Azeri Media’s Everyday Reports On Ceasefire

AZERI MEDIA’S EVERYDAY REPORTS ON CEASEFIRE VIOLATIONS NOTHING BUT PROPAGANDA TRICKS

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.09.2007 17:07 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Reports on firings upon the Azeri armed forces from
the Armenian side have nothing to do with the reality. There was no
skirmish on September 5 either," head of the department of propaganda
and information at the NKR Defense Ministry, Colonel Senor Hasratyan
told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

Azeri media’s everyday reports on ceasefire violations are nothing
but propaganda tricks meant to keep Azeri population in constant
hatred for Armenia," Col. Hasratyan said.

Azeri Day.az news agency with a reference to the Azerbaijani Defense
Minister reported that 2 Azeri soldiers were killed and 1 injured in
a skirmish on September 5 night. The same source said the Armenian
side lost three soldiers.

Armenian President Issues Address On Karabakh Independence Anniversa

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT ISSUES ADDRESS ON KARABAKH INDEPENDENCE ANNIVERSARY

Arminfo
1 Sep 07

Yerevan, 1 September: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has issued
an address over the Nagornyy Karabakh republic independence day.

"Dear compatriots, I am congratulating you on the Day of the
Republic. We are celebrating the 16th anniversary of Artsakh’s
[Nagornyy Karabakh] independence by reaffirming the desire of the
Karabakh people to live in an independent and democratic state. The
past years have explicitly proven the resolve and vitality of the
people in building a free and secure state. Many sons of the Homeland,
dreaming to see a free and prosperous Artsakh, have died a hero’s
death on that hard path. Today, we bow to their memories. Once again,
my congratulations on Independence Day. I am sure that the programmes
that are implemented in Karabakh under the newly-elected president
will result in a new quality of life," the message reads.

ANKARA: Peres: Gul Epitome Of Contemporary Man

PERES: GuL EPITOME OF CONTEMPORARY MAN

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 1 2007

Israeli President Shimon Peres said concerns regarding whether or not
the Justice and Development Party’s (AK Party) government’s second
term, this time with more electoral clout in the wake of the July 22
polls, are baseless because they are not based on facts.

"Erdoðan declared that he is for a secular government, not for
an Islamic government. You might be suspicious of his words. The
more important thing is his actions. Is he behaving like an Islamist
fundamentalist? The mere fact that Turkey is maintaining relations with
Israel is the best declaration about the nature of the government,"
Peres said.

Regarding former Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul’s new role as president
of Turkey, Peres said: "I met Mr. Gul. I think he is a responsible
man and he contributed positively to our relations. I feel that he is
a man of contemporary times and a politician who really would like
to see Turkey as a free and democratic country. I think he will act
with a sense of secular responsibility."

When asked why US-based Jewish-American organization the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) had changed its traditional position
concerning the killings of Anatolian Armenians in the early 20th
century — the ADL recently said the killings of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks "were indeed tantamount to genocide" — Peres stated:
"I hope they will return to their traditional position. I talked to
[ADL Director] Mr. [Abraham] Foxman. He told me that they are going
to publish an open declaration that would say two things; they won’t
support the proposing of this issue before the American Congress, and
secondly they would support the idea of [Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip] Erdoðan to have a commission including historians from both
sides to study the matter. I think that historians, not governments,
should deal with history."

In an exclusive interview with Today’s Zaman, a few hours before
Abdullah Gul became the 11th president of Turkey, Peres cast no doubt
on the new government’s intentions to keep the regime secular. When
asked about First Lady Hayrunnisa Gul’s headscarf, he laughed and said:
"I’m not a fashion designer. So you should not ask me this question."

Recipient of the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize together with Israel’s
then-Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
for the peace talks that produced the Oslo Accords, Peres became
president this year in June following the resignation of Moshe Katsav
amid impending charges of sexual harassment crimes — later dropped.

During the interview on Aug. 28 in Jerusalem, Peres answered our
questions, spanning the concerns of Israel’s 1 million-strong Muslim
Arab population to the embargo on Iran, the possibility of Iraq’s
disintegration and Turkey’s role in the region.

After the AK Party’s success in the July 22 elections there has been
many concerns, particularly in Jewish-American circles in the US that
see this as the end of the Turkish Republican era, heralding a new and
more Islamic Turkey and marking the end of Ataturk’s regime. How do
you see half of the Turkish population’s supporting Erdoðan, is it
something to be feared?

The concerns are baseless for two reasons. Erdoðan declared that
he is for a secular government and not an Islamic one. You might be
suspicious of his words, but the more important thing to keep in mind
is his actions. Is he behaving like an Islamist fundamentalist? The
mere fact that Turkey is maintaining relations with Israel is the
best indication of the nature of his government. Israel’s founder
[David] Ben-Gurion used to say, "Judge the leaders on their record,
what they do, not on what they say." It is only fair that we take a
look at Erdoðan and his government’s record — a very impressive record
at that: he created a middle class that has led to current stability,
encouraged modern science and technology to Turkey, reduced the numbers
of people below poverty line and improved the economy. Meanwhile,
[Iranian President] Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, never asked to become a
member of the European Union — a democratic organization. Erdoðan,
on the other hand, wants Turkey to be an EU member.

So the concerns have been exaggerated?

The concerns are not based on facts and I can only judge the factual
situation.

Similarly, some people in Washington argue that relations between
Israel and Turkey have lost momentum due to AK Party governance. Do
you agree with that?

I don’t think so. Even if Turkey and Israel do not have the same
past, they belong to the same future. Even in the past, you know,
some of our leaders were educated in Turkey, including our first
prime minister and the first president — they even wanted to be
members of the Turkish Parliament.

A new president will be elected in Turkey today. Abdullah Gul will
probably be your colleague as the 11th president…

I met Mr. Gul. I think he is a responsible man and he has contributed
positively to our relations. I feel that he is a man of the modern
age and a politician who really would like to see Turkey be a free
and democratic country. I think he will act with a sense of secular
responsibility as well.

His wife’s headscarf has been a topic of debate for some people.

Today, I read in the newspapers debates that she may change her
style. And I saw some of the styles suggested for her.

So it’s not a problem?

I’m not a fashion designer. This is an issue people of fashion should
talk. [laughter]

Mr. President, Turkey has become a more active country in the Middle
East. How do you see it?

We welcome it. We are very glad to learn that Union of Chambers
and Commodity Exchanges (TOBB) decided to build industrial parks in
Palestine, starting from Gaza all the way to Jenin. We are negotiating
with a Turkish university to build a branch here. We are very happy
about Turkey’s readiness to play more active role in the region.

You underline in your books that ‘for peace in the Middle East’ and
‘for peace between Israel and the Palestinians,’ the Palestinians
should be empowered. What more can be done in that regard?

When we say "empower" we have to refer to it in modern terms. Today
"to be empowered" is having a better economy, not necessarily having
a better army. I think that we cling too much on strategy, too much
on diplomacy, not enough on economy. What’s changed Turkey is her
economy. And if you are talking about headscarves, there are Turkish
women without scarves. So women have a choice; if you don’t enforce
that then it’s okay. Now I think that Palestinians should be given a
chance to promote their economic life. There was an attempt to help
Palestinians financially; unfortunately it didn’t function.

Palestinians got $1 billion a year from the world in the last
12-13 years, but it created a lot of corruption that brought [major
Palestinian political party] Fatah down. It has created a lot of
administrative costs and produced very little. Instead of financial
aid we have to create economic opportunities so people will be able to
get jobs and work. A peace process must be a meeting of people with
a new fortune in which they personally believe that peace brought
bread and butter to their homes and an open life to their children.

Do you have practical suggestions for Turkey in empowering
Palestinians?

Turkey can build new industrial parks. Turkey made a name for itself
as a good builder. It is also building in Russia, for example. So
why not build here? We have to build bridges instead of building walls.

But you are building walls?

Because we are forced to, it’s not our choice. The walls stopped
suicide bombings; we haven’t had it since then. It wasn’t our pleasure
[to build the walls].

Do you think that one day it might be demolished?

One-hundred percent. We are experts in dismantling walls.

But it took 60 years for the Berlin wall…

The walls must be shorter to be dismantled. It’s not the age of
walls, but it is the age of terror and I think terror will disappear
finally. Because it doesn’t have a message, it is a violent protest
and they don’t know where they are going.

So aren’t the ideas to empower Palestinians economically and
international communities’ and your embargo on Palestinians
contradictory?

No, no, no. We don’t have any embargo on the Palestinians. We have
an embargo on Hamas.

But it punishes ordinary Palestinians.

Who punishes them? Hamas punishes them. What can Israel do if Hamas
fires every day three or four rockets over our civilians? We left
Gaza completely. There is no Israeli there — neither civilians nor
soldiers. We took out our settlements. What do they want more? I am
afraid they aren’t looking for a Palestinian state. What they are
looking for is an Iran-like religious hegemony in the Middle East,
and for that reason they want to destroy, not to achieve.

Is there any way to engage Hamas into the political system, and how
do you perceive Turkey’s efforts in that respect?

I think the chances are very low. For example, Turkey cannot engage
with Iranians about the UN resolutions. Same goes with Hamas. Of
course you can have a dialogue, but not with a wall.

But Turkey has good relations with Iran, don’t you think it may
contribute to world peace or to peace in the Middle East?

What relations? Turkey can do business with Iran but cannot influence
Iran to stop terror, cannot influence Iran to stop building bombs
and threatening other people. I am sure Turkey would never agree to
what the Iranian leadership says — to wipe out Israel. Do you agree
with it? Nobody does. Do you agree with Hamas that terror should be
continued, that they don’t have to negotiate? Nobody can, and nobody
will, pay for terror. Hamas wanted to continue terror and shoots
rockets, and hopes the world will pay. … The world will not pay
for terror. So we are not talking about Palestinians, we are talking
about terror. Because, when it comes to the people, as you have said,
we continue to supply electricity, we continue to supply water, we
continue to open passages in spite of their firing rockets, but that
doesn’t mean you can negotiate with them, because there is no reason
to. Nobody can explain why they are still shooting after Israel has
completely left Gaza. What do they want?

Some people say that Turkey can be a mediator between Israel and
the Palestinians, but some say that Turkey may side more with the
Palestinians so it cannot be a mediator.

I think Turkey should support peace, not one side or the other,
because the negotiations must be directly between the Israelis and the
Palestinians, no other country can take part. Now — when we are in
negotiations — when you negotiate, you negotiate with two parties,
your enemy and your own people. Occasionally it’s very difficult to
convince your own people to give up land or something else. People
don’t like it. So the negotiator cannot be [anything] but Israeli,
because he has to convince his people. No other country can convince
Israelis but their own messengers, their own representatives. And for
that reason I think the negotiations have to be face to face, between
Mr. [Mahmoud] Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, and
Mr. [Ehud] Olmert, the prime minister of Israel. They talk, if they
establish chemistry. Mr. Abbas has the same problem with Hamas as we
do. It is not only a problem for Israel, but for the Palestinians as
well. The latest polls shows the supporters of Hamas are beginning
to be disappointed, saying, "What are you doing in Gaza?"

You do not buy the arguments that Turkey may be a negotiator?

I believe Turkey could and should support peace. Why should Turkey be
one-dimensional when it can be two-dimensional like us? I mean we also
want good relations, I told you. But I think if one must contribute,
they should contribute more in the economic domain than the political
one, because to negotiate politically you have to have a mandate of
your own.

Again, regarding Turkey’s role in the Middle East, how do you think we
can be inspired by the Ottoman legacy, a time of peace for centuries
in the region?

The Ottoman legacy is over, like the British Empire is over, like
the French Empire is over. And you are not coming from the Ottoman
legacy, you are coming from modern Turkey. Modern Turkey’s example
is the greatest contribution for peace in the Middle East. I went
to Rafiah once when we were governing it. The mayor of Rafiah was a
good friend of mine. He said: "Look, I don’t know what we can do. You
cannot negotiate with the Egyptians — they are stubborn, we cannot
go with you or the Jews — we are Muslims." "So what do you want us
to do, why can’t you call the Turks back," I said. "Because Turks
don’t want to come back, they don’t want to build a new empire,
it’s over," he said. We live in a world with borders. Distances
disappear with the power of transportation and communication. The
racial differences are over too. Today it’s really not important if
you are yellow or black or white. If you adopt the right policies,
color has nothing to say. Even the relations between men and women are
changing; we are becoming more and more equal. So we cannot go back,
we have to move forward. And you can pray like a Muslim. Why should
I shoot you and you shoot me? You should pray and I should pray. We
accept all prayers go straight to heaven, so let the Lord be the judge.

Yesterday I was at the Al-Aqsa Mosque. I told one of your Arab
citizens there that I planned to interview you and asked him to
tell me his concerns. The humble man said he is a citizen of Israel,
but his brother just five kilometers away, cannot come here to pray,
though American Muslims or European Muslims may do so.

Let them behave like the American Muslims and they can come. That’s
all. We don’t want them to stop being Muslims. We want them to stop
shooting. If they continue shooting they will not be able to move
freely. Look, there were 50,000 Palestinians working in Israel. But
they have begun to commit acts of terror. We have in Israel a million
Muslim Arabs, as our citizens. Five thousand of them are academics.

Twenty-thousand Arab students every year enter into our universities
and most of them are women.

What those graduates are doing in Israel? Some of them are teachers,
some of them doctors. Today you come to every Israeli hospital and
find Arab doctors. You’ll find Arab nurses and Arab patients. Now look
how ridiculous the situation is. A Jewish patient wouldn’t mind being
treated by an Arab doctor; an Arab patient can be treated by a Jew,
a Jewish doctor. What I am saying is the only healthy relations are in
the hospital. The doctor has a knife but only to perform an operation,
to make somebody healthy, not to cut somebody — that’s the difference.

So easing the visitation restrictions are dependent on the level
of violence?

One-hundred percent. Jordanians come and we don’t have a problem.

Turks are Muslims and we don’t have problems.

Yesterday I was with former Israeli Ambassador to Turkey Zvi Elpeleg
in Tel-Aviv. I realized a serious problem faces Muslim Arabs and Mr.

Elpeleg was very concerned as well. Israel, according to a 1950s law,
confiscated the properties of Muslim foundations. Mosques have been
used for purposes other than that they were designed for and cemeteries
have been sold. Once it might have been a security issue, but times
have changed. As a man of peace, how would you help solve this issue?

I think we are responsible for all holy sites of all religions. We
have to honor them, we have to respect them, we must not endanger
them. It’s our responsibility, the safety of the churches, of the
mosques, of the synagogues. All of them are holy in our eyes, and as
a government we have to do whatever we can.

A lawyer brought the cemetery case to the Supreme Court but they said,
under the law dating back to the 1950s, it’s not illegal.

I don’t know which law you’re referring to…

I’m referring to the ‘present absentees’ issue. It’s the law about
the properties belonging to the Palestinians who were displaced during
the 1948 war but currently live in Israel.

According to our Constitution, we have to respect all religions,
enable free worship and respect their holy sites.

Some neocons, the ones close to the Jewish lobby, say partition of
Iraq would be good for Israel because this will decrease Iran’s power,
helping Israel. How do you see the issue?

It’s not our problem. Nobody knows what’s helpful and what’s not
helpful. It’s for Iraq to decide what they want, to be together or to
separate. We don’t have a say. We have enough problems of our own. We
don’t run the lives of other people.

How do you feel when you look at your Nobel Prize and the current
situation? What went wrong?

Many reasons… There was a split among the Palestinians; they
couldn’t unite and make up their minds, and as a result Mr. Arafat
started zigzagging. Without him we wouldn’t be able to even start
the negotiations but with him we couldn’t conclude because of this
zigzagging. On the other side, Israelis became disappointed; they said
"land for peace." They thought Israelis decided to give all the land
but failed to get peace. In spite of it all, the result has not been
so bad. Without Oslo, Palestinians wouldn’t be people that could
negotiate — maybe all of them would be in Hamas. In Oslo we also
agreed on some principles, including the 1967 borders and not those
of ’48. But history takes time, you know. You have to overcome many
prejudices, many hells, many fears and many worries. Personally, 14
to 20 years seems to be a long time period, but in fact it is not —
it’s a short period of time.

This year was the 40th anniversary of the 1967 events. Some in the
Israeli media have been quite critical of what was done after 1967,
especially the occupation.

Was that the only thing they were critical about? [Laughing]

No, there was a lot of criticism, but they say that the occupation
was not right.

What else could we do? Take the West Bank? It was under Jordanian
control. Our then prime minister sent a message to the king of Jordan
and said, "Don’t attack us, we shall not attack you." Then they
turned their guns against us, so we were left without any choice but
to silence them.

But you are still for the withdrawal from the West Bank, and you have
been criticized by some rabbis for being against Jewish law.

I think there was a solution accepted by most Israelis: that there
should be two states for two people. It’s clear. What I say is in
that direction.

Some say that the absence of a Muslim state in the Quartet diminishes
its power. Wouldn’t an Islamic country or the Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC) — representing 57 Muslim states — help to
strengthen its legitimacy?

We have to negotiate outstanding questions. Some of the proposals
are music without an orchestra. They made their opinions known, but
you cannot negotiate with opinions. Therefore we are negotiating with
Palestinians politically and with the Jordanians and the Palestinians
economically. I think this is the right framework.

Why did the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) change its traditional
position and make such a decision [equating the 1915 events against
Anatolian Armenians to genocide]?

I think there was internal pressure and they departed from their
traditional position. I hope they will return to their traditional
position. I talked to [ADL Director] Mr. [Abraham] Foxman. He told
me that they are going to publish an open declaration that would say
two things; they won’t support the proposing of this issue before
the American Congress, and secondly they would support the idea of
[Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip] Erdoðan to have a commission
including historians from both sides to study the matter. I think
that historians, not governments, should deal with history.

Do you agree with the argument that this was a reaction to Turkey’s
relations with Iran and Turkey’s invitation of Hamas?

No, I don’t think so. I think it’s an internal matter. I don’t think
they play into world politics. They don’t get orders from Israel and
I think they didn’t have a political underpinning.

Could the experiences of the Armenians, who formed gangs during World
War I and demanded independence, be compared to the experiences of
the Jews, who faced genocide just because of their identity?

No, I don’t think you can compare them. I think it’s reasonable
what Prime Minister Erdoðan suggested — bringing together a group
of historians that will judge history based on history, not based
on politics. I mean they would not adapt history depending on the
present political arguments. History is over, it cannot be changed.

It must be investigated professionally and we have to continue with
our lives. We cannot change the past; we can only change the future.

A rabbi asked Ben-Gurion once what even God couldn’t change.

Ben-Gurion asked, "What?" and the rabbi replied, "History."

Do you think Turkish society can be assured that Israel would not
change its position on the events of 1915?

Israel is firm in its position. For us relations with Turkey are
very important and if we had to fight, we would fight Ahmadinejad’s
policies of destruction, threats, terror and bombs.

So do you support the idea of a nuclear-free Middle East?

I declare the Middle East free from the threat of destruction. Arms
don’t destroy, people destroy. Pakistan has a bomb but has not hit
anything. But here comes a declaration of the leader, a member of
the United Nations that he wants to wipe out another member of the
United Nations. Nobody can accept it. Israel is being threatened,
but Iran is not being threatened by anybody.

So do you think Israel could also be part of the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)?

Well, that’s another story. Israel never said we should detonate a
nuclear bomb in the Middle East, but people are suspicious. And if
the suspicion is a deterrent, it’s good enough. We are satisfied with
the suspicion. We don’t want anything more.

–Boundary_(ID_iStC0sX6HihlIlDLYKgSlQ)–

Azerbaijan Ruins The Visit Of PACE Speaker To The Region

AZERBAIJAN RUINS THE VISIT OF PACE SPEAKER TO THE REGION

Hayots Ashkharh Daily
Aug 31 2007
Armenia

Taking into consideration the fact that during the recent two days
different articles appeared in the press regarding the failure of
the visit of PACE speaker Edward O’Hara to the region, aimed at the
study of the South Caucasian cultural heritage, as well as the fake
clarifications that appear in Azerbaijani press, Armenian National
Assembly considers necessary to introduce the reality.

Armenian delegation in PACE was the initiator of this visit,
linked to the annihilation of Armenian khachcars (cross-stone) in
Nakhichevan. Later PACE committee accepted the proposal of Azerbaijani
side to visit the region.

PACE speaker Edward O’Hara’s visit to the region, aimed at the study
of the issue of the protection of cultural heritage was envisaged
years ago but it has been postponed for different reasons.

The visit that was to start on August 29, from Azerbaijan, has been
prepared for two months; the program of the visit has been elaborated,
the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh expressed
readiness to show all kinds of assistance for the organization of
the visit. Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia have sent the list of the
monuments to be studied in the three countries of South Caucasus, the
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh, and Autonomous Republic of Nakhichevan.

The speakers have already chosen the monuments to be studied and August
29 visit was to take place. According to the preliminary agreement
the programs of the visit were to be sent to the Republic of Armenia
and the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh on August 28, at midday. But
before that we got the letter from the Secretary of the Committee,
which ran that the visit is canceled.

The reason is one: on August 28 leader of Azerbaijani delegation
in PACE announced that the speaker must visit Nagorno Karabakh via
Azerbaijan, whereas before that, all the details have been clarified
through the representative of Nagorno Karabakh in Armenia. Armenian
National Assembly was to show transportation and other assistances
to the speaker during his visit.

By laying down conditions to the speaker, at the last moment,
Azerbaijan, in fact ruined the visit and the false information in
Azerbaijani press saying that it was a regular delay, has nothing to
do with the reality.

Another interesting circumstance is, that despite the efforts of
Azerbaijani delegations in different international organization
to spread misinformation saying that Armenians are annihilating
Azerbaijani monuments, PACE speaker expressed a desire to see only one
mosque in Yerevan, which is not Azerbaijani but Persian "Blue" mosque.

On August 29, PACE General Secretary Mateo Sorinas informed Speaker
of Armenian National Assembly Tigran Torosyan, that Mr.

O’Hara’s visit is canceled. Whereas he underscored two reasons, from
which one is the issue of the entry to Nagorno Karabakh, something
that Azerbaijan announced on August 28.

It is obvious that Azerbaijanis did their best to hamper the visit of
the speaker to the region. Because it was going to reveal the fact that
various Armenian monuments have been and are still being annihilated
both in the Autonomous Republic of Nakhichevan and Azerbaijan and that
the information saying that Armenians are destroying "Azerbaijani"
monuments was simply fake.

Armenian National Assembly has expressed readiness to assist the
visit of PACE speaker to the region any time.

The fate of the visit will be decided during the sitting of PACE
committee.

NA Public Relation’s Department

Foundation Ceremony Of Armenian House To Take Place In Vanadzor

FOUNDATION CEREMONY OF ARMENIAN HOUSE TO TAKE PLACE IN VANADZOR

Noyan Tapan
Aug 30 2007

VANADZOR, AUGUST 30, NOYAN TAPAN. The foundation ceremony of the
Armenian House of the city of Vanadzor will take place on August 30
with the solemn participation of the Catholicos of All Armenians.

According to the message received from the Information Service of
the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Mr. and Mrs. Sargis and Hrut
Bedevians, benefactors of the Armenian House, national benefactors,
pilgrims and guests will be present at this ceremony.

CEC Registers Khachik Manukian As National Assembly Deputy

CEC REGISTERS KHACHIK MANUKIAN AS NATIONAL ASSEMBLY DEPUTY

Noyan Tapan
Aug 29 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 29, NOYAN TAPAN. At the August 29 sitting, the RA
Central Electoral Commission (CEC) registered the member of Republican
Party of Armenia (RPA) Khachik Manukian as a NA deputy. The decision of
the district electoral commission No 15 on election of the NA deputy by
the majoritarian system from the indicated district was taken as the
basis. The protocol was signed by all the eight members of the CEC,
including the representative of the "Heritage" party Zoya Tadevosian.

To recap, among rivals of K. Manukian in this electoral district was
Raffi Hovannisian, the leader of the "Heritage" party and the head of
NA "Heritage" faction, who stated the day before that the elections
were held in a unfree and unfair atmosphere. Z. Tadevosian shared the
opinion of her party’s leader. However, in response to reporters’
questions, she said that "all electoral falsifications take place
outside the polling stations: these are electoral bribes, guidance
of voters, use of power levers, confusion of passport addresses" and
for this reason she did not decline to sign the protocol of the CEC.

Anatomy Of A Massacre: How The Genocide Unfolded

ANATOMY OF A MASSACRE: HOW THE GENOCIDE UNFOLDED
Simon Usborne

The Independent – United Kingdom
Published: Aug 28, 2007

This graphic, with its network of lines and blobs, reveals the scale
of what some historians have called the "first holocaust of the 20th
century". An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died between 1915 and
1917, either at the hands of Turkish forces or of starvation. Exact
figures are unknown, but each larger blob – at the site of a
concentration camp or massacre – potentially represents the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of people.

The trail of extermination, and dispute about exactly what happened,
stretches back more than 90 years to the opening months of the First
World War, when some of the Armenian minority in the east of the
beleaguered Ottoman Empire enraged the ruling Young Turks coalition
by siding with Russia.

On 24 April 1915, Turkish troops rounded up and killed hundreds of
Armenian intellectuals. Weeks later, three million Armenians were
marched from their homes – the majority towards Syria and modern-day
Iraq – via an estimated 25 concentration camps.

In 1915, The New York Times reported that "the roads and the Euphrates
are strewn with corpses of exiles… It is a plan to exterminate the
whole Armenian people." Winston Churchill would later call the forced
exodus an "administrative holocaust".

Yet Turkey, while acknowledging that many Armenians died, disputes
the 1.5 million toll and insists that the acts of 1915-17 did not
constitute what is now termed genocide – defined by the UN as a
state-sponsored attempt to "destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
ethnic, racial or religious group". Instead, Ankara claims the deaths
were part of the wider war, and that massacres were committed by
both sides.

Several countries have formally recognised genocide against the
Armenians (and, in the case of France, outlawed its denial), but it
remains illegal in Turkey to call for recognition. As recently as last
year, the Turkish foreign ministry dismissed genocide allegations as
"unfounded".

One authority on extermination who did recognise the Armenian
genocide was Adolf Hitler. In a 1939 speech, in which he ordered
the killing, "mercilessly and without compassion", of Polish men,
women and children, he concluded: "Who, after all, speaks today of
the annihilation of the Armenians?"

Russia Bans Livestock Product Imports From Armenia

RUSSIA BANS LIVESTOCK PRODUCT IMPORTS FROM ARMENIA

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
August 29, 2007 Wednesday 2:25 PM EET

Russia’s veterinary regulator Wednesday banned imports of livestock
products from Armenia over quality concerns, Alexei Alekseyenko,
a spokesman for the regulator, told ITAR-TASS.

