Turquie : Nouveaux Heurts A Ankara Entre Police Et Manifestants

TURQUIE : NOUVEAUX HEURTS A ANKARA ENTRE POLICE ET MANIFESTANTS

TURQUIE

Les heurts entre policiers et contestataires se sont poursuivis a
Ankara dimanche, au lendemain de l’intervention musclee des forces
de l’ordre turques, condamnee par le Conseil de l’Europe, contre
les manifestations qui ont marque le premier anniversaire des
rassemblements antigouvernementaux de juin 2013.

La police a, pour la deuxième journee consecutive, tire du gaz
lacrymogène et utilise des canons a eau, afin de disperser quelque 500
personnes place Kizilay, dans le centre de la capitale, a l’endroit
meme où, l’annee dernière, un manifestant de 26 ans avait ete tue
par balle, a constate un photographe de l’AFP.

Ethem Sarisuluk, dont la famille a depose des fleurs sur le site
du drame, avait perdu la vie dans les violences survenues il y a
un an quand quelque 3,5 millions de Turcs – chiffre officiel –
avaient proteste dans la rue pendant trois semaines contre le
chef du gouvernement islamo-conservateur Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Ces
manifestations durement reprimees dans toute la Turquie avaient au
total fait huit morts et plus de 8.000 blesses

“Le meurtrier d’Ethem, c’est la police de l’AKP !”, le Parti de la
justice et du developpement, au pouvoir, ont scande les contestataires
dimanche a Ankara.

“Ce n’est qu’un debut, le combat continue !”, ont-ils encore crie.

Condamnation du Conseil de l’Europe –

Le Conseil de l’Europe a vivement deplore dimanche la manière dont
les policiers s’etaient comportes la veille contre les milliers
de manifestants.

“Je condamne l’usage excessif de la force par la police turque
contre les manifestants et les journalistes”, a en effet declare Nils
Muiznieks, commissaire aux droits de l’Homme du Conseil de l’Europe,
dans un communique transmis a l’AFP.

Les evenements de samedi “viennent s’ajouter a la liste de cas où la
gestion de manifestations en Turquie soulève de graves inquietudes
en matière de droits de l’Homme”, a-t-il ajoute.

La semaine dernière, deux personnes ont ete tuees dans une banlieue
d’Istanbul au cours de heurts entre les forces de l’ordre et des
manifestants qui honoraient la memoire d’un adolescent mort des suites
des blessures lui ayant ete infligees pendant la fronde de 2013.

“Les derapages des personnes chargees de faire respecter la loi
representent une menace directe a l’Etat de droit et ne peuvent
etre toleres”, a encore dit M. Muiznieks, appelant instamment les
autorites turques a traiter les contestataires conformement aux normes
en matière de droits de l’Homme.

Samedi, le Premier ministre avait mis sa menace a execution et la
police etait massivement intervenue dans la soiree a Istanbul et
Ankara avec force gaz lacrymogène et canons a eau contre tous ceux qui
avaient brave l’interdiction de manifester aux cris de “Taksim partout,
resistance partout !”, ou “Tous ensemble contre le fascisme !”.

D’impressionnantes cohortes de policiers en civil armes de matraques
avaient alors charge dans les rues d’Istanbul qui mènent a la fameuse
place Taksim, le coeur de la revolte du printemps 2013, procedant a
de nombreuses arrestations et faisant plusieurs blesses.

Rien que dans cette agglomeration, survolee par des helicoptères,
les autorites avaient mobilise 25.000 hommes, des dizaines de blindes
et 50 canons a eau.

Des photographes ont saisi des scènes de violence place Taksim, où
des manifestants ont ete matraques et d’autres allonges par terre,
certains perdant du sang, après avoir respire du gaz lacrymogène.

Des heurts sporadiques s’etaient poursuivis toute la nuit en differents
quartiers des deux premières villes de Turquie.

lundi 2 juin 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

BAKU: US Congress Makes Statements Regarding Azerbaijani National Ho

US CONGRESS MAKES STATEMENTS REGARDING AZERBAIJANI NATIONAL HOLIDAY – REPUBLIC DAY

Trend, Azerbaijan
June 2 2014

Baku, Azerbaijan, June 1

US Congressmen Steve Cohen, Michael Turner, Jim Bridenstine and Henry
Cuellar made statements in connection with Azerbaijani National Holiday
– the Republic Day, Azerbaijan’s embassy in the U.S. said on June 1.

According to the message, the co-chair on the Working Group on
Azerbaijan Steve Cohen congratulated Azerbaijani people with the
Republic Day in his statement.

It was noted that Azerbaijan regained its independence in 1991,
and during the years of independence, the country faced serious
challenges, adding that 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory is still
occupied by Armenia.

The congressman also mentioned the partnership between Azerbaijan and
the U.S. in security sphere, emphasizing the country’s contribution
to Europe’s energy security.

