Michael Kambeck: Safarov Must Appear On Europol And Interpol Lists

MICHAEL KAMBECK: SAFAROV MUST APPEAR ON EUROPOL AND INTERPOL LISTS

ARMRADIO.AM
14.09.2012 13:58

EurActiv.com has published an article by Michael Kambeck,
Secretary-General of the European Friends of Armenia, titled “EU Must
Act to Avert another Caucasus Conflict.”

Michael Kambeck argues that Azerbaijan should face EU sanctions over
its decision to pardon a soldier convicted of killing an Armenian
counterpart during a NATO-sponsored training exercise.

“In an unprecedented manner, European and other international
institutions have declared their solidarity with Armenia and condemned
the latest provocation of Azerbaijan, the pardoning and public
glorification of the convicted murderer Ramil Safarov by President
Ilham Aliyev.

A court in Hungary imposed a lifetime sentence on Safarov, after
he was convicted of using an axe to kill sleeping Armenian officer
Gurgen Margaryan with 16 strikes to the head in 2004 while they were
both on a NATO-sponsored English training exercise in Budapest.

On 31 August, Safarov was extradited to Baku, where the government
already years ago awarded him the honour of a national hero for this
barbaric act.

The crisis now erupted when Aliyev decided to pardon him immediately
upon arrival, to pay him eight years of salary and offer him an
apartment, to promote him to the rank of major and to present him to
a crowd of cheering children as a hero on prime-time TV.

Why are emotions so high in this case and why should the EU care?

First the murder and conviction happened in the EU member state
Hungary, which until the last moment signaled to Armenia that no
extradition was foreseen.

Now relations between Armenia and Hungary are suspended and right in
the middle of concluding a new and very comprehensive EU Association
Agreement, Armenia feels let down by an EU, which seems too weak to
prevent such events from happening.

Secondly, because the valid conviction of an EU member state’s court
was circumvented by a third country and de facto weakens the EU’s
power to enforce its legal verdicts. Azerbaijan confirmed in writing
to Hungary that Safarov would continue serving his life-time prison
sentence in Azerbaijan.

Hungary published the respective Azerbaijani letters, while
Fuad Alasgarov, a senior advisor in the Azerbaijani presidential
administration, noted in trend.az that “the Hungarian court only
prohibited the sentenced person’s release on parole within 30 years
from the date of pronouncement of the judgment. This restriction did
not concern the possibility of pardon or amnesty for the sentenced
person.”

As ridiculous as such arguments are, they reveal the nature of the
regime with which the EU is making energy deals and with which Armenia
‘negotiates’ for a settlement of the precarious Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.

This conflict is the third reason why Europe should care, because it is
no longer a “frozen conflict”, despite the valid Bishkek ceasefire of
1994. Before that, the 85% majority of ethnically Armenian population
of Karabakh took up left-over Soviet arms to stop large-scale ethnic
cleansing and the harshly discriminatory governance exercised by
Azerbaijan in this enclave.

If this conflict, by means of similar crises, re-erupts, Europe would
have to pay the bill in many ways. Crude oil prices would skyrocket,
tracks of refugees would move into Europe and everything built up
in the South Caucasus over the last 20 years, both economically and
politically, would be shattered.

The pardoning of Safarov by Azerbaijan in this provocative style
raised calls among the Armenian opposition to demand a harsh response,
like the recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent republic.

With emotions understandably high, such steps can quickly deliver the
excuse to Aliyev to overreact even more and stop the OSCE-Minsk-Group
mediated negotiations, which he has been trying to replace for several
years now.

The Minsk Group has always resisted to follow Baku’s maximalist
demand whereby “first all Armenian-controlled territories must be
given to Azerbaijan”.

The co-chairs know that such a step would be practically impossible and
lead first to a security vacuum and then to war. Baku anyway constantly
threatens to resort to war. But the Safarov case now demonstrates that
after years of petro-dollar financed armament and economic growth,
Baku does not feel the need to respect anyone or anything and even
includes an EU member state in its provocation strategy.

To pardon such a brutal murderer and to glorify him publicly is nothing
but a demonstration of disrespect for European values as much as for
the EU and its member state Hungary.

