Aliev To Visit Kazakhstan On August 7-8

ALIEV TO VISIT KAZAKHSTAN ON AUGUST 7-8
By Aghavni Haroutiunian

AZG Armenian Daily #140
26/07/2007

International

It is envisaged that Azeri president Ilham Aliev will pay a working
visit to Kazakhstan on August 8. The Azeri ambassador to Kazakhstan
informed the journalists about the coming visit.

It’s worth mentioning that the sides are expected to sign about
80 documents, as well as discuss the current situation in the
basin of the Caspian Sea and the transportation of oil through the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline.

The Turkish Election

THE TURKISH ELECTION
By Gwynne Dyer

AZG Armenian Daily #139
25/07/2007

Situation in Turkey

The best thing about the outcome of the Turkish election on Sunday
is that now the army can’t make a coup. It may still want to: it was
certainly making menacing noises about it recently. But after almost
half the voters (47 percent) backed the incumbent AK (Justice and
Development) party in Sunday’s election, the army simply cannot move
against it. A great many officers would just refuse to act against
the popular will in such a blatant way, and the army would never risk
a split in the officer corps.

The even better thing about this election is that Turks have decisively
rejected the false dichotomy between "political Islam" and "democracy"
that paralyses politics in so many Muslim countries. That matters,
because Turkey is a rapidly developing middle-income country of 75
million people that still has hopes of joining the European Union. (The
current obstructionism of leaders in France, Germany, Austria and a few
others countries is irrelevant, since they will probably all be gone
by the time a decision is taken in ten or twelve years’ time.) But the
election outcome is also important for other Muslim-majority countries.

Most foreign reporting of the Turkish election followed the script
provided by the main opposition parties, the Republican People’s
Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Action Party (MHP), in which they
were defending enlightened, secular democracy in Turkey and the AK
Party was just a front for ignorant hordes of rural Muslim fanatics
who wanted to shove shariat law down the nation’s throat. It was a
"test of Turkish secularism," they claimed –and if it was, then
secularism lost. But that isn’t what really happened at all.

The real struggle in Turkey was between the "republican elite" and
practically everybody else. The "republican elite" are a privileged
and well-educated class of people who have virtually monopolised
senior jobs in the military, the judiciary and the state bureaucracy
for several generations on the pretext that they must have control
in order to defend Ataturk’s secular reforms (in the 1920s!). But
these days, that is only a pretext for preserving their power:
secular democracy in Turkey is not in danger.

There are certainly fanatics in Turkey who would like to force all
their fellow-citizens to conform to their particular brand of religion
on pain of death. Every country has some of those, but they are as rare
in Turkey as they are in Spain — and while the ones in Turkey probably
do vote for the AKP, since it is the only party that openly espouses
"Islamic values," they are a tiny proportion of its supporters.

Indeed, it’s likely that quite a few of the people who voted for the AK
Party this time are not even believers. Although officially 99 percent
Muslim, Turkey has lots of unofficial non-believers, especially in the
big cities, and many of them would have been attracted by the party’s
impressive economic record (five unbroken years of high-speed growth),
by its unwavering commitment to membership in the European Union,
and above all by its determined attempts to LIBERALISE Turkey’s
legal system.

The AK Party has consistently used the need to make Turkish law conform
to EU norms as a justification for changing the law in ways that
expand individual rights. Of course, that also undermines the ability
of the "republican elite" to control the state from behind the scenes,
so they are fighting back by accusing the AK Party of being a Trojan
horse for religious fanatics who want to stop Turks from drinking
alcohol and force women into "Islamic" clothing. The AK Party denies
it, it has spent the last five years in power moving consistently in
the opposite direction, and most Turkish voters believe it.

The larger significance of the AK Party’s success in Turkey is that
it demonstrates that devout Muslims can co-exist with their less
devout fellow-citizens in a democratic constitutional order. All the
devout need in order to prosper is recognition of their equal rights,
not a monopoly of power and control over the personal behaviour of
the less devout and the non-believers.

In Muslim-majority countries where the secular holders of power and
the Islamist revolutionaries see one another as mortal enemies —
which is to say, in about half of the countries of the Muslim world —
peaceful democratic change, compromise and co-existence of the sort
that we can see in Turkey are regarded as impossible. It is war to
the death between the establishment and the fanatics, and there is
very little space between them for people who would quite like more
democracy and civil rights but don’t fancy living under shariat law
as interpreted by extremists.

