Anjey Kaspszyk Will Visit The Frontline Of Nagorno Karabakh And Azer

ANJEY KASPSZYK WILL VISIT THE FRONTLINE OF NAGORNO KARABAKH AND AZERBAIJAN

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 22, ARMENPRESS. Scheduled observation of frontline of
Armed Forces of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan from the territory of
the Nagorno Karabakh Republic will be held under the direct guidance of
representative and ambassador of OSCE chairman Anjey Kaspszyk. As the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic informed
“Armenpress” Nagorno Karabakh authorities expressed their willingness
to support the observation and secure members of OSCE mission.

In accordance with preliminary agreement with Nagorno Karabakh
authorities scheduled observation of frontline of Armed Forces of
Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan by OSCE mission will be held near
Talish habitat of Martakert region of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic.

The Independent: Photograph Links Germans To 1915 Armenian Genocide

THE INDEPENDENT: PHOTOGRAPH LINKS GERMANS TO 1915 ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

01:02 22.10.2012

The Independent has published a newly discovered picture, which shows
Kaiser’s officers at the scene of Turkish atrocity. The photograph
– never published before – was apparently taken in the summer of
1915. Human skulls are scattered over the earth. “They are all that
remain of a handful of Armenians slaughtered by the Ottoman Turks
during the First World War. Behind the skulls, posing for the camera,
are three Turkish officers in tall, soft hats and a man, on the far
right, who is dressed in Kurdish clothes. But the two other men are
Germans, both dressed in the military flat caps, belts and tunics
of the Kaiserreichsheer, the Imperial German Army. It is an atrocity
snapshot – just like those pictures the Nazis took of their soldiers
posing before Jewish Holocaust victims a quarter of a century later.

“Did the Germans participate in the mass killing of Christian Armenians
in 1915? This is not the first photograph of its kind; yet hitherto
the Germans have been largely absolved of crimes against humanity
during the first holocaust of the 20th century. German diplomats in
Turkish provinces during the First World War recorded the forced
deportations and mass killing of a million and a half Armenian
civilians with both horror and denunciation of the Ottoman Turks,
calling the Turkish militia-killers “scum”. German parliamentarians
condemned the slaughter in the Reichstag,” The Independent writes.

The paper notes that it was the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute
and its energetic director, Hayk Demoyan, which discovered this latest
photograph. It was found with other pictures of Turks standing beside
skulls, the photographs attached to a long-lost survivor’s testimony.

All appear to have been taken at a location identified as “Yerznka”
– the town of Erzinjan, many of whose inhabitants were murdered on
the road to Erzerum.

The full article published by The Independent can be found here.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2012/10/22/the-independent-photograph-links-germans-to-1915-armenian-genocide/
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/photograph-links-germans-to-1915-armenia-genocide-8219537.html

Armenia Increases Gas Import From Russia 24.3% For Nine Months Of 20

ARMENIA INCREASES GAS IMPORT FROM RUSSIA 24.3% FOR NINE MONTHS OF 2012

arminfo
Tuesday, October 23, 17:30

Natural gas import from Russia in Armenia for Jan-Sept 2012 versus
the same period of 2011 grew 24.3% to 1,322.5 mln cu m, ArmRusgasprom
CJSC, the sole importer of gas in Armenia, reports.

A total of 1,128.2 mln cu m of gas were sold for the period under
review, which is 12.3% more than for the same period of 2011. As
compared to 2011 gas consumption by the population grew 11.8% to
396.2 mln cu m. Gas consumption by the energy sector grew 42% and
by the industrial sector- by 4.2% to 132.5 cu m and 181.1 mln cu m,
respectively. Gas consumption by gas filling stations grew 16.9%
to 304.3 mln cu m. Gas consumption by other consumers grew 7.1%
to 114.1 mln cu m.

