Sweden: The Social Democrat Congress recognizes the 1915 Genocide

Press Release
2009-10-29
The Union of Armenian Associations in Sweden
[email protected]

Stockhol m, Sweden

After a long debate, the Social Democrat Party Congress 2009 disregarded
the recommendation from the Party Executive, approving the first clause of
motion J28, stating that "the Social Democrats shall act for the genocides
Seyfo [1915 Genocide] and Al-Anfal [Iraqi Kurdistan] to be recognized by
Sweden, EU and UN".

The Union of Armenian Associations in Sweden applauds the Congress for its
historic decision, noting that this action shall in no way harm the
democratization process in Turkey, the research on the genocide, nor the
reconciliation process between Turkey and Armenia.

The Union of Armenian Associations in Sweden looks forward to this
decision of the Congress being reflected in the Social Democratic
activities within the Swedish Parliament and in the future work of their
MPs in regard to the existing parliamentary motions calling for an
official Swedish recognition of the 1915 Genocide.

www.armeniska.se

RA Public Council To Submit Considerations On Armenian-Turkish Borde

RA PUBLIC COUNCIL TO SUBMIT CONSIDERATIONS ON ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER OPENING

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.10.2009 19:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ RA Public Council has today held its session in
Yerevan. Discussion agenda comprised issues concerning Council’s
membership in UN General Assembly Association of Economic and Cultural
Council (ECOSOC), elaboration of the concept on "Armenia-Nagorno
Karabakh Cooperation" as well as possible opening of Armenian-Turkish
border.

Public Council Chairman Vazgen Manukyan recommended Council members
Karen Bekaryan, Sos Sargsyan, Harutyun and Kosrov Hautyunyan to submit
the final version of concept on "Armenia-Nagorno Karabakh Cooperation".

Touching on Armenian-Turkish border opening and challenges related
thereto, Council decided that all 12 commissions would conduct studies
into the matter. "Issues like economic monopolization, foreigners’
acquisition of immovable property in Armenia and migration policy
should be thoroughly studied and submitted to Armenian Government,"
Vazgen Sargsyan stressed.

Armenian School In Tbilisi Celebrates Its 70th Anniversary

ARMENIAN SCHOOL IN TBILISI CELEBRATES ITS 70TH ANNIVERSARY

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.10.2009 17:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 27, Tbilisi State Drama Theatre after
Petros Adamyan hosted the celebration of the 70th anniversary of
Armenian Public school No. 104.

Participants heard the congratulatory addresses of Armenian and
Georgian Education Ministers Armen Ashotyan and Nika Gvaramia, as
well as RA Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobyan. Armenian Welcoming
speeches were delivered by RA Ambassador to Georgia Hrach Silvanyan,
Georgian Deputy Education Minister Irina Kurtadze and AAC Georgian
Eparchy Primate Archbishop Vazgen Mirzakhanyan. Event was also attended
by Advisor to Georgian President, Editor of "Gruzia" newspaper Van
Bayburt, as well as local Armenian Diaspora representatives and guests.

During the ceremony, Ambassador Hrach Silvanyan handed the Gold
Memory Medal, the highest award of RA Education and Science Ministry,
to school principal Karine Manukyan. Many school teachers received
acknowledgement awards from Armenian and Georgian Education Ministries
and RA Diaspora Ministry.

Tensions Between Turkey and the West Increase

Tensions Between Turkey and the West Increase

The New York Times
October 28, 2009

By DAN BILEFSKY

ISTANBUL – With Turkey’s prospects for joining the European Union growing
more elusive and the country reaching out to predominantly Muslim countries
with a vigor not seen in years, a longstanding question is vexing the United
States and Europe: Is this large, secular Muslim country turning East
instead of West?

When President Obama visited Turkey in April – a symbolic gesture that
underlined Turkey’s geostrategic importance – he emphasized the country’s
role as a bridge between East and West, acknowledged its mediation in the
Arab-Israeli conflict and threw his weight solidly behind Turkey becoming a
European Union member.

Now, six months later, some in Washington and Brussels are questioning
Turkey’s dependability as an ally, and many Turks are asking whether they
should reject the European Union before the bloc rejects them.

Fears that Turkey is abandoning its bridge-building role were fanned this
month when it canceled air force exercises with Israel, straining ties that
frayed in January when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan castigated
Israel’s president, Shimon Peres, over the war in Gaza, in front of world
leaders at Davos, Switzerland.

Senior Turkish officials say Mr. Erdogan, who was mediating between Israel
and Syria just weeks before the conflict in Gaza broke out, felt personally
betrayed by Israel’s aggression and what he regarded as the needless killing
of innocent Muslims.

At the same time, some Western diplomats say, Turkey has made what they
consider alarming overtures toward Iran.

When the official result of Iran’s disputed presidential election was
announced in June, Turkey was one of the first countries to congratulate
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on his re-election. On Tuesday, during a visit
to Tehran, Mr. Erdogan said the West was applying a double standard in
pressuring Iran over its nuclear program. "Those who are chanting for global
nuclear disarmament should first start in their own countries," he said.

