Iran Can Guarantee Settlement Of Nagorno Karabakh Problem

IRAN CAN GUARANTEE SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO KARABAKH PROBLEM

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
08.06.2009 15:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Active foreign policy of Iran can guarantee a
tangible progress in the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict ,
said Iran presidency candidate Mokhsen Rezai in Tebriz.

"The foreign policy of Iran should be strengthened, otherwise it
will be difficult to solve regional problems in future," Mokhsen
Rezai said. According to him, historical sphere of Iran’s influence
will enable it to settle the Nagorno Karabakh problem, Turkish media
report. Presidency candidate promised, that if he is elected, his
policy will be supporting peace, regional conflict resolution in
order help regional countries to rely more on Teheran, rather than
on Washington as a mediator.

Mokhsen Rezai was a head of the Corps of Guards of Islamic Revolution.

Beyond Cairo: Translating ‘Important’ Obama Message into

Beyond Cairo: Translating ‘Important’ Obama Message into Policies

Interview with former U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Israel, Edward
P. Djerejian

CFR.org / Council on Foreign Relations (New York, NY)
June 4, 2009

Interviewee:Edward P. Djerejian, Director, James A. Baker III
Institute for Public Policy, Rice University
Interviewer:Bernard Gwertzman, Consulting Editor, CFR.org

Former U.S. ambassador to Syria and to Israel Edward P. Djerejian sees
the speech in Cairo by President Obama to the Muslim world as "a very
powerful public diplomacy statement." But taking into account the
years of frustration by previous administrations, he says Obama made
some fundamental framework points that "will have to be translated
into actual and effective policies." Djerejian says two chief arenas
for U.S. action are the Arab-Israeli conflict, where Washington can
play a stepped-up brokering role, and the troubled relationship with
Iran, which requires a broad, strategic dialogue encompassing all
major bilateral issues.

Gwertzman: President Obama has given a much-anticipated speech about
U.S. relations with the Muslim world but it also included
U.S. relations with Israel and a great deal about life in the United
States. How would you sum up the speech?

Djerejian:The speech was a very important statement by an American
president to the Muslim world. By just being the first
African-American president ,whose family had Muslim background —
although he is a Christian as he stated in his speech — speaks
volumes in itself. His just standing there in Cairo University
demonstrated what America is at its best: truly a country of
opportunity for everyone who strives to achieve and to reach the
heights, and that equality of opportunity message, came across just by
his being there. That in itself was a very powerful public diplomacy
statement. A second point, as he underscored in his speech, is that
America is a country that enjoys religious freedom. In other words,
America welcomes people of all faiths to practice their re s freely,
although we are a secular state and we obviously have the very
important constitutional division of state from religion. He affirmed
that the United States is a very practicing religious country and it
was very important for him to talk about the need for the people of
the Book -Christians, Muslims, and Jews – to be living in peace and
harmony.

Gwertzman: How does that relate to the big issues out there?

Djerejian: He segued that very well into the need for resolution of
the long-standing Arab-Israeli conflict. He made it clear he would
take a major role in conflict resolution to bring, in the first
instance, the Israelis and Palestinians together. But he is very
intent on a wider peace – to bring in Syria and Lebanon if things go
well enough. But the audience reacted by applause certainly when he
mentioned the Palestinian issue and that’s a very important part of
the message since the Arab-Israeli conflict remains the single most
important political issue in the region as a whole. It has resonance
not only amongst Arabs but Muslims also. It’s the issue that brings
people into the streets, and this was one of the major flaws in the
thinking of the neo-cons [of the Bush administration] was that they
felt that the Arab-Israeli conflict was not really the primary issue,
the real issue was in overthrowing authoritarian regimes and promoting
democracy so that Israel would be able to negotiate peace with
democratic neighbors.

I remember when I was ambassador to Israel during the Clinton
administration Yitzhak Rabin, the then prime minister, told me, "if
Israel had to wait for its Arab neighbors to become democratic to make
peace, we would be waiting a thousand years." Obama blended, very
skillfully, a larger outreach to the Muslim world by stressing that
there is no innate hostility between the United States and the Arab
and the Muslim world, that we have actually much in common –and it is
in our mutual interest, both as Americans and as Arabs and Muslims, to
marginalize the extremists and the terrorists in our midst who preach
a doctrine of violence and terrorism, and who have to be marginalized
for our societies to move forward and to reduce the threat that we
face.