Congressman Michael Turner, who is the author of the draft resolution
to support the Southern Gas Corridor which was nominated in the U.S.

House of Representatives, in a statement on the occasion of the
Republic Day, stressed the important role of Azerbaijan in the
energy security of Europe, significance in terms of Southern Gas
Corridor diversification supplies, which will transport Azerbaijani
gas to Europe.

Congressman Jim Bridenstine marked that Azerbaijan is the strategic
partner of the U.S., adding that National Guard of Oklahoma State,
which he represents, cooperates closely with Azerbaijani Armed Forces,
within the U.S. Partnership for Peace programme.

In turn, congressman Henry Cuellar stressed the importance of strategic
partnership between Azerbaijan and the U.S., noting that Azerbaijan
makes a significant contribution in energy security of Europe, Turkey
and other countries.

Thereby, the total number of statements on Azerbaijan made in Congress,
has reached nine.

The report notes that on May 28, 2014 congressmen Bill Shuster,
Virginia Foxx, Paul Cook, Michelle Grisham and Madeleine Bordallo made
a statement in connection with 96th Anniversary of the establishment of
Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, and before that, the congressman Steve
Stockman has put out a resolution in association with Azerbaijan’s
Republic Day in the U.S. House of Representatives.

http://en.trend.az/news/politics/2280553.html

ANKARA: Armenia Should Constructively Consider PM’s Proposal

ARMENIA SHOULD CONSTRUCTIVELY CONSIDER PM’S PROPOSAL

BY ÞUKRU ELEKDAÐ*

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
June 2 2014

Ministers applaud Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan, front,
at the Parliament in Ankara on Wednesday, April 23. (Photo: AP)

June 02, 2014, Monday/ 17:18:24

I believe that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan’s April 23 statement
on “the Armenian issue” reflects a rational, humane, peaceful and
reconciliatory approach.

It also shows that Turkey is not shunning the truth and is not afraid
of confronting its past. That was evidenced in his remarks: “… we
wish that the Armenians who lost their lives in the context of the
early 20th century rest in peace, and we convey our condolences
to their grandchildren. Regardless of their ethnic or religious
origins, we pay tribute, with compassion and respect, to all Ottoman
citizens who lost their lives in the same period and under similar
conditions.” However, his statement should not be taken as a step
toward recognition of the Armenian allegations and a concession;
nor should it be viewed as a unilateral apology.

The functional side of the full statement is that the conditions
for the aspired-to peace and reconciliation between the parties are
clearly laid out. These conditions include the establishment of a
joint historical commission by the parties to reveal the facts of the
1915 incidents and analyze the findings in light of the applicable
legal framework. The decision of the European Court of Human Rights
(ECtHR) on the Doðu Perincek case, which rejected “the existence of a
general consensus” on the Armenian genocide allegation and maintained
that this is a controversial issue, allowed Ankara to adopt a bold
initiative for peace with Yerevan.

Parliament’s declaration for the formation of a joint historical
inquiry

The prime minister’s expression of regret for the lives lost by
Armenians and other Ottoman people in the conditions that prevailed
during the period of 1915 is another striking part of the statement.

As for the humane approach in the statement, we should note that
Parliament also adopted the same approach in a declaration unanimously
adopted on April 13, 2005. The declaration extended a hand of peace
and amity to Armenia and referred to the following justifications
for the establishment of a joint historical commission.

“The Parliament believes that both Turkey’s and Armenia’s interests
are best served in the reconciliation of the Turkish and Armenian
peoples, who lived in peace and mutual tolerance for centuries on
the same land, to save them from being hostage to deep prejudices
stemming from the war years, and in the creation of an environment
that will enable them to share a common future based on tolerance,
friendship and cooperation.

“The government and the opposition parties have made a proposal to that
end, which aims to shed light on historical facts through scientific
research so as to prevent history from continuing to be a burden for
these two nations. By this move they have proposed to establish a
joint commission by Turkey and Armenia composed of historians from
both sides, to open their national archives without any restrictions
to research and to disclose the findings of this research to world
public opinion. The proposal further specifies that the commission
can carry on its research in the archives of other related countries
and that the parties will determine the establishment and working
methods of said commission.

“Parliament fully supports and approves this historic proposal. The
cooperation of the government of Armenia is a must for the
implementation of this initiative. To this end, unless Turkey
and Armenia rely on a common perspective on historical facts, the
inheritance that both sides will leave to their children and future
generations will be nothing other than biases, enmity and sentiments
of revenge.

“Wisdom and logic command Turkey and Armenia not to be afraid of
destroying taboos and to face their history by discovering all the
aspects of the human tragedy they experienced together. This is the
way to prevent the past from overshadowing our present and future.

Parliament underlines the fact that the proposal of the Turkish
Republic should be considered, in essence, an initiative for peace. If
Armenia wants to establish good neighborly relations with Turkey and
develop a basis for cooperation, it should not hesitate to accept
Turkey’s proposal for a joint historical evaluation.”