Gas import from Russia in the first half of 2012 totaled 1.018 mln
cu m and grew 22.37% versus the first half of 2011. ArmRusgasprom
cjsc is the sole importer of gas to Armenia. Gazprom ojsc, Russia,
holds the 80% stake in the company, with the remaining 20% belonging
to the Government of Armenia.

Global Post: Drone Violence Along Armenian-Azerbaijani Border Could

GLOBAL POST: DRONE VIOLENCE ALONG ARMENIAN-AZERBAIJANI BORDER COULD LEAD TO WAR

23.10.12

By Nicholas Clayton

In a region where a fragile peace holds over three frozen conflicts,
the nations of the South Caucasus are buzzing with drones they use
to probe one another’s defenses and spy on disputed territories.

The region is also host to strategic oil and gas pipelines and a
tangled web of alliances and precious resources that observers say
threaten to quickly escalate the border skirmishes and airspace
violations to a wider regional conflict triggered by Armenia and
Azerbaijan that could potentially pull in Israel, Russia and Iran.

To some extent, these countries are already being pulled towards
conflict. Last September, Armenia shot down an Israeli-made Azerbaijani
drone over Nagorno-Karabakh and the government claims that drones
have been spotted ahead of recent incursions by Azerbaijani troops
into Armenian-held territory.

Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Center in Yerevan,
said in a briefing that attacks this summer showed that Azerbaijan is
eager to “play with its new toys” and its forces showed “impressive
tactical and operational improvement.”

The International Crisis Group warned that as the tit-for-tat incidents
become more deadly, “there is a growing risk that the increasing
frontline tensions could lead to an accidental war.”

With this in mind, the UN and the Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) have long imposed a non-binding arms
embargo on both countries, and both are under a de facto arms ban
from the United States. But, according to the Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), this has not stopped Israel and
Russia from selling to them.

After fighting a bloody war in the early 1990s over the disputed
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked
in a stalemate with an oft-violated ceasefire holding a tenuous peace
between them.

And drones are the latest addition to the battlefield. In March,
Azerbaijan signed a $1.6 billion arms deal with Israel, which consisted
largely of advanced drones and an air defense system.

Through this and other deals, Azerbaijan is currently amassing a
squadron of over 100 drones from all three of Israel’s top defense
manufacturers.

Armenia, meanwhile, employs only a small number of domestically
produced models.

Intelligence gathering is just one use for drones, which are also
used to spot targets for artillery, and, if armed, strike targets
themselves.

Armenian and Azerbaijani forces routinely snipe and engage one another
along the front, each typically blaming the other for violating the
ceasefire. At least 60 people have been killed in ceasefire violations
in the last two years, and the Brussels-based International Crisis
Group claimed in a report published in February 2011 that the sporadic
violence has claimed hundreds of lives.

“Each (Armenia and Azerbaijan) is apparently using the clashes and the
threat of a new war to pressure its opponent at the negotiations table,
while also preparing for the possibility of a full-scale conflict in
the event of a complete breakdown in the peace talks,” the report said.

Alexander Iskandaryan, director of the Caucasus Institute in the
Armenian capital, Yerevan, said that the arms buildup on both sides
makes the situation more dangerous but also said that the clashes are
calculated actions, with higher death tolls becoming a negotiating
tactic.

“This isn’t Somalia or Afghanistan. These aren’t independent units.

The Armenian, Azerbaijani and Karabakh armed forces have a rigid chain
of command so it’s not a question of a sergeant or a lieutenant
randomly giving the order to open fire. These are absolutely
synchronized political attacks,” Iskandaryan said.

The deadliest recent uptick in violence along the Armenian-Azerbaijani
border and the line of contact around Karabakh came in early June as
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was on a visit to the region.

While death tolls varied, at least two dozen soldiers were killed or
wounded in a series of shootouts along the front.

The year before, at least four Armenian soldiers were killed in an
alleged border incursion by Azerbaijani troops one day after a peace
summit between the Armenian, Azerbaijani and Russian presidents in St.

Petersburg, Russia.

