BAKU: Azerbaijani President: The war not over yet

Azerbaijani President: The war not over yet

ANS
22.06.2007 15:30

Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev attended graduation ceremny at
Heydar Aliyev Military School
Ceremony dedicated to graduation of students of Military School named
after Heydar Aliyev was held on June 22. Azerbaijani President, Supreme
Commander-in-chief Ilham Aliyev participated in the event. Following
this, the heads of state bodies, representatives of diplomatic corpse
accredited to Azerbaijan attended the event. Defense Minister, General
Colonel Safar Abiyev opening the ceremony stated that the process of
conformation of Azerbaijani Armed Forces to world and NATO standards
continues.
`Social condition of servicemen focuses the state. Armed Forces are
always ready to carry out Supreme Commander-in-chief’s orders,’ he said.
Azerbaijani President addressing the ceremony stated that Azerbaijani
Army is able to do everything.
`If the military budget of Azerbaijan was $135 million in 2003, this
figure raised to $1 billion in 2007. The war has not yet ended. Though,
ceasefire is announced, it is impossible to say that the war is over,
the President underlined.
Ilham Aliyev stating that the social condition of servicemen is being
improved, their salaries are being increased, military supplies have
been brought for them.
`Defense Industry Ministry has been established in Azerbaijan. This
Ministry will start production of military supplies till the end of the
year,’ he said.
The President mentioning that state budget of Azerbaijan comprised $1.5
billion underlined that this figure increased to $7.5 billion at
present.
`I said two years ago that military expenses of Azerbaijan will be
equal to Armenia’s state budget, and it happened. The expenses of
Azerbaijan and Armenia were equal five years ago, it is increased by 7
times. Armenian Armed Forces are lacking in contact line. The
negotiations are going on for 13 years, it can not be continued 13
years once more. The whole world sees unconstructive position of
Armenia,’ the President said.
Ilham Aliyev stressed that he will do his best for strengthening the
Army as Azerbaijani President and Supreme Commander-in-chief.
`We will liberate our regions. I state again that territorial integrity
of Azerbaijan can not be violated, Daqliq Qarabaq will not gain
independence,’ he underscored.
After the speech of President, apartment orders were presented to
several servicemen and diplomas to graduates.

It’s Wrong When Officials Say To Return Territories

IT’S WRONG WHEN OFFICIALS SAY TO RETURN TERRITORIES

Lragir.am
25-06-2007 15:00:20

For the mediators of the talks on Karabakh, the resolution of the
conflict is not an urgent issue, therefore they will not be pressuring
on the sides, stated Kiro Manoyan who is in charge of political
affairs and Hay Dat of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun Bureau, on June 25
at the Pastark Club. He said considering the elections in Armenia,
Azerbaijan, America and Russia in 2008, hardly any progress can be
anticipated at least until 2009.

Kiro Manoyan says Armenia needs to activate diplomatic activities.

"Propagandist diplomacy, state diplomacy, parliamentary diplomacy,
because the approaches we have lost regarding propaganda, with
these approaches the essence of the problem must be presented to the
international community."

Kiro Manoyan thinks resettlement of the liberated territories
is primary. It is interesting, however, the resettlement of which
territories the ARF representative means, all the territories or maybe
some territories cannot be resettled because they will be returned
to Azerbaijan. "There is no territory that should not be settled, but
logically we must start with what is relatively easier. It is important
to start. It is important to instill in people that the territories
which are being settled will not be returned," Kiro Manoyan says.

He says there were failures in resettlement, and the people who
left these territories are not to blame but the people who are
responsible. Kiro Manoyan hinted at the NKR president Arkady Ghukasyan
as well. He had stated a few weeks ago that the NKR government cannot
settle these territories without side assistance because it is highly
expensive. Kiro Manoyan says if there is a policy of settlement, it is
always possible to raise funds. Kiro Manoyan, in charge of political
affairs and Hay Dat, says it is negative that different Armenian
officials are considering returning one territory or another. Namely,
Kiro Manoyan criticized Serge Sargsyan who had stated that Aghdam is
not an Armenian territory. According to Manoyan, it might have been
tactics, but it is wrong because it may become a strategy and we may
suddenly start believing what we said.