Diaspora’s attitude

The positive impression generated by Turkey’s bold and peaceful
initiative to set up a joint historical commission in the international
arena should be underlined. This impression is confirmed by the joint
declaration of 97 parliamentarians from the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe (PACE), the decision by the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE) and the remarks by former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder
and American Ambassador to Turkey Francis Ricciardone that the
establishment of a joint commission would contribute to the achievement
of reconciliation between the Turkish and Armenian nations.

The Armenian diaspora strongly opposed Turkey’s proposal for the
establishment of a joint commission, as it would undermine the
credibility of their allegations. For this reason, the provision on
the creation of a joint commission, which has been strongly supported
and promoted by Turkey, was the main issue during the deliberations
on the twin protocols concluded on Oct. 10, 2009 in Zurich between
the Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers. This provision has also
played an important role in the obstruction of the ratification of
the protocols as well, because nationalist and militant Armenians as
well as the diaspora fiercely opposed this proposal, asserting that
the Armenian genocide is a historically established fact not open to
further research and negotiation.

ECtHR: Genocide allegation is controversial

In light of this antagonistic stance, one is inclined to ask what
sort of development took place that accounts for the Turkish side’s
hope that its proposal for the establishment of a joint commission
might be practically viable.

This development is the ECtHR judgment in the Perincek case. Swiss
courts had convicted Perincek over his remarks that the Armenian
genocide allegation was a lie, basing their decisions on the
contention that there exists “a general consensus concerning the
legal characterization of the events in question as genocide.” But
the European court, in its judgment on Dec. 17, 2013, rejected the
Swiss courts’ view and stressed that the Armenian genocide allegation
was controversial for three reasons.

First, it pointed out that it would be very difficult to identify
a general consensus, as there were differing views even among the
Swiss political organs themselves. The Swiss Federal Court itself had
acknowledged that there was no unanimity in the community as a whole
concerning the legal categorization in question. Furthermore, only
about 20 states out of 190 worldwide had officially recognized the
Armenian genocide, and such recognition had not always been extended
by the governments of those states but from their parliaments, as
was the case in Switzerland.

Second, the court rightly recalled that the notion of “genocide” is
a precisely defined legal concept. According to the case law of the
International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the International Criminal
Tribunal for Rwanda, “genocide” requires that the acts in question
must have been perpetrated with the specific intent to destroy not
only certain members of the group but all or part of the group itself
(dolus specialis). As a result the court, noting that genocide is a
very narrow, difficult-to-prove legal concept, stated that it was not
convinced that the “general consensus” on the existence of the Armenian
genocide to which the courts of Switzerland referred in convicting
Perincek was consistent with such very specific points of law.

Third, the court expressed doubts on whether there could be a
“general consensus” on events such as those at issue here, given that
historical research was by definition open to discussion and a matter
of debate, without necessarily giving rise to final conclusions or to
the assertion of objective and absolute truths. In this connection, the
court’s underlining the fact that Armenian claims cannot be compared to
the Holocaust, clearly distinguishes the case from those concerning the
denial of the crimes of the Holocaust committed by the Nazi regime,
as those crimes have a clear legal basis established and proven by
an international court.

Outcome of appeal is doubtful

As can be seen from the above, the ECtHR rejected the Swiss court’s
assertion that the Armenian genocide is a matter of “general historical
and scientific consensus” whose existence had to be considered
established as a matter of fact and could not be challenged in court
— even though the issue had not been adjudicated by a competent
judicial authority. The court also set aside any contention of
legal equivalence of the “Armenian genocide” with the Holocaust,
since there had been a clear legal basis for the recognition of the
Holocaust as genocide. The Holocaust was unambiguously established
as fact and defined as a crime by the International Military Tribunal
at Nuremberg, whereas no such valid judicial finding has so far been
made in respect to the Armenian situation.

Switzerland decided to appeal the ECtHR ruling on the Perincek case.

The Swiss Federal Office of Justice announced on March 11, 2014 that
the ECtHR’s Grand Chamber will be requested to review the ruling
in order to clarify the scope available to the Swiss authorities in
applying Swiss criminal law to combat racism. However, the appeal for
review remains pretty weak, because it does not offer new findings
or arguments. Furthermore, it is really a remote possibility that the
Grand Chamber will challenge the above-mentioned three arguments that
the court’s judgment is based upon.

In the light of these newly emergent conditions, the diaspora and
Armenia need to switch to a more realistic approach vis-a-vis Turkey’s
proposal suggesting the establishment of a joint commission.

