Turkish Culture Minister Praises Publisher Ragip Zarakolu

TURKISH CULTURE MINISTER PRAISES PUBLISHER RAGIP ZARAKOLU

PanARMENIAN.Net
November 3, 2011 – 11:54 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Culture and Tourism Minister Ertugrul Gunay has
praised prominent publisher Ragıp Zarakolu who was arrested for
alleged links to an outlawed organization.

“[Zarakolu] is a valuable publisher and writer,” Gunay told journalists
when asked about his reaction to the arrest, Hurriyet daily News
reported.

Zarakolu, along with Professor BuÅ~_ra Ersanlı and 42 other suspects,
was arrested in Istanbul on Tuesday for his alleged involvement with
the outlawed Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK), the alleged urban
wing of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

“I have known him since my school years. Of course, I do not know
the reason for the arrest warrant. Frankly, I would like to learn
because I never heard about his involvement with any act of violence
until now,” Gunay said.

While testifying in court, Zarakolu said all the accusations directed
against him concerned his intellectual activities.

“My actions are aimed at presenting my own contributions to find
a solution for a problem that has been going on for years. To this
effect, I am also invited this evening to an international meeting
that will take place with the culture and tourism minister as host,”
Zarakolu said.

Zarakolu is the head of the Turkish Publishers’ Union’s Committee
for the Freedom of Publishing, as well as the recipient of numerous
prestigious awards pertaining to the freedom of expression.

“These documents include various book drafts. My activities that are
the subject of the accusations are entirely intellectual activities,”
Zarakolu said about the documents that were seized from his flat by
law enforcement officials.

“A worthy publisher and writer. What are the allegations about this
friend of ours? As the public, we also have the right to know,”
Gunay said.

Hraparak: Armenia’s Minister Of Sport Packs A Suitcase

HRAPARAK: ARMENIA’S MINISTER OF SPORT PACKS A SUITCASE

Tert.am
12:02 03.11.11

The newspaper reports that on Nov 2 evening Armenia’s Minister of
Sport and Youth Affairs Artur Petrosyan packed up his belongings and
left his office.

This ministerial post belongs to the Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP).

The PAP is a coalition party, and PAP Chairman Gagik Tsarukyan is
the only person that can demand the minister’s resignation.

Last night the ministry staff discussed the reasons, but did not find
any. One of the reasons may be the staff’s letter to the PAP chairman,
wherein they ask Gagik Tsarukyan to call the minister to order.

BAKU: Azerbaijani MPs Assess Resignation In Armenia As Governmental

AZERBAIJANI MPS ASSESS RESIGNATION IN ARMENIA AS GOVERNMENTAL CRISIS

Trend, Azerbaijan
Nov 2 2011

The recent resignations of senior Armenian officials show that the
president cannot govern the country, MP Aydin Mirzazade told Trend
on Wednesday.

“The recent events prove once again that President Serzhe Sargsyan does
not have a concept for the country’s development and for teamwork,”
he said.

“We are talking about a crisis of Armenian statehood and national
identity rather than personnel changes,” he said. “The political elite
of the Armenian nation sees its own development in its territorial
claims against neighboring countries.”

“This never gave success to any country,” Mirzazade said.

These changes are visible signs of the crisis occurring in the Armenian
society, he said.

“The continuous emigration of the population, its economic regression,
the country’s isolation from regional economic projects, and the lack
of total progress in the economic, political, military and diplomatic
spheres are obvious,” he said.

He stressed that if the Armenian authorities continue their current
policy, similar signs of a crisis will often take place.

Armenian National Assembly Chairman Hovik Abrahamyan, Yerevan Mayor
Karen Karapetyan, the country’s police chief Alik Sargsyan, other
officials have been recently resigned.

“The latest events taking place in Armenia are the elements of the
authorities’ crisis,” Azerbaijani MP Zahid Oruj said. “It will be
intensified in the future.”