Gwertzman: In the first chapter of your new book, Danger and
Opportunity, you have a letter to the new president in which you say
on the Arab-Israeli front everything goes through Jerusalem, meaning
the Palestinian-Israeli relations are foremost. And he stressed again
the need for a two-state solution and he picked up on the Road Map
which the Bush administration had drafted. How do you think the
president will proceed? Is he heading for a global conference like the
Madrid Conference of 1991 after the Persian Gulf War. Or is Obama
going to work bilaterally?

Djerejian: In the first instance, he’s going to work bilaterally
because he’s chosen a very good presidential emissary in George
J. Mitchell to do the groundwork in brokering the Israelis and the
Palestinians on all the key issues. I think the Obama administration
is adopting some of the obligations, as you stated, in the Road Map on
both sides. The Palestinians have to be able to politically represent
their people effectively. They have to build security infrastructure
so that they control the guns in the street, [so] that there’s only
one weapon that’s used and that’s the weapon of the Palestinian
Authority, the government, [so] that you don’t have Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and other groups taking security into their
own hands and initiating acts of violence against the Israelis. Those
are very important obligations on the part of the Palestinians. Now
where the Palestinians have done well is that they have produced very
good economic reforms, especially under Prime Minister Salam
Fayyad. And so they cleaned up their act to a great extent in terms of
being able to account for and use the funds that are flowing into the
Palestinian Authority, especially from abroad.

The Israelis on their side have very important obligations to stop the
settlements, and the Obama administration has taken a very clear stand
on stopping settlements — not only eliminating the illegal outposts,
but stopping all settlement activity including "natural growth," which
has obviously been criticized by the Israelis, especially within Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition. The Israelis also have an
obligation to facilitate the access routes for Palestinians within the
West Bank, and to lift checkpoints. So each side has its obligations
and this is what the Obama administration is focusing on in the first
instance. Now, where this leads to hopefully will be negotiations on
the final status issues, and that again may take a leaf from the
Annapolis initiative [of November 2007] of the last administration,
which means while you’re taking actions on the ground in terms of
security and settlements, etc., you’re also engaging the Israelis
and the Palestinians to discuss borders, territorial components of
peace, Jerusalem, and Palestinian refugees, to arrive at a final
settlement. So I think that’s how they are approaching it. Now whether
they decide to bring in the international community in a formal way as
you stated, perhaps another Madrid Conference type of thing, or just
using the quartet has to be seen.

Gwertzman: How do you get around the problem of there being a split
Palestinian leadership?

Djerejian: It’s interesting, the president mentioned Hamas in his
speech and reiterated the conditions that Hamas should accept in order
to become, if it can, a responsible player in any Palestinian approach
towards peace with Israel — accepting past agreements, ending
violence, and recognizing Israel’s right to exist. But it was
interesting that he mentioned Hamas specifically because that was a
signal that this administration is willing to promote or see a
political reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas, if Hamas agrees to
be a responsible player. That was an important signal.

Gwertzman: And on Iran, on the nuclear standoff, that’s pretty much
what he said before, right?

Djerejian: The important thing there is he wants to open up a
strategic dialogue, which I certainly support completely, between the
United States and Iran. I do not think that we are going to be able in
any way effectively to deal with Iran’s nuclear ambitions–and I’m
thinking now if indeed they are intent on building nuclear weapons
capability–if the United States and Iran do not engage in a
comprehensive dialogue where we put everything on the table.
Everything should be on the table, all the issues from our bilateral
relationship, to the nuclear issue, to Arab-Israeli peace, Hamas,
Hezbollah, terrorism, Iraq, Afghanistan. It is also important that we
state, and here the president made a very important reference in his
speech, that regime change in Iran is not part of our agenda. There
was always a suspicion among Iranians during the Bush administration
that regime cha Bush administration.

Gwertzman: In the Clinton administration there was an effort by
Madeleine Albright when she was secretary of state, and even by the
president himself, to try and get a dialogue going with Iran but it
never got anywhere.