Government’s acceptance of my proposal for creation of a joint
commission

I have been proposing the establishment of a joint historical
commission between Turkey and Armenia since the 2000s, in my talks
with high-ranking officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
however, arguing that this is a fairly risky move, they did not adopt
this proposal. I have continued to subscribe to this view since being
elected as a Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputy in the elections on
Nov. 3, 2002. Following several meetings with then-Foreign Minister
Abdullah Gul, he, despite objection by the ministry bureaucracy,
concurred that this was a fair, constructive and humane approach and
that it would take Turkey to a better position in the dispute. Most
important, he persuaded Prime Minister Erdoðan that this project was an
appropriate initiative. I also got the approval of then-CHP Chairman
Deniz Baykal on this matter. The proposal thus resulted in a sort of
miracle, as it brought together the prime minister and the chairman
of the main opposition party, who were not on very good terms, for
a meeting in the office of the prime minister at Parliament on March
8, 2008. The prime minister reviewed the proposal, but he still had
some questions in mind. Subsequent to my briefing, in a joint press
conference, Erdoðan and Baykal announced the proposal to establish
a joint historical commission in the context of the peace initiative
vis-a-vis Armenia. With this initiative, they demonstrated that Turkey
is not afraid to confront its past and that they expected the same
attitude from Armenia in the name of peace and friendship.

Parliament unanimously adopted this proposal on April 13, 2005.

What wisdom and reason require

Armenia should positively consider this initiative launched by Prime
Minister Erdoðan in order to extract Turkish-Armenian relations from
where they have been stuck for 99 years.

Unless this is done, it will not be possible to free Armenians from
a consuming preoccupation with victimization and usurpation and Turks
from the feeling of being the unfair target of a worldwide conspiracy
of calumny and slander. And in that case, it would be a fantasy to
suppose that these two nations could ever achieve reconciliation
and peace.

For this reason, a contemporary approach based on wisdom and reason
must be achieved by exposing all aspects of the human tragedy
that befell Turks and Armenians to daylight and by confronting the
historical facts and accepting them. Peace will inevitably be born
out of this trauma.

*Dr. Þukru Elekdað is a retired ambassador, former undersecretary of
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and former deputy for the Republican
People’s Party.

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-349386-armenia-should-constructively-consider-pms-proposal-by-sukru-elekdag-.html

Swiss President Urges New Phase In Karabakh Peace Talks

SWISS PRESIDENT URGES NEW PHASE IN KARABAKH PEACE TALKS

Agence France Presse
June 2, 2014 Monday 5:08 PM GMT

BAKU, June 02 2014

Swiss President Didier Burkhalter on Monday urged arch-foes Azerbaijan
and Armenia to step up efforts for a peaceful solution to their
conflict over the disputed Nagorny Karabakh region.

On a visit to Baku, Burkhalter — who is also chairman of the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) —
“called on the sides to strictly adhere to the ceasefire agreement”
and increase efforts for the conflict’s peaceful settlement, the OSCE
said in a statement.

Burkhalter backed a proposal for a meeting in Paris between the
Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents that “should mark the beginning of
a new phase in peace talks,” he was quoted as saying by Azerbaijan’s
state news agency, Azertag.

In Baku, the Swiss president was beginning a three-day visit to the
South Caucasus which will see him holding high-level talks in Georgia
on Tuesday and Armenia Wednesday.

There has been an increase in violence in recent months along the
Azerbaijan-Armenia border and at the Karabakh frontline, with both
sides regularly accusing the other of tit-for-tat raids.

Armenia-backed separatists seized Nagorny Karabakh from Azerbaijan in
a 1990s war that killed 30,000 people. Despite years of negotiations
since a 1994 ceasefire, the two sides have yet to sign a peace deal.

Azerbaijan has threatened to take back the disputed region by force
if negotiations do not yield results, while Armenia has vowed to
retaliate against any military action.

The Karabakh peace talks are mediated by the so-called OSCE Minsk
Group co-chaired by France, Russia, and the United States.

Le président arménien a reçu le patriarche Nersès Bédros XIX primat

ARMENIE
Le président arménien a reçu le patriarche Nersès Bédros XIX primat de
l’Eglise catholique arménienne

Le président arménien Serge Sarkissian a reçu le 30 mai dans son
palais présidentiel de Yerevan Nersès Bédros XIX primat de l’Église
catholique arménienne avec le titre de Patriarche des Arméniens de
Cilicie. Le thème de la rencontre porta pour une grande part sur les
manifestations officielles du 100ème anniversaire du génocide
arménien. Nersès Bédros XIX était à Yerevan où il avait pris part à la
4e rencontre-conférence de préparation des cérémonies et
manifestations liées au 100e anniversaire du génocide. A l’invitation
du président arménien, le 28 mai, le primat de l’Eglise catholique
arménienne se trouvait à la célébration de l’indépendance de la
Première république arménienne à Sardarabad. Le président arménien a
noté l’importance des relations entre églises, ainsi que de ces
dernières avec l’Arménie.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 1er juin 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

Young people from neighboring villages reflect on two decades of rel

GENEARATION CEASE-FIRE
Young people from neighboring villages reflect on two decades of relative peace

A childhood in the context of war, a party for graduates who never
held a strong desire to leave the darkness and humidity basements …
the cease-fire as perpetual expectation of peace for a generation
bearing the imprint of war irreversible, incurable memories …

