U.S. Gets More Serious About Karabakh Conflict

U.S. GETS MORE SERIOUS ABOUT KARABAKH CONFLICT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
08.09.2009 13:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Appointment of experienced diplomat Robert Bradtke
as Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group is conditioned by the U.S.’s
wish to properly promote its interests in the region, according to
Sergei Minasyan, head of department of scientific research at the
Caucasus Institute.

"Mr. Bradtke’s experience in NATO and OSCE is the evidence of his
perfect awareness of conflict situations," he told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter. "I do not think that appointment of a new mediator can speed
up Karabakh conflict resolution but that fact is that the U.S. got
more serious about the problem."

Survivors wary of rapprochement

Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR, UK
Sept 3 2009

SURVIVORS WARY OF RAPPROCHEMENT

Armenians, recalling killings, oppose peace talks with Turkey.

By Gayane Mkrtchian

Movses Hameshian is one of the few Armenian who can still remember the
mass killings of 1915 but he insists all his countrymen should heed
its lessons and never trust the Turks.

`They are pressuring our president to go there for a peace deal with
the Turks. Those who did not see the carnage, the genocide, can speak
out for opening the borders, but I do not want this. It was us who
were slaughtered and killed. Where now are those million and a half
Armenians? I was a witness to that sorrow and savagery, how they
killed people, and threw their bodies in the Euphrates,’ he told IWPR,
his hands raised to the skies.

Turkey denies genocide took place, saying that deaths occurred on both
sides during wartime, but Armenians say they were systematically
driven from their homes into the desert, where between a million and a
million and a half people were starved or killed.

Hameshian was born in the village of Kaboussieh in Turkey’s Hatay
province, where Armenian partisans resisted Turkish forces until their
ammunition ran out. The province was ruled by France until 1939, when
Turkey took control of it, and many of the surviving Armenians fled a
second time. Hameshian eventually ended up in Soviet Armenia.

The genocide question is still a factor in any peace deal with Turkey,
and those like Hameshian who survived it say they only lived because
of a miracle. He said an Arab acquaintance of his father rescued them
by bribing the Turkish officers driving them into the desert.

`Those whose legs refused to go any further were just killed, hit in
the head with a rifle butt. The pregnant were killed too. No one else
would act this way, but the Turks did. They are fascists. They
slaughtered defenceless, unarmed people,’ he said.

`I am an old man, and the experience of my life shows me that opening
the border will bring no good. Our country can develop without this.’

His view was echoed by Mari Vandanian who, at 105, must be one of the
oldest survivors of the genocide left alive. Some 7,500 Armenians were
killed in her home town of Malatya, where her father used to work in
the city council. Although she was saved by Turks’ kindness, she also
does not want Armenia to sign a peace deal.

`They took my father away with the other men and killed them a few
days before the start of the genocide. My mother and grandmother and I
lived only thanks to our Turkish friends, who hid us in their house,’
she said.

She cried as she described how an orchard became a cemetery, and how
refugees were killed as they fled the town, where she and her mother
herself stayed until 1937 `with fear in our hearts’, when she moved to
Syria. She was also one of the hundreds of Armenians who came to
Soviet Armenia in 1946, following a propaganda campaign to lure them
from the Middle East.

`Our president should not go there. They will force him to sign some
document, under which we will have to give up Artsakh
(Nagorny-Karabakh), they will refrain from recognising the genocide
and only then will they open the border. Turks are from hell, you just
don’t know them very well. As soon as the border is opened, Armenia
will be full of Turks, it is better not to even open the road to
them,’ she said.

She did not believe that the opening of the border would end Armenia’s
troubles, even though it might help the economy diversify away from
its reliance on Georgia and Russia.

`At first it will be good, and what then? Do you know why they killed
us? They said killing an Armenian would get you to heaven. And how can
I want the border to be opened after that?’

Gayane Mkrtchian is a reporter with Armenianow.com and a member of
IWPR’s EU-funded Cross Caucasus Journalism Network.