"No such statements should be made, and if I am not mistaken, the prime
minister has stated recently that he did not say so. It is commendable.

Therefore, I think we must mind our business instead of trying to
please someone," Kiro Manoyan says. He says the ARF Dashnaktsutyun
is against returning territories. "I am saying that we are against
returning territories. We are against returning any territory. And we
must consider the territories in terms of security," says Kiro Manoyan.

Armenia concerned over Baku’s wish to scrap arms limit treaty

Armenia concerned over Baku’s wish to scrap arms limit treaty

Mediamax news agency
22 Jun 07

Yerevan, 21 June: Armenian Defence Minister Mikayel Harutyunyan has
expressed his concern over the recent Azerbaijani statements about the
possibility of leaving the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty (CFE).

Harutyunyan voiced his concern at the meeting with the NATO secretary
general’s special representative in South Caucasus and Central Asia,
Robert Simmons, today [22 June].

Simmons said that due to the regional stability and security concerns,
NATO wants strict compliance with all the provisions of the CFE treaty.
He added that in the near future, NATO will hold a special discussion
to look into the intentions of Russia and Azerbaijan to put a
moratorium on compliance with CFE treaty provisions.

EU will have a President from 2009

EU will have a President from 2009

armradio.am
23.06.2007 15:00

European Union leaders have reached agreement in Brussels on an outline
of new rules to govern the 27-member bloc.

They announced a compromise to delay until 2014 a new voting system
that reduces Poland’s influence – the main stumbling block. Other
proposals envisage a long-term president and a foreign affairs head.

The new treaty, expected to be finalised later this year, preserves
much of the planned EU constitution, which was rejected by voters in
2005.

The treaty will need to be ratified by each of the EU’s member states,
before entering into force in mid-2009.

Commission Set Up To Organize Process Of Entrance Into Armenian High

COMMISSION SET UP TO ORGANIZE PROCESS OF ENTRANCE INTO ARMENIAN HIGHER EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS

Noyan Tapan
Jun 19 2007

YEREVAN, JUNE 19, NOYAN TAPAN. The Republican Entrance Commission
(REC) (the chairman is the RA minister of education and science Levon
Mkrtchian) has been set up to organize the process of entrance into
higher educational institutions of Armenia in 2007. NT was informed
about it by the RA ministry of education and science.

The deputy chairman of the commission is the deputy minister Ara
Avetisian, its responsible secretary is the head of the unit on
coordination and supervision of higher educational institutions of
the staff of RA ministry of science and education Sasun Melikian.

The commission is also comprised of the head of the ministry’s
department of higher special education Ruben Gasparian, rectors of
state higher educational institutions, and a representative of the
National Security Council adjunct to the Armenian government. The
Yerevan mayor’s office is represented in the commission by the head
of the educational department Onik Vatian.

The work of the REC Counting Center will be coordinated by the head
of the Counting Center of Yerevan State University R. Topchian. The
minister’s spokeswoman Lilit Galstian will organize the work with
the mass media.

Billy Hayes: "I Prefer Turkish Prisons To Those Of America"

BILLY HAYES: "I PREFER TURKISH PRISONS TO THOSE OF AMERICA"

Noyan Tapan
Jun 19 2007

ISTANBUL, JUNE 19, NOYAN TAPAN. Billy Hayes, the real hero of the film
"Midnight Express", arrived in Istanbul on a seven-day visit.

At the press conference Hayes declared that the film "Midnight Express"
does not reflect reality: "The film has become the cause of having a
bad perception of the Turks and Turkey. There are great differences
between my book and the film. In reality, I did not kill anybody in
the Turkish prison and neither used the expression "Turks are swine"
in court.

Mentioning the fact that he was subjected to a serious beating on the
first night in the Turkish prison, Billy Hayes declared: "I committed
a crime. If I had the opportunity to choose, I will prefer Turkish
jails to those of America."

The real feelings of the American citizen Billy Hayes lie on the
basis of the film "Midnight Express", in which the demoralization
of Turkish jails and abuse made by the Turkish authorities are
demonstrated. Billy Hayes was detained in a Turkish airport in 1970
on the charge of sedative drug smuggling and since then he has been
serving his sentence in a Turkish prison…

As NA Vice-Speaker Affirms, Armenia Should Keep Its Own Position In

AS NA VICE-SPEAKER AFFIRMS, ARMENIA SHOULD KEEP ITS OWN POSITION IN RELATIONS WITH IRAN

Noyan Tapan
Jun 18 2007

YEREVAN, JUNE 18, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenia should keep its own position
with its relations with Iran, as this proceeds from country’s national
interests.

