Eu In Fact Approves Safarov’s Transfer To Azerbaijan By Saying It Wa

EU IN FACT APPROVES SAFAROV’S TRANSFER TO AZERBAIJAN BY SAYING IT WAS DONE IN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE CONVENTION OF STRASBOURG

Mediamax
Armenia
Sept 3 2012

The spokespersons of Catherine Ashton, High Representative of the
Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice President of the
Commission and Stefan Fule, European Commissioner for Enlargement
and Neighbourhood Policy, issued the following statement today:

“The High Representative and Commissioner Fule are concerned by
the news that the President of Azerbaijan has pardoned Azerbaijani
army officer Ramil Safarov, who was convicted and sentenced to life
imprisonment for the murder of Armenian Army officer Gurgen Margaryan
in Budapest in 2004.

Ramil Safarov was transferred from Hungary to Azerbaijan on 31
August on the basis of an Azerbaijani request, in the framework of
the Convention of Strasbourg on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons of
21 March 1983, to serve the rest of his sentence. EU representatives
are in contact with the relevant authorities and will continue to
follow the situation closely.

In the interest of regional stability and on-going efforts towards
reconciliation, the High Representative and Commissioner Fule
reiterate their call on Azerbaijan and Armenia to exercise restraint,
on the ground as well as in public statements, in order to prevent
an escalation of the situation.”

Hungary Considers "Unacceptable" Azerbaijan’S Decision To Pardon Ram

HUNGARY CONSIDERS “UNACCEPTABLE” AZERBAIJAN’S DECISION TO PARDON RAMIL SAFAROV

Mediamax

Sept 3 2012
Armenia

Yerevan, September 3. /Mediamax/. Hungary considers it unacceptable
and expresses utter disapproval at the fact that Ramil Safarov, who
was sentenced for manslaughter by Hungarian court, received pardon
from the President of Azerbaijan.

Zsolt Nemeth, Parliamentary State Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, asked Vilayat Guliyev, Azerbaijan’s Ambassador to Hungary,
into his office on September 2 to inform Ambassador Guliyev about
the position of the Government of Hungary.

Zsolt Nemeth has pointed out that the measures made by Azerbaijan are
contrary to the relevant rules of international law and blatantly
contradict the promise officially confirmed by Azerbaijan earlier
that Safarov would continue to serve his sentence in Azerbaijan.”The
steps taken by the Azeri party are not appropriate with respect to
the relation of mutual trust that has developed between our countries
over the past years, and which could serve to further improve our
bilateral cooperation”, Hungary’s MFA stated.

The Parliamentary State Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
handed over the following diplomatic note to the Ambassador of
Azerbaijan:

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary presents its compliments
to the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan in Budapest and has the
honour to communicate the following.

The Government of Hungary was astonished to receive the news about
the decision of the Azerbaijani side granting pardon to Ramil Sahib
Safarov, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for manslaughter
in 2006.

Hungary refuses to accept and condemns the action of Azerbaijan,
which contradicts the relevant rules of international law and sharply
contrasts the undertaking of the Azerbaijani side in this matter,
confirmed by the Deputy Minister of Justice of the Republic of
Azerbaijan in his letter XX-NBSKFO/3743/4/2012 of 15 August 2012
addressed to the Ministry of Public Administration and Justice
of Hungary. In this letter the Republic of Azerbaijan quoting the
relevant international Convention undertook that the sentenced person
will serve the remaining part of his prison sentence in the Republic
of Azerbaijan and may be released on conditional parole only after
he has served at least 25 years of his sentence.

Hungary regards the decision of Azerbaijan inconsistent with the
spirit of cooperation based on mutual trust that has been achieved
during the past years between our respective countries.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary avails itself of this
opportunity to renew to the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan in
Budapest the assurances of its highest considerations”.

http://www.mediamax.am/en/news/politics/5721/

Armenia’s Ministry Of Justice Advices Syrian-Armenians To Call Hot L

ARMENIA’S MINISTRY OF JUSTICE ADVICES SYRIAN-ARMENIANS TO CALL HOT LINE

news.am
September 03, 2012 | 18:34

YEREVAN. – The Ministry of Justice of Armenia turned to the
Syrian-Armenians.

In the message released for the Syrian-Armenian compatriots,
the Ministry calls them to call the Ministry’s hot line and get
consultations about issues which are within the authority of the
Ministry. The services of the Justice Ministry may include the
registration of the civil acts, which include birth, marriage, death,
divorce, child adoption, determination of paternity, name change
and apostil, as well as state registration of the legal entities and
notary issues.

