Baku not going to inform public of Karabakh process

PanARMENIAN.Net

Baku not going to inform public of Karabakh process
05.12.2007 14:17 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Azerbaijani authorities see no need in informing
the public about the process of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
resolution, said Novruz Mammadov, the head of the International
Relations Department of the Azerbaijani President’s Administration, in
response to demand of some political parties and movements that called
upon the leadership to make the talks’ contents public.

`We have nothing to say now, because no serious decision was taken
toward the final peace agreement,’ he said.

According to Mammadov, mediators present different proposals to the
sides and nothing else, Trend reports.

CBA Sets Refinancing Interest Rate At 5.75%

CBA SETS REFINANCING INTEREST RATE AT 5.75%

Noyan Tapan
Dec 04 2007

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 4, NOYAN TAPAN. At the Decemebr 4 sitting, the Board
of the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) raised the refinancing interest
rate by 0.5%, setting it at 5.75%.

NT was informed by the CBA press service that 2.1% inflation was
registered in November on October 2007, as a result of which the
12-month inflation made 6.8%, exceeding by 1.3% the upper limit of
the target inflation of 4+-1.5%.

According to the CBA Board, in the fourth quarter, high growth
rates of private spending (under conditions of a high infaltion
environment formed under the impact of external shocks) will keep
inflation pressures.

The CBA Board stated that it will be consistent in neutralizing
the secondary impacts of external inflation shocks, as well as the
inflation pressures conditioned by growing demand, and in mitigating
inflation expectations.

By another decision of the CBA Board, Avangard Invest credit
organization CJSC has been registered and licensed.

Welcome .. My Beloved Yerevan

WELCOME .. MY BELOVED YEREVAN

KarabakhOpen
05-12-2007 11:05:46

Ara S. Ashjian
An Iraqi Armenian settled in
Yerevan, Armenia
For Karabakh-Open

After my brother and I had left my beloved Baghdad on September 6,
2007, we arrived in Damascus and then Aleppo by motorcars. Many Iraqis
were leaving Iraq to escape the worsening security conditions. Their
departure from Iraq was hastened after Damascus had announced that it
will apply to the Iraqis who enter Syria a new regime of previously
getting visas from September 10, 2007. In Aleppo we stayed at my
older aunt’s house for ten days. My aunt is the only alive among her
sisters after my mother and my youngest aunt had passed away last
July. Finally, we took the plane to my beloved Yerevan, the capital
of the Republic of Armenia, which we arrived in after midnight.

In the first month I rented a house in Komitas Street, a street of
vital importance in the capital, and then moved to live in a house
in Kievian street. I have begun a search to buy a house. My sister
s youngest daughter, who came from the United States to continue her
study at Yerevan State Medical University, lives with me. Her study was
interrupted at the College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, after my
sister and her family had left Baghdad in July 2006 and emigrated to
the United States. They left Iraq because of the insecure conditions
prevailed in the country and after terrorists began targeting and
threatening the life of Iraqi scientists, engineers, academic staff
members, doctors and surgeons, among whom my brother-in-law.

First, I had to place my sick brother in the hospital to be under
continuous medical care. I keep visiting him at the hospital to be
reassured and watch his condition. I began working as a supervisor
engineer in building roads and bridges in a site of the project
placed near the Victory Park and Monument region, which symbolizes
the fiftieth anniversary of declaring the Soviet Republic of Armenia
(declared on December 2, 1920). The network of roads and bridges
in the project I work will connect Hiratsi, Saralanj and Avetisian
streets in a high place that overlooks the capital Yerevan. From this
place, the fascinating scene of Ararat mountain (also called Masis
by Armenians), which historically symbolizes Armenia and Armenians
and is captivated by Turkey, clearly appears, especially in shining
days. The two peaks of the mountain appear close to us, although
they are at 55 kilometers from Yerevan. The work in the project,
which extends for kilometers, continues earnestly and actively to
a late hour of the day to compensate for the breaks that may occur
during the season of bitter cold, snowfall and torrential rains.

The project is funded, as well as several other projects to reconstruct
Armenia and NKR (Artsakh), by Lincy Armenian American Foundation. I
stand in honor and respect for this foundation and its great work,
which contributes, beside other domains, to building a network of
modern roads and bridges.

