Barack Obama A Exhorte Erevan Et Bakou A Trouver Un Accord

BARACK OBAMA A EXHORTE EREVAN ET BAKOU A TROUVER UN ACCORD
Marion

armenews.com
lundi 27 juin 2011

Le president americain Barack Obama a personnellement appele les
presidents armenien et azerbaïdjanais avant leur reunion a Kazan en
Russie, vendredi 24 juin. Il les a exhortes a se mettre d’accord sur
les principes de base de la resolution du conflit du Haut-Karabagh.

” Le president Obama a vivement encourage les deux leaders a finaliser
et approuver les principes de base lors de leur rencontre avec le
president D. Medvedev a Kazan “, a declare la Maison Blanche dans un
communique publie jeudi soir.

” Une fois les principes de base approuves, les parties pourront
commencer a negocier un règlement definitif base sur les principes
d’Helsinki qui sont le non recours a la force, l’integrite territoriale
et le droit des peuples a l’autodetermination. ”

” Le president Obama a declare aux deux dirigeants qu’il est desormais
temps de resoudre ce conflit et d’offrir aux peuples armenien,
azerbaïdjanais et du Haut-Karabagh un avenir meilleur pour eux-memes
et pour leurs enfants “, a ajoute le communique.

Le president Serge Sarkissian aurait repondu qu’il etait determine
a trouver une solution ” juste et pacifique ” au conflit du
Haut-Karabagh. Il a egalement declare que la reunion de Kazan sera un
succès si le president Ilham Aliev ” montre une approche constructive
“.

Dans un message adresse a S. Sarkissian rapporte par le service de
presse presidentiel armenien, vendredi 24 juin, le president francais
Nicolas Sarkozy a exhorte les presidents armenien et azerbaïdjanais
” a montrer a leurs peuples le chemin du courage, de la sagesse et
de la paix “.

L’Azerbaidjan Montre Sa Force, Apres L’Echec Des Discussions Avec L’

L’AZERBAIDJAN MONTRE SA FORCE, APRES L’ECHEC DES DISCUSSIONS AVEC L’ARMENIE
Stephane

armenews.com
lundi 27 juin 2011

L’Azerbaïdjan a profite dimanche du 20e anniversaire de l’independance
pour montrer sa force, avec un defile militaire sans precedent,
deux jours après l’echec des negociations avec l’Armenie sur le
Nagorny-Karabakh.

Des milliers de soldats et des centaines de vehicules militaires
ont defile dans le centre de la capitale, survolee par des avions
et helicoptères de combat. Une flottille de navires de guerre etait
alignee dans la baie sur la mer Caspienne.

Le president Ilham Aliev n’a pas cache qu’il s’agissait avant tout
de montrer a l’Armenie que l’Azerbaïdjan n’entendait pas ceder sur
la question de la province annexee militairement par l’Armenie dans
les annees 1990.

“La guerre n’est pas terminee”, a-t-il lance devant les soldats qui
defilaient. “L’integrite territoriale de l’Azerbaïdjan doit etre
restauree”, a-t-il declare, promettant de mettre fin a “l’occupation”
armenienne de ce territoire.

Il s’est egalement felicite de la hausse du budget de la defense
ces dernières annees, financee par les revenus confortables des
exportations de gaz et de petrole, soulignant avec fierte avoir
atteint l’objectif qu’il s’etait fixe, “que le budget militaire de
l’Azerbaïdjan soit superieur au budget entier de l’Armenie”.

Le defile comportait egalement, pour la première fois, du materiel
militaire fabrique en Azerbaïdjan, notamment des drones.

Il a ete retransmis en direct a la television, precede d’images
montrant des troupes en action et le president Aliev en tenue de
camouflage, sur fond de chants patriotiques.

L’Armenie a pris le contrôle du Nagorny-Karabakh a l’issue d’une
courte guerre contre Bakou au debut des annees 1990, et l’Azerbaïdjan
reclame depuis la retrocession de cette region.

Le conflit lie a ce territoire azerbaïdjanais peuple majoritairement
d’Armeniens a fait 30.000 morts entre 1988 et 1994 et des centaines
de milliers de refugies.

Les Armeniens ont alors pris le contrôle du territoire qui a
ensuite proclame son independance, non reconnue par la communaute
internationale. Un cessez-le-feu a ete signe en 1994, mais Bakou et
Erevan n’arrivent pas a se mettre d’accord, depuis, sur le statut de
la region.