Georgia May Lose Role Of Transit Country From Armenia-Turkey Normali

GEORGIA MAY LOSE ROLE OF TRANSIT COUNTRY FROM ARMENIA-TURKEY NORMALIZATION: GEORGIAN EXPERT:

Today.Az
Sept 4 2009
Azerbaijan

Armenia-Turkey border opening contributes to the maintenance of peace,
meanwhile weakens Georgia’s position in the region, Georgian expert
on Caucasian issues Mamuka Areshidze said.

He said transit of first-necessity goods supply via Georgia that
gives much importance to the country.

"Georgia has a chance to use its privileged position and succeed. Now
the situation has changed and Georgia’s function is weakened. It is
not good for us," Areshidze said.

In the meantime, he did not rule out that border opening will favor
the peace process, including the Karabakh problem settlement.

ICON Communications Extends Service Coverage

ICON COMMUNICATIONS EXTENDS SERVICE COVERAGE

TeleGeography
Sept 4 2009

Armenian WiMAX start-up iCON Communications has extended its broadband
coverage to include the Nor Norq and Avan districts of the capital
Yerevan. In a statement the company said the move is part of the
planned expansion of services to cover all of Yerevan in the coming
months. iCON’s latest extension means the company can now offers
broadband WiMAX coverage to Nor Norq districts 2-8, parts of district
1, and the southern and central sections of Avan. In total, iCON’s
network now covers over 70 square kilometres, taking in the following
districts: Kentron, Arabkir, Achapnyak, Vahakni Taghamas, Kasakh
village, Zeitun, Kayaran district, Nor Norq sections 2-8, and Avan.

iCON Communications’ CEO Adam Kablanian said: ‘We are very excited
about this significant extension of our coverage area. The Nor Norq
and Avan communities are home to thousands of residents that can now
benefit from improved access to the global community of information,
commerce and personal communication … Also, because iCON customers
can access the internet anywhere in our coverage area, our existing
customers can now use their iCON modems in Nor Norq and Avan, just
as our new customers in these districts can use their modems anywhere
else in the city where we provide coverage.’

According to TeleGeography’s GlobalComms Database, in October 2008
Alcatel-Lucent was selected to deploy and maintain a commercial WiMAX
802.16e-2005 (Rev-e) network for iCON in Armenia. iCON is looking to
provide a range of services including high speed internet access, VoIP
and VPNs to business users, government organisations and residential
customers. To support its launch, iCON has secured a multi-million
dollar investment by a multinational holding company specialising in
telecommunication investments. The financial infusion will accelerate
the WiMAX rollout across the country. The regulator the PSRC gave iCON
permission to expand its activities to other parts of the country in
late-October 2008.

Armenia To Be Able To Gain Benefit In Any Circumstances

ARMENIA TO BE ABLE TO GAIN BENEFIT IN ANY CIRCUMSTANCES

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
03.09.2009 22:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "There’s no need to jump conclusions about worsening
of Azerbaijani-Turkish ties because countries may always freeze and
unfreeze relations between one another," RA Ambassador to Ukraine
Armen Khachatryan told a PanAREMANIN.Net reporter.

Armenia, he said, should conduct consistent foreign policy,
i.e. establish good diplomatic ties with Turkey and solve the problem
of borders. "After all, Armenia needs direct transport communication,
and Turkey in that sense occupies a favorable geographical location,"
Armen Khachatryan noted.

Ambassador also stressed that Azerbaijani-Turkish relations were a
problem to be resolved by two countries, and Armenia should be able
to gain benefit in any circumstances.

Turkey-Armenia Peace Talks: A Thaw In A Century-Old Feud?

TURKEY-ARMENIA PEACE TALKS: A THAW IN A CENTURY-OLD FEUD?
Ruzan Khachatryan

"Radiolur"
04.09.2009 15:55

The Times Magazine published an article today titled "Turkey-Armenia
Peace Talks: A Thaw in a Century-Old Feud?" by Pelin Turgut.