Opening that space up is the most important political task these
countries face. The interesting thing about Turkey is that it has been
the Islamic activists, not the secularists, who did the hard work
that made it happen. But let’s be honest: even the AK Party would
have found it hard to open the Turkish system up if it had not had
the prospect of membership in the European Union as an inducement for
everybody to be reasonable and cooperative — and it’s unlikely that
the EU will be offering Egypt or Pakistan membership any time soon.

‘Jerusalem of Karabakh’ at the heart of Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict

‘Jerusalem of Karabakh’ at the heart of Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict
Posted on Wednesday, July 25, 2007 (EST)

Torn between two cultures and at the heart of a conflict with no end in
sight, the historic city of Shusha is often called the "Jerusalem of
Karabakh."

SHUSHA, Azerbaijan (AFP) – Perched on a plateau overlooking the fertile
valleys of Azerbaijan’s disputed Nagorny Karabakh region, Shusha is a cradle
of culture both for Christian Armenians, who now control it, and for Muslim
Azerbaijanis, who have vowed to reclaim it as their own.

The site of a decisive battle in the 1988-1992 Nagorny Karabakh war, Shusha
is now largely in ruins. The city is littered with gutted apartment blocks,
derelict office buildings and crumbling churches and mosques.

To mark the 15th anniversary of their capture of Shusha in 1992, Karabakh’s
separatist authorities this year announced ambitious plans to rebuild the
city and turn it into a cultural and tourism centre.

"Shushi was a beautiful city and it will be again," said Samvel Haratunian,
the deputy head of the local administration, using the Armenian name for the
city.

He said authorities plan to spend 10 million dollars (7.2 million euros)
over several years restoring historical buildings, replacing rotting
infrastructure and building new homes.

The restoration plans have sparked outrage among Azerbaijanis, who say that
after forcing them out of the city, the separatists are now erasing their
cultural heritage.

"Without Shusha there can be no Azerbaijan, the country simply cannot exist
without this city. It was always a strategic Azerbaijani city," said Hikmat
Sabiroglu, a refugee from Shusha who is now a political analyst in the
Azerbaijani capital, Baku.

"We are very angry about the Armenian administration’s plans for
reconstruction. Trying to transform Shusha into an Armenian city is simply
absurd," he said.

Azerbaijanis date the founding of Shusha to the mid-1700s, when it became
the capital of the independent khanate of Karabakh, though Armenians claim
to have settled the area earlier. It was a mixed city throughout much of its
history.

Shusha was a centre of culture in the 19th and early 20th centuries,
producing many of the most renowned musicians, scientists and writers in
both Armenian and Azerbaijani history.

It was famed for its architectural beauty, in particular its 17 mosques and
five churches. At its height, Shusha was the second-largest city in the
South Caucasus after Tbilisi, with a population of more than 60,000.

Despite occasional disputes, the city’s Armenian and Azerbaijani population
managed to live together in relative peace until the collapse of the Russian
Empire, which had absorbed the region in the mid-1800s.

Fighting broke out in 1920 over whether Shusha would be part of the newly
declared republics of Armenia or Azerbaijan. Thousands died and the Armenian
population fled the city.

Following the Soviet takeover of the region, control over Karabakh was given
to Azerbaijan. While the majority of Karabakh’s population was ethnic
Armenian, Shusha remained a mostly ethnic Azerbaijani enclave.

When full-scale fighting broke out in Karabakh following the 1991 collapse
of the Soviet Union, more than 95 percent of Shusha’s 17,000 people were
ethnic Azerbaijani.

A walled fortress overlooking the regional capital Stepanakert, Shusha was a
strategic stronghold for Azerbaijani forces. For months in the winter of
1992, rockets rained down on Stepanakert from Shusha, killing thousands.

On May 8 separatist forces, who were backed throughout the conflict by newly
independent Armenia, stormed the citadel in the most famous encounter of the
war, taking the city in street-to-street combat.

Mass demonstrations broke out in Baku over the loss of Shusha, forcing the
government to resign. Attempts to retake the city failed and when a
ceasefire was signed in 1994 the city remained in separatist hands.

Today, like Jerusalem in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Shusha is at the
heart of negotiations on a peace settlement, with both sides claiming the
city as their own.

Unlike Jerusalem, Shusha is entirely under the control of one side in the
conflict. Officials here insist their restoration plans will respect
Shusha’s Muslim history, pointing to major restoration work at an historic
mosque.

But many in the city do not accept the return of its Muslim population.

"No Muslims live here now, of course. The mosques are simply historical
monuments," said Father Andreas of Shusha’s Ghazanchetsots Cathedral, which
has been fully restored after suffering heavy damage during the war.

Slightly more than 3,000 people live here now, many of them refugees who
fled Azerbaijan during the war. For them, Armenians and Azerbaijanis living
side-by-side again in Shusha is simply unthinkable.