BAKU: Members Of Russian State Duma Assess Azerbaijan’s Membership T

MEMBERS OF RUSSIAN STATE DUMA ASSESS AZERBAIJAN’S MEMBERSHIP TO UN SECURITY COUNCIL – POLL

Milaz.info, Azerbaijan
Nov 2 2011

Alexei Ostrovsky: “The new status of Azerbaijan at the United Nations
will have an impact on the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict”

“UN’s confidence in Azerbaijan is a value giving by the international
organization to the achievements of Azerbaijan in recent years”,
chairman of the Russian State Duma’s committee on CIS issues, MP Alexei
Ostrovsky said, APA correspondent reports from Moscow. “I consider
that Ilham Aliyev worthily follows the foreign policy course started
by Heydar Aliyev. I welcome the independent position of Azerbaijan and
personally Ilham Aliyev. His policy is not based on the position of
the West, more exactly, economic partners, but dictates the interests
of Azerbaijani people. The new status at the United Nations will
contribute to the strengthening of Azerbaijan’s independence”.

The committee chairman said Russia and Azerbaijan are strategic
partners. “It is seen in both personal relations between the presidents
and all instances of the two countries. We don’t divide the regional
countries to the friends and enemies. We have same attitude toward
Azerbaijan and Armenia. We advocate for peaceful solution of the
problem. I consider that the new status of Azerbaijan at the United
Nations will have an impact on the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh
conflict”.

Member of the State Duma of Russia from the Communist Party Anatoly
Lokot said that his country’s support to Azerbaijan’s candidacy
to the non-permanent membership of the UN Security Council was an
important political step: “It show’s Russia’s goodwill. I believe
that Azerbaijan will appreciate this friendly support. Russia is a
strategic country for Azerbaijan. There are many things tied us. We
mustn’t forget that many Russians and Russian-speaking population are
living in Azerbaijan. The relations with the South Caucasus have great
significance for Russia. Though several western countries wanted to
interrupt our relations, their attempts failed”.

“I assess Azerbaijan’s election as the non-permanent member to the UN
Security Council as an estimation given by the world community and
Russia to the positive changes observed in Azerbaijan”, said Deputy
Chairman of the State Duma’s Security Committee Vladimir Kolesnikov.

According to him, it is an estimation given to democratization
process in Azerbaijani society, level of society and human security:
“At first, as a person who has visited Azerbaijan many times, I can
say that one can leave this country with pleasant impressions. I wish
the achieved successes to develop Azerbaijan yet more”.

Kolesnikov said that the justice would win in the settlement of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict: “I wish the law to win in the settlement
of this conflict, the settlement process to be based on law”.

Sergey Minasyan: There Can’t Be A Better Document Than The Protocols

SERGEY MINASYAN: THERE CAN’T BE A BETTER DOCUMENT THAN THE PROTOCOLS FOR YEREVAN AND ANKARA

Mediamax, Armenia
Nov 2 2011

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Deputy Director of Caucasus Institute, political
scientist Sergey Minasyan believes that although the Armenian-Turkish
protocols are in a “half a meter” state, nevertheless there can’t be
a better and more acceptable document for the sides.

Sergey Minasyan said today that if one day Yerevan and Ankara decide
to get back to the process of settlement of relations, they should
do it within the frames of the protocols, Mediamax reports.

According to the political scientist, who has recently returned
from Turkey, where he and other Armenian experts took part in the
Conference on “Reconsideration of settlement of Armenian-Turkish
relations”, Turkey tries to link Armenian-Turkish relations to the
Nagorno Karabakh problem and it looks very false.

As Sergey Minasyan said, Turkey understands that by linking these two
issues together Ankara not only toughens Armenia’s position but also
traps the Turkish authorities.

Turkey Can Politically Assist In Resolution Of Karabakh Problem – OS

TURKEY CAN POLITICALLY ASSIST IN RESOLUTION OF KARABAKH PROBLEM – OSCE SECRETARY GENERAL

news.am, Armenia
Nov 2 2011

ISTANBUL. – In an interview with Zaman daily of Turkey, the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s (OSCE) new
Secretary General, Lamberto Zannier, also reflected on the Karabakh
issue.

As per Zannier, this matter could be resolved by way of OSCE, or
other organizations, but it can only be resolved through a genuine
desire by the parties. “You can take the horse into the water, but
you cannot make it drink water. This problem is somewhat like that.

No matter how much the talks may continue under the brokerage of US,
France, and Russia, it is all the same; it is not the OSCE’s monopoly.

As Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s neighboring country, Turkey certainly
could politically assist in the Karabakh process,” OSCE Secretary
General stated.

Iran’s Ahmadinejad To Visit Armenia Soon

IRAN’S AHMADINEJAD TO VISIT ARMENIA SOON

Press TV, Iran
Nov 2 2011

An official with Iran’s Presidential Office says President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad will visit neighboring Armenia in the next two months.

The Presidential Office Director General for International Affairs,
Mohammad Reza Forqani, further said on Wednesday that during the
upcoming visit, Ahmadinejad would discuss regional developments with
Armenian officials.

He added that the two sides will also sign economic agreements,
Mehr News Agency reported.

Ahmadinejad was originally scheduled to visit Armenia on June 6,
2011 but his one-day trip was cancelled as both sides needed more
time to draw up and finalize relevant documents.

Heading a high ranking delegation, Ahmadinejad last visited Armenia
on October 22, 2007. During the two-day visit, Iran and Armenia signed
four memorandums of understanding and issued a joint statement.

The Iranian president also received an honorary doctorate from Yerevan
State University.

Ahmadinejad last met his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sargsyan in Tehran
during International Nowruz Celebrations in April 2011.

Armenia: Private Project Plays Up Repatriation

ARMENIA: PRIVATE PROJECT PLAYS UP REPATRIATION
by Liana Aghajanian

EurasiaNet.org, NY
Nov 2 2011

Armenia is known for having a high emigration rate, caused mainly by
labor migrants heading to Russia and elsewhere in the former Soviet
Union in search of work. Now, a private initiative is striving
to mitigate the effects of the steady outflow of human capital by
enticing ethnic Armenians living abroad, particularly those living
settled lives in the West, to resettle in the “homeland.”

The project, largely an online media campaign started by those who
have already made the move, is being framed in Peace Corps-like
terms and aims to appeal to idealistic impulses in the diaspora. Its
leading advocates — drawing on a deeply held Diaspora concept
that Armenia’s survival depends on a strong defensive capability —
exhibit a missionary zeal when discussing the allure of repatriation.

“I really believe that this land has some kind of magnetic pull,”
commented Los Angeles native Madlene Minassian, who decided with
her family to settle in Armenia about a decade ago. “A lot of people
are happy to live in a certain place, but I can say that I’m happy
and proud to be here, and I think that’s such a different kind of
existence.”

The Armenia 3500 Project strives to convince 3,500 ethnic
Armenians from the West to move to either Armenia proper, or the
majority-ethnic-Armenian, disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh,
within the next three years. Those who opt for Karabakh would be
eligible for a free house as an additional incentive. The program is
relying on a group of 30-somethings who have already repatriated to
generate enthusiasm abroad.

These evangelists maintain that Armenia 3500 participants can become
difference-makers, hopefully creating jobs with their investments,
and pressing for better governance. “They bring language skills and
introduce new ideas, as well as new expectations, from business and
government,” a project representative, who declined to be named,
said of the repatriates. “This all helps to stimulate investment,
jobs and reforms.”

Proponents are tight-lipped about how the project is going. Only a
few months old, it has signed up an unspecified number of diaspora
Armenians in the United States, United Kingdom and Germany to make
the move.

Meeting the target quota of repatriates will not be easy, some
experts assert. One skeptic is history professor Stephan Astourian,
executive director of the Armenian Studies program at the University of
California, Berkeley. He noted that repatriation since Armenia gained
independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 has been minimal at best.

“The fact of the matter is that a miniscule amount of Armenians have
repatriated, with the exception of one country — Iran,” Astourian
said. He estimates the number of Armenian repatriates since 1991 at
5,000 to 10,000. Official data was not immediately available.

By contrast, the United Nations Development Programme estimates that
as many as 1.3 million Armenians have left Armenia since 1991.

Astourian claims that the reasons for low diaspora interest in
returning to Armenia to live are the same that have prompted Armenians
to leave – a lack of rule of law, and economic difficulties; plus,
rampant corruption.

“I think repatriation would be highly desirable if there was a
state based on the rule of law, with the control of the police,
real parliamentary life and judiciary,” Astourian commented.

Armenia ranked 123rd out of 178 countries in a 2010 Transparency
International report measuring corruption; slightly better than
neighboring Azerbaijan, which was ranked 134th, but far worse than
next-door Georgia, in 68th place.

Armen Rakedjian has firsthand experience of the red tape and corruption
plaguing the region’s Armenian communities. After relocating from Paris
to the Nagorno-Karabakh town of Shushi in 2004, Rakedjian got caught
up in a dispute over improperly registered property that ultimately
cost him his entire $50,000 investment. He blames his loss on the
alleged need to pay bribes and “high salaries” to correct the problem.

Nonetheless, Rakedjian decided to stay in Shushi, where he runs a
B&B with his wife, Cristina. In Karabakh, he says, he can preserve
his cultural identity. In France, “I don’t have any insurance that my
daughter will stay Armenian, or the children of my daughter,” Rakedjian
said. “I have to live here. I have to endure all the difficulties,
to have the possibility to remain Armenian.”

The extent to which either the de facto government of Karabakh or
Armenia’s Ministry of Diaspora lends a hand to repatriates making
this transition is unclear. Armenia currently has no state-funded
program covering repatriation. Representatives from the Ministry of
Diaspora, which is a frequent target of criticism for doing little
to support repatriates in Armenia, were not available for comment in
time for publication.

State-sponsored support could have helped Natasha Hillis and her
husband, Victor Sargissian, a dentist, with their move to Yerevan from
Ventura, California. Financial problems forced the couple and their
two young sons to move back to the United States this past summer.

Although Sargissian found work at a dentist’s office, he complains
that business was slow, with most locals unable to afford regular
dental care. “Making a living to support the standard of living
that we’re accustomed to here in the US was basically impossible,”
recounted Hillis, who taught English part-time. “I was making $4 an
hour, and my cab to and from the center cost me $3.”

Many repatriates acknowledge that their expectations of life in Armenia
were unrealistic. To counter that, one Wynnewood, Pennsylvania-based
non-profit group, Birthright Armenia, offers travel fellowships to
diaspora members to work as short-term volunteers in Armenia without
committing to a permanent move. Twenty-five of the 550 participants
in the program since its 2003 launch still live in Armenia, according
to the organization’s executive director, Sevan Kabakian.

Two of those participants — Canadian freelance writer Nyree Abrahamian
and her American husband, Areg Maghakian, deputy director of operations
at the Armenia Tree Project — have now been living in Armenia for
close to five years. Though they haven’t ruled out the possibility
of returning to North America, the couple says they have put down
roots in Armenia.

Despite the lack of ready, well-paid employment, the attraction of
working in a developing country where they could have a greater impact
ultimately persuaded the pair to stay. “It’s moving and changing
and twisting,” Abrahamian said of Armenia’s development. “Not only
do you get to see that, but you get to be a part of it and actually
affect it.”

Diaspora groups hope that, eventually, more ethnic Armenians will
say the same.

Editor’s note: Liana Aghajanian is a freelance writer based in Los
Angeles.

Vahe Avetyan On Forming Of Ideology Of The Ruling Party Of Armenia

VAHE AVETYAN ON FORMING OF IDEOLOGY OF THE RULING PARTY OF ARMENIA

Vestnik Kavkaza
Nov 2 2011

Difficult dialogue between the authorities and the opposition in
Armenia is not effective. Criticism of the ruling Republican Party of
Armenia becomes heavier. One of its first members, the Armenian writer
Vage Avetyan, who migrated to Sweden, told VK about circumstances of
foundation of the party in 1990 and transformation of its ideology.

