Azeri President, Turkish premier to discuss regional cooperation

Azeri President, Turkish premier to discuss regional cooperation
By Sevinc Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman

ITAR-TASS News Agency
June 29, 2005 Wednesday 9:28 PM Eastern Time

BAKU, June 30 — President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who arrived here late Wednesday
night, begin official talks Thursday to discuss bilateral, regional
and international cooperation.

This is the first time Erdogan is visiting Azerbaijan in the capacity
of prime minister.

Diplomatic sources in Baku say Aliyev and Erdogan will begin the
program for the day with a tete-a-tete meeting and members of
Azerbaijani and Turkish government delegations will join them later.

Cooperation in oil and gas industry and other parts of the energy
sector, peace settlement in the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorny
Karabakh, and promotion of democratic processes in Azerbaijan will
likely dominate the discussions, the sources said.

Aliyev told the CNN Turk channel Wednesday relations between the two
countries are at a very high level at the moment and have moved to
a new dimension.

An entirely new atmosphere is forming in the region thanks to the
projects the two countries are carrying out together, he said,

Aliyev believes new horizons will open for Azerbaijan and Turkey in
the future.

Erdogan and he are expected to sign a range of documents at the end of
Thursday’s talks. The package includes agreements on cooperation in
the economy, technology, education, science, cartography, as well as
agreements on joint actions in emergency situations and on copyright.

The itinerary of Erdogan’s stay in Baku envisions an address to members
of the Azerbaijani parliament, meetings with parliament speaker Murtuz
Aleskerov, Prime Minister Artur Rasi-zade, Azerbaijani and Turkish
business people,

Erdogan will also take part in the cornerstone ceremony at the site
of a new Turkish embassy in Baku.

European revolution starts from the school

EUROPEAN REVOLUTION STARTS FROM THE SCHOOL

A1plus

| 12:47:37 | 29-06-2005 | Social |

Today in Armenia the COE Yerevan school of political courses opened,
which is the 12th of suchlike schools. This kind of schools are
usually opened in COE new member-countries.

By the way, in this respect Armenia has left behind Azerbaijan, where
there is no school teaching European values yet. “Today we opened the
school in Yerevan, and we hope that soon another one will be opened
in Baku. For suchlike schools it is very important to have regional
nets. Even responsible people need them”, announced COE political
relations department head Klaus Schumann who realized the opening
ceremony of the school.

In the initial stage of opening schools only South Eastern Europe was
in the center of attention. But today, especially after the referendums
in France and the Netherlands the COE thinks that suchlike schools will
be useful for the COE old member-countries to support the realization
of the European values.

The newly opened school in Armenia has 35 students among whom are
social and political bodies, journalists, editors. Within a year they
will take part in the seminars about Euro integration, Foreign policy
of Armenia, constitution, state governing system, and the current
political developments of Armenia. At the end of the study the group
will leave for Strasbourg where they will receive their diplomas with
the signature of the COE Secretary General.

The RA Constitutional Court head, NA deputies and oppositional and
pro-governmental political bodies took part in the opening ceremony
of the political school. Although gifts in the working place do not
correspond to the European standards, Artashes Geghamyan, leader of
the “National Unity” party approached the microphone. CC President
Gagik Haroutyunyan gave his place near the microphone to him. Artashes
Geghamyan mentioned that “he does not have an eye on the CC President’s
post” and explained that he wanted to present the COE official with
a bottle of Armenian brandy “to celebrate the event”.

BAKU: President Receives Credentials from 9 Ambassadors

President Receives Credentials from 9 Ambassadors

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
June 28 2005

President Ilham Aliyev received credentials from ambassadors of
South Korea, North Korea, Ireland, Zambia, Sudan, Moldova, Australia,
Guinea and Kuwait on Monday.

Aliyev stated that the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Upper Garabagh
must be settled within international legal norms and Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity. He expressed a hope that the newly appointed
diplomats’ countries will further back Azerbaijan’s fair position and
make every effort within international organizations to achieve peace.

President Aliyev called on the ambassadors to assist in strengthening
economic relations between their countries and Azerbaijan.