"How can you live together with evil dogs?" said Valo Baghdasarian, a fruit
and vegetable seller in the town centre. "You can’t give away land that was
paid for with blood."

(c)AFP

PICTURES:

*Father Andreas of Shusha’s Armenian cathedral
(c) AFP/File Michael Mainville*

*The ruins of a building and a mosque in Nagorny Karabakh’s city of Shusha
(c) AFP Michael Mainville*

spx

http://news.sawf.org/Lifestyle/40453.a

Caroline Cox To Pay A Visit To Nagorno Karabakh

CAROLINE COX TO PAY A VISIT TO NAGORNO KARABAKH

Panorama.am
17:07 24/07/2007

Vice Speaker of the House of Lords of Great Britain’s Parliament
Caroline Cox is on her regular visit to Nagorno Karabakh. She will
meet with Nagorno Karabakh Republic Parliament Speaker Ashot Ghulyan
and Foreign Minister Georgy Petrosyan today, ARKA reports say.

Baroness Cox will also visit a Rehabilitation Center in Stepanakert
named to her honor.

NJ ANC Activist Discusses Community Concerns with Rep. Garrett

Armenian National Committee of America
1711 N Street NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel. (202) 775-1918
Fax. (202) 775-5648
Email [email protected]
Internet

PRESS RELEASE
July 24, 2007
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

NEW JERSEY ANC ACTIVIST DISCUSSES
COMMUNITY CONCERNS WITH REP. SCOTT GARRETT

WASHINGTON, DC – Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) "Leo
Sarkisian" intern Nyree Naljian met with Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ-
5th District) to thank the Congressman for his cosponsorship of the
Armenian Genocide Resolution (H.Res.106) and his ongoing support
for issues of concern to the Armenian American community.

"I was pleased to see how responsive the Congressman was about the
Genocide Resolution and his passion to advance this important human
rights legislation," explained Naljian. "I was also encouraged to
hear that he will reach out to his Congressional colleagues in
support of H. Res. 106."

Naljian, who was joined by ANCA Legislative Affairs Director Raffi
Karakashian during the meeting, updated Rep. Garrett about the
current status of the Armenian Genocide Resolution and discussed
ways to rally additional co-sponsors from among his colleagues.
Naljian also touched on a number of Armenian American community
concerns including continued high levels of U.S. assistance to
Armenia and the upcoming presidential elections in Nagorno
Karabagh.

In additional to cosponsoring H. Res. 106, Rep. Scott Garrett is a
member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian issues. He
continuously expresses support for Congressional initiatives and
resolutions to commemorate the Armenian Genocide, U.S. aid to
strengthen Armenia’s independence, and continued developmental and
humanitarian aid to Nagorno Karabagh.

Rep. Garrett expressed interest in the ANCA "Leo Sarkisian"
Internship program and discussed Naljian’s project to reach out to
evangelical Christian across the U.S. as part of a broader ANCA
coalition building campaign in support of the Armenian Genocide
Resolution.

The ANCA "Leo Sarkisian" Internship Program, now in its 23rd year,
is an eight week intensive program designed to give student leaders
and activists the tools necessary to effectively advance Armenian
American concerns on campus and in their communities. It is an
integral part of the ANCA Capital Gateway program, a year-round
internship / job placement service which provides Armenian
Americans greater opportunities to explore careers on Capitol Hill,
in the U.S. Foreign Service and key Washington, DC foreign policy
think tanks.

To learn more about the ANCA Capital Gateway Program, visit:
w.php

#####

Photo Caption: Rep. Scott Garrett with ANCA Leo Sarkisian intern
Nyree Naljian

http://www.anca.org/gateway/gateway_overvie
www.anca.org

Foreign Ministry Spokesman Liu Jianchao’s Remarks On The Election In

FOREIGN MINISTRY SPOKESMAN LIU JIANCHAO’S REMARKS ON THE ELECTION IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH REGION

MFA China (press release), China –
tm
July 23 2007

Q: Nagorno-Karabakh Region held "Presidential Election" on July
19th. What’s your comment?

A: The Chinese Government respects the independence, sovereignty and
territorial integrity of the Republic of Azerbaijan, supports the UN
Security Council’s resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh Region. China hopes

http://www.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/xwfw/s2510/t343514.h

Armenian PM, Speaker Of Armenian Parliament Congratulate Bako Sahaky

ARMENIAN PM, SPEAKER OF ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT CONGRATULATE BAKO SAHAKYAN ON HIS ELECTING AS NKR PRESIDENT

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 23 2007

YEREVAN, July 23. /ARKA/. Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan and Speaker
of the Armenian parliament Tigran Torosyan congratulated Bako Sahakyan
on his electing as President of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

"I am sure that you, by enjoying the unreserved support of the
Karabakhi people, will continue efforts aimed at strengthening,
developing Karabakh’s statehood, and ensuring the people’s well-being,"
the prime minister’s greeting message says.

