demands that the committee should visit
Karabakh via Azerbaijan. Davit Harutiunyan said the international
delegations always go to Nagorno-Karabakh via Armenia.

Lord Russell Johnston voiced concern regarding another delay of the
visit to Karabakh. Presently, there is no certainly regarding the
future. Most probably, Russell Johnston will pass his concern to the
presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

In Strasburg the Armenian delegation to the PACE Davit Harutiunyan
also met with the CoE Secretary General Terry Davis. The Armenian
delegation asked Davis to focus on the fact that Azerbaijan is impeding
the visit of the CoE and PACE delegations to Nakhidjevan to study
the demolition of the cemetery of Djolfa, Regnum reported.

By the way, the visit of the PACE ad hoc committee appointed on October
8 to 12 failed due to Baku’s preconditions which demanded that the
PACE delegation should arrive in Nagorno-Karabakh via Azerbaijan.

"Populist Draft With Awkward Formulation"

"POPULIST DRAFT WITH AWKWARD FORMULATION"

Panorama.am
14:41 01/10/2007

Larisa Alaverdyan, member of "Zharangutiun" block at the National
Assembly described the government submitted Draft Law "On making
amendments in profit tax" as "populist." "This is a populist initiative
in pre-election period but is an awkward and embarraced formulation,"
Mrs. Alaverdyan said in her speech.

Armen Alaverdyan, deputy state tax service head, presented the draft
and informed that oorganizations registered in tax-exempt areas
will pay 10 percent profit tax in case the draft passes. Until now,
such organizations were exempt of profit tax. In the words of Hamlet
Harutunyan, member of Armenian Republican Party (HHK), tax-exempt
areas known as ovshor zones are centers for money laundering and many
organizations of Armenian origin have registered in such countries
and are tax exempt but work in Armenia.

Armen Alaverdyan confirmed what Harutunyan said also saying that
the founders easily register their organizations in "ovshor" zones
through internet but pursue activities in Armenia. That is why they
have decided to require 10 percent profit tax from such organizations,
thus, bringing them out of shadow.

The deputies will vote on the draft in the first reading after the
discussions.

ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Erdo=F0an=3A?= Era Of Coup D’Etats Closed In Tur

ERDOðAN: ERA OF COUP D’ETATS CLOSED IN TURKEY

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 1 2007

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan dismissed prospects for a coup in
Turkey, saying the country has made clear its choice is democracy,
and asserted that his government remained firm on its commitment to
membership in the European Union.

"We have no such problem," Erdoðan said at a meeting with
representatives of the Turkish community in New York on Saturday,
the last day of his visit to the United States to attend a UN General
Assembly meeting. "Turkey will not go down in history as a country
of coup d’etats, be assured of that. Turkey has made its choice and
this choice is democracy."

His comments followed a question from the audience that some retired
commanders wanted a coup in Turkey. Erdoðan’s government wants to
rewrite the Constitution, drafted after a military coup in 1980,
vowing to democratize and make more civilian the charter. But critics
say it is an attempt to undermine the country’s secular order. "If
we can see our differences as a source of richness and if we can
fully understand democracy, secularism and our notion of social
state, many things will be resolved," Erdoðan said.He also assured
those present that the new constitution will keep the principle of
secularism as defined in the current Constitution and said criticism
of the government’s intentions were "purposeful."

"But we won’t fall into this trap. We will continue on our path to
increase living standards of our country," he went on.

The prime minister also pledged that the government remained committed
to the goal of membership in the EU. "We don’t have the slightest
hesitation," he told the meeting at New York’s Marriott Marquis
Hotel. "We are content because we have a president who has faith in
the EU process, a prime minister and a foreign minister [who feel
the same]."

Ankara’s bid to join the EU has been complicated by obstacles
stemming from the unresolved Cyprus dispute and objections from French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, who says Turkey does not belong to Europe
and should seek a partnership with the EU in a club of Mediterranean
countries. "Of course they will put obstacles in front of us, but we
continue our efforts despite them," Erdoðan said.

‘Mutafyan not allowed to speak’

Responding to a question, Erdoðan also touched on disputes related to
Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire,
and accused the Armenian lobby in the United States of acting as
a "network of interest" pursuing certain interests after Turkish
Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II (Mutafyan) had to cancel a speech at
a US university last week, reportedly under pressure from the US
Armenian groups.