This eases connection between different parts of the capital, as well
as provides jobs to thousands of workers and engineers. I am happy and
proud to be one of the engineers who contribute, even in simple part,
to reconstruction of my beloved Yerevan, after I had contributed to
reconstruction of my beloved Baghdad in the past. I regard this as
one of the events I am proud of in my life and career. Before leaving
Iraq a friend of mine, who lives in the United States, found, without
asking him to do so, a job offer for me to work as a construction
engineer in the United States.

Ahead of that a friend settled in Canada promised to aid my immigration
to Canada. However, I apologized to accept both offers as I have the
great wish to live and work in my beloved Yerevan to make true the
dream I have since childhood.

Among the difficulties I faced in work at the beginning was the
different method used in putting engineering designs and its
language. It depends, sometimes, on the Russian language commonly
used in Armenia, for being one of the republics of the former Soviet
Union. The Russian is widely used by engineers and workers belonging to
the old generation. I begun learning some Russian words used in work
and other spheres of life and to acclimatize with the work and its
mountainous environment, which varies from the working environment
in Baghdad. Perhaps I am the first Iraqi construction engineer, in
the recent years, who enter such a domain. It also needs mastering
the Armenian language (with its eastern dialect used in Armenia,
other republics of the former Soviet Union and Iran) to be able to
write reports on the progress and amounts of the work. The engineering
supervision here is less strict than that we were familiar to in Iraq
because of what I was told it is continuing of the system existed in
the Soviet era.

I try to apply a more strict supervision system to the project I work
in cooperation with my colleagues in work. Close to this project
there is the project to build Cafesjian Museum of Art oversaw by
Cafesjian Armenian American Foundation beside a project to build a
museum and a home to the French Armenian world-famous singer Charles
Aznavour. Then, I was appointed a supervisor engineer to another part
of the project beside a stone bridge built in 1933 in the era of the
Armenian communist leader Aghasi Khanjian.

He was a victim of a liquidation campaign led by the Soviet leader
Stalin in the third decade of the last century. This bridge is placed
in the Street of Alexander Miasnikian, the first communist leader of
the Soviet Armenia. The manager of the company I work in told me I
was appointed to work in this important site of the project because
of the serious nature of my work after less than a month of work in
the project.

The work in this site is carried out by a contractor whose family
immigrated, while he was a child in the age of six months, from
the Iranian city of Isfahan to Armenia in 1946. The contractor,
who is loyal to his work, has made me a striking offer; he has asked
me to work with him in Iraq in engineering projects and compensate
for the house I sold in Baghdad before leaving it. This means, in
case of existing the proper conditions to achieve it, my return,
even temporarily, to my hometown and beloved Baghdad.

Some workers and engineers confuse that I am from Iran for similar
vocalization of the words (Iraq) and (Iran) in the Armenian language
(also in English). To prevent such confuse, I say I am originally
from Baghdad, Iraq. Workers often ask me about Iraq, its situation and
ethnicities, including Kurds and Yezidis, 55-60 thousand in Armenia,
who consider Iraq as their historical homeland. Many Yezidis are
meat merchants in Armenia. The overseer of the workers, had passed
three years in Adan, Yemen, in the eightieth of the last century. He
always remembers with yearning those days and tells me the customs
and traditions of Yemen s good-hearted people and comes near to me
whenever I hear Iraqi songs on my cellular phone!!

I used to arrive to Yerevan s streets and regions by using a detailed
computer map and guide for transport minibuses. I learned many names
of avenues and streets of the city in a way that made some friends and
work colleagues jealous!! I used to spend the daily break hour close
to my workplace in a region where many universities and institutes
exist near the metro station named (Youth). I used to sit near
the statue of the great Armenian poet Avedik Isahakian (1875-1957)
which overlooks the street of great Armenian writer Khachadur Abovian
(1803-1848). I used to sit down in this site and enjoy looking at
cars and pedestrians, mostly young men and beautiful and elegant
women remembering the Armenian famous song titled the beautiful
girl of Yerevan (Yerevani sirun aghchig) !! I know well that I would
made jealous my male readers, especially Armenian young men in the
Diaspora!! Why not, when I myself envy myself every day for leaving
in my beloved Yerevan!!