Djerejian: That’s right, Madeleine Albright did make that effort with
President Clinton but it didn’t get anywhere and I think again I would
strongly recommend that in order to have that dialogue you really have
to put everything on the table. Now, they may not be ready for that
dialogue and that water will have to be tested.

Gwertzman: Summing up, where do we go from here?

Djerejian: President Obama has laid a very good public diplomacy
framework for America’s engagement with the Arab and the Muslim
world. The basic message is we are not your enemy, that we have a lot
of common tasks and challenges that we can work together to
achieve. We the United States are willing to move forward with our
Arab and Muslim partners. We’re willing to work for this dialogue of
civilizations, we’re willing to work for economic social development
and more exchanges, more communication between the two sides, we’re
willing to work for Arab-Israeli peace, and we’re willing to try to
put a cap on nuclear weapons development, which would destabilize the
region and the world. And so he made some very fundamental framework
points that will now have to be –and here’s the trick — will have to
be translated into actual and effective policies. It’s one thing to
state the policy, it’s another thing to carry it out effectively, and
that’s been a
challenge of every administration in the Middle East.

Weigh in on this issue by emailing [email protected].

9572/policy_hurdles_beyond_cairo.html?breadcrumb=% 2F

http://www.cfr.org/publication/1

We’ll take under our independence’s care

We’ll take under our independence’s care
NAGORNO KARABAKH REPUBLIC

05-06-2009
g/index.php

As we have informed, the benefactors of `Hayastan’ all-Armenian Fund,
by the head of the executive director of the structure Ara Vardanyan
on May 11-14 were in Artsakh. They devoted three days to the
acquaintance of the objects financing by the Fund. And it’s natural,
that during the meeting with the representatives of mass-media they
shared with great readiness their impressions, considerations. This
time we draw our readers’ attention to the talk with assessors of the
fund’s local bodies of the three westeuropean states – Germany,
Switzerland, Austria Gilber Momjyan, Avetis Kiziryan and Razmik
Harutyunyan about the fund, the community’s problems, as well as
Diaspora-Armenia-Artsakh three-unity.

The assessor of local body of Switzerland Avetis Kiziryan has noted,
that it’s already the tenth year that he visits Artsakh, and the
impression got from this visit is incomparably great. `We are very
glad and proud,-he stressed,- that results of the realizing works are
high, it concerns to construction: in comparison with the previous
years it has been done by 99 per cent more better. We’ll hope, that
not only construction’s level, but living standard of our sisters and
brothers living in Armenia and Artsakh will be as in Diaspora’. Then
addition: great part of the diaspora Armeinans grudge nothing for
prosperity of the country.Wishing great successes Armenia and Artsakh,
he said. `We’ll hope, we take under our newborn independence’s care
hundred years and we `ll always assist our country’. School needs
road, subscribing to his collegue’s word, the assessor of the local
body of Germany Gilber Momjyan has noted in his turn, it’s also ten
years that he visits Artsakh, but he has brought his contribution for
the development of Armenia more than 30 years.After Artsakh’s
independence, Mr Momjyan informs, Armenian community in Germany has
worked out some programs and assisted restoration of some villages
ruined by war, as well as programs directed to the construction of
`Goris-Stepanakert’ and `North-South’ high ways. `We were in Togh’s
school, conditions are perfect,-he said,- but till we got to
school….the road was unbearable. So I want to say, that management
of `Hayastan’ Fund should think really well in direction of improving
these roads.So it’s necessary to construct roads of many villages of
Artsakh connecting with each other and cities, as we have done for
constructing `North-South’ highway’. The benefactor attached
importance to the question, as it would spur greatly on development of
tourism.There are 40 thousand armenians in Germany today, the leader
of the community informs. The settlement is not so big, but it’s
rather active, it assists various programs of the fund being realized
in Armenia and Artsakh and n of azatamartiks at least.According to the
assessor of local body of Austria Razmik Harutyunyan, the armenian
settlement in this country is rather small, in conssequence of which
the community is not able to assist great programs.But all the
assistances of the community are directed to children of killed
azatamartiks.We come to the aid easily, but we unite hardly. Why each
time greater successes are recorded in thelethones organized by
`Hayastan’ Fund? `Yes, – noticed Avetis Kiziryan,- we armenians come
to the aid easily, but I must say, we unite hardly. I want to send my
wish to all armenians – all parties, organizations, unities: let’s
unite, come to the aid even with small contribution in the name of
development of native land, Armenia. If we unite, if we unite all our
efforts, we’ll be one of the most powerful nations of the
world’. Agreeing with the collegue’s opinion, G.Momjyan noticed, that
owing to that activity, in Germany some armenian great acting
organizations united thier efforts and came to the aid to the fund’s
programs with joint efforts. Razmik Harutyunyan commented philanthropy
conception in other way: an armenian does not philanthropy, but
expresses its national self-consciousness in this way. `Each armenian
should assist with whole soul’,- with this slogan was concluded our
talk with diaspora Armenian famous benefactors.