In his message, Sargsyan pointed out that the presidential elections,
held in keeping with democratic standards in NKR, confirms the
irreversibility of establishment of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

The Armenian prime minister wished the newly-elected NKR president
good luck with his high post for the benefit of the country and
Karabakhi people.

In his turn, Tigran Torosyan pointed out the big success of the
elections is a very good foundation both for further development of
the NKR and well-being of the people, and international recognition
of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

"I am sure that your experience and devotion are a guarantee for
continuing the consistent and purposeful development of Karabakh,"
Torosyan’s message says. The Armenian speaker assured Sahakyan of
full support of the Armenian parliament and wished him good luck for
the benefit of the people and well-being of the NKR.

The presidential elections in Nagorno-Karabakh were held on July 19.

At the meeting held by the NKR Central Election Committee, CEC members
finalized results of presidential election and signed a decision on
appointing Bako Sahakyan as NKR President.

He collected 59,326 votes, or 85.12% of the total number of voters –
92,114 people.

ANKARA: Armenia- Iran Joint Economic Commission

Armenia- Iran Joint Economic Commission

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
July 21 2007

Saturday , 21 July 2007

Iran-Armenia Joint Economic Commission meets in Yerevan

TEHRAN, July 20 (MNA) ~V The seventh session of the Iran-Armenia Joint
Economic Cooperation Commission was held in Yerevan on Friday. The
commission was chaired by Iranian Foreign Minister Manuchehr Mottaki
and Armenian Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan.

The commission discussed cooperation in the areas of trade, energy,
health, transportation, science, culture, as well as provincial and
legal cooperation.

Mottaki said ties between Iran and Armenia have risen significantly
over the last few years.

~SWe have witnessed good relations between two nations over centuries~T
and continued commercial ties are examples of progressive bilateral
relations, Mottaki said.

He mentioned the implementation of joint projects such as
construction of the Iran-Armenia gas pipeline, electricity
transmission lines, and a wind power station in Armenia as examples
of growing economic cooperation between the neighbors.

The Iranian top diplomat also pointed to an agreement to construct
the Aras hydroelectric power station, establishing railway system
between the two states, an initial agreement for forming a trilateral
committee consisting of Iran, Russia and Armenia for building a
refinery in Armenia, and establishing a joint trade center as among
other avenues for upgrading ties.

The Armenian energy minister also expressed satisfaction over the
growing Tehran-Yerevan ties, adding that Armenia is prepared to take
large steps for expansion of bilateral ties.

European Committee Demands To Set Free Azerbaijani Journalists

EUROPEAN COMMITTEE DEMANDS TO SET FREE AZERBAIJANI JOURNALISTS

AZG Armenian Daily
20/07/2007

"We inflexibly demand from the Azerbaijani authorities to set free
the arrested journalists", announced the European Committee’s Special
Representative for Azerbaijan Alan Vaddams to Day.az agency.

He assured that they always discuss the issues of human rights and
freedom of press with the authorities of Azerbaijan.

The demand of the Special Representative of the European Committee to
set free the 7 Azerbaijani journalists is presented as a realization
of the EU policy in Azerbaijan.

The above-mentioned issue will also be discussed during the visit
of EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby to
Baku on July 19.

TEHRAN: Armenian President Says Anxiously Awaiting Iranian Counterpa

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SAYS ANXIOUSLY AWAITING IRANIAN COUNTERPART’S VISIT

IRNA website, Tehran
20 Jul 07

Yerevan, 20 July: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said here Friday
[20 July] that he was impatiently looking forward to visiting of his
Iranian counterpart Mahmud Ahmadinezhad to Yerevan.

Kocharyan told Iran’s visiting foreign minister Manuchehr Mottaki that
exchange of talks and visits by Iranian and Armenian officials and
historical commonalities of the Iranian and Armenian nations as well
as their cordial ties have gravely been contributing into expansion
of the two-way ties.

He said conclusion of free trade agreement would boost volume of
mutual commercial transactions.

Mottaki, voicing satisfaction with the successful arrangement and
holding of the 7th Tehran-Yerevan Joint Economic Cooperation Commission
session, stressed promotion of bilateral ties.

"There is no limit to expansion of bilateral ties and in this line
we seek stronger cooperation with the Armenian side in the economic,
energy, transportation and transit sectors," he said.