Vahan Hovhannisian, RA NA Vice-Speaker, member of ARFD Bureau, said
this in his June 18 meeting with journalists commenting upon the recent
statement of Anthony Godfrey, U.S. Charge d’Affairs to Armenia. He also
mentioned that the U.S. and the EU have always perceived Armenia-Iran
mutual contacts with understanding realizing that the country being
in the blockade has no great possibility of choice.

It should be reminded that in A. Godfrey’s words, the U.S. in anxious
about development of relations between Armenia and Iran. At the same
time, he expressed satisfaction with the energy contacts between the
two countries mentioning their transparency. A. Godfrey on behalf of
the U.S. called Armenia for persuading Iran to refuse implementing
its nuclear program.

Iraqi Armenians are Disillusioned

HETQ ONLINE
Iraqi Armenians are Disillusioned
Haykush Aslanyan
June 18, 2007

Two years ago Barsegh Hambardzumyan and his family emigrated from Iraq to
Armenia. They lived for a year and a half in Yerevan’s Avan district, but
paying $180 a month rent was a luxury the family couldn’t afford, and so
they moved to Echmiadzin, where they found a place for $50 a month. They
have five children, all of them in school. Sixteen-year-old Masis frequently
skips school because of the language barrier, and prefers to apprentice with
his father, as an electrician. Ten-year-old twins Minas and Maral do their
best to excel in school, and Alis and Moris, who are in middle school, are
trying with difficulty to overcome the language barrier. They believe that
one day they will be as fluent in Armenian as they are in Arabic.
Fifteen-year-old Aida Petrosyan, the daughter of Barsegh’s sister, whose
family also emigrated to Armenia from Iraq with them, said what she liked
here was the free and peaceful lifestyle. `There, it was forbidden to go out
from six at night till eight in the morning. We couldn’t even sleep. When
the bombings would stop, we would call our relatives to find out if they
were still alive, ` the girl recalled.
Her mother Arshaluys, who was visiting her brother’s family, asked us to
pass her complaints and condemnation along to the Armenian government, for
completely ignoring Iraqi Armenians.

`My brother’s family of seven and my own family of four are barely
surviving. It’s good that my brother got a job at VivaCell with the help of
the Red Cross. He is one of the few Iraqi Armenians who has gotten a job
here, and that is only because of his five children, ` said Arshaluys
Eghiazaryan.
Arshaluys explained that they and other Iraqi Armenian families living in
Armenia survive on the money they received from selling their homes and land
in Iraq. `But that will run out one day. I’ve calculated, and we spent
$1,000 in five months only for the rent and various taxes. Without a job,
how are we going to live? I don’t know, ‘ she said worriedly. She said that
they had been to several job agencies, but were always rejected with the
reply, `There aren’t enough jobs for us, and now we have to worry about
you…’ She couldn’t remember precisely which organizations gave that reply,
but she does remember that at Yerevan’s 8 th Hospital she paid 6,000 drams
for an X-ray, instead of 2,000. `That’s how it is if you don’t have a
residency passport,’ they told her.
Arshaluys is not happy with the school, either. `Every day they collect
money. How can I pay them if none of us are working? But not paying is no
good, either, since the children suffer.’ Both Barsegh Hambardzumyan and
Arshaluys Eghiazaryan are disillusioned by Armenia. `The Armenia that our
parents talked about day and night did not lived up to our expectations. We
feel ignored and uncared for here. We came here to our homeland, hoping that
we would feel like somebody here, but believe me, we felt that way more in
Iraq. If it weren’t for that damned war, we would never have left Iraq, `
said Arshaluys, who is relatively fluent in Armenian.