"War Is Not Over": Azerbaijan Resumes Bellicose Rhetoric On Karabakh

“WAR IS NOT OVER”: AZERBAIJAN RESUMES BELLICOSE RHETORIC ON KARABAKH AFTER KAZAN
By Aris Ghazinyan

ArmeniaNow
27.06.11 | 12:00

Photo:

Azerbaijan’s so-called Karabakh Liberation Organization held a meeting
in Baku on June 25 to discuss the “dangerous situation regarding
Karabakh’s future that has formed after the Kazan meeting.”

The resolution adopted as a result of the meeting stated that “the
futility of the Kazan meeting has once again demonstrated the OSCE
Minsk Group co-chair countries’ pro-Armenian position. Hence, there
is no point in continuing these negotiations.”

Enlarge Photo With this document the organization is demanding that
the Azeri authorities “immediately start a war against Armenia”.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stated on June 26: “Armenia’s
occupation of 20 percent of Azeri territories is temporary and cannot
last forever. I am strongly convinced that our territorial integrity
will be recovered by any means it takes. The war in Karabakh is not
over yet.”

The demonstrative nature of this statement is in the fact that
it was voiced right after the Kazan meeting, that is after the
co-chairs stressed once again that a diplomatic settlement is the
only acceptable settlement of the issue and has no alternative. The
Azerbaijani president’s statement, hence, became a sort of demarche.

It is symbolic that the statement itself was voiced during a military
parade in Baku held on Sunday and timed to Armed Forces Day and the
20th anniversary of Azerbaijan’s independence.

Some 6,000 servicemen took part in the parade demonstrating 400 units
of military hardware and ammunition.

S-300 surface-to-air missile systems purchased from Russia, anti-mine
carriers as well as modern defense technology items of Turkish, Czech
and Israeli make were paraded during the review. As reported by news
agencies, for the first time Azerbaijan demonstrated its unpiloted
planes along with combat helicopters and fighter jets. Besides,
Azeri-manufactured kinds of riffles were also demonstrated during
the parade.

To sum it up: the parade was designed as a show of Azerbaijan’s
military might. The Azeri president attended it in the capacity of
the Commander-in-Chief, but delivered his speech as president.

“Our state budget has grown 16 times. Accordingly, our military
spending has increased 20 times and mas 2,582,959,470 manats ($3.27
billion), but even that is not our limit. Today Azerbaijan’s military
spending exceeds Armenia’s entire state budget by 50 percent. By their
volume the military expenses will continue being a top priority in
Azerbaijan’s budget until Armenia withdraws from the Azeri lands and
a peace agreement is signed with this country,” Ilham Aliyev stated.

Baku is traditionally talking about its material-financial superiority
over Yerevan to make a point that “Armenia is much poorer than
Azerbaijan”. Still Ilham Aliyev’s late father and ex-president Heydar
Aliyev used to say: “Our military budget will soon exceed Armenia’s
total budget.”

In this connection Vahram Atanesyan, head of the NKR National
Assembly’s Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, says that
although money is important, it is, nevertheless, not the decisive
factor. “The international experience of recent years has shown that
even superpowers are unable to solve their issues by force… And
didn’t Artsakh [Nagorno Karabakh] manage to resist multi-million
Azerbaijan back in the early 1990s?”

After the Kazan meeting other structures, too, have started to
talk about the possibility of a new war. Sabine Freizer, the Europe
program director of the International Crisis Group, said that the
results of the trilateral meeting of the presidents (of Armenia,
Russia and Azerbaijan) are disappointing, but there still remains
a hope that the basic principles of the Karabakh settlement can,
after all, be agreed upon.”

The problem, she believes, is that there isn’t much time left.

Presidential elections will be held in the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing
countries in 2012, and in Azerbaijan and Armenia in 2013; and it would
be very difficult to reach an agreement over a Karabakh settlement
during the election campaign periods.

“If the negotiations on the basic principles fail, the likelihood
of a new wave of armed clashes between the sides will be very high,”
she says.

www.president.az

The Calls Of War Sounded In Baku After The Meeting In Kazan

THE CALLS OF WAR SOUNDED IN BAKU AFTER THE MEETING IN KAZAN

Noyan Tapan

27.06.2011

(Noyan Tapan – 27.06.2011) The organization of the liberation of
Kharabakh formed in Azerbaijan held an extraordinary session of the
Supreme council after the meeting in Kazan. As Musavat reports, the
uncertain and dangerous situation formed over Kharabakh issue was
discussed during the session. The participants of the session noted,
“The co-chairs of Minsk group aren’t interested in the fair solution
of Kharabakh conflict, they wish to preserve “status-quo”, so it is
senseless to continue the negotiations.”