“My father came and said that Shushi is released, then a cease-fire,
which for many children like me meant going out into the yard and
play, enjoy the sky and the sun,” said Anahit Kartashyan 27 , who one
by one out the memories of warm and deep corners of his soul and
carefully arranged.”As soon as the shootings were more intense, we
went down to the basement. Imagine us up and down four to five times a
day. At times, we lived there for days. But everyone was united and
close. We cooked and ate together. And children staged a show for
adults almost every day. ”

Anahit roots lie in the border village of Chinari in the province of
Tavush (maternal side) and Aygedzor (from his father’s side) and reach
up to his birthplace – the town of Berd, 10 kilometers from the
Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which have become theaters of war in the
early 1990s, and even today with regular violations of the cease-fire
that occur there.

Like all men of this region’s father Anahit took up arms and protect
the borders of his country, and the mother of three children continued
to live in Berd, but Anahit may remember that the situation is more
serious when his father moved his family to Aygedzor, closer to the
border.

“Now I understand why: if your family is behind you, you will fight to
the last drop, no place for retirement. In my memory related to the
war, I can remember very well the hallway of our house with three
small bags containing our birth certificates and clothing essentials.
When the shooting were beginning we took our bags and waited for one
of the neighbors to come and help our mother we go down to the
basement. I still remember the panic on the stairs. I still hate the
panic. ”

After attending kindergarten in the thunder of cannon and the school
as part of the “fire in the cease-fire” and later the Faculty of
Oriental Studies of the University of Yerevan State, Anahit is
currently a PhD at the Department of Oriental Studies of the State
University of St. Petersburg in Russia where it was sent from Yerevan
State University following an international university agreement.

While studying Anahit working away at the center of studies of
Armenian issues and Western Armenia.

“I live temporarily in Russia. As our Armenian students in St.
Petersburg often joked “I am an intellectual migrant worker,” says
Anahit, two sisters and brother studying in Yerevan, but his parents
still live in Berd. “We use the opportunity to go to EBRD Aygedzor and
Chinari. Our commitment to Shamshadin is so strong and inexplicable.
This is not only a place of birth, this is the place where you are
yourself devoid of pretension. However exhausted and frustrated just
do a one-day visit is enough to return with new energy, because you
realize that you have much to do and not allowed to run out. ”

In his opinion an ordinary resident of the border does not care much
about the chronology of the cease-fire, the parties in conflict and
the history of conflict, they need action. According to Anahit for any
survivor of the war a cease-fire is like air and water.

“If, for example, you dine with someone Shamshadin, the first toast is
for peace. The cease-fire was necessary for both sides, the question
is how we acted after the ceasefire and what are the lessons we have
learned. We had enough time to develop the border areas, but we have
not done anything worse, the population decreased and now we have what
we have.In border villages every day is an undeclared war. People have
become accustomed to it and their only request is social security,
“says Anahit adding that the state must take concrete steps to develop
border areas, must provide benefits for residents – lower taxes,
health care affordable and education, support for small and medium
enterprises, and especially employment opportunities, so that
university graduates do not have the obligation to leave for Russia
and Yerevan to find a job.

According to sociologist Aharon Adibekyan, research shows that the
generation born during the war cease-fire sees his future outside of
Armenia.

“The search for a better fortune abroad becomes a sore point, but half
of the generation grows to be patriots, we have put our hope in them,
not those who receive higher education and try to leave Armenia “said
Adibekyan.

War, fire, border, daily shootings, mined areas … these words become
common to ear approach the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, while far from
the border, they are like phonemes heard in a movie . According to the
ethnographer Hranush Kharatyan, in general, there is no understanding
of the phenomenon of truce.

“In Armenia there is a feeling that everyone is talking about the war,
but it is not a reality, even the word fire is not in our lives, and
there is a feeling that people are not ready, I do not think this is
the best condition, “says Kharatyan.

Narine Vardanyan, born in the village of Nerkin Karmragyugh in 1994,
is well aware of the price of war and peace, and sometimes angry when
his peers born in the capital do not understand, can not imagine her
emotions and feelings when his hometown is under fire.

“Recently, a historian with a very serious face explained what a
cease-fire.Maybe he’s right, that his moving speech, he would have had
to leave out the terms of the agreement, the documents, the
conflicting parties and would have then reality – we have reached a
cease- fire because of our men who fought, who fought and died. The
relative peace we have is not due to a piece of paper, it is because
of our struggle at the national level, “says a contemporary of the
cease-fire, which recalls the paper the agreement has not served its
purpose, which is proved by the fact that Comrade Narine boys are
always in danger every day protecting the border marked by their
fathers.

First year student at the Faculty of Journalism of Yerevan Narine has
almost no memory of his childhood, it is said that the day she was
born there there was a lot of snow, his father was before and during
the long time they could not find a car to take her mother work at the
regional center of EBRD, and when, finally, there was a car and they
reached the hospital, there was no electricity “We are a generation of
hard work and life with a miracle.”