Barsegh’s wife Muna Hambardzumyan, who is Assyrian and understands only a
few Armenian words, told us via her husband’s sister that despite the fact
that she became sick from the fear of bombs, she would happily go back,
because at least in Iraq they didn’t have problems with food. ` Once a
month, the Iraqi government would distribute free flour, sugar, cooking oil
and soap. Plus we had jobs. And here only the UN helps, and they give us so
little food that it’s not enough to last us till the end of the month, `
Muna said. According to her, the UN will continue supporting her because of
her five children, but for people with smaller families, assistance will be
given only once a year.
Both families lived in Baghdad. Arshaluys Eghiazaryan was a manager in an
energy company, with a good salary. She said that once when Saddam Hussein
visited their office, everyone stood up `except me. He asked me if I knew
who he was. I said yes. He said, `Why don’t you stand up then?’ I replied
that my work would suffer. Saddam liked my reply. He ordered my bosses to
give me 100,000 dinars as a reward for my courageous attitude and hard work,
` she recounted, and added that they all cried when they saw on TV how
Saddam was hanged.
They are upset now, too, but for another reason – they want to go back. `A
person dies once. If we have to die of hunger in our homeland, it would be
better to die in Iraq in an explosion, ` said Arshaluys. Her brother
Barsegh, who after work receives rare orders to repair electric appliances,
wants to go to Europe instead of Iraq.
`If we had money, we could go to Syria. We could buy a Shengen visa there
and move to Europe. To find the details, I went to the UN office, where they
told me that no one handles such issues, this is your homeland, you should
stay here. It’s true, Armenia is the best country in the world, but we can’t
live here, and also, people treat us like foreigners, ` Barsegh said.

Young Men Leave Orinats Yerkir

YOUNG MEN LEAVE ORINATS YERKIR

Panorama.am
18:39 15/06/2007

Several ex-members of Orinats Yerkir (OYeK), Samuel Farmanyan,
chairman of party youth wing, Marsel Abrahamyan, deputy chairman of
youth wing and Tigran Lazarian, foreign relations spokesman confirmed
in a statement today that they have left the party. The statement
says: "In the course of recent few months it has become obvious
that the postulation of "European values" by the party leadership
does not stem from the deep understanding of such values but follows
lucrative and sectional aims. The attraction of graduates from European
educational establishment around the chairman of OYeK has the sole
aim to "legitimize" the European aspirations of the party within and
outside Armenia."

ANKARA: The True Meaning Of The Relationship Between Civil Society A

THE TRUE MEANING OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CIVIL SOCIETY AND DEMOCRACY
By Levent Koker*

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
June 14 2007

The fact that the Turkish Parliament was unable to carry out its duty
of electing the president, and that the laws in reference to this from
the 1982 Constitution became — or were made — unworkable, brought
a slowdown to democracy in Turkey, in as much as there is a settled,
rooted justice system here.

This is not to say that there was already a flawless liberal-democratic
system in Turkey, and that it was disrupted. No, instead this is to
say that an important aspect of Turkish democracy, the Parliament, was
brought to the point of not being able to do its job. In situations
where parliaments can not do their jobs, democracy can turn straight
to the people in order to keep working or to be stopped, and forces
outside of democracy begin to make their voices heard more loudly. In
any case this is the point that Turkey reached during the presidential
elections. But of course a certain ambiguity reigns now. And so
now the process of electing the president goes to the people of
the country. Elections were destined to go to the people anyway,
but for the normal parliamentary elections. Now what is faced is
a referendum, or perhaps a direct election. In any case though, no
matter what happens at this point, the general parliamentary elections
will now be like a "referendum" on the events that took place during
the unsuccessful rounds of the presidential ballot.

No matter what the outcome of the upcoming elections is, Turkey,
which has for a long while been on the road towards democratization
in an uninterrupted fashion, will not have a fully formed,
strong democracy, at least as long as the "civil societal bedrock"
created by the bureaucratic guardianship — the same bedrock that
has forced the country to a crossroads of choice between democracy
and an authoritarian regime — does not change. For this reason,
the following points must be clearly understood:

1- Civil society, no matter how it is interpreted, must be outside
the state.

2- Civil society demands rights and freedoms for the citizenry,
countered in balance to the state.

3- The demands for rights and freedoms made by civil society are
shaped by and expressed for different identities and interests.

4- Differences are a result of the pluralistic nature that must be
present in civil society.

5- Differences are explained with terms such as "we" and "they," or
"me" and "the others."