"They didn’t let the patriarch speak. They are the ones who live
with us in Turkey and they have no complaint," Erdoðan said, adding:
"If we have guilt, we say we are ready to face our history. But they
are unable to answer us when we ask them if they are ready too. There
is a diaspora here. I say it openly; they are an interest network
that seeks ways to benefit from the debate."

The prime minister also urged the Turks in the United States to get US
citizenship, saying they will help Turkey-US ties if they are better
integrated. He even called for Turks to run for the US Congress,
lamenting that there are no Turkish congressmen.

–Boundary_(ID_x8qvE9QzpCroI88gYOqGs A)–

Vardan Oskanyan Sends A Letter To Speaker Of US House Of Representat

VARDAN OSKANYAN SENDS A LETTER TO SPEAKER OF US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Panorama.am
14:41 01/10/2007

Dear Speaker Pelosi,

I have refrained from intruding into the process that has brought US HR
106 to its current stage in the congressional process. I have done so
because I believe that the content and the intent of the resolution are
a matter for US Representatives and their constituents. For us, there
is nothing there that is historically inaccurate, nor that threatens
the interests of any country. Nevertheless, we have refrained from
public expressions.

The recent letter from eight Secretaries of State addressed to you,
Madame Speaker, introduces an important change in the nature of the
discussion. That letter clearly addresses processes that directly
affect the Republic of Armenia, and therefore, I would take this
opportunity to share my concerns and thoughts.

It is with dismay that I read that the letter claims that such
a resolution would hurt Armenia-Turkey relations. It is quite
unfortunate that eight experienced diplomats would buy into
Turkish manipulation. I regret to say that there is no process in
place to promote normalization of relations between Armenia and
Turkey. Expressing concern about damaging a process that doesn’t
exist is at the very least, disingenuous.

Let me go further. Not only is there no process, I can honestly tell
you that we have no hope that Turkey will seriously engage with the
expectation of achieving minimal normal relations as an outcome. My
pessimism is based on the fact that each time we agree to a meeting,
the simple fact of the meeting is used by Turkey to derail other
processes in the US or around the world in other bodies. Yet
the meeting itself does not open any new doors, does not have a
commensurate follow-up, and other than meeting-for-meeting’s sake,
there is no progress. That is frustrating for us, but appears to be
inconsequential for Turkey’s leadership.

This time, too, we agreed to a meeting between myself and the newly
appointed Foreign Minister of Turkey, Ali Babacan, in New York next
week, cognizant of our responsibility to use every opportunity to
improve relations. Before that meeting has even been held, there are
claims that somehow that still-unheld meeting is part of a process
that might be endangered.

Madame Speaker, Armenia has always been ready for normal
Turkey-Armenia relations. Yet, every initiative that would lead
toward normalization has been rejected by Turkey. Instead, it
continues to place pre-conditions. Turkey makes offers that are
simply invitations for open-ended talk, without serious commitment to
arriving at ordinary relations between neighbors. Even their call for
a historical commission to discuss painful, historic events is not
serious, given their prohibitive penal consequences for open speech
and discussion and the adversarial environment Turkey has created by
maintaining closed borders with Armenia.

To view acknowledgement of the truth as an obstacle to political
relations is cynical. A resolution that addresses matters of human
rights and genocide cannot damage anyone’s bilateral relations –
neither yours with Turkey, nor ours. I would urge you and your
colleagues, as well as the former secretaries of state, to acknowledge
that the same concern for geostrategic interests should move us all
to do everything possible to open these borders, and not to reward
intransigence.

Iraqi Christians Forced to Flee Homes or Risk Death

Assyrian International News Agency
Sept 30 2007

Iraqi Christians Forced to Flee Homes or Risk Death

BAGHDAD, IRAQ — Nabil Comanny and his family endured the dead bodies
left to decompose along the road in their southern Dora neighborhood.

They accepted the criminal gangs that roamed the area, searching for
targets to kidnap.

And neither the utility failures nor the mountains of trash in the
street could drive them away.

As Christians, the Comannys had learned to keep a low profile. They
even stayed in their house after many Muslim neighbors fled the daily
chaos when sectarian bloodshed between Shiite and Sunni militants
broke out in 2006, making this one of Baghdad’s most embattled
districts.

But the hand-scrawled note at their door was the final straw. The
message commanded the family to select one of these options:

1. Convert to Islam.

2. Pay a fee of nearly $300 monthly for "protection."

3. Leave the area.

Failure to comply with one of the three would result in death.

"We don’t have weapons, and the government doesn’t protect us. What
else can we do?" said Comanny, a 37-year-old journalist whose family
abandoned its modest home of 11 years.

Extreme Islamic militants increasingly are targeting Christians in
Iraq, especially here in the capital. As a result, Iraq’s Christian
community — long the minority in a largely Muslim country —
continues to dwindle.

Islamic law imposed

Comanny said the first sign of trouble for his family arrived last
spring when Muslim militants imposed Islamic law over the area. The
proclamation came via an 18-point document posted along shops and
blast walls. The decree listed stringent rules for all residents.

Among other things, women were required to wear burqas, which are
draped over the head, covering the face and entire body.

"It’s not our tradition," Comanny said. "How can Christian women be
expected to do this?"

In the end, most Christian families decided to pay a bribe, Comanny
said, "because it gave them time to prepare to leave. But most can’t
afford to keep paying."

Comanny, who shared a small house in Dora with his mother, three
brothers and four sisters, finally decided to move his family on the
advice of someone he described as a "sympathetic" insurgent — a
lifelong acquaintance.

Because militants in Dora frequently attack families returning home
to fetch their belongings, Comanny paid his insurgent contact 1
million Iraqi dinars, or about $800, for safe passage from the
neighborhood.

Cautious among Shiites

Today, the Comannys live in the New Baghdad section of the capital,
where hundreds of Christian families relocated. The families move
cautiously among a majority Shiite population who rely on the Mahdi
army to protect the area.

Christians in Dora once mixed easily with Muslims, sharing cookies at
Christmastime and joining Muslims at Iftar dinners — the sunset
feast breaking the daily fast during Ramadan.

Amer Awadish, a 47-year-old taxi driver, said those relationships are
what saved his life.

After a handwritten note was delivered to his apartment in December
ordering him and his wife, Samia, 48, to leave within two days, a
lifelong neighbor appeared at his door. The man, Awadish said,
advised him to leave immediately.

"This man used to kiss my mother on the forehead in public," Awadish
said, referring to a common gesture of respect toward elderly women.
"He was too ashamed to kill me because of that."

In addition to the direct threats, Iraq’s Christians also must cope
with subtle obstacles.

William Warda, the founder of Hamorabi, a Christian-led national
human rights group in Iraq, said most Christians here no longer feel
safe embracing the lifestyle they once enjoyed.

"They can’t drink alcohol, or even dress in the fashion they’re
accustomed," Warda said. "Maybe they can stand this for a year or
two, but not their whole lives."

Most Christians still in Iraq are Chaldean Catholics who acknowledge
the pope’s authority but remain sovereign from the Vatican. Other
denominations include Syrian Catholics, Armenian Orthodox and
Armenian Catholics. Small groups of Greek Orthodox and Greek
Catholics also practice, as do Anglicans and Evangelicals.

One common thread among most of the groups is a concern church
leaders have not spoken out to protect their rights.

"The church is not defending us," said Bashar Jamil John, a
24-year-old engineering student at the Baghdad Technical Institute.
"This is part of the problem."

Priests also threatened

The Chaldean Catholic patriarch, Emmanuel Delly, the Vatican’s
representative in Iraq, declined to be interviewed, but the Rev.
Mokhlous Shasha, 32, a first-year priest at the Lady of Our Salvation
Syrian Catholic Church in central Baghdad, argued the clergy here are
as equally threatened as the ones they serve.

"Priests live in the same situations as their parishioners," said
Shasha, who added he never walks the streets of Baghdad in his
collar.

Since 2006, militants have killed three priests and kidnapped 10
others, church officials said.

The one thing most Christians agree on is their view of the future:
bleak.

While at least a dozen churches here simply have closed, some
seminaries and nunneries have shifted their bases to the north. For
those still open, such as the Chaldean Catholic Virgin Mary in
central Baghdad, attendance at Masses is down by more than half,
officials said.