The organization of the liberation of Kharabakh demanded from the
authorities to begin war immediately. Moreover, the organization
decided to held actions against UN demanding to “use punitive measures
against Armenia.” So, the resolution of the issue by the means of
war is considered as the best variant in social-political frames
of Azerbaijan.

www.nt.am

Min. of Economy predicts 4.6% economic growth by the end of the year

Minister of Economy predicts 4.6% economic growth by the end of the year
24.06.2011 17:19

Lena Badeyan
`Radiolur’

The indices of the first half of 2011 are encouraging, Minister of
Economy Tigran Davtyan told a press conference today.

According to him, considerable growth has been registered in the field
of industry. The highest growth was registered in the machine-building
sector, which is one of the best indicators of reviving economy.

According to the Minister, about 10 new enterprises in the spheres of
agriculture, industry and tourism, providing hundreds of new jobs,
were opened in the first half of 2011.

Tigran Davtyan says that this year the sphere of industry will become
the locomotive of the country’s economy.

The Minister predicts 4.6% economic growth by the end of the year. `If
everything goes well, we will exceed the plan,’ he said.

French parliamentarians statment about Van insult Chavushoglu

French parliamentarians statment about Van insult Chavushoglu

11:14 – 21.06.11

At the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly’s (PACE) summer
session which kicked off in Strasburg on Monday, a statement by the
Assembly’s raparteur for Turkey insulted PACE president Mehmet
Chavushoglu, according to the Kurdish news agency Firat.

Addressing the recent parliamentary election in Turkey and the Kurdish
minority’s influence on the country’s political life, Josette Durieu,
a French parliamentarian representing the socialist party in PACE,
said: “It is necessary to closely follow what trend the Kurds will
adopt after the election … I went to Van on the election day because
it is in Kurdistan. Policemen and soldiers were walking about in the
polling stations.”

Hearing the word Kurdistan, Chavushoglu answered: ” Turkey has a
region populated by Kurds, but there’s no Kurdistan as such. Let’s
avoid making statements violating the sovereignty of states.”

Tert.am

People Of Armenia Are Only Reservoir Of Our Strength – Opposition

PEOPLE OF ARMENIA ARE ONLY RESERVOIR OF OUR STRENGTH – OPPOSITION

news.am
June 24 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. -The people of Armenia are the only reservoir of our
strength. We should be able to unite our people, Hrant Margaryan,
a representative of ARF-D (Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Dashnaktsutyun) Bureau stated at the party’s general meeting on Friday.

“We have not yet reached tangible results in this direction, but we are
following a right course. Unfortunately, Armenia’s political system
has not yet established, as no force enjoys strong public support,”
Margaryan stressed.

Referring to the ARFD’s goals, Margaryan emphasized the party aims
to achieve free and fair elections.

“We will work following legislative initiatives, parliamentary
activities and propaganda till new elections. We will elaborate and
force to accept our options to solve social issues. As for facing
external threats, we will be ready to cooperate with all political
forces without exceptions,” ARFD member noted.

BAKU: Karabakh Peace Requires ‘Much More Than Two Signatures’ On A D

KARABAKH PEACE REQUIRES ‘MUCH MORE THAN TWO SIGNATURES’ ON A DEAL

news.az
June 24 2011
Azerbaijan

News.Az interviews Armenian Phil Gamaghelyan, the managing editor of
the Caucasus Edition.

Azerbaijan’s spiritual leader, Sheikh Allashukur Pashazade, has
received an invitation to visit Armenia in November to attend a CIS
Inter-Religious Council meeting. Armenian Church leader Garegin II
visited Baku last year. What kind of role may such visits play in
the Karabakh settlement?

In the late 80s and early 90s and even during the war, relations
between the two societies were not as hostile as they are today.

Today, 20 years of memories of propaganda and memories of war have
led to a sense of extreme hostility between the societies and complete
de-humanization of each other. So even if the political leaders sign an
agreement, it will be hard for the two societies to return to normal
coexistence. So contacts of non-political leaders, and especially of
spiritual leaders, are key in re-humanizing each other and developing
conditions for future coexistence.

Do you see the need for a third side to take part in dialogue between
Azerbaijani and Armenian religious leaders? What do you think about
the mediatory role of the patriarch of Moscow and All-Russia, Kirill?