"As ancient as Herodotus’ Histories, the fast-flowing waters of the
Aras River today trace the Turkish-Armenian border, a messy 20th
century creation of broken bridges and shuttered rail tracks. In the
shadow of snow-topped Mount Ararat, the river splits and narrows until
it divides the verdant villages of Halikisla, on the Turkish side,
and Bagaran, in Armenia. Once one, the villages are now separated by
a stretch of water little wider than a double bed. Residents never
meet, except to cast for trout under the watchful gaze of military
guards or to return an errant cow.

Turkey and Armenia have been bitter enemies for almost a century,
their tensions stemming from the massacre of hundreds of thousands
of Armenians in 1915 at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish army,"
the author writes.

"Turkey has always denied that the killings constitute genocide. The
two countries briefly shared an open border when an independent Armenia
emerged from post-Soviet Russia in 1991, but two years later Turkey
sealed the border in solidarity with Azerbaijan in its conflict with
Armenia over the contested enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Now one of
Europe’s last closed frontiers may finally be reopening again,"the
author continues.

The Times reminds that on September 1, Turkey and Armenia announced
a Swiss-mediated six-week negotiation period aimed at normalizing
diplomatic relations. "The goal is for both parliaments to ratify
a deal by Oct. 14 — when the two countries are scheduled to play a
World Cup soccer qualifier. The border could then reopen by the end
of the year."

"There is much at stake. Securing the Caucasus region, veined with
oil and gas pipelines, has become a priority for both Russia and the
U.S. The Obama Administration has signaled that helping to rebuild
Turkish-Armenian ties is a foreign-policy priority. But history is a
potent saboteur in this part of the world, and talks have collapsed
before under its weight. Already hard-liners in both countries are
furiously denouncing the new peace plan," Pelin Turgut writes.

The Times has talked to a number of experts on the issue. "Both Turkey
and Armenia have taken a brave and statesmanlike step," says Hugh Pope,
analyst with the Brussels-based International Crisis Group. "Both
will win if it succeeds."

Ali Guvensoy, head of the Chamber of Commerce of Kars in eastern
Turkey, estimates the regional economy could grow by 20% if the border
reopens, a much-needed boon for the impoverished area. "The past is
in the past. We need to look to the future," he says. "There is no
r oom for fear."

"Once trade, human interaction and dialogue begin, finding common
ground on more complicated issues will become easier," says Aybars
Gorgulu, analyst at the Istanbul think tank TESEV.

The author of the article concludes that it will take time,
perhaps years, for Turkey and Armenia to overcome decades of mutual
distrust. But with the announcement of new peace talks, a long-overdue
healing process may have finally begun.

Foreign Investments In Armenian Economy’s Real Sector Dwindle 39.4%

FOREIGN INVESTMENTS IN ARMENIAN ECONOMY’S REAL SECTOR DWINDLE 39.4%

ARKA
Sep 3, 2009

YEREVAN, September 3. /ARKA/. The flow of foreign investments in the
real sector of Armenian economy has dwindled 39.4% over the period
between January and June 2009, compared with the same period of
the previous year, to $312.2 million (excluding credits received by
state-governing agencies and the banking sector), National Statistical
Service of Armenia reports.

Direct investments shrank 30.1% to $246.4 million or 79% of total
foreign investments for Jan-June 2009 against 68.5% a year earlier.

According to the statistical report, the greatest part of the outside
investments – $144 million or 46.12% of total foreign investments or
52.39% of direct investments – targeted the communication sector.

Besides, $37.5 million or 15.21% of direct investments were sent to
the areas of generating and distributing electric power, gas and hot
water and $24.6 million or 9.97% to the construction sector.

Russia, France and the Netherlands were the largest investors in
Armenian economy in Jan-June 2009.

Russia invested $100.2 million or 32.1% of total foreign investments,
France $85.5 million or 27.4% and the Netherlands $39.9 million or
12.8%.