For one, Hamorabi’s Warda predicts a mass exodus of Christians from
Iraq if Western countries relax their immigration policies.

"If the U.S. and Europe open their doors, the Christians in Iraq will
be finished," Warda said. "They will all leave."

By James Palmer
Newhouse News Service

BAKU: Azerbaijan Adopted UN Resolution on Protection of Heritage

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
Sept 29 2007

Azerbaijan Achieved Adoption of a UN Resolution on Protection of
Cultural Heritage during Armed Conflicts

Azerbaijan, Baku /corr. Trend S.Agayeva / Azerbaijan achieved
adoption of a Resolution on Protection of the Cultural Heritage
during Armed Conflicts at the UN Council on Human Rights. Initiated
by the Azerbaijani side suffered from the aggressive actions of
Armenia, the document was adopted at the Council’s sixth session in
Geneva.

The Ambassador of Azerbaijan to Switzerland, Elchin Amirbeyov, said
on 29 September by telephone that Azerbaijan presented to the
attention of the session participants the facts of Armenians’
destroying the cultural and historical monuments in occupied
Azerbaijani lands.

As a result of the military aggression in the occupied Azerbaijani
territories, over 927 libraries, 464 historical monuments and
museums, over 100 archaeological monuments, 6 state theatres and
concert studios were destroyed. Over 40,000 valuable and rare
exhibits were plundered. After Kalbajar region’s museum of local
lore, history and economy was destroyed, rare golden and silver
jewelries, ancient carpets were taken out to Armenia. The same
happened to Shusha historical museum, Aghdam museum of bread,
Zangilan museum of stone monuments. In fact, it is impossible to
define the total cost of all those historical and cultural values
plundered and destroyed by Armenians.

`Despite the reaction of the Armenian side participating at the
session, all 47 member-countries voted for the adoption of the
document,’ the Ambassador said.

The document envisages human rights for the protection of cultural
heritages in occupied territories within the international
principles.

The conflict between the two countries of South Caucasus began in
1988 due to territorial claims by Armenia against Azerbaijan. Armenia
has occupied 20% of the Azerbaijani land including the
Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven surrounding Districts. Since
1992, these territories have been under the occupation of the
Armenian Forces. In 1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire
agreement at which time the active hostilities ended. The Co-chairs
of the OSCE Minsk Group ( Russia, France and USA) are currently
holding peaceful negotiations.

BAKU: President of OSCE PA due to visit S. Caucasus in November

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Sept 29 2007

President of OSCE Parliamentary Assembly due to visit South Caucasus
in November

[ 29 Sep 2007 15:32 ]

President of OSCE Parliamentary Assembly (PA) Goran Lenmarker is
scheduled to visit South Caucasus in November 2007, OSCE PA Office in
Denmark told the APA.
The exact date of the visit has not yet been specified. Mr. Lenmarker
will visit Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. Regional security,
countries’ integration to Europe and other issues will be debated
during the visit.
Mr. Lenmarker visited the region for the last time in February 2007.
/APA/

Yerevan Slams U.S. Opponents Of Armenian Genocide Recognition

YEREVAN SLAMS U.S. OPPONENTS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
Sept 28 2007

Armenia condemned on Friday eight former U.S. secretaries of state
for jointly speaking out against the passage of a congressional
resolution that refers to the 1915-1918 mass killings of Armenians
in Ottoman Turkey as a genocide.

In a joint letter on Tuesday, the former officials urged the speaker
of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, to keep the
resolution from reaching the House floor, saying its adoption
would jeopardize America’s national security and further strain
Turkish-Armenian relations. While recognizing the "horrible tragedy"
suffered by Ottoman Armenians, the signatories — among them Colin
Powell, Madeleine Albright and Henry Kissinger — emphasized Turkey’s
"geo-strategic importance" for the United States.

"Passage of the resolution would harm our foreign policy objectives
to promote reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia," they said. "It
would also strain our relations with Turkey, and would endanger our
national security interests in the region, including the safety of
our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan."

"It is quite unfortunate that eight experienced diplomats would buy
into Turkish manipulation," Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian responded
in an extraordinary statement.

Oskanian specifically denied the former state secretaries’ claim
that there are now "some hopeful signs" of a Turkish-Armenian
rapprochement. "I regret to say that there is no process in place to
promote normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey.