The regulator suspects that some Armenian livestock products could be
contaminated with African swine fever, Alekseyenko said. He added that
the regulator had also imposed a ban on imports of meat products from
other countries via Armenia and restrictions on imports of agricultural
produce from Armenia and other countries via Armenia.

More Opposition Talks On Presidential Candidate

MORE OPPOSITION TALKS ON PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
By Astghik Bedevian

Radio Libery, Czech Rep.
Aug 28 2007

Leading Armenian opposition parties held on Tuesday a second round
of negotiations on the possibility of fielding a single candidate in
next year’s presidential election.

Their leaders were tight-lipped about details of the talks. Some of
them said only that they again did not discuss names of concrete
individuals who could successfully challenge Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisian during the vote.

"One of the participants said that everyone is ready to put aside
their ambitions for the sake of national welfare," said Paruyr
Hayrikian, a prominent Soviet-era dissident and the main initiator
of the talks. "Nobody objected to that."

"Right now we need to ascertain the team that would enter the fray with
a different value system," Hayrikian told RFE/RL. "It is not important
who will lead the team. The best player should not necessarily be
the team captain."

"We are not discussing concrete candidacies yet," said another
participant, Manuk Gasparian.

Participants again included opposition heavyweights like Stepan
Demirchian, Artashes Geghamian and Artur Baghdasarian. All three men
are believed to continue to harbor presidential ambitions despite
their parties’ poor showing in last May’s parliamentary elections. It
remains to be seen whether any of them is ready to withdraw from the
presidential race in favor of another presidential contender.

Baghdasarian described Tuesday’s consultations as "very useful"
but refused to go into details. Demirchian and Geghamian could not
be reached for comment.

Another top opposition leader, Raffi Hovannisian, failed to
send representatives to the latest talks. They were again openly
boycotted by two other prominent oppositionists, Vazgen Manukian
of the National Democratic Union and Aram Sarkisian of the radical
Hanrapetutyun party. Manukian has already made it clear that he will
run for president in any case, while Sarkisian and his allies make
no secret of their support for former President Levon Ter-Petrosian.

All of the participants interviewed by RFE/RL insisted that
Ter-Petrosian’s possible participation in the 2008 election was not
on the agenda of their meeting.

Crisis In U.S. Mortgage Crediting Sphere To Have No Impact On Mortga

CRISIS IN U.S. MORTGAGE CREDITING SPHERE TO HAVE NO IMPACT ON MORTGAGE SYSTEM OF ARMENIA

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Aug 27 2007

YEREVAN, August 27. /ARKA/. The crisis in the mortgage crediting
sphere of the United States will have no impact on mortgage system
of Armenia due to lack of two fundamental contributing factors,
Director of Association of Mortgage Market Participants of Armenia
Vardan Petrosian said. According to him, two fundamental contributing
factors lack

"Financial markets of Armenia and USA are not mutually integrated that
much; besides, mortgage sphere in Armenia has no system importance
to the financial market for the time being," he said.

Petrosian also added that mortgage gains importance in the country
gradually and "it is natural to suppose that the sphere will be of
key importance after some time".

According to him, the situation on the U.S. mortgage market is one
of the occasions and opportunities to gain experience and education.

"The mortgage crediting market of Armenia takes its first steps in
the way of development, and this is a good opportunity to study the
experience of other countries and learn lessons", he said.

In spring 2007 crisis occurred on the U.S. mortgage market due to
inability of mortgage borrowers to pay off the credits. As a result of
mass defaults of American borrowers the ratings agencies overestimated
the ratings of more than 1,000 issues of mortgage bonds for total of
$12 bln. Fifty companies went bankrupt in USA.

As of June 30 2007, the volume of mortgage credits allocated by the
Armenian banks reached AMD 35,159 mln, thus increased by more than
two times over the year (AMD 17,026.0 mln as of June 30 2006). Over
the same period, the mortgage credit portfolio of credit organizations
reached AMD 3,067.7 mln against AMD 711.4 mln in the year before. ($1 =
AMD337.12).