Baku: Vladimir Putin Held Talks With Serzh Sargsyan

VLADIMIR PUTIN HELD TALKS WITH SERZH SARGSYAN

Trend, Azerbaijan
Dec 19 2012

Russian President Vladimir Putin held talks one on one with the
President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, RIA Novosti reported.

The meeting was held in the Kremlin after the CSTO and EurAsEC.

Prior to that, the Russian president held bilateral talks with the
presidents of Kazakhstan and Belarus.

CSTO member states are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia and Tajikistan. Organization of the Collective Security Treaty
was established on the basis of the Collective Security Treaty,
signed on 15 May 1992 the CIS member countries. The next meeting of
the CSTO will be held in May in Bishkek.

The Eurasian Economic Community (EurAsEC) – the international economic
organization established to promote the process of effective formation
of the Customs Union and the Common Economic Space, as well as other
goals and tasks associated with the deepening of integration in
economic and humanitarian fields. Russia will retain the chairmanship
of the Eurasian Economic Community in 2013. The next meeting of the
EurAsEC Interstate Council at the level of Heads of State will be
held in Moscow in the second half of next year. A specific date will
be determined later.

Baku: Araz Azimov: "Philippe Lefort Must Announce The Aim Of His Vis

ARAZ AZIMOV: “PHILIPPE LEFORT MUST ANNOUNCE THE AIM OF HIS VISIT TO NAGORNO KARABAKH”

APA
Dec 19 2012
Azerbaijan

“Nagorno Karabakh is a territory under occupation and it requires
Azerbaijan’s permission to go there”

Baku. Mubariz Aslanov – APA. “We must understand the aim of EU Special
Representative for the South Caucasus Philippe Lefort while speaking
about his visit to Nagorno Karabakh, because the EU is not directly
involved in the settlement of the conflict and supports the efforts
of the OSCE Minsk Group,” Azerbaijani Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs Araz Azimov told journalists, APA reports.

He noted that the EU may be involved in the solution of some issues
on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in the future, but currently, it is
not directly participating in this process: “A concrete answer must
be given regarding Philippe Lefort’s intention to visit the conflict
zone. What is the political position of the EU? Is this desire based on
the organization’s support to the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan
or this initiative has another aim? If Lefort wants to visit Nagorno
Karabakh, he must announce his aim.”

Araz Azimov said such an initiative can be realized only in one case.

“In case that this initiative helps Nagorno Karabakh reintegration into
Azerbaijan. Otherwise, no initiative can be accepted. If this visit
is connected with Nagorno Karabakh’s reintegration into Azerbaijan,
the issues on such visits can be considered. We have not received an
affirmative answer from the European Union yet. Nagorno Karabakh is a
territory under occupation and it requires Azerbaijan’s permission to
go there. We do not object to the visits of OSCE Minsk Group to that
territory in connection with the settlement of the conflict, because
this is their work. As regards the visits of various political forces’
representatives to the region for political interests, we do not give
consent to it, as there is no ground,” he said.

Ankara: Yet More Bad News For Turkish Press

YET MORE BAD NEWS FOR TURKISH PRESS

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Dec 19 2012

by Mustafa Akyol

Last weekend, unexpected news hit Turkey’s headlines: The top
executives of Taraf, an ultra-liberal daily that has fearlessly bashed
both the old Kemalist establishment and the new AKP government,
resigned. Ahmet Altan, the editor-in-chief of the paper, along
with Yasemin Congar, the second to Altan in rank, announced their
departure. Soon, they were also followed by NeÅ~_e Duzel, a senior
correspondent, and Murat Belge, a senior columnist.

To see why this is more than just any ordinary job change in the
Turkish media, we should take a closer look at Taraf. This paper
was established only five years ago by Altan, Congar and a bunch
of idealist liberals and leftists with a self-declared mission:
helping Turkey’s democratic transformation by relentlessly going
after the powers that be. In those initial years, Taraf especially
defied the Turkish military, with a bravado that shocked most Turks,
who had seen this sinister institution as untouchable.

Taraf also became very instrumental in the Ergenekon and Sledgehammer
cases, which both put alleged coup plots on trial. Many of the
documents that were used by the prosecutors in these cases were first
printed in Taraf – before they were apparently “leaked” to the paper
by the police.