After a long list of condemnations ranging from the UN Secretary
General to the European Parliament and the Council of Europe, now
the real work has to begin.

First, Safarov must appear on the Europol and Interpol lists, so that
he cannot set foot upon any soil outside Azerbaijan, certainly not
in Europe. Secondly, Armenia and Hungary must now work behind the
scenes to re-establish their historically good relations.

Both countries are old Christian countries and gateways between East
and West.

Thirdly, the EU must rethink and reform its approach to Azerbaijan,
treating it not less but more critically than Belarus, which is known
to have the same internally repressive regime style, but neither the
militarisation nor the state-promoted xenophobia of Azerbaijan.

We cannot explain to European voters that we implement EU-funded
programmes with the oil-rich and notoriously anti-democratic government
in Baku and conclude large-scale energy deals with them, while we
apply sanctions against Belarus.

And finally, Armenia must now find clever answers, without stepping
into the trap of a counter-provocation, which Aliyev is surely
hoping for.

A new war on Europe’s eastern periphery would in no way be comparable
to the Karabakh war of the early 1990s and have dramatic consequences
for the region and for Europe. To avoid this, the state-promoted
xenophobia against neighboring Armenia and the increasing nationalism
in Azerbaijan must be contained and met with the strongest possible
response by Europe and the international community.”

Kurds Are The Inhabitants Of The Southern Part Of Western Armenia

KURDS ARE THE INHABITANTS OF THE SOUTHERN PART OF WESTERN ARMENIA

14:06 | 2012-09-14 | Armenia | Diaspora |

ACNIS expert, Saro Saroyan, had an interview with journalists and
talked about the situation in Western Armenia.

“The southern part, of Western Armenia is full of Kurds and when you
enter there it seems that you are on a military base. All of them are
armed and are waiting to take actions if necessary. There is a great
fear that the Kurds will get angry and attack the Turkish government,
which will bring a lot of problems”.

The expert also noted that in Western Armenia the Turkish “gendarme”
always tries to put pressure on the citizens.

“Armenians living in Mush and Sasun are kind of in good condition
than the rest of Armenians. The mentioned citizens are Muslims and
don’t know Armenian. Acceding to them they adopted Muslim by their
wish and nobody made them do it. May be they weren’t against that
action but I’m sure that their ancestors were.”

The expert also touched upon the ongoing developments in Syria.

“I hope that al-Asaad’s regime won’t fall down, because it won’t be
good for Christians. Turkey does everything, supplies weapons and
everything else, in order to overthrow al-Asaad’s regime. If Turkey
fails, then it will face a lot of problems.”

In the end Saroyan noted that nowadays, Western Armenia is separated
in two parts: Southern and Northern. The Northern part is controlled
by Turks and the Southern part by Kurds, and there is a huge conflict
in the region.

http://1in.am/eng/armenia_diaspora_2198.html

MEPs Condemned The Acquittal In Azerbaijan’s Armenian Murderer Of An

MEPS CONDEMNED THE ACQUITTAL IN AZERBAIJAN’S ARMENIAN MURDERER OF AN OFFICER
Attila KISBENEDEK

RIA Novost
14/09/2012
Brussels

The European Parliament in a resolution condemned the acquittal in
Azerbaijan Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani who in 2004 killed an Armenian
officer while attending courses together about NATO in Hungary.

The document stresses that the pardon granted to Safarov contradicts
“the diplomatic agreement” between the governments of Baku and Budapest
and can contribute to the escalation of tensions between Armenia and
Azerbaijan around the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

MEPs also regretted that the murderer was tried amnesty in Azerbaijan
with honors “hero”.

Armenia suspended Aug. 31 diplomatic relations with Hungary after
the controversial extradition Ramil Safarov Azerbaijani Lieutenant,
sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Armenian military
Gurguén Margarian, in 2004, and pardoned just inside the homeland.

President of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, described the decision
grave error of Hungary and accused of agreeing to a compromise with
Azerbaijan. According to the press, Azerbaijan plans to invest up to
three billion euros in sovereign bond purchases in Hungary.