Student at Yerevan Narine says she dreams of her village, and she
hopes to put one of his hobbies, writing, serving to tell the world of
everyday life, history and heroes of his small village.

Narine tenderly packed clothes for a few days, candy bought for his
parents in the village to spend a weekend in the village with his
family.

“Go Yerevan to our village to me is the same as back home during a
break for a soldier. I look forward and I miss home and everyone more
day before you go … Before I used to take some books with me, now I
leave books, lessons, college, everything here so as not to disturb
me.Furthermore, I return to Yerevan as a soldier returning after his
break – with difficulty and with a missing home, my real home. ”

GOHAR ABRAHAMYAN

ArmeniaNow

Sunday 1st June 2014,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Baku: Baku Risks Us Ties With Harsh Rhetoric Against Top Envoy Ameri

BAKU RISKS US TIES WITH HARSH RHETORIC AGAINST TOP ENVOY AMERIKAN ANALYST: “AMBASSADOR MORNIGSTAR WANTED TO SAY THAT:”

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijan
May 23, 2014 Friday

As the official rhetoric in Baku against US envoy escalates over
Ambassador Richard Morningstar’s latest interview to the RFE/RL’s
local branch, diplomats in Washington DC seem wary of reacting the
incident in public.

With Azerbaijan recently taking over the chairmanship of the CoE,
Ambassador Morningstar spoke out about the current human rights
concerns in the country, as well as other pertinent issues, such as
corruption, Ukraine lessons, liberal democracy, a harder line within
the government, something that Baku officials see as “attempts to
interfere into the country’s domestic and foreign policy and control
[it]”.

While criticizing US policy in the country some top Azeri government
officials, including President’s advisers, went further accusing
Washington of “financing and orchestrating Euromaidan” as well as
“undermining Azerbaijan’s balanced policy with its neighbors i.e.

Russia, Iran.”

The State Department didsn’t comment on the accusations. For many
analysts though, such as Michael Tkacik, an American academic focusing
on democracy, international affairs, and a longtime Azerbaijan watcher,
it is ironic that Ambassador Morningstar drew such ire from some
Azeri officials because “he was quite circumspect in what he said.”

“He could have been far more critical,” a Texas-based Professor of
Government, and Director of the School of Honors at the Stephen F.

Austin State University, told TURAN’s Washington DC correspondent.

What did Ambassador Morningstar actually want to say, aside form the
diplomatic language and the timing of the interview?

Speaking to TURAN, Mr. Tkacik underlined four major subjects from
the Ambassador’s statements.

“I think the most important thing that he (the Ambassador) hinted at,
was that corruption at all levels is stifling Azerbaijan’s economy,”
he said, arguing that notwithstanding the progress made against lower
level corruption, there is a disincentive to becoming an entrepreneur
in Azerbaijan because people feel that their hard work will simply
be stolen.

“If no one innovates and no one is willing to begin new businesses,
an economy will not grow. And too few people see the value in such
activity because of corruption. Corruption adds costs to doing business
and provides a disincentive to economic activity. If corruption is
reduced, the economy grows, and the environment for liberal democracy
becomes friendlier.”

A second important point, Prof. Tkacik added, is the importance
the Ambassador puts on liberal democracy, while at the same time
acknowledging the limits on US influence. These limits are both
self-imposed (the US has competing interests in the region, such
as access to energy for Europe and keeping Azerbaijan independent)
and systemic (there is simply a limit to how much the US can achieve
with its resources).

“The Obama administration believes liberal democracy is in the
long-term interests of the US and the Azerbaijani people. But it is
focused on incremental change so as to create a friendlier environment
for democracy. This means the US is playing a long-term game, not a
short-term game. Obviously one of the keys to this long-term approach
is building civil society,” Prof. Tkacik emphasized.

A third important concern is Nagorno-Karabakh. So long as this issue
is not resolved, it is more difficult to push for democracy.

For Tkacik, government officials “can always claim that democracy
must be delayed in the interests of national security. All governments
make similar arguments – one only needs to observe the Bush and Obama
administrations assaults on civil liberties.”

A fourth item was present in the subtext: the US has interests other
than democracy.

Democracy, said Tkacik, is one interest that is sometimes
(oftentimes?) trumped by other interests: “The US, does not want
to see Russia reassert control over Azerbaijan… The US does want
energy to continue to flow to Europe and other markets. The US does
not wish to strengthen Iran’s hand. The US would prefer a liberal
democracy in Baku. But the US is not willing to risk Azerbaijan’s
independence in a gamble on liberal democracy.”

As for the Azeri officials’ responses to the Ambassador’s interview,
Tkicik said, they were “comical and even paranoid on some level.”