The city streets witness crowds and traffic jams for launching a
campaign to build roads and bridges which people here link to the
presidential elections to be set up in next February. I met in Yerevan
some friends whom I knew by Internet while I was in Baghdad. They are
nice and help me to overcome difficulties I face here. Among those an
MA student who presented a dissertation on the conditions of Iraqi
Armenians after the US-UK invasion of Iraq in 2003 presented to the
Graduate School of Political Science and International Affairs of the
American University of Armenia. The research caught the attention
of Iraqi Armenians, international and humanitarian organizations
working in Armenia, because it focuses, in particular, on the
conditions of Iraqi Armenians in Armenia and proposes solutions to
their problems. The student had contacted me by Internet while I
was in Baghdad, on the advice of some Iraqi Armenians in Armenia,
to supply her with information she needs in this difficult subject,
which lacks written sources. The faculty adviser is the political
scientist Dr. Armen Ayvazian<2>. The student has completed, by her
hard work, a distinctive research, which is the first of its kind
in Armenia and moved from research to humanitarian act to aid Iraqi
Armenians in Armenia.

I attended a meeting of Iraqi Armenians in Armenia in which nearly
120 Iraqi Armenians settled in Armenia were present. The meeting was
aimed at setting up a union or league which would represent and follow
the affairs of Iraqi Armenians in Armenia in front of the government
and the public, international and humanitarian organizations working
in Armenia. An Iraqi atmosphere prevailed the meeting in which the
attendance exchanged ideas and thoughts on setting up this union and
its aims. The meeting unanimously adopted setting up this union which
needs to put its rule, gain official approval and elect its board
of directors.

I always yearn to my beloved Baghdad, and follow the news of Iraq on
Iraqi and Arab satellite channels, as if I am still in Iraq and didn
t leave it. I feel pain for Iraq s tragic situation and for sectarian
and ethnic artificial conflicts between one people created by the
occupier to perpetuate the occupation, and are used by some Iraqi
political forces to achieve own interests. I listen continuously
to the songs of Iraqi singer Haitham Yousif and remember my beloved
Baghdad, my life there and my deceased mother whom I see here in the
faces of women at her age and feel sadness. My mother, how much I
miss and need you, even if you were sick and I d take care of you,
while I begin my new life in my beloved Yerevan to receive from you
power and advice. Why do not you come to me in my dreams so I can talk
to you, tell you how much I love and miss you and kiss your cheeks
and hands? However, I feel your breath close to me while you watch me
to be reassured on my new life here. My beloved and precious mother,
I ask God to have mercy on you.

Armenia Receives PACE Delegation

Economic News
December 6, 2007 Thursday

Armenia Receives PACE Delegation

Yerevan. ">OREANDA-NEWS . December 6, 2007. RA Prime Minister Serzh
Sargsyan received the delegation led by Georges Colombier, rapporteur
for Armenia on the monitoring commission of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE). First of all, Mr. Colombier
briefed the RA Prime Minister on the objectives behind his visit by
mentioning that he has come to our country to get acquainted with the
situation about six and a half months past the May parliamentary
elections and two and a half months prior to the upcoming
presidential vote in Armenia, as well as to collect information
regarding our country’s developments in the pre-election period. "I
am glad that reforms are completed in a number of spheres, including
the adoption of an amended constitution, the improvements to the
electoral code, the judiciary reform that are supposed to bring about
tangible shifts in the reform process in Armenia after full
enactment," Georges Colombier has said.

Serzh Sargsyan welcomed the visit to the Republic of Armenia of the
delegation led by rapporteur for Armenia on the PACE monitoring
commission Georges Colombier and noted that the monitoring carried
out by the Council of Europe is another incentive for our country to
implement the reforms in line with the proposed time-schedule.

The parties have also spoken about the preparations for the
forthcoming presidential elections, the ways to ensuring that the
poll is free and fair, the measures towards providing freedom of
speech and plurality, past and future action for fighting corruption,
as well as the latest developments in the Karabakh peace process.

Court Evidence Raises Questions About Involvement of Turkish Ofcls

The Eurasia Daily Monitor
December 5, 2007 — Volume 4, Issue 225

COURT EVIDENCE RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT INVOLVEMENT OF TURKISH OFFICIALS
IN KILLING OF CHRISTIANS

Evidence presented to the court during the trial of five youths
accused of killing three Christians in the southeastern town of
Malatya earlier this year have raised questions about the involvement
of state officials in the murder.