Azeri FM "Puzzled" Over U.S. Response To Safarov Liberation

AZERI FM “PUZZLED” OVER U.S. RESPONSE TO SAFAROV LIBERATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 3, 2012 – 21:52 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov had a
telephone conversation with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William
Burns, Foreign Ministry spokesman Elman Abdullayev said.

As Mammadyarov noted during a conversation, “Azerbaijan cannot
understand U.S. reaction over the liberation of Ramil Safarov.”

Earlier, U.S. National Security Council (NSC) Spokesman Tommy Vietor
commented on Azerbaijan’s Decision to Pardon Ramil Safarov.

“President Barack Obama is deeply concerned by announcement that
the President of Azerbaijan has pardoned Ramil Safarov following
his return from Hungary. Safarov confessed to the murder of Armenian
Army officer Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest in 2004, and was serving a
life sentence in Hungary for this brutal crime. We are communicating
to Azerbaijani authorities our disappointment about the decision to
pardon Safarov. This action is contrary to ongoing efforts to reduce
regional tensions and promote reconciliation. The United States is
also requesting an explanation from Hungary regarding its decision
to transfer Safarov to Azerbaijan.”

Ramil Safarov, the Azerbaijani army officer who was serving a life
sentence in Hungary for axing to death Armenian Lt. Gurgen Margaryan,
was extradited to Azerbaijan and pardoned by Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev.

Official Yerevan reacted by suspending diplomatic ties with Hungary.

The Department of State, through a formal announcement issued by
Acting Deputy Spokesman Patrick Ventrell, also took a stand against
Hungary’s extradition and Azerbaijan’s pardon, explaining that: “The
United States is extremely troubled by the news that the President
of Azerbaijan pardoned Azerbaijani army officer Ramil Safarov, who
returned to Baku today following his transfer from Hungary. . . . We
are expressing our deep concern to Azerbaijan regarding this action
and seeking an explanation. We are also seeking further details from
Hungary regarding the decision to transfer Mr. Safarov to Azerbaijan.”

Ashton And Fule Are Concerned About The Decision Of The President Of

ASHTON AND FULE ARE CONCERNED ABOUT THE DECISION OF THE PRESIDENT OF AZERBAIJAN TO RELEASE RAMIL SAFAROV

ARMENPRESS
3 September, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS: Catherine Ashton, High Representative
of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and
tefan Fule, European Commissioner on Enlargement and Neighborhood
Policy issued today the following statement on the release of Ramil
Safarov. As Armenpress was informed at the Press center of the
European External Action Service, the statement reads as follows,
“The High Representative and Commissioner Fule are concerned by the
news that the President of

Azerbaijan has pardoned Azerbaijani army officer Ramil Safarov, who
was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of
Armenian Army officer Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest in 2004.

Ramil Safarov was transferred from Hungary to Azerbaijan on 31 August
on the basis of an

Azerbaijani request, in the framework of the Convention of Strasbourg
on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons of 21 March 1983, to serve the
rest of his sentence. EU representatives are in contact with the
relevant authorities and will continue to follow the situation closely.

In the interest of regional stability and on-going efforts towards
reconciliation, the High

Representative and Commissioner Fule reiterate their call on Azerbaijan
and Armenia to exercise restraint, on the ground as well as in public
statements, in order to prevent an escalation of the situation.”

AZAD Sent Open Letter To Secretary Hillary Clinton On Ramil Safarov

AZAD SENT OPEN LETTER TO SECRETARY HILLARY CLINTON ON RAMIL SAFAROV CONTROVERSY

WASHINGTON, DC. September 2, 2012: The Azerbaijani Americans for
Democracy has addressed an open letter to the US Secretary of State
on the issue of the Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov. Below is the
full text of the letter:

Dear Madam Secretary,

On August 31, the US State Department issued a statement noting
that it was “extremely troubled by the news that the President of
Azerbaijan pardoned the Azerbaijani army officer Ramil Safarov,” who
killed an Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan at a NATO sponsored event
in Budapest, Hungary, after the latter insulted the Azerbaijani flag. A
strongly worded statement from the US State Department expressed ~Sdeep
concern~T and underscored that the US is ~Sseeking an explanation~T
from Azerbaijan and ~Salso seeking further details from Hungary”
about the extradition of Safarov to Azerbaijan.

Ilham Aliyev’s government has committed countless transgressions
violating the rights of hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijani
citizens. Scores of people were physically attacked, arrested,
tortured, and some died at the hands of the Aliyev regime. Yet, the
strongest ever US State Department protest to the actions taken by
the dictatorship in Baku seem to be motivated not by the concerns for
rights and freedoms of the people of Azerbaijan, but rather by the
deference to the out-of-proportion influence of the Armenian lobby
on the US foreign policy.