6- In these expressions of differences, it is not to be understood that
people not included in the "we" are enemies. For as long as anyone
different is perceived as an enemy threatening "we," the survival of
pluralism based on differences is impossible.

7- Democracies based on the differences between citizens are for the
above reasons the highest levels of union achieved in human history

As opposed to the state-centered "so-called and real" civil society
definitions summarized previously, true civil society embodies
and embraces the above examples of what civil society should be,
and is thus the real guarantor of democracy. For this reason the
events of "spring 2007" were opposed to democracy, not just because
they included interventions debatable in terms of their legality,
but because they presented support for an authoritarian regime in
the guise of societal support.

Turkey is finally at the point where it can put down a real foundation
for a strong civil society. At this crossroads Turkey’s journey into
a more democratic future depends on the continuation of EU-based
reforms, and on the execution of democratic processes at home. For
this reason the "so-called civil society" with its slogans of "Neither
the US nor the EU," and as if that weren’t enough, its creation of
not only "foreign" but "domestic" enemies as well, coupled with its
unwillingness to afford anyone outside of the authoritarian regime
the chance to rule, makes contributions to democracy on any level an
impossibility. And in a state where democracy has become impossible,
it is also completely impossible for that state to be a republic.

As is known, a republic, in terms of its state and its government, has
two definitions. The first, and narrower, definition of a republic is
an expression of a system wherein the position of the head of state
is not hereditary or passed on, and is, in this sense, the opposite
of a monarchy. Just as it is implicitly understood herein that not
every republic is a democracy, similarly it would thus translate that
not all monarchies are necessarily in opposition to democracies. To
the contrary, just as there have been in the past and continue on
today to be republics that are not democratic, and which are run
by military or civil authority, there are also deep-rooted, strong
democracies which are not simultaneously republics.

In addition to the above definition of what a republic is, there is
a definition that goes more to the root of the essence of the term.

According to this definition, a republic is a style of leadership
aimed at ensuring the good of the people, or the public. Since a
leadership style that aims to achieve the best for its people would
not, naturally, exclude the people themselves, this definition of
what a republic is then describes a style of leadership or governing
wherein the people have a voice. In this sense then, this definition
more approaches the definition of democracy.

So let’s take a look at a variety of ideas of how it is that these
two above definitions of a republic have separated from each other
in the modern world, and how it is that they need to come together
again. But first let me make the following clear, so that we can
better understand the issues we are examining here: the republic, as
many significant modern thinkers and politicians have stressed, means
being against tyranny. In order to eliminate tyranny, it is enough
that the state uses its power according to the law. The highest-level
guarantee that the state will use its power according to the law is
the idea that the law will in fact be made by the people. In this
way the society itself, rather than a being simply a gathering and
assortment of people, becomes a "society of citizenry," or as we were
saying before, a "civil society."

In a republic the citizenry of the republic sets out the order of
the society and the state through laws it creates by its own free will.

Thus it is the citizenry that limits and defines its own freedoms,
but it should be remembered that they are doing it themselves. In
order for citizens to be able to make up the laws to which they
themselves will be subject to, they must first be equal holders of
the individual and political freedoms guaranteed by law. And thus in
a modern state where everyone is counted as a citizen (slave-master,
male-female, worker-bourgeoisie, black-white, racist, ethnicist,
sexist and other categories like these) a republic in a modern state
is then in fact obliged to be a democracy.

In Turkey the same thing has been being repeated since the formation
of the republic. Since the passage from the Ottoman system to the
republican system, the transformation of the Turkish people from
vassals into a citizenry has been talked about frequently at every
level of our educational life. In addition to this it is always
stressed that it was the democratic aspect of the republic that
brought about the most wonderful of the changes.

"Well in that case what exactly is the problem?" The problem is
rooted in the lack of understanding that the modern interpretation
of the republic-democracy coupling is that it mandates a pluralistic
participation by the citizens of the country. The Turkish republic
can not seem to keep itself from falling into situations that prevent
the unity of the republic and democracy.