On April 18, the five are alleged to have tortured and brutally killed
three employees of Zirve Yayincilk, a Christian publishing house in
Malatya. Two of the victims were Turks and the other a German
national. The murders shocked Turkey, particularly as they came less
than three months after the January 19 killing in Istanbul of Hrant
Dink, the editor of Agos, a newspaper serving Turkey’s small
community of Armenian Christians.

Initially the Malatya murders were thought merely to have been the
work of a group of impoverished Islamist youths, several of whom were
staying in the same dormitory run by a local Islamic foundation. The
assumption was that, even if the five had not acted spontaneously, it
had been an emotional decision taken at relatively short notice.

Under the Turkish judicial system, the individual hearings of a case
are often spread over many months or years rather than being held on
consecutive days, as is common in the United States and Western
Europe. When the first hearing was held on November 23, the evidence
presented by the public prosecutor contained detailed records of what
were alleged to have been the victims’ missionary activities. This
outraged the lawyers representing their families, who accused the
state-appointed prosecutor of trying to present the defense with
grounds for citing mitigating circumstances by claiming that their
clients had been provoked (Radikal, Milliyet, NTV, November 24).

It has now emerged that, in the six months preceding the murders, four
of the suspects changed their telephones a total of 106 times,
suggesting a concerted attempt to avoid surveillance. The cost of
changing telephones so frequently has also raised the question of
whether they were receiving financial support. Perhaps more
alarmingly, the records of the telephones used by the accused showed
that those with whom they had been in regular contact included a local
council member from the ultranationalist Nationalist Action Party
(MHP), someone in the Ankara headquarters of the Special Police Unit,
a public prosecutor, and a member of the military (Milliyet, Radikal,
Vatan, NTV, CNN-Turk, November 4).

There is nothing to suggest that the institutions themselves were
involved in the murders. However, the latest revelations have
disturbing parallels with the trial of those suspected of killing
Hrant Dink and have raised questions about the prevalence of racist
and religious prejudices among those responsible for maintaining law
and order. At the trial of Dink’s suspected murderer, it emerged
that, despite reporting numerous death threats, Dink had not been
offered police protection. More worryingly, telephone records
presented to the court suggested that some of those accused of
Dink’s murder had close links with elements in the police force in
their native city of Trabzon, on Turkey’s eastern Black Sea
coast. After the main suspect had been arrested, the Turkish media
published photographs taken by the detaining officers, showing him a
variety of heroic poses in front of the Turkish flag. Similarly,
after a 16 year-old was convicted of the February 2006 murder in
Trabzon of the Italian priest Andrea Santoro, his family received
photographs taken by detaining police showing their son proudly
displaying a Turkish flag (Milliyet, October 5).

On November 28, the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation
(TESEV) published the results of a survey of the attitudes of members
of the Turkish judiciary. A total of 51% of the judges and public
prosecutors questioned said that they regarded human rights, including
the freedom of expression, as a threat to national security and unity,
compared with only 28% who did not. Some 63% believed that the
European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) was prejudiced against Turkey
and 49% were opposed to the Turkish cases being taken to the court at
all. Perhaps more worryingly, 53% of judges said that they paid no
attention at all to any agreements signed by Turkey relating to basic
freedoms and rights (NTV, CNNTurk, November 28, Radikal, November 29).

The full details of the events leading up to Dink’s murder are
still not clear. The next hearing of the case involving the killings
in Malatya is currently scheduled for January 14, although the case is
not expected to be concluded until late summer or fall 2008 at the
earliest. The evidence against the accused, most of whom were arrested
at the scene of the crime, is so strong that few doubt that they will
be convicted. However, there has as yet been no attempt to investigate
some of the other questions raised by the case, not least what appears
to be a recurring pattern whereby those involved in high-profile
racist and religious hate crimes appear not only to have been in close
contact with state officials but have subsequently been feted as
heroes by members of the institutions responsible for enforcing law
and order in Turkey.

–Gareth Jenkins

—————————————– ———————————–

The Eurasia Daily Monitor, a publication of the Jamestown Foundation,
is edited by Ann E. Robertson. The opinions expressed in it are those
of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent those of
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Without Manukyan it will end in one round

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 4 2007

WITHOUT MANUKYAN IT WILL END IN ONE ROUND

The leader of the National Democratic Party Shavarsh Kocharyan who
said to support Vazgen Manukyan stated December 4 at the Hayatsk
press club only Vazgen Manukyan , who is opposition to both the
previous and the present government, and proved that he is not
against persons but authoritarianism is able to tackle the most
important problem of the country – structural reforms.