“The claims of “interference in one’s internal affairs” usually mean
that a state is abusing its population and wishes to continue that
abuse. It usually means a state has something to hide. For example,
China is the biggest proponent of its “sovereign internal affairs,”
because China denies its citizens human rights. What these objections
really mean is that, for the person making the statement, personal
power means more than the liberty of others,” he explained. “And
power usually means more because they are in some way benefiting
from that power (i.e., corruption). If these objections come from
certain sectors of the government, one can surmise those making the
objections see a greater threat to their ability to take from the
system (through corruption).”

That said, added, Tkacik, there is something legitimate about the
concerns set forth. “First, it is true that many civil society
groups are financed in the West (who else would do it?). It is also
true that these groups have a long-term goal of opening society up,
which will eventually bring about democratic reforms. But if this is
the objection, then let’s be clear: the government’s real objection
is to liberalization and an end to their privileged positions, not
to civil society NGOs.”

Second, he said, Euromaidan fears “are real.””And it is plausible
that a MaidanNezalezhnosti-like event could eventually lead to the
end of Azerbaijan’s independence. The beauty of any great lie is that
it has enough truth in it to be plausible.”

The analyst also ruled out the speculations that given the recent
tensions Baku-Washington relations are near rock bottom, adding that
if anything, “the counties need each other more than ever.”

“As noted in the interviews, Ukraine made clear just how tenuous
Azerbaijan’s independence is: Behind the scenes the two states
are probably working on shoring up Azerbaijan’s independence, which
explains in part the renewed emphasis on resolving Nagorno-Karabakh,”
he said, adding, the democratization dispute is between individuals
within each government.

“Certain “democratic ideologues” in the US are clashing with certain
especially onerous officials within President Aliyev’s government. But
as the Ambassador makes clear, democracy is only one US interest
among many in Azerbaijan. It is a key long-term interest, but in the
short-term there are probably more salient interests.”

The US and Azerbaijan,he emphasized, still have significant common
interests. “The [Ambassador’s] interview was focused on liberalization
and the responses to that interview by Azerbaijani officials were,
naturally, also focused on liberalization (or protecting Azerbaijan’s
internal sovereignty, if you prefer). But just because the focus
here was on liberalization, that does not mean the two states are
primarily focused on liberalization or that they are not working
toward shared interests.”

For Tkacik, the US must balance its desire for liberalization in
Azerbaijan against other goals such as maintaining Azerbaijan’s
independence; maintaining the flow of energy resources as well as the
infrastructure that moves those resources; maintaining cooperation
on security matters, including terrorism; maintaining access to
Azerbaijan for American businesses; and so forth. “The US cannot
place its desire for liberalization above all other interests… It
must balance these interests.”

On the other hand, he said, it appears from the Ambassador’s comments
that the US sees Aliyev as more moderate than others in the regime.

“The Ambassador implies that there is a harder line within the
government… If that is the case, then the US may be wary of weakening
Aliyev by criticizing too intensely. Admittedly, I am reading between
the words a bit here. My interpretation may be incorrect. But there
does seem to be at least an implication along these lines.”

Speaking about the regional challenges in front of the Azeri government
in a wake of the events in Ukraine, Prof. Tkacik said, one can imagine
a situation in which Russia seeks to reassert its rule over Azerbaijan.

“When Russia seized Crimea, it also gained access to energy resources
in the Black Sea. Azerbaijan has not only energy resources, but also
pipeline infrastructure. Russia sees value in controlling pipeline
infrastructure.”

Azerbaijan also straddles a key geopolitical position allowing for
easier access to the Middle East. Georgia and Ukraine both provided
a model for 21st century Russian intervention. At the same time,
Putin will probably think twice before engaging more deeply in the
Islamic world. “He has his hands full north of Azerbaijan already. It
is not clear that he wishes for deeper involvement, especially when
Azerbaijan has kept its distance from the US.”

“My feeling is that so long as the status quo maintains, Russia will
be happy. Aliyev and his supporters are probably right in claiming
that one thing that could encourage Russian intervention would be
a Euromaidan-type uprising. One could also imagine Nagorno-Karabakh
being Azerbaijan’s Crimea. The status quo ante may be the best way
to keep Russia out of Azerbaijan, but it also provides incentive for
Russia to prevent resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh,” he said.

The analyst believes that it seems that Russia does not wish to see
resolution of the conflict.

“If the conflict were resolved, Russia would have less justification
to intervene in the region and the US might well draw closer to the
states of the region,”he said. “Moreover, we would likely see some
Western led peacekeeping mission, which would make Russia profoundly
uncomfortable. That said, if the US could offer incentives sufficient
for Armenia to move away from Russia, a peace deal might be struck,”

In the meantime, he said, counter-intuitively, the most likely way
for this to happen would be some unilateral concession on the part
of Azerbaijan as a way of “jump starting” the final phase of a peace
agreement.

“President Aliyev may or may not be strong enough to make such a
concession. But if he were able to, Armenia would find itself under
intense pressure to meet this gesture. The US could then step in
and offer security guarantees through Western supported peacekeeping
forces that would remove any justification for Russian intervention.