During this initial period, which probably went on until 2011, Taraf
was very popular among pro-AKP conservatives as well. But as the
military’s power waned, and the AKP government consolidated itself,
Taraf’s arrows turned toward the “new establishment.” Especially
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan became the paper’s new target, as its
headlines and editorials began to bash him every day as the new threat
to freedom.

If you ask me, I think Taraf was basically right in its stances, but
also often too emotional, clumsy and subjective. In the “coup cases,”
Taraf overlooked the excesses of the prosecution, such as prolonged
arrests of too many suspects, and also dismissed some the legitimate
suspicions about the military documents that it published. With
regards to the AKP, Taraf again was too heated in my view, as not
only the authoritarian stances of the AKP but also its legitimate
moral conservatism became the paper’s target. (No wonder even some
Taraf writers, such as Yıldıray Ogur, disagreed with Altan on the
latter’s passionate anti-AKP stance.)

All in all, however, Taraf has certainly been an important contribution
to Turkish democracy. Its opinion pages broke many taboos, ranging
from Ataturk’s historical reality to the true fate of Ottoman
Armenians. Moreover, in its five-year-long short history, it proved
to be an independent paper that bowed to no one.

Therefore, the departure of Altan and the other leading names of
the paper is concerning. The announced reason is that the paper is
in a dire economic situation, and that Altan and others have become
“tired and frustrated.” In his farewell column, Altan wrote that he
is going back to his “real job,” which is writing novels. We will
see what the others will do, and what Taraf will do without them,
in the months to come.

Nevertheless, many people inevitably suspect that pressure from the
AKP government might have led the owner of Taraf, BaÅ~_ar Aslan, to
ask for the withdrawal of his most anti-AKP pens. I have no evidence to
support or dismiss this claim, but I am sure that it will be credible
for many. And I am also sure that the earthquake in Taraf will be yet
another bad sign for the future of independent journalism in Turkey.

December/19/2012

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/yet-more-bad-news-for-turkish-press.aspx?pageID=449&nID=37140&NewsCatID=411

Armenian And Russian Defense Ministers Summed Up The Results Of 2012

ARMENIAN AND RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTERS SUMMED UP THE RESULTS OF 2012

Mediamax News Network, Armenia
Dec 19 2012

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan met with
his Russian counterpart Sergei Shoygu in Moscow today.

As the press service of the Armenian Defense Ministry informed Mediamax
today, at the meeting the parties summed up the results of bilateral
military and technical cooperation in 2012 as well as outlined the
upcoming programs.

The ministers also discussed issues of strategic and operative
planning, exchanged opinions on regional and international security.

Today, Armenian Defense Minister also took part in the regular session
of the Council of Defense Ministers of CSTO member states.

Have And Have Not’S: Reflections On Shushi, Yerevan, And La

HAVE AND HAVE NOT’S: REFLECTIONS ON SHUSHI, YEREVAN, AND LA
By Vrej Haroutounian

15:55, December 19, 2012

I woke up at 8 AM to the face of an old lady wearing a blue dress
covered with yellow flowers. She told me breakfast was ready. I smiled
because she had a smile on her face. She knew I was up late the night
before hanging out with my friends in the courtyard, drinking tea
and conversing about our lives.

I made my way to the breakfast table where some of my friends were as
well. We all sat down to a breakfast table set with butter, yogurt,
cheese, hot dog, and jam made from a berry plant that grew all over
the city. At that moment I realized that, other than the hot dog,
all of the food came from sources that were within 50 feet of where I
was sitting. Most of it was from the cow that was outside in the barn.

I was in Sushi, a war torn city that was taken back a few years ago
by a people that were determined to choose their own future and had
made it happen. While I was buttering my toast, I was thinking, “Wow,
everything I am eating here is purely organic” (I didn’t eat the hot
dog). These organic products were what people in LA would easily pay
top dollar for. I could already imagine it at Trader Moe’s, priced
at $4 a jar, labeled “Organic Raspberry Jam” along with the butter
and cheese.

A few weeks later I am in Yerevan sitting at a cafe. If you’ve been
to Yerevan in the last 20 years you know it’s not hard to find a
cafe in gendron (Central downtown). Many of the beautifully designed
Soviet era parks that were once there have been covered by Cafes since
independence. The free market is well in progress. Restaurants with
international names and themes, billboards everywhere, and European
fashion walking up and down the streets on the fit bodies of the
masses. As they stroll up and down Northern Ave, I watch them and
they watch me.