This is where the meaning of the events Turkey witnessed in the spring
of 2007 lies; according to this way of seeing things, democracy is
actually threatening the republic, and perhaps even more so than the
republic, the Turkish nation-state. What we see here is a very serious
paradox. The paradox is this: according to these claims the republic,
which by definition is composed of the citizenry, is actually being
threatened by this same citizenry. For this reason then limitations
must be put on how much authority these citizens can have in the
leadership of the republic. This paradox is rooted in the "founding
ideology" of the Turkish republic, Kemalism. In order to transcend
this paradox it is an inescapable necessity that the republic fully
and truly realize itself, and this is a quest that is only possible
through the deepening and widening of democracy. In order for the
Turkish republic to be able to experience such a process, a civil
society which stands behind the freedom necessary to talk about
differences in the public arena is an indispensable factor.

Quite in opposition to this though, what happened in Turkey during
the spring of 2007 was that the guardianship bureaucracy moved into
action to bring society out into the city squares, with some of the
factions being set into motion by the previously mentioned "so-called
civil society organizations." With this, the tableau presented was
not of simply a republic under threat, but going further still, the
presentation of citizens who did not see or acknowledge the "clear
and present danger" as the "enemy in the form of the other." This
itself turned into a presentation of these factions not seeing the
threats facing Turkey as being "co-conspirators" with the "imperialist
enemies."

‘Neither the US nor the EU, but a completely independent Turkey’:
Meaning what?

So in this sense another paradox contained in all these spring
events is that those wishing to take action based on the dangers and
threat facing Turkey all stood up against both the US and the EU. In
terms of its ties to the US, this stance is based on the political
strengths gained by the Kurds in northern Iraq, and the belief that
one region of Turkey now faces a threat from these relatively new
Kurdish strengths. Choruses ringing out about the ineffectiveness
of the US against Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) terror are brought
constantly to the forefront in the press. As for the EU there are
the constant complaints that it is both trying to divide Turkey and
that it has persistently taken the side of the Greek Cypriots. These
and topics like the so-called "genocide" matter with the Armenians
are brought up often in the public forum as topics with the high
potential of affecting and influencing public opinion. In any case,
these expressions of opposition against both the US and the EU take
from time to time an "anti-imperialism" tone, and at other times are
couched with an emphasis on the strength of the Turkish nation-state.

When you combine the perceptions of the "domestic enemies" with the
"foreign enemies" perception (which itself is based on much incorrect
information and spreading of incorrect information) you get yet another
paradox that sits on the daily agenda of the Kemalist republic. This
is a paradox in connection with the EU. As already known, Turkey went
through a series of rapid and widespread reforms after 2002, arriving
in October 2005 at the point of starting up full membership talks with
the EU. The basic paradox is that while Kemalism is often defined
as being a modernization project for Turkey, the very EU reforms
which are the most concrete expression of Kemalism’s main goal,
the achievement of a "modern civilization level," are opposed on the
basis that they threaten the republic.

This sort of "hostility to foreigners," which is sometimes of a
xenophobic character, does not make it clear in which direction it
expects Turkey’s international relations to develop. And since the
slogan "Neither the US nor the EU, but a fully independent Turkey"
became so popular during the rallies, in fact became synonymous with
the expressions of opposition to the administration, it is a valid
question. Yes, what is the suggestion then? If we interpret this point
of view’s essence as being based on opposition to a "concessionist"
stance, and embracing more of a "nationalist" stance, then you could
also extrapolate that what this really means is "isolationism" or
"autocracy." This in turn looks to resemble the story of Kemalism in
the 1930s, along with the byline of single-party rule.

The purpose of clarifying all the above is not to prophesy that
Turkey is going to turn into an isolationist, autocratic and thus
authoritarian and even fascist political regime. But along with that it
should be noted that it is clear that there are those with inclinations
for an undemocratic regime in the military and the civil bureaucracy,
as well as the "civil society" and the political parties. These
factions, who base the reasons for their actions on the idea that
they are protecting the state, can push the need for democracy in a
state back to the second, even the third plan when necessary. What’s
more they even have the capacity to completely ignore this need for
democracy. And it was the spring of 2007 in Turkey that proved they
could find support for these inclinations from civil society. This is
of course a situation that increases the likelihood that Turkey can
and might be swayed from its path to democratization. In order then to
prevent this from happening, the citizens of the republic must make
clear their support of a pluralistic and freedom-loving democracy,
by putting their will and volition front and center.

*Levent Koker is a lecturer at Gazi University