`If an artificial impression is made that in reality the struggle is
between the present and the previous ones, it favors the present one,
and it will end in the first round. Our aim is to foil this plan. And
only the unification that will emerge around Vazgen Manukyan can do
it. Because it will not be bullfight, but questions will be raised
which are justified by ideas, plans and biography, which are directed
at the future of Armenia. Only in this case will the scenario be
foiled. Otherwise, there is no if,’ says Shavarsh Kocharyan in answer
to the question why the NDU will do, whom it will support if Vazgen
Manukyan is not elected to the second round of election.

In answer to the question whether his words mean that if Vazgen
Manukyan does not run in the second round, there will be no second
round at all, Shavarsh Kocharyan says if Vazgen Manukyan is not
elected to it to be perceived appropriately by the society, all the
rest if meaningless. `Today there is only one possibility, the
current process that is now underway and which leads to the victory
of the representative of the majority, to prevent it, I see no other
way but unification around Vazgen Manukyan,’ Shavarsh Kocharyan says.

He rules out supporting Levon Ter-Petrosyan. He says Ter-Petrosyan
has founded this authoritarian system, and the National Democratic
Party accuses the present government of having enlarged this vicious
system instead of fighting it. As to the probability that Vazgen
Manukyan may withdraw from the campaign and support the ARF
Dashnaktsutyun, Shavarsh Kocharyan says nothing should be ruled out
in politics but he can see that Vazgen Manukyan is determined to go
all the way. Now efforts to cooperate with other parties – the ARF
Dashnaktsutyun, the Orinats Yerkir Party and the Heritage Party – are
made, the aim of which is to control the election because all the
three parties have representatives to the election commissions.

Such cooperation is highly important because let us recall the
referendum and the recent parliamentary election when there was no
argument, and everyone said there was fraud. Point to it. If you do
not control, you cannot accuse observers of using double standard.
How are you going to prove? Shavarsh Kocharyan asks. As to the
observation that people sell their votes, Shavarsh Kocharyan says it
is an excuse for fraud by the government and for the failure of the
opposition to get the confidence of the society.

Shavarsh Kocharyan rules out that if there is distinct control, the
government will resort to violence in answer to the question what the
opposition can do in that case. He gives the example of the
presidential election of 1996 when the government held on to power
through violence. Shavarsh Kocharyan says he rules out the repetition
of this scenario in 2008. `I think this scenario is ruled out in
these elections,’ Shavarsh Kocharyan says. According to him, the most
important problem is people’s confidence and standing to this vote of
this confidence.

Three Conditions To ARF (Dashnaktsutyun)

THREE CONDITIONS TO ARF (DASHNAKTSUTYUN)
By Gohar Gevorgian, translated by L.H

AZG Armenian Daily
27/11/2007

Union of NR, DLP Armenia and Alliance does not exclude the possibility
of supporting ARF candidate

"National Renaissance"(NR), "Alliance" and Democratic Liberal Party
of Armenia continue to negotiate the issue of unification, announced
Chairman of NR party Albert Bazeyan in "Tesaket" club.

According to him, the political figure will lead the union, who
will be elected, maybe him, maybe the representative of DLP Armenia,
or the leader of "Alliance" Samvel Babayan.

It is already announced that in case of unification the three parties
will not have a candidate but will support one of the presidential
candidates. Albert Bazeyan couldn’t tell concrete names, as only after
the nominations of the candidates and the presentation of their plans
the union will announce whom they support.

To the question of "Azg" daily about the possibility of supporting
the ARF candidate, Albert Bazeyan answered, "If our colleagues tell
forcible arguments that it is right to support the ARF candidate,
in this case I will not exclude that circumstance. But before it ARF
should take some steps; if it is able to rally several opposition
parties and political figures round it, and propose plans and
approaches close to ours, why not, we will even support the ARF
candidate, in that case we expect that ARF will act as opposition
and call back its officials from the government. In this case we
don’t exclude the possibility of supporting ARF candidate", told the
Chairman of NR Albert Bazeyan.

It’s worth to mention that Albert Bazeyan has many times mentioned that
the viewpoints of Vazgen Manukian are dear to him, and he confirmed
it also on November 24.