Tennis: Nalbandian eyes his second final

Scotsman, UK
June 25 2005

Nalbandian eyes his second final

ALAN PATTULLO

LIKE Andy Murray, David Nalbandian knows what it is to cause a stir
in his very first Wimbledon. The Argentine arrived at SW19 in 2002 a
genuine unknown and made stealthy progress into the final, where he
was beaten by Lleyton Hewitt.

It is possible for his young Scottish opponent today to emulate the
feat. Possible, even, for him to exceed it. But Murray himself has
judged it unlikely. Asked how he thinks he might fare, Murray replied
that he should lose comfortably against a player he ranked among his
boyhood favourites.

When Nalbandian’s name came to the fore, Murray was only 15, an
impressionable youngster about to set out on a tennis odyssey which
would begin to take shape at the Sanchez-Casal Academy in Barcelona,
and then bring him here to Wimbledon.

Nalbandian, on the other hand, hadn’t heard much about Murray until
the Dunblane teenager started appearing on the front page of national
newspapers this week. “I didn’t know him before so I can’t tell you
too much,” said Nalbandian, a man of few words, after his
second-round victory over Karol Kucera. Although his reticence is
well known on the tour, he has a particular reason for his solemn
bearing this week. Nalbandian is still mourning as his father,
Nolberto, died recently.

The pony-tailed Nalbandian gives the impression of a man focused on
what he is doing, and unfussed by the media circus. But his lack of
profile shouldn’t obscure the danger which lurks for Murray.
Nalbandian’s five victories over Roger Federer point to a man on a
level above mediocre. “I think I can get there [the Wimbledon final]
again,” Nalbandian said this week. “Why not this year?”

Even the mere mention of his birthplace is enough to give many Scots
nightmares. Nalbandian was born on New Year’s day in 1982 in a place
called Cordoba, scene of Scotland’s infamous 3-1 defeat by Peru in
the 1978 World Cup finals. His Armenian grandfather built a tennis
court in his back yard but it wasn’t until his first appearance at
Wimbledon that he experienced a proper grass court. Indeed, in order
to prepare for his appearance three years ago he asked his club in
Buenos Aires to draw out some tennis lines on a nearby cricket pitch.

Although Nalbandian has slipped down the rankings again in the past
year – he entered this tournament at No 19 in the world – he is still
a more than handy operator, as his last 16 finish at the French Open
last month confirmed. And he knows what to expect today, if not in
terms of Murray’s game then with regard to the partisan Centre Court
which is likely to await him. He lost in four sets to Tim Henman in
2003 at the fourth- round stage, and knows a similar outcome will be
equally popular today.

“I think this is going to be the same,” he said. “But it gives you
extra motivation. I like the pressure.”

BAKU: No light at the end of the tunnel

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
June 23 2005

No light at the end of the tunnel

The talks between Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers held in
Paris on Friday were ‘comprehensive, serious and beneficial’, Azeri
officials have said.
The ministers held a meeting attended by the co-chairs of the OSCE
Minsk Group (MG) mediating the Upper Garabagh conflict settlement.
The intermediaries also met with each minister in private.

Liberation of the occupied territories, the return of displaced
persons home and other issues were discussed.
The parties did not reach any specific agreements but their positions
‘drew closer’ on some issues, Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov
said on Monday.
“The return of occupied territories is a pivotal issue for
Azerbaijan. This however, does not mean settling the conflict yet, as
a number of other problems will remain to be solved.”
Azimov told a news briefing that to achieve a conflict resolution,
the contempt between the two nations should be done away with, while
Azerbaijan and Armenia should start cooperating.
Among other key issues discussed in Paris was the co-existence of the
Azerbaijani and Armenian communities of Upper Garabagh. The issue of
granting Garabagh the status of self-administration is currently not
being discussed, the Deputy Foreign Minister said.
“The status of the region should be determined with the involvement
of all people living here. For this to be possible, all refugees must
return home.”
Azimov said Azerbaijan proposed to ensure a transportation link
between Upper Garabagh and Armenia, which is ‘currently under
scrutiny’. The proposal dwells upon restoring and opening the road
connecting Aghdam, Khankandi, Shusha, Lachin, the Goris and Sisian
regions of Armenia, and Shahbuz, Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, with
further access to Turkey. Certainly, the road may open after the
occupied territories are liberated, said Azimov.
The Deputy Foreign Minister noted that the sides are interested in
opening this road, as it goes through residential areas populated by
both Azerbaijanis and Armenians.
“This road would facilitate restoring trust between Azerbaijani and
Armenian residents in the region. Opening of the road has not only
pragmatic but also political importance.”
In reply to a question whether the road will open before or after the
status of Garabagh is determined, Azimov said ‘it will be an
important step in the peace process leading to the status
determination’. As for financing issues, he said the road will not
require considerable funds, as it already exists and it is necessary
only to restore it in some areas and build small sections along the
route.
The Deputy Foreign Minister said a donor conference will be held on
the initiative of the OSCE Minsk Group after Azerbaijan and Armenia
reach an accord. Considerable funds will be required to restore the
liberated land, establish infrastructure and implement mine clearing
operations there, which cannot be done on account of the Azerbaijani
government alone, Azimov said.
“The European Union and other international organizations have
already said they will allocate funds for the purpose. Moreover, some
donor countries have stated they will be involved in the process on
the individual basis.”
The Deputy Foreign Minister noted that peacekeeping forces will be
stationed in the conflict zone after the conflict is resolved.
“It has been agreed that co-chairing countries [France, United States
and Russia] will not be included in these forces. The precise make-up
of peacekeepers will be determined as results are achieved in peace
talks.”
The MG co-chairs will visit Baku next month. The visit is likely to
take place on July 10 or 11. Its precise date will be determined
shortly. The intermediaries will leave Baku for Yerevan.
“Azerbaijan would like for the co-chairs to come up with concrete
proposals during their visit to the region”, Azimov said.
The next meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents will be
held in Kazan, Russia late in August as part of the summit of the
Commonwealth of Independent States, the Deputy Foreign Minister said.

Azerbaijan suggested that the two countries’ foreign ministers meet
again at least twice before the presidents’ meeting.
“In general, the Azerbaijani side wants the negotiating process to be
stepped up”, Azimov said. He emphasized that it is time to continue
the negotiations on the level of experts.
With regard to the so-called ‘elections’ held by Garabagh
separatists, Azimov said this may be prevented only through peace.
“The conflict must be resolved within democracy and Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity. Our position was fully supported by the MG
co-chairs.”
The mediators said at the Paris meeting that they consider the regime
in Garabagh illegitimate and do not recognize the results of the
‘elections’.

‘No progress’
Armenian foreign minister Oskanian says that talks with his Azeri
counterpart Mammadyarov were fruitless.
“Although the Presidents are taking little steps forward, no progress
was achieved at the Paris meeting.”
Oskanian was quoted by Radio Liberty as saying that the discussions
covered all areas – from the status of Upper Garabagh to refugees’
problems and security.
“The issue of peacekeepers was also discussed but negotiating this is
premature. The status of Garabagh is the most important issue for
Yerevan and until it is determined, other issues should not be
considered.”
Oskanian also said that ‘the foreign ministers failed to revitalize
the agreement reached by the two presidents in Warsaw’.
“We agreed to continue the talks and will probably meet again in
July”, he said.

Sydney: Victim communities come together for the first time

The Australian Institute for Holocaust and Genocide Studies
Shalom College, UNSW
Sydney 2052 AUSTRALIA
Telephone: +61 (2) 9931 9628
Facsimile: +61 (2) 9313 7145
Email: [email protected]

Sydney, Australia – VICTIM COMMUNITIES COME TOGETHER TO EXAMINE HOLOCAUST
AND GENOCIDE

For the first time in Australia, Jewish and Armenian communities will come
together to explore aspects of the Holocaust and Armenian genocide,
coinciding with the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide and the 60th
anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

During the Jewish cultural festival of Limmud Oz, Professor Deborah Lipstadt
of Emory University and Professor Ronald Grigor Suny of the University of
Chicago will participate in a panel discussion organised by the NSW Jewish
Board of Deputies and the Armenian Genocide Research Unit of the Australian
Institute for Holocaust and Genocide Studies (AIHGS).

In a historic trial in Britain in 2000, Professor Lipstadt successfully
defeated Holocaust denier David Irving in his attempts to sue her and
Penguin Books for libel. Lipstadt recounts the drama in her new book History
on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving.

“Three or four survivor generations on, Armenians and Jews are still dealing
with the legacy, and the denial, of their attempted destruction. The time
has come for the two communities to share their experiences, and to learn
from each other. This event is an important step in that process,” says
Meher Grigorian, a Director of the AIHGS.

The Armenian genocide, which claimed up to 1.5 million lives during and
after the First World War, is still officially denied by the Turkish
government. Professor Suny’s visit comes following the surprise postponement
by Turkish officials of a pioneering conference that was to examine these
historical issues.

The conference was to take place on the 25th of May in Istanbul, organised
by Bogaziçi, Sabanci and Bilgi universities.

Following the postponement more than 150 Turkish scholars formally protested
the decision, claiming it an assault on university autonomy and academic
freedom.
The decision comes as Turkey begins European Union accession talks later
this year.

Professor Suny has authored many books, including most recently:
Intellectuals and the Articulation of a Nation (University of Michigan
Press, 1999) and A State of Nations: Empire and Nation-making in the Age of
Lenin and Stalin (Oxford University Press, 2001).

He has appeared numerous times on the McNeil Lehrer News Hour, CBS Evening
News, CNN, National Public Radio, and has written for The New York Times,
The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Nation, New Left Review,
Dissent, and other newspapers and journals.

The joint communal event will take place at 7:00pm on Tuesday 5 July 2005 at
Shalom College, the University of New South Wales. For further information,
contact Meher Grigorian at [email protected]

Opposition angry at Karabakh poll

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
June 22 2005

OPPOSITION ANGRY AT KARABAKH POLL

Government declares victory in parliamentary elections in the
mountainous republic.

By Karine Ohanian in Stepanakert

The Nagorny Karabakh opposition suffered a stinging electoral defeat
in the June 19 parliamentary elections, winning only three seats out
of 33 in the new assembly.

Karabakh opposition parties are now considering their next move after
faring badly in a poll that many had expected them to do well in.

However, after the liveliest election in the mountainous territory
since the end of the war in 1994, most observers agree the voting was
free and many analysts put the drubbing down to a strategic
outflanking of the opposition by the authorities.

There were more than 130 non-governmental observers monitoring the
polls from many countries, though the international community has not
recognised the legitimacy of the election and Azerbaijan has strongly
condemned them since Armenian-run Nagorny Karabakh is an unrecognised
state.

One of the observers, James Hooper, head of the US-based Public
International Law and Policy Group expressed hope that democratic
elections in Karabakh could positively influence the peace process
with Azerbaijan.

`The region will only win if Azerbaijan and Karabakh are competing in
democracy and not an arms race,’ he told IWPR.

According to preliminary results, pro-government forces won a
convincing victory, with two pro-government parties, the Democratic
Party of Artsakh and Free Motherland, claiming a total of 22 seats in
the 33-seat parliament. A further five seats went to independents
known for their pro-government sympathies.

The opposition alliance, ARF Dashnaktsutiun-Movement 88, gained 24.4
per cent of the popular vote, giving it just three seats.

Movement 88 is a newly formed party, while Dashnaktsutiun is
Armenia’s oldest nationalist party. Their opposition to the
government was not over policy on the status of Karabakh – all the
parties want it to be separate from Azerbaijan – but on criticism of
the government’s democratic record.

These elections differed markedly from three previous polls in
Nagorny Karabakh. They took place under a new electoral law, with the
use of transparent ballot boxes and with an unprecedented 127
candidates registered to run.

Most non-governmental foreign observers saw few irregularities and
said that the elections had been largely free and fair.

`I witnessed a completely democratic electoral process, and I think
many recognised states would do well to take Nagorny Karabakh as an
example,’ said Mark Almond of the British Helsinki Human Rights
Group. `A lot here was organised better than in Great Britain and in
this regard we have something to learn.’

Only one foreign observer, Milan Stefanec from the Czech Republic,
said what he saw at nine stations fell short of European standards.
At one station, he said the chairman rejected a complaint by an
opposition observer, calling it `unimportant’. There were also
instances where problems with documentation were sorted out not by
the electoral commission but by the security forces, he said.

Some Karabakhis also though the poll was unfair. `Many people went
and voted not for people they chose themselves but for people who
were named for them by their bosses,’ said Zhan Apresian, a voter in
the village of Askeran.

A spokesman for the opposition alliance said his movement would soon
publish information about electoral irregularities. `The elections
were unfree, unfair and untransparent,’ said Gegam Bagdasarian.

The leader of another losing party, Karen Ohanjenian of Social
Justice, also insisted the elections were rigged. `A system of buying
votes has demonstrated how corrupt society in Karabakh is. A
corrupted democracy is prevailing here,’ he said.

People working on behalf of different candidates told IWPR they had
seen residents voting without proper registration documents and
entering polling booths in pairs.

Most of the complaints, however, have focussed on the use of
so-called `administrative resource’, pressure from the authorities on
electors to vote for official candidates. People spoke of threats of
being dismissed from work, bribery and pressure being put on army
conscripts.

`First they asphalted our road, then they fixed our neighbour’s
roof,’ said Galina Babayan. `One person offered money, someone else
built a children’s playground. No one dared to try to bribe me, but
my friends and neighbours got very concrete offers.’

However, political analyst David Babayan urged the opposition to look
not at government corruption but at its own strategy, which he
believes was the key to its defeat.

`It acted impulsively, from the start setting the highest priority on
criticising the authorities. For the first 10 days voters took that
well, but then they got tired from the endless criticisms,’ he said.

A local expert who asked not to be named added that the introduction
of a second pro-government party, Free Motherland, was a clever move
by the authorities to avenge an opposition victory in last year’s
elections for mayor of Stepanakert.

The results have given a boost to Karabakh president Arkady Gukasian,
who has one year remaining on his second term.

On election day, Gukasian called the poll `the most honest elections
in the entire post-Soviet space’. Asked to comment on Azerbaijan’s
rejection, he said, `Today the attention of the people and observers
is fixed on processes inside Karabakh, which directly affect the
independent future of the Nagorny Karabakh Republic.’

Tension is still high in Karabakh. On June 20 there was alarm at the
news that opposition candidate and war veteran Pavel Manukian had
been badly beaten up after an incident in the defence ministry. In
hospital Manukian named the names of two well-known Karabakh
generals.

Gukasian said the incident would be investigated and criminal charges
brought if necessary and talks were held with the opposition. `When
someone is hurt it’s not important who won and lost,’ said a top
official. `The authorities won the election but today it’s more
important that the state does not lose.’

Karine Ohanian is a journalist with the Demo Newspaper in
Stepanakert.

MOSCOW: CIS body chief calls to curb flow of drugs from Afghanistan

CIS security body chief calls for action to curb flow of drugs from
Afghanistan

Interfax news agency
22 Jun 05

Moscow, 22 June: Troops of the antiterrorist coalition in Afghanistan
are effectively failing to take action in the struggle against the
production of narcotics in this country, the secretary-general of the
Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), Nikolay Bordyuzha,
said in an interview with Russian news agency Interfax today. The
members of the CSTO are Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Armenia.

“During the entire period that the antiterror coalition has been
active not a single illegal narcotics laboratory (in Afghanistan) has
been destroyed. When I asked a US general why this was the case, he
told me that they had not been given the task of waging war on
narcotics, and that is why they are not waging this war,” Bordyuzha
said.

According to the information of the Russian federal drugs control
agency, most narcotics, in particular 90 per cent of the heroin, that
enter Russia come from Afghanistan via Central Asian countries.

Bordyuzha noted that last week responsibility for guarding the
Tajik-Afghan border was passed completely from Russian border guards
to service personnel of the Tajik State Border Protection Committee.

“The departure from Tajikistan of Russian border guards, who had a
fairly efficient system for guarding the border could, of course, lead
to a growth in drug-trafficking from Afghanistan,” Bordyuzha said.

He went on to say that “a growth in drug-trafficking is possible
because everyone is noting a rise in the amount of opium sown in
Afghanistan”.

“The growth of drug-trafficking from Afghanistan is dangerous. And, to
be frank, neither special services nor law-enforcement agencies are
coping with the flow of drugs,” the CSTO general-secretary said.

He stressed that the CSTO member-states should assist Tajik border
guards with the guarding of the Tajik-Afghan border.

At the moment the border guard department of the Russian Federal
Security Service [FSB] in Tajikistan is being transformed into an
operational border group, which will begin operating from 2006.

It will not include actual troops. The service personnel in the group
will act as advisers and will help Tajik border guards with training
personnel and guarding the border.

Metal’s new political voice

Jerusalem Post
June 21 2005

Metal’s new political voice
By HARRY RUBENSTEIN

SYSTEM OF A DOWN
Mesmerize
(NMC)

With the dispersion of American political rockers Rage Against the
Machine, the metal scene needed a new band to don the mantle.

Enter System of a Down (SOAD), a Los Angeles-based ethnic-Armenian
nu-metal outfit that blasted onto the scene in the mid-Nineties. With
one of the most unique sounds around, SOAD literally left its
contemporaries in the dust (and in used CD bins around the world).

On Mesmerize, the first of two releases set for 2005 (Hypnotize will
hit stores this fall), the band opens with “B.Y.O.B.” a syncopated
thrash-inspired number that quickly turns into a maelstrom of chaotic
noise. When the chorus hits, Serj Tankian melodically belts the R&B
sounding and incredibly sarcastic line “Everybody’s going to the
party, have a real good time. Dancing in the desert blowing up the
sunshine.”

The attack on the war in Iraq continues as he screams: “Why don’t
presidents fight the war? Why do they always send the poor?”

The relentless sonic assault continues as SOAD squeezes 11
unapologetic, fast-paced songs saturated in melody, inventive time
signatures and adventurous harmonies into an astounding 36 minutes.

Besides its obvious musical prowess, SOAD’s greatest strength is the
band’s embracing of its Armenian heritage. The group is as inspired
by Eighties LA hardcore music as it is by its ethnic roots, and there
are numerous instances when the songs devolve into Armenian folk,
with the appropriate ethnic guitar riffage eventually taking it into
a beautifully harmonious mess of metal.

Guitarist Daron Malakian’s harmonies are outstanding, and at times,
his Middle-Eastern-inspired guitar playing adds to the relevance of
this quirky yet outstanding metal album.

RA Prime Minister and Deputy Mayor Of Moscow Express Satisfaction Wi

RA PRIME MINISTER AND DEPUTY MAYOR OF MOSCOW EXPRESS SATISFACTION
WITH EFFICIENT COOPERATION BETWEEN 2 COUNTRIES’ CAPITALS

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, NOYAN TAPAN. The development of Armenian-Russian
relations considerably contributes to multi-lateral and efficient
cooperation established between Armenian and Russian, in particular,
Moscow governments, as well as Yerevan and Moscow Mayor’s Offices. RA
Prime Minister Andranik Margarian declared this on June 16, while
receiving Vladimir Resin, first Deputy Mayor of Moscow. According
to him, this is consonant with the logic of stimulation of trade and
economic relations considered to be primary between the 2 strategic
allied countries and development of immediate contacts among separate
administrative entities. According to RA government’s Information and
Public Relations Department, the parties expressed satisfaction in
connection with mutual visits of delegations of high level between
Yerevan and Moscow in recent years. The presence of potential
in bilateral economic relations not used yet was mentioned. In
this connection issues concerning activization of participation of
Moscow’s business circles in Armenia’s, including Yerevan’s economy,
new possibilities of attracting additional investments and other issues
were discussed. A.Margarian and V.Resin also attached importance to use
of the potential of the large Armenian community living in Russia and,
in particular, in Moscow, in further extension of Armenian-Russian
relations.