Armenia and Azerbaijan for over two decades faced by Nagorno-Karabakh,
an area of â~@~Kâ~@~Kmostly Armenian population in 1988 was separated
from the then Soviet Socialist Republic of Azerbaijan for three years
later proclaim independence.

The secession led to a war between Baku and Yerevan, which lasted
until May 1994 as a result of which Azerbaijan lost control over
Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding districts.

Since 1992, the Karabakh settlement is being negotiated in the
framework of the Minsk Group of the OSCE co-chaired by the U.S., France
and Russia. Azerbaijan insists restore its territorial integrity and
Armenia defends the interests of the rebel republic of Karabakh is
not part of the negotiating process.

Kurds And (The Turkish) Way

KURDS AND (THE TURKISH) WAY
By ANDREW FINKEL

September 5, 2012, 11:06 am 22 Comments

ISTANBUL – When I first started covering Turkey in the early 1990s,
my foreign colleagues and I were sometimes mocked for referring
to the brewing resentment in southeastern Turkey as “the Kurdish
problem.” There was no sectarian or ethnic discrimination, we
were told; the problem was terrorism. The Kurdistan Workers Party,
better known as the PKK, resorted to violence and extortion, which
no civilized society could abide.

How can Ankara deal with Kurds beyond its borders if it can’t manage
relations with its Kurds at home?

The major flaw in this argument was that the Turkish state also
resorted to tactics unworthy of a civilized society. For years, to
argue for Kurdish rights – let alone regional autonomy – or simply
to write in Kurdish could mean prison; such acts were considered
aiding and abetting terrorism. Kurdish political parties were shut
down. Political activists were tortured. In what became Turkey’s own
dirty war, thousands of people were assassinated or disappeared.

It’s not just the Kurds who suffered. Fear of Kurdish secession has
long been the canker in Turkish democracy, the justification for a raft
of laws that restrict human rights and the freedom of expression. Now
it is compromising Turkey’s attempt to play a greater role in its
region, particularly as Syria implodes. How can Ankara deal with Kurds
beyond its borders if it can’t manage relations with its Kurds at home?

And as long as Turkey blurs the line between terrorism and legitimate
protest, it will continue to alienate its Kurdish population while
legitimating the men of violence.

A Kurdish man wearing a T-shirt with the portrait of Abdullah Ocalan,
the jailed PKK leader, guards a checkpoint near the Syrian-Turkish
border. Aris Messinis/Agence France-Presse – Getty ImagesA Kurdish
man wearing a T-shirt with the portrait of Abdullah Ocalan, the jailed
PKK leader, guards a checkpoint near the Syrian-Turkish border.

The Justice and Development Party (AKP) was aware of this challenge
when it came to office in 2002. And so in early 2009, after having
consolidated power, it initiated a “Kurdish opening.” It started a
Kurdish-language television station and offered amnesty to young PKK
militants to lure them back into civilian life.

But that opening famously shut down in October 2009, after the
PKK tried to cast as a victory parade the return of a group of its
militants at the Habur border crossing with Iraq. The AKP, despite
commanding a strong majority in Parliament, simply wasn’t prepared
to brave nationalist sentiment and the many Turks who saw compromise
as weakness. Just as in Northern Ireland, where a bloodier-than-thou
faction of the IRA was shadowing the peace process, there were factions
within the PKK with no intention of giving peace a chance.

After Habur, the Turkish government abandoned the carrot and picked
up the stick. It was determined to stop the spread of a campaign of
civil disobedience to cities with large Kurdish populations, by way
of mass arrests and pretrial detention.

These harsh policies have brought Turkey little security, and the
bloody events in Syria are now making matters worse. President Bashar
al-Assad of Syria has voluntarily ceded control of the Kurdish north
of his country to the Democratic Union Party, a Syrian variant of
the PKK. There has recently been an upsurge in PKK attacks against
Turkish soldiers and police near the Iranian border, as well as a
rise in acts of random terrorism – including a bomb explosion on
Aug. 20 near a police station in Gaziantep that killed 10 civilians.

Many suspect the bloodshed is the direct result of political games in
Syria, as well as a ploy by Iran to use the PKK against the Turkish
government to punish it for supporting the Syrian opposition.