It is difficult to understand the urgency and importance given by
the US State Department to the pardoning of the Azerbaijani soldier
Ramil Safarov.

Safarov’s extradition from Hungary could have been handled by
Azerbaijan with more consideration of diplomatic sensitivities
and without aggrandizing someone sentenced to life for killing an
Armenian officer. However, the practice of extraditing convicted
foreign citizens to their home countries where they receive lenient
terms or pardons is hardly extraordinary. One may recall the case of an
Armenian terrorist Varoujan Garabedian, convicted in France for bombing
Turkish Airlines check-in counter, subsequently freed and extradited
to Armenia. Garabedian was greeted as a national hero by the president
of Armenia and given the rank of an army colonel. The current Armenian
Minister of Defense, Seyran Ohanyan, had led a well-documented massacre
of Azeri civilians by Armenian forces in the town Khodjaly in 1992.

What is extraordinary and puzzling is that the arguably strongest-ever
criticism used by the US leadership against the Azerbaijani authorities
comes in response to the Ramil Safarov incident, rather than the
numerous grave trespasses on democracy and human rights perpetrated
by the Aliyev dictatorship against Azerbaijani citizens. It is
unfortunate that given the gross injustices perpetrated by the Aliyev
regime against its own people over the past two decades, the US State
Department appears to show greater concern for the sensitivities of
Armenia which currently occupies 20 percent of Azerbaijani territories,
having driven out all of its Azeri inhabitants.

It would be highly desirable to see equally strong reactions by
the US administration to fraudulent elections, violent attacks
against peaceful protesters, arrest, torture, beating and murder of
journalists, dissidents and civic activists in Azerbaijan. In many
of those instances, instead of expressions of “deep concern” and
“extreme trouble”, and demands of explanation from the Azerbaijani
government, as it was included in the US State Department~Rs and
National Security Council spokesperson~Rs statements on Safarov case,
the United States responded with much milder statements of concern
and “hopes for improvement”, effectively watering them down by the
assurances of cooperation and alliance with the ruling regime in Baku.

We cannot help but remember the ~Selection victory~T congratulations
delivered on behalf of the US government by the Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage to the Azerbaijani dictator Ilham Aliyev while
the streets of Baku were still reeling from violent suppression of
protests against the wholesale election fraud in October of 2003.

More recently, the nomination of Matthew Bryza to the position of
a US Ambassador to Azerbaijan and his failed Senate confirmation
process revealed a misplaced emphasis in the US approach towards the
Azerbaijani regime. Mr.

Bryza~Rs personal connections to the Azerbaijani regime were
questioned extensively in light of his perceived anti-Armenian bias
and pro-Azerbaijani position on the Karabakh conflict. Solely on those
grounds, two US senators effectively blocked his confirmation. His
credentials on democracy and human rights were never questioned by the
US government or members of the Congress. Ironically, Matthew Bryza~Rs
actions during and after his brief ambassadorship tenure – including
his high-profile job with an oil firm linked to Azerbaijan~Rs State
Oil Company, and his statements supportive of the Aliyev government
and lacking criticism of its human rights record – proved his bias
in favor of the regime in Baku on the issue of democracy, but not on
the Karabakh problem or on the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

The corrupt dynastical Azerbaijani dictatorship led by Ilham Aliyev
can and should, indeed, be heavily criticized and pressured by the
US and other Western governments. However, the issue of democracy and
human rights, and not the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, is the most
appropriate subject where the strongest language and the heaviest
pressure should be applied.

The current short-sighted foreign policy focus might temporarily
appease the ethnic-Armenian lobby groups, but it certainly does not
serve the US national interests in Azerbaijan and the broader region,
harms the democratic development in that country, damages the US
reputation in the eyes of Azerbaijani people and further complicates
the resolution of the Karabakh problem.

Sincerely yours,

Elmar Chakhtakhtinski, Chairman Azerbaijani-Americans for Democracy

http://azerireport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3695&Itemid=53

Chess: Armenia On Track For New Olympic Success

CHESS: ARMENIA ON TRACK FOR NEW OLYMPIC SUCCESS

News | 03.09.12 | 11:42

Team Armenia, the winner of two chess Olympiads in 2006 and 2008,
is in the middle of another effort to assure its world supremacy at
the biannual event in Istanbul, Turkey.