http://www.artsakhtert.com/en

American singer Jessie Norman to give a concert in Yerevan

American singer Jessie Norman to give a concert in Yerevan
06.06.2009 19:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Well known American singer Jessie Norman’s concert
will be organized in Yerevan within `Perspectives XXI’ 10th
International Music Festival framework.

`We’ve had negotiations with Yuri Bashment (on June 4 Moscow hosted a
joint concert of Bashmet and Norman). Organizational issues are being
discussed at the moment to pan American Prima Donna’s concert in
Yerevan,’ `Perspectives XXI’ Festival Chairman and Art Director,
composer Stepan Rostomyan said.

Lebanese parliament based on sectarian split

Lebanese parliament based on sectarian split
By The Associated Press
06/06/2009

A new parliament to be elected in Lebanon on Sunday will be apportioned
among Christian and Muslim sects under a power-sharing formula that
also divvies up Lebanon’s main leadership positions by religion.
Under the 1989 agreement to end a 15-year civil war, the 128-seat
parliament is divided equally between Christians and Muslims, and
subdivided among the largest of the country’s recognized 18 religious
sects.

On the Christian side, Maronite Catholics get 34 seats, Greek Orthodox
14, Greek Catholics eight, Armenian Orthodox five, Armenian Catholics
one, Protestants one and another one for "minorities." On the Muslim
side, Sunnis and Shiites each get 27 seats, the Druse sect eight and
the Alawite sect two.

Under an unwritten but unbending tradition since Lebanon won
independence in 1943, the president must be a Maronite Catholic, the
prime minister a Sunni Muslim and the

ANC Submits Report On Violations To CEC

ANC SUBMITS REPORT ON VIOLATIONS TO CEC

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
05.06.2009 19:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian National Congress has submitted
a statement to the Central Electoral Commission with a demand to
declare the results of May 31 municipal elections invalid. The ANC
also sent in a report on violations fixed during the election process.

The Republican Party of Armenia won the elections to Yerevan city
council with 190171 votes (46,6%). Prosperous party came second with
91141 votes (22,3%). The Armenian National Congress garnered 69871
votes (17,41%).

Gagik Beglaryan of the RPA retained the post of Mayor of Yerevan.

Russian Citizen Comes To The Aid Of Akhaltskha Armenian Church

RUSSIAN CITIZEN COMES TO THE AID OF AKHALTSKHA ARMENIAN CHURCH
Kristine Aghalaryan

urche/
2009/06/05 | 15:42

Important Culture Diaspora

Renovation work on the Saint Grigor Lusavorich church in Akhaltskha
has been completed. Due to financial difficulties, walls surrounding
the church have yet to be built.

Renovation work on the church began on February 26, 2009. At the time,
the church was in near total disrepair and lacked any walls. The
church’s altar has been repaired along with the bellfry. New windows
have been installed.

Despite the fact that work continues, the church was reconsecrated
on April 4.

Father Manouk Zeynalyan, Saint Grigor’s pastor, is now searching for
funding to complete the construction of the walls surrounding the
church property.

Larisa Shoukina, a Russian citizen, read about the plight of the church
in the "Akhaltskha Renaissance" website and of Father Manouk’s request
for funds to complete the renovation of the church. The initial figure
cited was some 4,000 Georgian Lari ($2,424).

After reading the news Larisa Shoukina sent the church $500. The
money is now being used to complete the construction of the walls.