The cell phone store has congestion from people waiting for service,
the restaurants are full, the high-end boutiques are well-lit and
awaiting customers. Yet, above the stores, all the lights are off. The
residents there are corporations or Diasporans who have purchased
these larger-than-life homes or offices on the city’s main promenade.

They seem to be occupied only a few months out of the year.

I walk around the corner into one of the large supermarkets that have
recently opened. Inside, I find processed yogurt with fruit, imported
cheeses, frozen chicken and beef products. The place shines, it glows.

It’s staffed by younger women in tight clothing who sell racks and
racks of imported foods and imported lifestyle. It oozes of sex appeal.

A few months pass by and I am back in Los Angeles. I read in a
newspaper that a new law has outlawed street vending in Yerevan. I
read another article a few weeks later about how the Pag Shooga
(indoor farmers’ market) will close for renovations after which
some of the vendors will not be returning due to higher rent costs
and larger retail spaces. A few weeks later I read about the workday
increasing to six days a week. I start asking, “If everyone in Armenia
is complaining that there is no work, then why is the workday being
increased to six days a week for certain industries?”

A few days later outside my studio I am conversing with a colleague. I
ask her why it is that most people in Yerevan could not wait to shop
at supermarkets for factory-farm produced chicken, cellophane wrapped
tomatoes, and processed dairy, while the biggest food movement in Los
Angeles is organic, small farmer and locally grown foods. She replies,
“People want what they don’t have.” I ask her why she thinks that
is, and she says, “Well, if you get something that you didn’t have
it proves to you and others that you worked hard and got it, that
you got something that you did not have before.” We exchange smiles
because it makes sense.

See, the have-nots in LA can’t get organic food-which is reserved
for the haves-and the have-nots in Yerevan can’t get food from the
supermarkets because it’s for the haves. At the end, we both agree
that organic food is a better choice overall for the health and
long-term sustainability of an economy.

In the end, it comes down to education, choice and discipline. Things
are worth the value you assign them. What is two cups of water worth
to you? Is it a walk to the kitchen, five-minute wait, a search for a
water fountain, or one dollar at a gas station or a convenience store?

Hopefully you picked all of the options except the last two, because
if you picked the last two, you gave someone a dollar for something
you could have had for a much lower cost. I use a bottle of water as
an example of how wealth is trickled up by the many and placed in the
hands of the few. Bottling water and making it available everywhere
can exploit a simple human need for hydration. Every day people give
their wealth and power over to others. When you pay $30 for a dress
that in materials costs pennies, you trade your labor and efforts for
something that marketing has convinced you is worth that by branding
it. If your $1,000 dollar purse producer named Smoochi or Louis Mutton,
made a great purse with materials that cost a few dollars of leather
and zipper, then they could literally sell it for a few dollars,
and more people would buy it because it would have the highest
demand. But why don’t they? Because then the masses would all have
it and the separation of perceived wealth would not exist. So they
keep the price high and keep you wanting. It’s the same with cars,
food, and what is called lifestyles.

So coming back to Armenia, I ask, “What is going on?” Well, it’s
simple! The wealthy open supermarkets, which attract the populous
like a moth to a flame, trying to be a have because, all of a sudden,
they were told they were have-nots. The international media and local
media create further want in the local population. All of a sudden,
local tomatoes are not good enough and the dimly-lit grocery store at
the bottom of the building starts looking ugly compared to the shiny
markets seen on TV. They buy the cellophane wrapped tomato at a premium
price and feel accomplished. Soon, the local storeowner realizes his
customers are buying less, and eventually a law is created that puts
street vendors completely out of business. Now, the supermarkets have
less competition and the free market has gotten less free.

As the supermarkets increasingly sprout up, foreign banks further
fuel the fire by lending money to oligarchs who turn around and
happily spend it on their wants of luxurious lifestyles, creating
further separation of the haves and have-nots. As small local markets
disappear and the supermarkets multiply, the only competition left
is between large chains. The prices increase dramatically ever since
people decided that the tomatoes at the market were better, that
a bottle of water was worth $1, and a Louis Mutton purse was worth
$1000. Now since the supermarkets have taken over the neighborhood
and the local groceries are closed, the population starts buying
cars, which they need to lug the bulk food from the “NEW” discount
supermarket located outside of the city.