Ankara has not responded so far, but it could get sucked into the
conflict by trying to enforce a buffer zone along the Syrian border.

It is already trying to get the international community to establish
a no-fly zone to protect the growing tide of refugees from Syria.

Some of those are deserters from the Syrian Army, and there is little
doubt that the Turkish government is encouraging them to re-enter
the fight on the side of the rebels.

All this has prompted Cemil Cicek, the speaker of Parliament and
a former hardline AKP minister of justice, to call for a “national
consensus” – code for re-opening the Turkish government’s Kurdish
initiative and granting Kurds more power locally. This sort of plan
might have worked miracles decades ago. And it might still succeed
today, except that Cicek is being criticized, and by his own party.

Instead of declaring that there is no Kurdish problem, as it did two
decades ago, the Turkish government now appears to be saying there
is no Kurdish solution. Does that count as progress?

____________________________________________________________________________

Andrew Finkel has been a foreign correspondent in Istanbul for over
20 years, as well as a columnist for Turkish-language newspapers. He
is the author of the book “Turkey: What Everyone Needs to Know.”

http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/05/kurds-and-the-turkish-way/

yerevan police officer commits suicide

YEREVAN POLICE OFFICER COMMITS SUICIDE

news.am
September 14, 2012 | 11:27

YEREVAN. – A 27-year-old law enforcement officer ended his life on
Friday in Armenia’s capital city Yerevan, the Police press service
informed Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Police officer K. Manukyan committed suicide by hanging himself in
a detached house at around 6:30am.

His dead body was discovered at the back of the home’s storage room.

Armenia’s Independence Anniversary Celebrated In Cyprus

ARMENIA’S INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED IN CYPRUS

tert.am
14.09.12

The Hilton Park Nicosia Hotel hosted on Wednesday celebrations
dedicated to Armenia’s independence holiday and the 20th anniversary
of the Armenian-Cypriot diplomatic ties.

Armenian FM Edward Nalbandyan, who is on an official visit to the EU
chairing state, was also present at the ceremony together with several
Cypriot officials, including President Demetris Christofias, Parliament
Speaker Yianakis Omirou, Foreign Minister Erato Kozakou Marcoullis,
as well as members of the country’s government and parliament,
foreign diplomats and representatives of the local Armenian community.

In his greeting remark devoted to Armenia’s national holiday,
Nalbandyan said he was very happy that the 21st anniversary of
independence coincides with the 20th year since the establishment of
the Armenian-Cypriot diplomatic relations.

“The Armenian-Cypriot inter-state relations have a special content
and quality thanks to the historically close ties and solid friendship
between our states.

We have over twenty licensed agreements in the investment, education,
healthcare, agriculture, tourism, civil aviation and defense sectors.

That lays a firm foundation for the implementation of different joint
projects. The two countries’ parliaments collaborate actively thanks
to the Armenian-Cypriot parliamentary committee.

What has been done over the past twenty years is our joint
achievement. Today, we have a strong will to open new ways for out
bilateral friendly cooperation,” Nalbandyan said.

Summing up, Armenia’s top diplomat thanked the participants for
joining the celebrations.

President Christofias later greeted the participants and delivered
a congratulatory address.

President Of All-Russia Azerbaijani Congress Asks Moscow Mayor To Pr

PRESIDENT OF ALL-RUSSIA AZERBAIJANI CONGRESS ASKS MOSCOW MAYOR TO PREVENT ARMENIANS RALLY

21:30 | 2012-09-13 | Region | Politics |

Azerbaijani sources report that Mammad Aliyev, The President of
All-Russian Azerbaijani Congress, academic of Russian Academy
of Medical Sciences and Russian Academy of Sciences has sent a
letter to Mayor of Moscow Sergei Sobyanin on forthcoming rally of
the organization “Armenian youth organizations of Moscow” on the
extradition of Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov.

“This rally might cause burst of ethnic conflicts between Azerbaijanis
and Armenians, not only in Moscow but also through the whole territory
of Russia”

“The interethnic relations require the most balanced and sensitive
approach towards transformation of the conflict of non-ethnic nature
to Russian territory. On behalf of a large Azerbaijani Diaspora in the
Russian Federation I ask you to prevent this rally.” stated President
of All-Russian Azerbaijani Congress.