Father Manouk said, "The donation has allowed us to obtain two
truckloads of stone and sand for the walls and to level out the
courtyard." He added that if new donors aren’t found work will once
again be halted.

http://hetq.am/en/culture/st-grigor-ch

Finance Minister Says Provision Of Russian Credit – Matter Of Days

FINANCE MINISTER SAYS PROVISION OF RUSSIAN CREDIT – MATTER OF DAYS

ARMENPRESS
June 5, 2009

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Finance Minister Tigran Davtyan
said today that there is no postponing in getting the Russian
stabilization credit of 500 million USD, moreover the process of
getting it and process of ratification go quite quickly.

The minister reminded that June 2 at the extraordinary session of
the NA the parliament ratified the inter-state agreement of providing
the credit and the provision of the credit means is a matter of days

100 Extra Envelopes

100 EXTRA ENVELOPES

A1+
01:35 pm | June 04, 2009

Politics

Within the framework of the criminal case brought up at the Special
Investigative Service, the prosecutor’s office opened the packet stolen
from the 8/01 polling station, which was open just like the packet of
the 8/05 polling station. This means that the packet that was closed
and stamped with all ballots, lists, valid and invalid ballots and
envelopes was opened before it made it to the prosecutor’s office.

The investigators registered this and started recounting the
votes. The alarm from this polling station referred to the ballot-box
stuffing. "A1+" asked the CEC representative if it was possible to
find out if there had been stuffing or not and the CEC representative
said no.

There were few errors during the recount with only three envelopes
out of the 1573 envelopes that didn’t correspond to the sample. But
the number of envelopes proved that there was stuffing at the polling
station because there were 100 envelopes more than the signatures
registered in the register. The report included 1480 signatures,
but after the recount at the prosecutor’s office it turned into 1477
and the envelopes were 1570.

It turned out that the ballots and reports corresponded in this
polling station after the recount. Among those present during the
recount was head of the "Heritage" party administration, MP Anahit
Bakhshyan, yet there were no European observers or representatives of
other parties. There were also no experts from the national center of
experts; however there were more CEC authorized representatives. The
recount was completed by three investigators and eight experts from
the CEC.

BAKU: Repeated Formation Of Nagorno-Karabakh Azerbaijani Community T

REPEATED FORMATION OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH AZERBAIJANI COMMUNITY TO RELY ON INTERNATIONAL EXPERIENCE: CO-FOUNDER

Trend
June 3 2009
Azerbaijan

The repeated formation of the Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh
will base on international experience.

"The repeated formation of the community will enable to show the world
that the Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh does not refuse to
live together with the Armenians. We advocate the two communities to
live together in the Karabakh. Simply, the Armenians have to abandon
the occupation of claims," Parliamentarian and Co-founder of the
Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh public association Elman
Mammadov told Trend News on June 3.

The Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh public association will
hold a congress on June 5. The meeting will focus on organizational
issues, as well as issues of the repeated formation of the
organization.

The head of the Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh
public association was Nizami Bahmanov, who died on Sept. 13
in 2008. Bahmanov as the head of the Shusha City Administration
represented the Azerbaijani community of the Nagorno-Karabakh in the
peace negotiations under the OSCE Minsk Group.

"Our aim is to publicize the realities about the Nagorno-Karabakh
history and Armenia’s aggressive policy to the world community. We
must hold such a propaganda which will clarify that there are not any
Azerbaijani terrorist organizations in the world, while the Armenian
terrorist organizations operate in all over the world," Mammadov said.

Mammadov said the Azerbaijani Community of the Nagorno-Karabakh’s
congress aims to establish the organization at the highest level and
improve the organization’s authority in the international community.

"The organization should have such a structure which will enable
to agitate at the international organizations. We must have the
organizations to act more efficient than the Armenian community,"
Mammadov said.

It should be admitted that the Armenian Community of the
Nagorno-Karabakh was organized at higher level rather than the
Azerbaijani, he said.

"We must draw conclusions from that. Armenians have been able to
achieve the desired due to such an organization. The Azerbaijani
community should not hold a defensive position. We must turn to the
tactics of attack in the fields of information, ideological propaganda
and agitation and must show the world the true face of Armenians,"
the co-founder said.