A few years later, European clothes on thin, petite bodies are replaced
by unhealthy Yerevantsis stuck in traffic listening to commercials on
how to lose weight. Twenty years later, Trader Moe’s opens in Yerevan
and sells them back the raspberry jam that they were tired of, for
300 times more then what it cost before.

All over the world, we are a generation that has been giving away
our freedom through laziness, lack of education, and discipline to
corporate power which has corrupted many governments worldwide. So I
ask Armenians everywhere to start being conscious of their buying
choices. It is not easy, due to the prevailing culture in most
countries that we are located in, but it is possible. I ask you
to think twice when you buy that bottle of water, that Panini,
that Smoochi purse. Your sports car payment can buy a tractor for a
village. Your Starbucks coffee can feed a family for a week and your
new 82″ TV is someone’s annual income. Start thinking about how much
change your conscious spending can create in our homeland and the
countries we are currently in.

This struggle is of one against the exploitation of all people
worldwide. It is a struggle against a system that is corrupt and
is failing; it is time for us to invest in creating a new system
worldwide, while making sure that the failed system of “free markets”
does not spread further in Armenia.

http://hetq.am/eng/articles/21697/have-and-have-not%E2%80%99s-reflections-on-shushi-yerevan-and-la.html

Azerbaijan Spurs Regional Arms Race, Inciting Hostility – Serzh Sarg

AZERBAIJAN SPURS REGIONAL ARMS RACE, INCITING HOSTILITY – SERZH SARGSYAN

TERT.AM
19.12.12

The Armenian president has slammed Azerbaijan for a non-constructive
approach to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement efforts.

Speaking at the Collective Security Treaty Organization’s council
session in Moscow, Serzh Sargsyan said that the country’s stance on
the problem remains an extremely serious challenge to the security
in the South Caucasus region.

The president noted that the Azerbaijani authorities demonstrate
unwillingness or inability to follow the negotiation format proposed by
the OSCE Minsk Group, the problem being repeatedly highlighted in the
statements issued by its co-chairing states (US, France and Russia).

“We are confident that negotiations are the only alternative to the
settlement of the existing conflicts. We have in mind that the threat
to renew the military operations between the sides after the signing
of ceasefire – especially considering that it has been maintained for
18 years now – is a direct violation of the norms and principles of
international law. That’s the most short-sighted way towards a new wave
of violence, hatred and bloodshed. Such problems are never resolved;
they become more complicated,” he said.

The president added that an entire generation in the country is
being brought up in an environment of xenophobia and intolerance. In
that context he referred to the Azerbaijani authorities’ decision to
pardon the life-sentenced army officer, Ramil Safarov, who had killed
an Armenian servicemen in sleep, and giving him a hero’s welcome and
a military promotion upon his return to the country.

“Killing an Armenian is thus no longer considered a crime in
Azerbaijan. And that happens in the 21st century, in a member state
of the United Nations Security Council. Azerbaijan continues its
belligerent policies. It spurs a regional arms race and incites
hostility. The Azerbaijani president openly declares the Armenians
around the world his enemies, calling Yerevan, which will soon
celebrate its 2,800th anniversary, an ancient Azerbaijani land. He
declares that the violation of the ceasefire regime is a rule of
conduct, with the war not being over yet. But he forgets who was the
first to sign the ceasefire,” Sargsyan said.

Karine Achemyan: A Whole Generation Subjected To Propaganda Terror I

KARINE ACHEMYAN: A WHOLE GENERATION SUBJECTED TO PROPAGANDA TERROR IN AZERBAIJAN

Panorama.am
10:26 20/12/2012

“It is inadmissible when policy of xenophobia is carried out on the
level of country’s leader, when hatred is inflamed on the ethnic
ground. Under the circumstances, it is impossible to talk about
progress in Karabakh settlement,” Republican MP Karine Achemyan
told Panorama.am.

President Serzh Sargsyan also commented on Azerbaijan’s policy
of xenophobia in his speech during the CSTO session in Moscow on
Wednesday.

A whole generation is subjected to propaganda terror in Azerbaijan, and
under the circumstances, it is impossible to talk about establishment
of an atmosphere of confidence between the two peoples, according
to Achemyan.