– What ideas were basic for RPA when it was founded? Were there other
ideas along with national liberation ones?

– RPA was founded by the Independence Army, which separated from
the National Self-recognition union, which used to be one of leading
players in political space of the republic. Fighting entity needed
political support, as it couldn’t exist only as a group of weaponed
people. The initiators were the former members of United National Party
and the National Self-Recognition union. Ideas of independence were
out of question, as compromises meant betrayal. The only argument in
favor of separation of RPA was the fact that ideas of independence were
deeper in minds of military men than in the National Self-Recognition
union. Many had swallowed the bait.

That’s how RPA was founded. In 1992 it cooperated with special
services of various countries and became the party of KGB servicemen,
which should help them to return to office in Armenia and establish
control under all spheres of social life. And we can see it today. The
authorities and the founder of our party, AshotNavasardyan, understood
it in 1992. All his life he thought that the main path of RPA is
fighting for independence and patriotic spirit. The authorities do
not refuse from these ideas even today.

– What about ideology of RPA?

– Initially the ideology was national democratic. The movement
Tsekharon, initiated by Garegin Nzhde, was interesting to some
members of the party, but it has never been the political creed of
RPA. But discussions of Tsekhakron people were heard by some members
of the party and distorted them. Andranik Markaryan, self-proclaimed
prime-minister, used it.

I speak about it as the second member of the party. To be fair in
1990-1992 RPA, in that time the foreign special services had no
absolute control over the party, developed the political program,
due to which it is the only party in the country, which has its own
program. That is why it still rules.

– How did those days ruling Armenian National Movement, headed by
Levon Ter-Petrosyan, react at RPA?

– At first reaction was very negative. The war didn’t promote
expression of positive emotions. However, when in 1992 RPA became
the KGB service similar to ANM, relations improved. Later the defense
minister of Armenia, Vazgen Sarkisyan, “captured” RPA and relations
became inside-ANMish.

– Did RPA support privatization of state enterprises?

– Speaking about ideology, that time few people understand it
clearly, today there are even less people, who can do it. RPA and
ANM stated that they are liberal. Initially they had no ideological
contradictions. Both parties stood for privatization. But ideology
wasn’t enough for implementation. Thus, the national legacy was taken
by tycoons.

– Did political and economy discussions between RPA and AMN take
place those days? Were there any contradictions?

– Contradictions took place not between RPA and ANM, but between
separate persons, who could represent two different organizations or
one and the same unity. The defeated person admitted lower status,
or died, or was imprisoned, or left the country. Discussions
concerned only market and contradictions were characterized by
pragmatism. The war and army weren’t interesting for these people,
they were self-governed. Thanks God! If they decided to interfere
with the war, I cannot even imagine how it could end.

Interview by David Stepanyan, Yerevan. Exclusively to VK.

.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/interviews/politics/19511.html

Azerbaijan’s New Status In UN Will Affect Karabakh Settlement – Ostr

AZERBAIJAN’S NEW STATUS IN UN WILL AFFECT KARABAKH SETTLEMENT – OSTROVSKI

Tert.am
23:18 02.11.11

Azerbaijan’s new status as non-permanent member of the UN Security
Council will affect the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
a Russian official has said.

Speaking to the Azerbaijani news agency APA, Alexei Ostrovski,
Chairman of the Committee on CIS Issues in Russia’s parliament said:
“I think that Azerbaijan’s new status will affect the settlement of
the Karabakh conflict.”

He also said that Russia does not intend to distinguish between South
Caucasus countries as friends and enemies.

“We do not intend to annihilate Armenia in the eyes of Azerbaijan,”
said he, adding that nor does Russia intend to annihilate Azerbaijan
in the eyes of Armenia.

“Our approach towards those two countries is the same,” explained he.