He said that it may cause burst of ethnic clashes between Azerbaijanis
and Armenians, not only in Moscow but also trough the whole territory
of Russia.

http://1in.am/eng/region_rpolitics_2164.html

Europe Ready To Pay

EUROPE READY TO PAY
Naira Hayrumyan

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 15:31:23 – 13/09/2012

The EU Special Envoy to the South Caucasus Philippe Lefort told Serzh
Sargsyan the arrangements for the donor conference are underway. It
was such important news for the president that his press service
placed it at the beginning of the official press release.

The news is important indeed because it is obvious that the change
of foreign partners or diversification is expensive. Armenia cannot
just discard the Russian direction and end its economic dependence
on Russia without external support.

Meanwhile, if the government of Armenia conducted a balanced economic
policy, did not enrich the rich and did not hinder investments,
everything could be done without external support.

And now we have what we have, and if Russia decides to boost the
price for gas and railway, demands more assets in return for its one
billion loan, Armenia will need money for ransom. And the only hope
is the donor conference.

Furthermore, the Armenian government needs money not only for that.

The country is facing a complicated financial and economic situation.

Next year we will have to repay half a billion dollars debt and
officials of the ministry of finance confess they are looking for
new loans. With a clever expression on the face, they tell the public
that having debts is normal. They pretend as if they do not know how
many people have sold their property and left Armenia to repay their
loans to banks. The same destiny awaits Armenia.

However, the Armenian authorities need more loans or better more grants
to become rich. They want to ride expensive cars, enrich their banks,
dine in restaurants and buy clothes for their daughters from expensive
boutiques. For the sake of this they are ready to send people into
the web of new debts.

Nevertheless, the West has decided to allocate some money, perhaps
before the presidential election because in autumn Russia may start
economic blackmail of Armenia. Although Tigran Sargsyan says there
is no invitation to join the Eurasian Union yet, it will be sent soon.

Modern Armenian mentality differs by its respect for hierarchy. Even
Christianity with its concept of equality was unable to uproot
the Eastern belief that God decides the place of everyone in the
hierarchy. In the government everyone is looking for someone standing
higher on the career scale to obey him or her. Our state policy is
based on this attitude. We are always looking for someone who will
give us money to justify our servility later.

Nation states are strong when they feel equal. Without equality there
is no freedom and without freedom there is no welfare.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments27375.html

Savarov Was Released To Achieve Turkey’s Inclusion In OSCE MG – Heri

SAVAROV WAS RELEASED TO ACHIEVE TURKEY’S INCLUSION IN OSCE MG – HERITAGE REP.

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 13, 2012 – 15:24 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – By releasing the axe-killer Ramil Safarov, Azerbaijan
and Turkey meant to escalate the situation, attract international
community’s attention to further achieve inclusion of Ankara in
OSCE Minsk Group as a co-chair, Heritage opposition party secretary
general believes.

As Stepan Safaryan noted in this context, despite remarks on the
necessity to terminate Karabakh settlement talks, Armenia should
continue negotiations. “Stalling talks may give rise to speculations
on the necessity to alter OSCE Minsk Group format, which would play
right into Turkey’s hands,” the politician said.

“Armenia, however, should take firm, rather than harsh, steps in
Karabakh negotiations,” Safaryan concluded.

Syrian Government Urges Armenians Leave Settlements

SYRIAN GOVERNMENT URGES ARMENIANS LEAVE SETTLEMENTS

TERT.AM
13.09.12

The Syrian government has urged the residents of the Nor Gyugh (Midan)
settlement in Aleppo to leave their homes.

An Aleppo-based source told Tert.am that Free Syrian Army gunmen are
not far from the local mosque, and, to attack them, the government
troops urged the local population to vacate.

Last night was a disturbed one in Armenian settlements. A young
Armenia man was killed by a sniper yesterday. The reports on two
Armenian women wounded during hostilities were not confirmed. The
evacuation is in progress now.