“It is hard to understand the fact that a country raising a generation
of Safarovs is a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security
Council and tries to use its status to take anti-Armenian actions,”
said the lawmaker.

As allies, CSTO member countries should exert efforts to neutralize
Azerbaijan’s destructive moves at international instances, Achemyan
added.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s Nominal Gdp Projected At 170.7bln Drams For 2013

NAGORNO-KARABAKH’S NOMINAL GDP PROJECTED AT 170.7BLN DRAMS FOR 2013

STEPANAKERT, December 20. /ARKA/. Nominal GDP of Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic (NKR) is expected to be 170.7bln drams in 2013, the projected
real growth is 9% respectively, NKR’s minister of finance and economy
Spartak Tevosyan said at a parliament sitting in Stepanakert.

Tevosyan said main economic growth projected for the country ranges
between 9% and 11%.

Under the 2013 budget draft, budget receipts are 71bln 263.9mln drams,
expenditures 72bln 36.1bln drams and deficit 722.2mln drams.

Loan to be extended by Armenia to NKR will be 39bln 293.8mln,
Tevosyan said.

Tevosyan mentioned that the budget draft was developed to ensure
further progress and development of whatever had been achieved before.

On the other hand, the bill sets up conditions for realistic reforms
in political, economic and social sectors and in public management,
Tevosyan said.

Tevosyan stressed that the 2013 social and economic policy will mainly
aim at economic development, stable growth rates, improved state system
and defense capacity and appropriate living conditions for everyone.

NKR’s GDP is about 152.1bln drams in 2012, a 9% increase against the
year before.

Industrial output will total approx. 41bln drams (2% increase) by the
end of the year. Capital construction output is expected to drop to
39bln drams by the end of 2012, compared to 2011. Agricultural output
will amount to 50bln drams (approx. 25% increase), Tevosyan reported.

The parliament sitting has also discussed state programs on healthcare,
science, sports, measures against drug addiction and drug smuggling,
employment regulation, social security of the disabled and support
to small and medium businesses.

As required by the parliament regulations, the budget discussions
were interrupted for several days and the next sitting was scheduled
for December 26. -0–

Armenia’s Ex-President To Top Homeland And Honor Party Black List

ARMENIA’S EX-PRESIDENT TO TOP HOMELAND AND HONOR PARTY BLACK LIST

tert.am
20.12.12

The an anti-corruption committee the Homeland and Honor party has
set up this month plans to compile a black list of “shady schemes,”
with Armenia’s ex-president Robert Kocharyan to top the list.

At his meeting with journalists on Thursday, Garnik Margaryan, Chairman
of the Homeland and Honor party and a member of the opposition bloc
Armenian National Congress, noted that the party intends to demand the
“attachment of the funds stolen from the Armenian people and amassed
at European banks” and a ban on his and his family members’ entry to
European states.

“Since fish begins to stink at the head, we will begin with the head
and clear this country,” Mr Margaryan said. Some persons representing
the current criminal and oligarchic system will be on the black list
as well.

“Our aim is to expose the unlawful acts and show the public that
the fortunes were built up through plunder, not due to hard labor,”
Mr Margaryan said.

Armenian President’s Speech At Csto Csc Meeting Evokes Wide Response

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S SPEECH AT CSTO CSC MEETING EVOKES WIDE RESPONSE IN AZERBAIJAN

arminfo
Thursday, December 20, 13:32

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s speech at the session of the
CSTO Collective Security Council in Moscow, wherein he slammed Baku
for non-constructive stance on the Karabakh conflict’s resolution,
has evoked wide response in Azerbaijan.

Thus, Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov harried to blame Yerevan for
“unwillingness to continue negotiations at the top level and for having
no interest in resolution of the conflict.” he also slammed OSCE MG
for not supporting Baku’s protests against possible exploitation of
the Stepanakert airport.

In turn, Spokesman for Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Elman Abdullayev
told APA that “the statement made by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
at the meeting of the Collective Security Treaty Organization contained
misinformation and populism.” He said that with such speeches Sargsyan
“attempts to mislead the world community.”

Elman Abdullayev added they regret that the international community
keeps silence. Serzh Sargsyan addressed the meeting of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization on December 19. He said Azerbaijan’s
destructive position on Nagorno Karabakh conflict remains a serious
threat to the region.