The relatively quick deployment of peacekeeping forces with Western
support could then seal the deal, effectively vaccinating the region
from Russian intervention. I acknowledge that this is a rather
attenuated set of events,”Tkack said, adding, though unless something
drastic is attempted (like unilateral concessions), Russia will be able
to maintain the crisis into the foreseeable future. “The indefinite
prolonging of the crisis would serve Putin’s interests in the region:”

Still, he added, Ambassador JamesWarlick is correct in that the bases
for peaceful settlement have been agreed upon:”The question is whether
either side can make the first move to jar loose the loggerhead.”

In conclution, Tkacik emphasized that there is no denying Azerbaijan
occupies a very important place in the world, both physically and
virtually. “The US does not want Azerbaijan to fall under the influence
of Russia or Iran. It does not want Azerbaijan to disappear.

It does want Azerbaijan to become more liberal. But actions taken to
ensure one of these outcomes often hinder the accomplishment of other
outcomes. Azerbaijan is a puzzle for the US for these reasons. Yet
it is a puzzle that the United States cannot afford to ignore.”

A.Raufoglu

Washington, DC

ANKARA: Azerbaijan ‘Supports Erdogan On Armenia Claims’

AZERBAIJAN ‘SUPPORTS ERDOGAN ON ARMENIA CLAIMS’

World Bulletin, Turkey
May 30 2014

Azerbaijan has always stood with Turkey’s Prime Minister’s on
allegations regarding the 1915 Armenian incidents.

World Bulletin / News Desk

Azerbaijan supports the Turkish Prime Minister’s stance on allegations
regarding the 1915 Armenian incidents, Deputy Head of the Azerbaijani
Presidential Administration and chief of Foreign Relations Department
said on Friday.

Novruz Mammadov told reporters in Baku that “Azerbaijan supports
Turkey’s attitude about Armenia. Azerbaijan has always stood next to
Turkey, and will always continue to support it. It has always stood
against Armenia’s so-called genocide claims”.

Turkish and Armenian historians should come together and participate
in a joint commission to investigate the events of 1915 objectively
Erdogan has said; the Baku government has agreed with this position.

In 1915, the ruling Committee of Union and Progress approved a law
that ordered the moving of a part of the ethnic Armenian population in
the then-empire. Armenia and the Armenian diaspora claim that nothing
short of genocide occurred under this order, but Turkey says that
both Turks and Armenians died during clashes between Ottoman forces
and armed Armenian groups backed by Russia.

On April 25, Erdogan gave his condolences to the descendants of
Armenians who lost their lives in the events of 1915, for the first
time in the history of the Turkish Republic.

http://www.worldbulletin.net/todays-news/137789/azerbaijan-supports-erdogan-on-armenia-claims

State Youth Orchestra Presents Special Charity Concert In The Cartoo

STATE YOUTH ORCHESTRA PRESENTS SPECIAL CHARITY CONCERT IN THE CARTOON NON-STOP SERIES

16:36 30.05.2014

>From May 30 to June 1st the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia will
present a unique concert program entitled Cartoon Non-Stop at the
National Opera and Ballet Theater after Alexander Spendiaryan.

On May 31 an additional Cartoon Non-Stop concert will take place under
the high patronage of the spouse of the President of RA Mrs. Rita
Sargsyan. This will be a special charity concert and the audience of
the concert will be solely children.

During the evening the Orchestra will present sound-tracks of the
most beloved and famous cartoons, such as “The Pink Panther “,
“Lion King”, “Beauty and the Beast”, “Cinderella “, “Madagascar”,
“Shrek”, “Aladdin”, etc.

The Cartoon Non-Stop project is the continuation of the successful
Hollywood Non-Stop program launched in 2012.

All performances will be accompanied by videos, displaying scenes
from the cartoons, and light and sound effects.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/05/30/state-youth-orchestra-presents-special-charity-concert-in-the-cartoon-non-stop-series/

Ruben Jaghinyan On The Symbol Of Forget-Me-Not (Video)

RUBEN JAGHINYAN ON THE SYMBOL OF FORGET-ME-NOT (VIDEO)

16:59 | May 30,2014 | Politics

The National Assembly continued to discuss on Friday the report of
the 2013 state budget execution report. A number of ministries today
presented the activities carried out at their agencies.

Today, the lawmakers mainly focused on cultural issues. Ruben
Jaghinyan, chairman of the Council of Public TV and Radio Company of
Armenia, tried to support the idea of a forget-me-not as a symbol
of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. Jaghinyan said
he had participated in the discussions and was satisfied with the
proposed symbol.

“I like the ideology and the shape of the flower. I do believe that
the logo is unique and will find its place,” he said.

The choice of the symbol caused uproar after it became known that it
resembles the symbol for International Missing Children’s Day.

http://en.a1plus.am/1190324.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nT3zEEB0Eg