President Nicolas Sarkozy of France has vociferously opposed European Union
membership for Turkey, arguing that it is not geographically part of Europe.
Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany has expressed similar reservations. Many
Turks have interpreted the rejection to mean that their country is not
welcome because of its large Muslim population.

At a meeting in Istanbul last week about Turkey’s relations with its
neighbors, Representative Robert Wexler, chairman of the European
subcommittee in Congress, said: "You wonder why Turkey is curious about
different avenues? Look at your own behavior and attitude, Europe."

Other analysts say that cultural and economic factors are also pushing
Turkey in that direction.

Ersin Kalaycioglu, a political science professor at Sabanci University,
noted that the global financial crisis had contracted European economies,
prompting Turkey, a large exporter, to seek different markets. He and others
also suggested that leaders of the governing Justice and Development Party,
or A.K.P., a socially conservative party with Muslim roots, felt more at
home in Riyadh, Damascus and Baghdad than in Paris, London or Rome.

Even a partial collapse of talks with the European Union would have
far-reaching consequences. Turkey is an indispensable ally for the United
States and Europe. Bordered by Iran, Iraq and Syria, Turkey is a powerful
symbol of the compatibility of democracy, capitalism and Islam. Located
between the Middle East and the former Soviet Union, it has vital strategic
importance as a transit country for gas. It also has deep influence in
Afghanistan and is a regional leader in the Caucasus.

Yet the country’s European Union negotiations are in a precarious state.
Negotiations on a number of issues have been blocked because of its long
dispute with Cyprus. For the first time in years, leading figures in the
business establishment, which has always led the drive for European Union
integration, are questioning the wisdom of continuing a negotiating process
that appears to have no end.

"We Turks are a proud nation and we don’t want to go to a house where we
were invited but where the host keeps slamming the door in our face," said
Hasan Arat, an executive at a top Turkish real estate development firm.

For all the country’s wounded pride, Turkish officials and analysts insist
that Turkey has no intention of abandoning the West. Rather than reorienting
Turkish foreign policy toward the East, Egemen Bagis, Turkey’s minister for
European Union affairs, argued in an interview that the recent outreach to
its neighbors – including the opening of its border with Syria, the signing
of a historic agreement with Armenia to establish normal diplomatic
relations and the engagement of Iran – was helping Turkey become a more
effective interlocutor for its Western allies.

"Any bridge with one strong leg and one weak leg can’t stand for long," Mr.
Bagis said.

Ibrahim Kalin, chief foreign policy adviser to Mr. Erdogan, said Western
critics of Turkey’s new inclusive foreign policy were using a double
standard. "When the U.S. makes an overture to Russia, everyone applauds this
as a new era in diplomacy," he said. "But when Turkey tries to reach out to
Iran, people ask if it is trying to change its axis."

Mr. Kalin said that the anti-Turkish talk emanating from key European
capitals was making it harder to convince the Turkish people about the need
for European Union membership.

Rather than worrying that Turkey is moving toward the East, said Cengiz
Aktar, a leading expert here on the European Union, the West should fear a
wounded Turkey turning to Russia. Already, Russia has been courting it as a
distribution point for energy supplies, while Turkish investment in Russia
is intensifying.

"This government is perfectly capable of saying `no thanks’ to Europe and
instead shifting toward Russia," Mr. Aktar said.

Armenia Hosted Friendship Bridge International Cycle Race

ARMENIA HOSTED FRIENDSHIP BRIDGE INTERNATIONAL CYCLE RACE

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.10.2009 18:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Friendship Bridge, an international cycle race
was held in Armenia on October 23 – 25. 36 cyclists from Moldavia,
Georgia, Iran and Armenia were participating.

"Armenia took the third place in the team standings. The tournament
was individual, and prizes were awarded individually. In the end,
still, we resolved to reward team standings’ winners as well. Thus,
Mher Lazarian and Arman Kharatyan of Armenia took 1st and 2nd places,
whereas Iran was announced as contest winner and Moldavian team took
the second place in team standings," Armenian Cycle Racing Federation
executive director Karen Grigoryan told PanARMENIAN.Net.

The routes were follows: Alavedi-Ozdun (October 23), Alaverdi-Haghpat
(October 24) and Alavedi-Akhtala (October 25). At the race, Armenia
was presented by 19 sportsmen, Iran -by 6, Moldavia -2, Georgia -10.

BAKU: Rapprochement Between Turkey And Armenia Can Cause Problems In

RAPPROCHEMENT BETWEEN TURKEY AND ARMENIA CAN CAUSE PROBLEMS IN GEORGIAN REGION OF SAMTSKHE-JAVAKHETI: FELLOW AT FOUNDATION FOR STRATEGIC STUDIES IN GEORGIA

Trend
Oct 27 2009
Azerbaijan

The process of rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia should
be considered as regional one because it can cause problems in the
Georgian region of Samtskhe-Javakheti, senior fellow at the Foundation
for Strategic and International Studies in Georgia, Professor Vladimir
Papava said.