After five rounds of the World Chess Olympiad the team (consisting
of GMs Levon Aronian, Sergei Movsesian, Vladimir Akopian, Gabriel
Sargissian and Tigran Petrosian) is in the lead with five wins in as
many matches. The strong team of Ukraine was the latest to be beaten
by Armenia. The other teams defeated by Armenia at the current Olympiad
include Bolivia, Bangladesh, Spain and the Philippines.

Meanwhile, the women’s chess team of Armenia is currently in 32nd
place among 126 teams after three victories and two defeats in the
Olympiad so far.

Play continues today. The 11-round tournament ends on September 9. For
more information and results visit:

Meanwhile, the European Youth Chess Championship held in Prague in
late August proved the continuity of chess traditions in Armenia
as 12-year-old Hayk Martirosyan won the title for the second time
in his career. Manuel Petrosyan, 14, and Hovhannes Gabuzyan, 18,
won silver medals in their respective age groups.

http://armenianow.com/news/39666/armenia_chess_olympiad2012
www.chessolympiadistanbul.com.

Azerbaijan May Be Expelled From UN Security Council – Expert

AZERBAIJAN MAY BE EXPELLED FROM UN SECURITY COUNCIL – EXPERT

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 3, 2012 – 17:20 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Azeri assassin Ramil Safarov’s extradition proved
Armenia needs strategic planning, Director of Regional Studies Center
(RSC) believes.

At September 3 news conference in Yerevan, political expert Richard
Giragosian shared a forecast as to possible development of events.

According to him, Azerbaijan may be expelled from UN Security Council,
with import ban on weapons to be imposed.

“Turkey’s reaction to Baku’s step proved the official Ankara’s weakness
in allowing Azerbaijan to control its international policy, as Turkey,
clearly, did not expect such actions,” the expert said.

“The international community will be sure to punish Azerbaijan,
with the country posing a threat to Armenia as well as the whole world.

Safarov’s crime is the perpetuation of 1915 Genocide,” Giragosian said.

Armenia Was Given Warning 11 Days Before Safarov Extradition – Hunga

ARMENIA WAS GIVEN WARNING 11 DAYS BEFORE SAFAROV EXTRADITION – HUNGARY’S ARMENIANS

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 3, 2012 – 18:21 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian National Autonomy of Hungary issued a
letter to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan.

As the Autonomy stressed in the letter, since the murder of Armenian
lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan in 2004, the Autonomy took every effort
to promote fair punishment for Azeri assassin Ramil Safarov.

Following the opening of Azeri embassy in Hungary, the Autonomy always
kept Armenian Diaspora Ministry as well as Austria’s Armenian embassy
aware of Azerbaijan’s anti-Armenian actions.

“We repeatedly requested Armenia’s Diaspora and Foreign Ministries to
open an embassy in Hungary in view of frequent conflicts with Azeri
side in the country. However, our requests were refused, with lack
of staff cited.”

“On August 20, 11 days before Safarov’s extradition to Azerbaijan, the
Autonomy’s deputy chair Nikoghos Hakobyan informed Armenia’s Foreign
Ministry and Austria’s Armenian embassy about extradition plans,
requesting to take steps to prevent the decision. Unfortunately,
all of our efforts proved useless,” the Autonomy said, demanding
explanation as to inactivity of the Armenian side.

“With Azeri lobby gaining the upper hand in Hungary, Armenia’s
diplomatic involvement in the issue would have been crucial,” the
statement said.

Iraq Could Have Embassy In Yerevan

IRAQ COULD HAVE EMBASSY IN YEREVAN

news.am
September 03, 2012 | 15:41

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Ambassador to Iraq, Murad Muradyan, met on August
27 with Iraqi Deputy PM Rose Nuri Shaways.

They discussed the PM’s scheduled visit to Armenia in early September,
and the cooperation domains that present a mutual interest for both
countries, Armenian MFA press service informs.

Shaways noted that he expects his visit to bring a new impetus to
the development of Armenian-Iraqi ties.

On the same day, Ambassador Muradyan also met with Iraq’s other
Deputy PM, Saleh al-Mutlaq, during which they explored the prospects
for developing the interaction between Armenia and Iraq. They also
exchanged views on Iraq’s domestic political situation and regional
matters.

On August 29, Armenia’s ambassador met with Iraqi Deputy FM Lubed
Abawi. The parties discussed the plan for opening an Iraqi embassy
in Armenia and the establishment of a bilateral legal framework.

Highly appreciating the opening of Armenia’s Embassy in Iraq, Abawi
noted that he will personally pursue the opening of an Iraqi embassy
in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan.