Araz Azimov: We Are On The Right Way

ARAZ AZIMOV: WE ARE ON THE RIGHT WAY

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Aug 3 2007

There is not progress in the meeting of OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs,
because sides ensuring progress did not participate in their meeting,
Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov said, APA reports.

He said that concrete solution way in stages for the solution of the
conflict has been defined.

"But unconstructive position of Armenia prevents solution of the
problem for the present. The situation is hopeless, there is no
alternative influencing on the solution of the conflict. There is only
one way here, occupied territories should be liberated," he said.

Canadians Run Amok In Azerbaijan

CANADIANS RUN AMOK IN AZERBAIJAN
by Kristian Gravenor

The Dominion, Canada

Aug 2 2007

Mining, oil undermines central Asian diplomacy and trade

When Jean Chretien retired as prime minister after a decade running
Canada, he did not go to Disneyland. Instead, he visited a place
seldom visited by American tourists. He hopped a flight to Ashgabat,
Turkmenistan, a former Soviet Republic populated by nomadic desert
tribes.

It’s also home to sensitive post-Soviet territorial disputes, the
most delicate of which is Turkmenistan’s claims to oil under the
Caspian Sea. For years, the country has been slowly working towards an
agreement with its Caspian-side neighbours — mainly Azerbaijan — over
where to draw territorial boundaries and how to divide those resources.

In the midst of this delicate situation, the seasoned Canadian
statesman jetted in as a lobbyist for Roger Haines’s Buried Hill
Energy, an Alberta-based company that was hoping to help Turkmenistan
extract oil beneath the Caspian Sea.

While the high-profile lobbying barely made the back pages in Canada,
the image of a longtime G-8 leader meddling in the fragile negotiations
laid a wallop to the process. Chretien departed Turkmenistan after
a few handshakes, but he left behind a regional diplomatic chill and
only now, two years later, has the process of determining the regional
boundaries started inching forward again.

One might imagine that the Alberta oil company storming in to
sensitive, decade-spanning negotiations might’ve broken a rule or
regulation somewhere.

But there are no Canadian rules when it comes to our companies
extracting abroad. None. Really. As industry watchdog Karen Keenan of
The Halifax Initiative explains: "The Canadian government doesn’t have
any policy statement or regulatory oversight of how it expects Canadian
mining companies to operate overseas. It’s a total policy vacuum."

When it comes to mining and oil exploration abroad, Canada not only
turns a blind eye to the corporate dirty weekend in Vegas, but it
often also supplies the poker chips.

"The Canadian government provides a myriad of forms of support for
these companies," says Keenan, "but we and many others are saying that
the Canadian government shouldn’t be promoting these companies; instead
they should look at them and make sure they’re following standards."

The misadventure in Turkmenistan might also have cost Canadians jobs.

Azerbaijan — which, thanks to rising oil prices, has suddenly emerged
as one of the world’s hottest economies –was unhappy when Canada’s
former leader doubted its territorial sovereignty.

Recently, according to one highly-placed source, Canada went to bat
for a Canadian jet manufacturer bidding on a fat contract to supply
the Azerbaijan government with jet aircraft. The would-be Azeri buyers
politely reminded the Canadians of Turkmenistan affair.

The Azerbaijanis weren’t buying from Canada.

It wasn’t the first time that Canada’s laissez-faire approach to
mining and exploration needlessly irritated the fast-modernizing
former Soviet republic, which has often cited Canada as a model for
its post-Soviet democracy.

The Azerbaijanis also claim that controversial Canadian miner Robert
"Toxic Bob" Friedland has been mining on parts of Azerbaijan now
controlled by the Armenian army. An international gold-mining tycoon,
Friedland got his nickname after he tried to sell LSD to an undercover
agent in Maine in 1969. He retained the moniker after a string of
his South American mining operations left a wake of environmental
disasters and mass protests, including a spill of three billion litres
of cyanide-contaminated wastewater in Guyana in 1995.

Azerbaijani officials referred to satellite evidence that Friedland,
whose mine-now-think-later policies have caused a stir in many
countries, set up the Zod gold mine in the western regions of
Azerbaijan.

The area is within a conflict zone where one million Azerbaijanis
were expelled in 1992.

The Armenian army currently controls the area and many Azeris see
the presence of Canadian miners on the spot where Azeri residents
were ethnically cleansed as immensely hurtful and insensitive.

Legally, Canada can do nothing to discipline such mining and oil
companies. There is, however, hope that Canuck miners might soon lose
their international license to misbehave.

Last year in Canada, the Government Roundtable on Extractive Industries
resulted in an unprecedented agreement between a wide-range of socially
conscious do-gooders and the oil and mining industries.

In March, an impressive coalition of industry and citizen groups
signed the document that would set standards on how Canadian mining
corporations should operate abroad.

Although the system is toothless — the miners balked at fining rule
breakers — civil groups hope that the agreement will be enshrined
in law this fall and that fines for corporate mining misbehaviour
will eventually follow.

Keenan is optimistic that the federal government will soon make the
deal law.

"We’ve got mining, oil and gas companies behind this agreement,
Canadian civil society, faith-based organizations, labour unions,
environmental NGOs, human rights groups; they’re all backing it.

We’ve never had this kind of consensus before."

And there’s hope that other Canadians can pick up the slack and help
foster the sort of positive trade in Azerbaijan that Canadians can
be proud of.

Ottawa entrepreneur Grant Thomas, who has visited the Caucasus
half a dozen times, sees Azerbaijan’s rocketing economy as having
potential for more than morally dubious mining by opportunistic
Canadian entrepreneurs.

"If we can mobilize the time and the attention, there are some niche
areas in which Canadian companies in Canada could become a leader in
Azerbaijan," he says.

Thomas’s baby is called a Regional Innovation Zone, a conception
that would accelerate the possibility of Canadian technology reaching
Azerbaijan. He sees Canada working with Azerbaijan on such things as
satellite seismic mapping and environmental clean-up technologies.

Other Canadian initiatives fostering a positive relationship with
Azerbaijan includes the Digital Opportunity Trust, an Ottawa NGO that
aims to bring computers to countries where they’re scarce. Alberta
businessman Donn Lovett tells the Dominion that he was enthusiastically
received in a trade mission to the country.

Meanwhile, Karen Keenan hopes that one day soon, Maple Leaf miners
will no longer be able to undermine Canada’s reputation and interests
abroad. "The Canadian government is finally saying that maybe we
should revisit our rules to see if our standards are high enough to
bring us real benefits."

Because if Canada’s resource extractors are kept in check, countries
like Azerbaijan can become gold mines, figuratively speaking, for
legitimate, mutually beneficial trade.

http://www.dominionpaper.ca

BAKU: Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Condemns So-Called ‘Municipal Ele

AZERBAIJANI FOREIGN MINISTRY CONDEMNS SO-CALLED ‘MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS’ IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
Aug 1 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / corr Trend S.Agayeva / The Azerbaijani Foreign
Ministry condemns the so-called ‘municipal elections’ in the
Armenian-occupied Azerbaijan region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

"The so-called ‘elections’ in the occupied Azerbaijani territory
contradicts the forms and principles of the international law and
the Constitution of Azerbaijan. They will be recognized neither
by the members of international community nor by countries. These
elections have a negative impact on negotiations on the resolution
of the Armenian -Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh,"
Khazar Ibrahim, spokesman for the Foreign Ministry announced on 1
August. He was commenting on the forthcoming ‘municipal elections’
scheduled for 14 October.

The conflict between two South Caucasus countries broke out in 1988 in
face of Armenia’s territorial claims to Azerbaijan. Since 1992, 20%
of Azerbaijani territories (Nagorno-Karabakh and 7 nearby regions)
have been under occupation by Armenian Armed Forces. In May, 1994 a
ceasefire was signed between the sides. The talks under the auspices
of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chaired by Russia, France, and the United
States are still fruitless.

The Central Elections Commission of the so-called "Nagorno Karabakh"
has set up arrangements for holding ‘elections’ to self-government
bodies, Armenian media reports.

Ecological Public Alliance To Hold Action Of Protest Against Illegal

ECOLOGICAL PUBLIC ALLIANCE TO HOLD ACTION OF PROTEST AGAINST ILLEGAL CONSTRUCTION IMPLEMENTED IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Jul 26, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The ecological public alliance, which
unites 32 non-governmental organizations, is going to hold an action
of protest against illegal construction implemented in the capital
in the Opera garden of Yerevan near the monument of Arno Babajanian,
on July 26 at 18:00. "We are against all those steps which are causin
an ecological disaster in our city. The greediness of our "elite" has
gone beyond any boundary. The construction business is purposefully
destroying the green zones and historical-cultural monuments of the
city, turning the capital into an asphalt-concrete desert for the
last ten years," is written in the appeal of the alliance directed
at the citizens of Yerevan.

Touching upon the fact of the construction started near the Karapi
Litch (Lake of Swans) in the Opera garden, the authors of the appeal
mention that after the stir created by the representatives of the
ecological public alliance it seems to have stopped, however, they
could not find out in any way who is implementing this construction
and what building they envisage to construct there.

"The authorities even promised to fill that gap of "no one". Let us
help them. Let’s gather around that gap, bring a "handful" of soil and
fill the gap with it. Let it be our investment in the struggle carried
out against the illegal construction business," is said in the appeal.

World Armenian Congress Plans A Dialogue Between The Armenian And Ge

WORLD ARMENIAN CONGRESS PLANS A DIALOGUE BETWEEN THE ARMENIAN AND GEORGIAN YOUTH
By Aghavni Harutyunian

AZG Armenian Daily #141
27/07/2007

In 2002, the Union of the Armenians in Russia held a conference
titled "The Armenians of the world on the verge of the centuries
and the contemporary issues of the international relations" in
Moscow. 300 representatives of about 50 countries were present there
to discuss the issues of the Armenian people in the context of the new
challenges. It was decided to create a new international structure that
would contribute to the unity of the Armenians of all over the world.

The World Armenian Congress was founded in 2003. The chief aim the
Congress was to contribute to the gathering of all Armenians round
the national interests.

"Last year, at the Bureau of the General Council’s sitting, it was
decided to involve the youth in the activities of the organization",
said the Deputy Chairman of the World Armenian Congress Vladimir
Aghayan on July 25, in "Urbat" club..

According to Mr. Aghayan, "The Challenges of the 21st Century and
the Armenian Youth" conference was held (July 9-11, 2007) to discuss
the problems and the abilities of the Armenian youth, as the youth
suffers first from the present difficulties, economic crisis and
social shakings. Therefore, the youth must think of the changes and
stable development.

The World Armenian Congress plans to organize a meeting between
Armenian and Georgian youth in order to discuss Armenian-Georgian
issues. In the context of the dialogue between the Armenian and
Georgian youth, it is anticipated to organize a meeting between the
Armenian and Georgian youth in order to discuss how the geo-political
changes have an effect on our centuries-old friendship.

The Congress aims to discuss those issues with the help of the youth
– to make the authorities of the two countries to act so as the
friendship of the peoples will not suffer.

There are proposals to enlarge the geographical circles of the coming
conference’s participants and to include participants not only from
Iran, but also from Turkey.

The conference will probably be held in October, in the frameworks
of the traditional project "The World Armenian Congress and the Union
of the Armenians in Russia’s days in Armenia and Artsakh".

The Victory Of Redgep Erdoghan’s Party Was A Real Slap In The Face F

THE VICTORY OF REDGEP ERDOGHAN’S PARTY WAS A REAL SLAP IN THE FACE FOR TURKISH GENERALS

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.07.2007 GMT+04:00

Europe has a very good experience and this is why it constantly
denies Turkey’s integration into EU, realizing what will happen to
the Christian Civilization if Turkey becomes a UN Member.

Erdoghan’s Justice and Development Party sealed a truly shattering
victory at Turkish Parliamentary elections, getting over 47% of
votes. In comparison with unassuming 34% in 2002, this is indeed a
considerable break. The victory of the party not only means reverting
to Islamic values, but to nationalist and patriotic moods.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Prof., Dr., Director of Department of Turkish
Studies at Institute of Oriental Studies Ruben Safrastyan says, "In
its foreign policy Turkey will also strive for integrating into EU,
but diversification in the country’s foreign policy; establishment
of better relationship with Arabic countries, and particularly with
Iran is also anticipated." The memorandum on cooperation in energy
power sphere, signed between Iran and Turkey before the elections
serves as a proof of the above mentioned.

The issue of Turkey’s integration into EU is not removed from the
agenda either. Most likely, Redgep Erdoghan’s secret decree about the
ban on using the word "sozde" ("assumed", "so-called" – in Turkish)
with reference to the Armenian Genocide was dictated exactly by
the above mentioned fact. The news about this "secret" decree was
promulgated on July 19 by the Turkish TB Ulusal Kanal. The Turks
denying the Armenian Genocide were not quite happy about the decree,
and blamed the Prime-Minister for impeding their efforts to prevent
the adoption of Resolution 106 of the Congress about the Armenian
Genocide. The Turkish officials and reporters never refuse to refer
to the Armenian Genocide as "the so-called" or "assumed", casting
doubt on the mess murder of the Armenians organized by the Turkish
government in 1915-1923. According to Erdoghan’s decree, from now on
the Armenian Genocide must be qualified in official documents and
in the society as "events of 1915" or as "the Armenian assertions
regarding the events of 1915".

The Prime-Minister’s Office sent out the above mentioned decree to all
State institutions, including all the Ministries and Governors, Mayors,
Universities, Courts and General Staff. As it is said, Erdoghan has
stated in the decree that he has taken this action on the bases of the
decision reached by the Council of Europe in February 2005. Probably
the matter concerns the recommendation of some Turkish non-governmental
organizations of taking measures "to clear the Turkish textbooks from
xenophobia and ultra-nationalism." This proposal became the result of
the 3-year-research, financed by the European Commission. Ulusal Kanal
notes, that the European Commission turned to Turkey with the request
to refrain from using certain humiliating words and expressions in
its appeal to the Armenians and Greeks in Turkish textbooks, says
the California Courier.

Turkey’s strive to be integrated into EU definitely originates
from pan-Turkism ideology and in distant future may "reanimate"
the Ottoman Empire. As for Europe, it has a very good experience
and this is why it constantly denies Turkey’s integration into EU,
realizing what will happen to the Christian Civilization if Turkey
becomes a UN Member. "Let’s be honest, Turkey is not ready to become
an EU Member, and the EU in its turn is not ready to affiliate Turkey
neither tomorrow, nor after tomorrow," said Jose Manuel Barroso;
President of the European Commission.

Together with this the Swiss Newspaper Tages Anzeiger mentions, that
for the first time over the past half a century the ruling party didn’t
only manage to stay in power, but also improve its results. "Perhaps,
a more important result was the loud slap in the face for Turkish
Generals. Over the past few months rather dark atmosphere hang over
the country, and the army carried the responsibility.

HayPost Announces Management Change And Focuses On Global Growth

HAYPOST ANNOUNCES MANAGEMENT CHANGE AND FOCUSES ON GLOBAL GROWTH

armradio.am
25.07.2007 16:32

HayPost, the National Postal Operator of the Republic of Armenia
announced management changes in effect as of today.

Based on his pivotal role in revitalizing the company, Hans Boon
has been appointed the new General Director of HayPost. As the
current General Director, Mr. Boon will lead the company to become
more commercial, more transparent and increasingly financially
accountable. "We are aiming to raise our standards with the purpose
to increase HayPost’s quality and efficiency both locally and
internationally," stated Hans Boon during the HayPost Shareholder’s
meeting earlier today.

As part of the new management change, Hans Boon has established a new
team and delegated the following people as Deputy General Directors
(DGD): Mr. Gevorg Nalbandyan, DGD Special Projects; Mr. Hayk Avagyan,
DGD Financial Operations; Mr. Arman Khachaturyan, DGD Corporate
Development; Mr. Kirk Odabashian, DGD Real Estate Management and
Operational Support; Ms. Lara Tcholakian, DGD International Affairs;
Mr. Mikayel Grigoryan, DGD Banking Operations; Mr. Micha Dalen Gilhuys,
DGD Postal Operations, and; Mr. Arsen Hovhannisyan, DGD Commercial
Operations.

Hans Boon and his new team will be modernizing the Armenian postal
system with the objective to increase the company’s performance with
the implementation of new services and new products, as well as the
establishment of a specialized Post Bank.

Baroness Cox Awarded With Medal Of Union Of Relatives Of NK’s Dead W

BARONESS COX AWARDED WITH MEDAL OF UNION OF RELATIVES OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH’S DEAD WARRIORS

DeFacto Agency , Armenia
July 24 2007

A delegation representing various circles of American and British
intelligentsia and students headed by vice speaker of Great Britain’s
House of Lords Caroline Cox has arrived in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The delegation was received by Archbishop Pargev Martirosian,
the Head of Artsakh Eparchy of Armenian Apostolic Church, IA
REGNUM reports. The guests also held a meeting at the Union of the
Relatives of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Dead Warriors. In the course of the
meeting Galina Arustamian, Chairwoman of the Union of Relatives of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s Dead Warriors, presented Baroness Cox with a medal
of ‘~RMaternal Behest’~R organization. The delegation’s members also
visited Khazanchetsots Cathedral in Shoushi.

July 24 the delegation will be received by NKR National Assembly
Chair Ashot Gulian and FM Georgy Petrossian.

Touching The Nerve Of Turkishness In The Spotlight Article 301

TOUCHING THE NERVE OF TURKISHNESS IN THE SPOTLIGHT ARTICLE 301
By Vincent Boland

FT
July 23 2007 03:00

In Istanbul tomorrow, in the splendid surroundings of the Ottoman-era
Dolmabahce Palace on the European shore of the Bosphorus, three
people who have done their bit for freedom of expression in Turkey
will receive a small but important acknowledgement. They will receive
the Turkish Journalists’ Association’s annual press freedom prize. It
is a ceremony that coincides with a critical moment in the country’s
continuing battle for and with free speech.

At first glance, the Turkish media seems to be as free, colourful,
irreverent, partisan, corporate-dominated, and occasionally
irresponsible as its British counterpart. Newsstands groan under
the weight of available titles. All-news TV channels proliferate,
offering a nationwide forum for an informative debate during the
general election campaign of the past few weeks. Facts can sometimes be
hard to find in this free-for-all, but there is no shortage of opinion.

Then there is Article 301 of Turkey’s penal code, which changes
the terms of the debate about freedom of expression. This article,
slipped into a revision of the fascist-era code three years ago while
the European Union was looking the other way, aspires to protect
the concept of "Turkishness" – the essence of the republic, its
institutions and its accepted historical narratives – from criticism
or denigration. In practice, this means that any critical questioning
of sensitive historical issues, from Armenia to Cyprus to the Kurds,
can lead to the writer’s prosecution.

The article has been used most assiduously by a group of nationalist
lawyers to prosecute writers, journalists and commentators whose
books, views or articles touched some reactionary nerve or other. This
group makes no apologies for rushing to court at the merest hint of
a slighting of the nation, as if Turkey were a delicate girl whose
honour needed protecting at all costs. Although Turkey has many of the
outward trappings of a liberal democracy, its governing institutions
are steeped in authoritarianism. They have little truck with those
whose patriotism they would question.

Kemal Kerincsiz, chairman of the jurists’ union that has brought most
of the prosecutions, says: "Some countries can survive without this
type of law, but Turkey cannot. It is vital to protect the Turkish
nation if it is to remain standing." Turkey’s original penal code in
effect prohibited everything that was not specifically authorised. The
revised version has remnants of this thinking, which is why Article
301 seems to fit so snugly into it.

Most of the cases brought under Article 301 have failed, but not before
the defendants have gone to the expense and trouble of putting up a
defence against such a slippery charge. The recipients of tomorrow’s
award, a citation that has been given since 1989, are not the only
people to have had to endure this painful and degrading process,
but they are among the most prominent and admired. They are being
given the award "in the name of all journalists and writers who have
suffered under Article 301".

One of the recipients is Ragip Zarakolu, one of Turkey’s leading
publishers and the frequent target of prosecutions and attacks by
the far right. His firm, Belge, has published historical books that
enrage die-hard nationalists – especially on the painful subject of
Armenia and the mass murder of Ottoman Armenians in the last days of
the empire. "It’s good to get an award like this in my own country,"
Mr Zarakolu said, adding that "it is not an accident this article is
in the penal code."

Another recipient is Gulcin Cayligil, a lawyer who has defended
journalists facing prosecution.

The third will be present only in spirit. Hrant Dink, the Turkish-
Armenian publisher of Agos, a weekly newspaper, was murdered in
January on an Istanbul street. He had been a pioneer in urging Turkey
to come to terms with the murder of Armenians during the last days of
the Ottoman Empire. A 17-year-old boy is on trial for his murder and
has cited Mr Dink’s opinions, as reported on nationalist websites,
as a motive.

The measure remains on the statute book in spite of condemnation from
bodies such as the EU and Amnesty International, and in spite of an
occasional half-hearted promise from the outgoing government that it
might amend it. So Turkey’s commitment to freedom of expression will
always be less than it seems, critics and victims of the article say.

As Orhan Erinc, chairman of the committee that chose this year’s
winners, says: "The fact we keep having to give this prize is proof
that, despite what the politicians say, freedom of expression is
still not guaranteed in Turkey."

Representatives Of Christian Primates Of Lebanon Meet In Antilias

REPRESENTATIVES OF CHRISTIAN PRIMATES OF LEBANON MEET IN ANTILIAS

ANTILIAS, JULY 20, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The meeting of the
representatives of the Christian primates of Lebanon was convocated in
Mayravank in Antilias on July 18. The representatives of the primates
of all the Christain communities took part in this meeting.

According to the information provided to Noyan Tapan by the
Catholicosate of the Great Cilician House, this meeting was a
preparatory one for the conference of the Patriarchs of Lebanon to
be convocated in November, which will primarily be dedicated to the
discussion of the presence of Christianity in Lebanon.