"I do not think that rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia
is in the interests of the region. After rapprochement between
Turkey and Armenia, Georgia will not have an argument that return of
Turks-Meskhetians will create new ethnic problems in the region. But,
in fact, Armenians living in those territories (Samtskhe-Javakheti)
oppose and are afraid of Turks’ return," Papava told Trend News.

Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers Ahmet Davutoglu and Edward
Nalbandian signed the protocols Ankara-Yerevan in Zurich on October 10.

Diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey have been broken
in 1993.

The law on repatriation of internally displaced people to Georgia came
into force in early January. According to the Ministry of Refugees
and Resettlement, bids for return are made by people willing to
be repatriated.

The Repatriation Law was approved at request of the Council of Europe.

Primarily, it concerns Turks-Meskhetians internally displaced from
South Georgia in 1944 by Stalin’s regime. Now Turks-Meskhetians live
mainly in Russia and Azerbaijan. Many of them intend to return to
their historical homeland.

According to Papava, if Armenia feels that the Nagorno-Karabakh
problem will be solved in its favor, some forces in the country will
provoke the conflict in Samtskhe-Javakheti too. This process should
be considered as a regional process but not as Georgian internal one.

Certainly, Javakheti’s issue should be considered both in the context
of Turkish-Armenian rerapprochement and return of Turks-Meskhetians
in the territory where the Armenians live now, he said.

"At present, Georgia is in a very difficult position. The Armenians
living in Georgia significantly oppose return of Turks-Meskhetians
to this region," Papava said.

If Turkey and Armenia fully approach, the Armenian community living
in Javakheti, must not oppose return of Turks-Meskhetians. However,
the situation is different. It can cause ethnic problems in the region,
experts said.

He said that it is an important new perspective of the problem of
the regional process.

"However, on the other hand, the status quo in the Caucasus could
not be maintained for a long time. Conflicts in the region must be
solved," Papava said.

Azerbaijani killed in fighting near Karabakh: reports

Agence France Presse
Oct 24 2009

Azerbaijani killed in fighting near Karabakh: reports

BAKU, Oct 24 2009

An Azerbaijani soldier has been killed in fighting with Armenian
forces near the disputed region of Nagorny Karabakh, news agencies
reported Saturday.

The Trend and ANS Press agencies reported that the soldier was killed
Friday in fighting in Azerbaijan’s Aghdam region, on the de facto
border with Karabakh. Officials with Azerbaijan’s defence ministry
could not be reached to confirm the reports.

Tensions over Karabakh have heightened in recent weeks amid efforts by
Armenia and Turkey, a close ally of Azerbaijan, to establish
diplomatic ties and reopen their border after decades of hostility.

Azerbaijan fears the efforts will lead Ankara to soften its
longstanding support for Baku in the dispute.

Backed by Yerevan, ethnic Armenian forces seized control of Nagorny
Karabakh and seven surrounding districts from Azerbaijan in the early
1990s, in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

The two former Soviet republics have cut direct economic and transport
links and failed to negotiate a settlement on the region’s status.

Armenian and Azerbaijani forces are spread across a ceasefire line in
and around Nagorny Karabakh, often facing each other at close range,
and shootings are common.

eg-mm/adc/gk

Armenia wants to cooperate with Russia in nanotechnology use

Interfax, Russia
Oct 22 2009

Armenia wants to cooperate with Russia in nanotechnology use

YEREVAN Oct 22

The Armenian Economic Ministry plans to sign cooperation agreements
with Russia’s state corporation Rosnano on using nanotechnologies.

A draft Russian-Armenian cooperation agreement on the use of
nanotechnologies was approved by the country’s government at its
Thursday session. The document was submitted by Deputy Economic
Minister Vage Danielian.

The signing of the agreement will be a good start in the cooperation
between the two countries in the field of innovations, he said.

The country’s government recognized the development of
nanotechnologies as one of its priorities back in 2002, Danielian
added.

Edward Nalbandyan To Take Part In The 10th Session Of Armenia-EU Par

EDWARD NALBANDYAN TO TAKE PART IN THE 10TH SESSION OF ARMENIA-EU PARLIAMENTARY COOPERATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.10.2009 20:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 26, FM Edward Nalbandyan will pay a
working visit to Luxemburg to participate in the 10th session of
Armenia-EU Parliamentary Cooperation. During his visit, Minister will
also conduct bilateral meetings, RA MFA press service reports.

"EXPO Russia 2009" Industrial Exhibition To Be Conducted In Yerevan

"EXPO RUSSIA 2009" INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION TO BE CONDUCTED IN YEREVAN OCTOBER 29-30

ARMENPRESS
OCTOBER 22, 2009
YEREVAN

"EXPO Russia 2009" industrial exhibition will be conducted in Yerevan
October 29-30 in the session hall of the Armenian government.

An official from the Armenian Development Agency told Armenpress that
in parallel with the exhibition round tables will be conducted the
participants of which will discuss issues on economic cooperation
between Armenia and Russia.

The round tables will be organized in Armenia’s Energy and Natural
Resources Ministry and Transport and Communication Ministry with
the participation of experts of the ministries and representatives
of companies.

With the participation of Economy Minister Nerses Yeritsyan
"Russia-Armenia: Prospects of Economic Development" conference will
be held.