Armenia Shouldn’t Have Initiated "Football Diplomacy"

ARMENIA SHOULDN’T HAVE INITIATED "FOOTBALL DIPLOMACY"

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.09.2009 19:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Although Protocols on normalization of
Armenian-Turkish ties do not contain any clause on Karabakh
issue, there are certain links between Kharabakh settlement and
Armenian-Turkish rapprochement, political scientist Yervan Bozoyan
told journalists in Yerevan. "Those processes are interrelated, and
during the upcoming 2-3 months, we’ll face superpowers’ increased
pressure on Karabakh peace process," expert stressed.

With regard to recently promulgated Protocols, Bozoyan characterized
them as the continuation of Armenian and Turkish Foreign Ministries’
joint statement made on August 23. "Yerevan and Ankara have been
conducting negotiations since 2007. Armenia shouldn’t have initiated
the ‘football diplomacy’ and reduced negotiation results to public
domain. Turkey finds Armenia very interested in opening border and
can now use that as a tool to get maximum support from Europe,"
Armenian expert said.

According to him, Ankara is simultaneously conducting imitation policy,
satisfying Baku’s interests in Karabakh conflict. "Hence, Turkey can
delay the process unless it faces mediators’ pressures with regard
to Karabakh settlement," Yervand Bozoyan said.

Novruz Mammadov: "Turkish Newspaper’s Disinformation About Azerbaija

NOVRUZ MAMMADOV: "TURKISH NEWSPAPER’S DISINFORMATION ABOUT AZERBAIJAN SHOCKED ME"

APA
Sept 3 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku. Lachin Sultanova – APA. "Disinformation about Azerbaijan
published in Turkish newspaper shocked me. It is very sensitive
moment. We expressed our position on the processes of normalization
of Turkish-Armenian relations. But Turkish newspaper "Bu gun" spread
absurd reports today", chief of the International Relations Department
of Presidential Administration Novruz Mammadov told APA. He said it
was impossible to understand reason and goals of this article.

"It is not exception that there are some forces in Turkey and
other countries, which try to cool Turkish-Azerbaijani relations and
strategic partnership. I see it in Russia’s Regnum agency. It is clear
that who owns this agency and what goals they follow. Regnum’s odious
owner intends to put the region against Azerbaijan in his articles
and thinks that he serves Russian interests with that. But this person
is mistaken", said department chief.

Mammadov noted that "Bu gun" newspaper reported that Azerbaijani
president broke his visit to Georgia and return to the country to
call emergency meeting of the parliament when reports about the
protocols between Turkey and Azerbaijan were spread. "What does it
mean? Who dares to write this? They said that Azerbaijan and Armenia
signed a protocol and Azerbaijan was shocked and accused Turkey in
betrayal and etc. It is not true. Such lies negatively impact on
the public communities in both Turkey and Azerbaijan. Today I talked
with Turkish ambassador Hulusi Kilic. The ambassador told me "take no
note of it". Azerbaijan and Turkey have long history of friendship,
brotherhood and strategic partnership. It can not be hurt by any
Regnum’s reports. But Turkish media’s reports hurt me".

Mammadov said "Bu gun" newspaper reported that Azerbaijani
parliamentarians visited Turkey regarding the last developments. "The
visit was planned two months ago. I send a message to Azerbaijani
and Turkish communities not to believe to such lying and slandering
reports".

Turkish newspaper "Bu gun" published an article today that protocols
between Turkey and Armenia shocked Azerbaijan and President Ilham
Aliyev called an emergency meeting of the parliament.

Armenian Citizen Killed In Russia

ARMENIAN CITIZEN KILLED IN RUSSIA

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
SEPTEMBER 2, 2009
SAINT PETERSBURG

SAINT PETERSBURG, SEPTEMBER 2, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Russian
law enforcers are conducting an investigation into the murder of an
Armenian citizen in Saint Petersburg. His body was found near house
1 in Nakhimov Street at around 10:45 pm yesterday. Presumably, the
man was stabbed to death, panarmenian.net reported. The criminal cut
his throat and stabbed him several times with a knife, which was not
found at the scene of the crime.

A criminal case was opened under the RF Criminal Code’s Article 105
Part 1 – premeditated murder. Investigation is under way.