“No one slept for two or three days [during the June skirmishes],”
said Grush Agbaryan, the mayor of the border village of Voskepar for
a total of 27 years off and on over the past three decades. “Everyone
is now saying that the war is coming. We know that it could

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2012/10/23/gp-drone-violations/

Azerbaijan: Peaceful Rallies Forcibly Dispersed

AZERBAIJAN: PEACEFUL RALLIES FORCIBLY DISPERSED

Panorama.am
23/10/2012

Police rounded up dozens of youth and political party activists in
central Baku on October 20, 2012, roughing them up and forcing them
into police cars and buses, Human Rights Watch said on Monday. Many
were fined and released, but at least 13 were sentenced to 10 days
of detention on misdemeanor offenses.

“Once again, the Azerbaijani government has trampled on people’s
right to hold peaceful protests,” said Giorgi Gogia, senior South
Caucasus researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The authorities should
immediately release the protesters and investigate any allegations
of ill-treatment by law enforcement.”

More than 200 youth activists affiliated with opposition political
parties and independent civil society tried to organize the rally in
central Baku on October 20. They intended to call for parliament’s
dismissal in light of a recent scandal in which a secretly recorded
video was published on the internet. The video appeared to show a
member of parliament from the ruling party who has strong ties to
the presidential administration asking for a bribe of 1 million manat
(about US$1.3 million) from a candidate in exchange for securing his
victory in the 2005 parliamentary vote.

Baku municipal authorities on October 17 had denied the protest
organizers’ request for a permit to hold the October 20 gathering in
Baku’s center, offering an alternative space in the city’s outskirts,
an area not easily accessible through public transportation.

The Azerbaijani authorities have adopted a policy to effectively ban
all forms of peaceful protest from the center of Baku, and instead
to force all demonstrations into designated zones on the outskirts of
the city. Since early 2006, authorities have not authorized a single
opposition protest in the center of Baku. On October 19, Baku police
warned the organizers that an unsanctioned rally in the city center
would be dispersed.

Such a blanket ban against freedom of assembly in the central areas of
Baku goes against Azerbaijan’s international commitments to freedom
of assembly and expression, Human Rights Watch said. As the European
Court of Human Rights has warned, “Sweeping measures of preventive
nature to suppress freedom of assembly and expression […] do a
disservice to democracy and often endanger it.”

At about 2 p.m., about an hour prior to the rally’s start time, police
amassed near the opposition Musavat party offices, where the party’s
youth activists had been gathering. Several dozen activists started
walking toward a nearby metro station, chanting, “Free elections!”,
“Resign, phony parliament!”, and “Freedom!” Without prior warning,
uniformed police and security officials in civilian clothes started
to grab the activists, then covered their mouths, forced them into
nearby police buses, and drove them away.

Meanwhile, another group of political and civic activists gathered at
Fountain Square, a pedestrian shopping area in central Baku. Several
witnesses told Human Rights Watch that there was a strong presence of
uniformed and plain clothes police in the immediate area. At 3 p.m.,
a group of protesters started chanting, “Down with the government!”,
“Phony Milli Mejlis!”, referring to the parliament, and “Resign,
Ilham Aliyev!”, the president.

Uniformed and plainclothes police immediately moved in on the
demonstrators, forcefully restraining them, including pinning down
their arms and roughing them up. Police shoved the protesters into
waiting buses and drove them away. Police then locked arms to form
a line and pushed the remaining protesters away from the square.

Several sources of video footage of the incident, widely available
online, also show that in the midst of the dispersal, one police
official used a loudspeaker to announce that the demonstration was
unsanctioned, calling on the demonstrators to disperse.

“Although the demonstration was unsanctioned, the police should not
have used force to disperse protesters who posed no threat,” Gogia
said. “Freedom of assembly is a fundamental democratic right, and the
Azerbaijani authorities are obligated to tolerate peaceful protests.

Loss of liberty should not be a sanction for peaceful protest and
Azerbaijan authorities should immediately release the detained
activists.”

Many of the activists were released after being transported to the
outskirts of Baku. Others were taken to police detention. One of the
youth activists apprehended at Fountain Square told Human Rights
Watch that she was kept at the Sabail district police station for
several hours in a cell with three other female activists and that,
despite numerous requests, they were not given water. She also said
that male activists were kept separately, with some 25 detainees
jammed into one cell.

Later that evening, about 50 of the protesters detained at Fountain
Square were transferred to courts, where 13 were sentenced to
administrative (misdemeanor) imprisonment terms ranging from 7 to 10
days for disobeying police orders. One of the protesters told Human
Rights Watch that the trials were perfunctory and lasted barely
more than 10 minutes. Several detainees refused the services of a
state-provided lawyer, and they were not allowed to retain a lawyer
of their choosing.

Another 28 protesters were fined up to 25 AZN (US$32) and released,
others were released with a warning.

“Although the activists were tried for misdemeanor offenses, they were
entitled to due process rights,” Gogia said. “Anyone facing detention
has a right to a real trial with real defense. A trial should never
be a rubber stamp.”

Azerbaijan is a party to a number of human rights treaties, including
the European Convention on Human Rights, which imposes obligations on
the government to respect the right of assembly and to refrain in all
circumstances from engaging in prohibited ill-treatment of protesters.

The government also has a duty to investigate and remedy violations.

In January 2013, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
(PACE) is scheduled to review a report by the PACE Monitoring Committee
on Azerbaijan’s compliance with its accession commitments.

“The Azerbaijani government is trying systematically to ban peaceful
protests in the capital’s downtown area,” Gogia said. “It is exactly
this kind of systematic denial of fundamental rights that the Council
of Europe should monitor very closely.”

Those Accused Deny Their Guilt

THOSE ACCUSED DENY THEIR GUILT

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 13:16:01 – 23/10/2012

All those six accused for the Harsnakar case and their lawyers
announced during the court hearing that they don’t understand the
meaning of the accusation.

Yesterday the hearing of Vahe Avetyan’s beating and death continued
in the court of Avan and Nor Nork districts of Yerevan.

The lawyers of the accused mediated to involve other staff members of
the restaurant because their testimonies will help the investigation
since two of them had been at the crime scene all through the process.

One of the lawyers said that it is important to find out what caused
the conflict.

The prosecutor presented the accusation. The six defendants are
accused of causing intentional harm to someone by an individual or a
group which resulted in the victim’s death. None of the six defendants
accepted their guilt noting they don’t understand their guilt.

David Adamyan who is considered the provoker of the quarrel with
Avetyan for the latter’s sportswear later denied he had been there.

The prosecutor declared the statements by the accused and their lawyers
on not understanding the accusation as groundless. He said that the
investigation has already proven that all the six have committed
the crime.

Yesterday, the court defined the order of studying the evidence. On
October 24, it will be clear how, in what sequence, the evidence will
be studied.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country27811.html

Serj Tankian And Arto Tuncboyaciyan Will Take Part In The Charity Co

SERJ TANKIAN AND ARTO TUNCBOYACIYAN WILL TAKE PART IN THE CHARITY CONCERT FOR THE SYRIAN- ARMENIANS

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Charity concert for “the Foundation
of Help to the Syrian-Armenians” will kick off in the United States
of America in the prominent “Pasadena CIVIC” concert hall in Pasadena,
California on November 11.

As reports “Armenpress”, citing internet website Itsmyseat.com,
in frames of charity concert “Hye AID” will take part a number
of celebrated Armenian musicians known world wide, like singer and
composer Serj Tankian and Arto Tuncboyacıyan. Other famous musicians
will also participate in the concert; among them are such famous
musicians as Rouben Hakhverdyan, Lilit Pipoyan, Armen Movsisyan,
Element Band, Dirty Diamond and members of the Glendale Band Adis
Hardamyan and Michael Avetisyan.

Two Benefit Concerts In Yerevan For Child Blindness Prevention

TWO BENEFIT CONCERTS IN YEREVAN FOR CHILD BLINDNESS PREVENTION

hetq
13:08, October 23, 2012

The Armenian EyeCare Project and the State Chamber Orchestra will
team up for two benefit concerts to prevent child blindness in Armenia.

The concerts will take place on October 23 and 25 at the Komitas
Chamber Music Hall in Yerevan at 7pm.

The October 23concert will feature world renowned violinist Levon
Chilingirian from the United Kingdom.

On October 25, Chilingirian will be joined by the Kaeni Symphonic
Orchestra from France.

Tickets are 2,000 and 3,000 AMD.

Presidents Of Armenia, Nkr Visit Defense Positions

PRESIDENTS OF ARMENIA, NKR VISIT DEFENSE POSITIONS

armradio.am
10:29 23.10.2012

President Serzh Sargsyan visited one of the military units deployed at
the eastern border of the Republic and participated at the official
ceremony of handing-over of the apartments built for the officer
personnel.

Afterwards, the President of Armenia left on a working visit to the
Nagorno Karabakh Republic.

Serzh Sargsyan and President of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Bako
Sahakian, RA Minister of Defense Seiran Ohanian, accompanied by the
representatives of the high command visited the defense positions,
familiarized first hand with the combat readiness of the troops and
ongoing army building works.

The Presidents of Armenia and Artsakh were present at the military
exercises carried out by the NKR Defense Army and conducted monitoring
of the defense area. In one of the military units, Presidents Serzh
Sargsyan and Bako Sahakian participated also at the inauguration
of Saint Gevorg church. Later, they conducted a meeting with the
participation of the high military command.

The Presidents of Armenia and Karabakh visited also the Maghavuz
coal mine in Martakert region which has already started to deliver
black coal to the Republic of Armenia for the Yerevan Hydro-Power
Station, Ltd., which produces electricity in the mixed water-coal
regime (through the refurbishment and commissioning of the old power
generating units). This investment project, which is important for
the energy and mining areas, along with fostering economy will also
considerably enhance Armenia’s energy security. The Presidents of
Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh were informed that a coal-preparation
plant will be constructed on the territory of the Maghavuz mine.

After familiarizing with the ongoing works and prospective programs of
the mine developing company, Presidents Sargsyan and Sahakian wished
the company all the best in its future activities.

The Improvement Of Armenian Position By 18 Points Is Unprecedented:

THE IMPROVEMENT OF ARMENIAN POSITION BY 18 POINTS IS UNPRECEDENTED: TIGRAN SARGSYAN

ARMENPRESS
OCTOBER 23, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS: Being ranked in the 32nd position and
improving its position by 18 points in the World Bank and International
Financial Corpporation’s 2013 report is definitely an unprecedented
success for Armenia. Tigran Sargsyan, Prime Minister of the Republic
of Armenia came forth with assessment in the course of Information
Technologies Development Support Council session and congratulated
Government members for the achieved progress.

“We have really registered progress in the course of the year. We
are ranked in the 32 nd place among 184 countries. Surely it is a
good index, yet we have more room to develop and our further efforts
should be targeted to the improvement of the position” the head of
the Executive Body stated, Armenpress reports.

“Armenia is the best among CIS countries in the frame of improving
its positions. Kazakhstan has improved its position by 7 points,
Russia – 8 points, Uzbekistan -14 , while the rest of the countries
have either recovered a lower positions or have retreated ” Karine
Minasyan , Armenian Deputy Minister of Economy noted.

Armenia is ranked as the second in the region after Georgia. In
comparision with the previous year Azerbaijan has retreated by one
position. Turkey and Iran have also jointly retreated their positions.

Armenian progress is due to investment, small business advocacy and
serious reforms recorded in other areas.