Chairman of the "Alliance" party Samvel Babayan has announced that
he will support Serge Sarkisian.

It’s very interesting what kind of candidate supporting conclusion
will reach the parties after the unification.

The Most Deplorable Form Of Authoritarianism

THE MOST DEPLORABLE FORM OF AUTHORITARIANISM

Lragir, Armenia
Nov 28 2007

Instead of reformist authoritarianism Armenia has got heritable
authoritarianism which is perhaps the most deplorable form of
authoritarianism, said the secretary of the Heritage Party Vardan
Khachatryan during the conference of the National Democratic Union
on November 28. He said the leader of the party Raffi Hovannisian did
not come to the conference only because he is in Moscow now. Earlier
the leader of the NDU Vazgen Manukyan had stated that he cannot tell
an ideological difference between them and the Heritage Party.

During his speech Vardan Khachatryan said the unification of
ideological forces in Armenia is highly important because the country
is in a difficult state, isolation now, and a challenge is already a
threat for Armenia. Vardan Khachatryan reminded about the Azerbaijani
defense minister Safar Abiyev’s statement on the eve in Astana that the
likelihood of war on Armenia is 100 percent. "This is not a challenge,
this is a threat," Vardan Khachatryan says, referring to this as the
consequence of the Armenian government’s incompetent policy.

"Therefore, the upcoming presidential election is going to be deciding
for Armenia," Vardan Khachatryan says, noting that the future president
of Armenia should be "loved by the people of Armenia and should not
disagree with people on any point." The secretary of the Heritage
Party says the authorized body, or the conference or the board of the
party will soon discuss and make a decision on supporting a candidate
because Raffi Hovannisian is not eligible since he became a citizen
of Armenia in 2001 and does not comply with the provision of the
Constitution on ten years of citizenship.

ANC-WR Provides Educational Update On Genocide Resolution At United

ANC-WR PROVIDES EDUCATIONAL UPDATE ON GENOCIDE RESOLUTION AT UNITED ARMENIAN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

armradio.am
29.11.2007 10:36

The Armenian National Committee-Western Region provided an analysis
of the genocide resolution pending in the US Congress to members
of the Mens Fellowship Club at the United Armenian Congregational
Church in Studio City on November 27, 2007. The briefing, provided by
ANC-WR Chairman Raffi Hamparian, gave the crowd of over 70 Armenian
Americans an opportunity to learn about the genocide resolution and
its consideration by the House Foreign Affairs Committee last month.

"The ANC-WR is pleased to have provided an educational presentation
to members of the Mens Fellowship Club," remarked ANC-WR Executive
Director Andrew Kzirian. "Whether it is providing educationals on
Armenian topics to Rotary and Kiwanis Clubs, or to Armenian groups, we
welcome engaging people on any number of Armenian issues. The briefing
that our chairman provided on the genocide resolution is part of a
broad grassroots effort to keep all Armenian Americans aware of the
challenges we have and continue to face in seeking justice for the
events of 1915," Kzirian added.

The Mens Fellowship Club at the United Armenian Congregational Church
regularly hosts speakers on a variety of religious and public policy
issues.

The ANC-WR briefing provided members a full accounting of the history
behind the genocide resolution sponsored by Representatives Adam Schiff
(D-CA) and George Radanovich (R-CA) and a synopsis of what may occur
to the bill during the second session of the 110th Congress which
begins next January.

Matthew Bryza: Nagorno Karabakh Process Is Peaceful And There Is No

MATTHEW BRYZA: NAGORNO KARABAKH PROCESS IS PEACEFUL AND THERE IS NO PLACE FOR WAR HERE

2007-11-29 17:35:00

ArmInfo. OSCE MG co-chairs think that military solution of the
Karabakh conflict is quite unacceptable, OSCE MG American Co-chair
Matthew Bryza told ArmInfo, commenting on the statement of Azerbaijani
Defense Minister Safar Abiyev about readiness of Azerbaijan to launch
a new war.

M. Bryza made his statement upon results of OSCE MG session held today
during the first day of the 15th session of OSCE Foreign Ministerial
Council in Madrid. He also said that the negotiation process is the
only opportunity. He noted that this is the reason they are here,
they help to formulate the negotiation process. According to him,
this is peaceful process and war is unacceptable here.