Expressing concern about damaging a process that doesn’t exist
is disingenuous," he said, adding that Ankara is sticking to its
preconditions for establishing diplomatic relations with Yerevan.

One of those preconditions has been an end to the decades-long Armenian
campaign for international recognition of the genocide.

Ankara also makes the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations
conditional on a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that
would satisfy Azerbaijan. Successive Turkish governments have refused
to drop these preconditions despite pressure from the current and
previous U.S. administrations.

Oskanian said he has written to Pelosi to "express our deep concerns
and to dismiss as unfounded any implication that a resolution that
addresses matters of human rights and genocide could damage anyone’s
bilateral relations."

The ex-secretaries’ letter was also condemned by Armenian-American
lobby groups that were behind the genocide resolution’s introduction in
the U.S. Congress early this year. "We are, as Americans, especially
troubled that, in warning Congress not to make a simple anti-genocide
statement for fear of upsetting Turkey, these officials would outsource
our nation’s moral conscience to a foreign government," Aram Hamparian,
executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America,
said in a statement.

The draft resolution calls on President George W. Bush to "ensure
that the foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate
understanding" of the Armenian genocide and to "accurately characterize
the systematic and deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as
genocide." It has already been co-sponsored by most members of the
House of Representatives. Pelosi, who has backed similar bills in
the past, is expected to put it to the vote this fall.

The Bush administration strongly opposes the bill’s passage with
arguments similar to the ones made by the eight former secretaries
of state.

In his annual messages to the Armenian-American community, Bush has
described the 1915 slaughter of more than one million Armenians
as one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th century but stopped
short of calling it a genocide. He has at the same time cited a
2002 international study which concluded that the massacres meet the
internationally accepted definition of genocide.

BAKU: President’s Adviser States Favorable Conditions In Azerbaijani

PRESIDENT’S ADVISER STATES FAVORABLE CONDITIONS IN AZERBAIJANI IRANIAN FRONTIER FOR ORGANIZED CRIME (VIDEO)

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Sept 25 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / Trend corr. Ê.Zarbaliyeva / There are favourable
conditions at the Azerbaijani Iranian border for the illegal entry
of arms and drugs, Vahid Aliyev, the Azerbaijani President’s advisor
on military issues, said in Baku on 25 September.

The conflict between the two countries of South Caucasus began in 1988
due to territorial claims by Armenia against Azerbaijan. Armenia has
occupied 20% of Azerbaijani land including the Nagorno-Karabakh region
and its seven surrounding Districts. Since 1992, these territories
have been under the occupation of the Armenian Forces.

Iran borders Azerbaijan 132km south east of occupied territories
of Azerbaijan.

International organizations do not control Azerbaijani territories
occupied by the Armenian Military Forces, particularly the
Nagorno-Karabakh, Aliyev said.

The President’s advisor noted that one of the reasons for an increase
in organized crime was because of poor control in the territory by
corresponding international and state bodies.

–Boundary_(ID_CEmng94WduyCx9VLWIlMkg)–

Russia, Armenia To Cooperate In Energy Sphere

RUSSIA, ARMENIA TO COOPERATE IN ENERGY SPHERE

ITAR-TASS News Agency
September 25, 2007 Tuesday

Russia and Armenia have agreed to cooperate in the energy sphere.

Russian Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov told reporters after his talks
with Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisyan in Moscow on Tuesday
that the two countries have a "clear energy programme, and a fairly
reliable relations have formed in this field".

"Armenia already has excess production of energy, in which it can
trade," Zubkov said.

The two countries’ cooperation is promising in the construction of a
nuclear power plant and the modernisation of already existing energy
reactors, he said.

"All this will be a strong stimulus for Armenia for development and
trade with other countries. The country can make big money on that."

Sarkisyan said the "biggest hindrance to cooperation is a lack of
convenient transportation communications".

"The liquidation of this limitation could strongly increase our trade,
the growth of which has been 72 percent over the first half of this
year," he said.

"Armenia is buying a lot of oil products not in Russia, but in other
places, even though raw materials are Russian."

This occurs because of a lack of transportation links.

Their development would lead to a "sharp increase in trade",
Sarkisyan said.