Ideally, we will come to a point where we can have a dialogue without a
need of third parties. Yet today, more often than not, we need third
parties to facilitate dialogue between us. As for who would a good
mediator: in my opinion it would be someone who both sides could
trust. So if both spiritual leaders are comfortable with Patriarch
of Moscow and All-Russia Kirill, then why not.

There seems to be a really good momentum for a Karabakh settlement.

The US, Russian and French presidents at the recent G8 summit called
on Azerbaijan and Armenia to finish work on the Basic Principles. And
now there are great expectations of the meeting of the Azeri, Russian
and Armenian leaders in Kazan on 25 June. Do you see the Karabakh
conflict being settled in the near future?

We are certainly at a crossroads. The status quo is unsustainable. And
hopefully we can avoid a slide backwards and instead can move forward.

At the same time, I think we cannot expect “the Karabakh conflict
to be settled in the near future”. A settlement of the conflict will
require much more than two signatures on a document. Any comprehensive
peace process includes a process of inter-societal reconciliation and
integration parallel with Track I negotiations. Yet in our case the
Track I negotiations are not complemented with any confidence-building
measures. Moreover, they are accompanied by decades of active hostility
building; exclusion of the key parties to the conflict, the Armenians
and Azerbaijanis of Nagorno-Karabakh, from the peace process; harsh
war rhetoric and military build up – all factors impeding settlement.

If we can get two signatures on a document along with genuine support
for broad confidence-building work, then we can say that we are on
track and moving toward a settlement.

It seems that the only mediator in the settlement process is Russia.

All the recent meetings at the presidents’ level have been hosted by
Russia. Do you think that the US and France have real interests in
solving the conflict?

Unfortunately, the conflict is not on the top of the agenda of either
the USA or Europe. It becomes obvious when you look into the news
coverage of the Western outlets, into where the funding is going,
where the efforts of the best diplomats are focused, what are the
conversations in the leading think tanks. Unlike the West, Russia has
been consistently showing visible interest in the conflict, and since
Obama took office the rest of the world seems to be content with that.

In this context, I would say we that we are lucky that Russia right
now seems to be favouring resolution rather than conflict when it
comes to Nagorno-Karabakh. But that might change after elections or
with some other changes in the political landscape. So I would hope
that we can make use of this opportunity before it is too late again.

Phil Gamaghelyan is the managing editor of the Caucasus Edition;
co-director of the Imagine Centre for Conflict Transformation and a
PhD candidate at the School of Conflict Analysis and Resolution at
George Mason University.

ANKARA: Russian FM: Kazan Meeting To Play Landmark Role In NK Confli

RUSSIAN FM: KAZAN MEETING TO PLAY LANDMARK ROLE IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

Journal of Turkish Weekly
June 24 2011

A meeting between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan, with the participation of Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev, will play a landmark role in the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict settlement, the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

“We expect that Baku and Yerevan will respond constructively in
Deauville on May 26 to the joint statement made by the presidents of
the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries – the Russian Federation,
the U.S., and the French Republic. The leaders of Azerbaijan
and Armenia must show political will during the Kazan summit to
complete discussion of the Basic Principles project pertaining to
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict”, the foreign ministry said.

The document to be discussed in Kazan is the result of long
negotiations and joint effort of all parties and co-chairing
countries. It is a real foundation for further advancement and
preparation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, the report said.

“We hope that on the basis of this document, the parties will reach
an agreement for peace, prosperity and development throughout the
region,” the statement said.

A trilateral meeting between the Azerbaijani, Armenian, and Russian
presidents will be held in Kazan on June 24.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of territories claimed by
Azerbaijan since 1992, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and
seven surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. –
are currently holding peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding
regions.

Sarkozy Wishes Armenian President Success At Kazan Meeting

SARKOZY WISHES ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SUCCESS AT KAZAN MEETING

news.am
June 24 2011
Armenia

Time has come to finalize the principles for the Karabakh conflict,
which can serve basis for main negotiations to resolve Karabakh
problem, French President Nicolas Sarkozy stated in a letter
to President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan on the eve of Armenian,
Azerbaijani and Russian presidents~R meeting in Kazan.

Sarkozy stressed it often happens when heads of states must show the
way to peace, courage and wisdom to their people. According to him,
this moment has come in the Karabakh peace process. As a friend,
France sincerely wishes sister Armenia to achieve success at the
meeting, he said in the letter.