Mortgage Crediting Market Dev Concept Works with KFW Bank Assistance

RA MORTGAGE CREDITING MARKET DEVELOPMENT CONCEPT WORKED OUT WITH
ASSISTANCE OF KFW BANK

YEREVAN, JULY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. A delegation of the KFW Bank (Germany)
will arrive in Armenia in September in order to work out the concept
of the mortgage crediting market development program. According to the
Armenian representative of the KFW Bank Karapet Gevorgian, the bank
experts are now preparing a technical and economic research of this
market’s development, with the report on the research results to be
submitted to the Armenian government for discussion in late August. It
will also be submitted to the interested international organizations
(the World Bank, the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development,
the US Agency for International Development), taking into account the
possible participation of these organizations in the market
development program. According to K. Gevorgian, at the suggestion of
the Armenian Prime Minister, KFW Bank assumed the role of the leading
donor organization in the process of Armenia’s mortgage market
development. The German bank will sign an agreement of 7 mln euros
with the Armenian government for the purpose of developing the primary
crediting market. This sum will be spent for implementing the first
stage of the mortgage market development program, during which the
participating commercial banks’ mortgage portfolios in line with
certain standards will be financed. According to K. Gevorgian, these
funds will have a positive impact on the terms of providing mortgage
credits. Particularly, KFW aims to extend the crediting period to at
least 10 years, which will enable to provide loans to the middle class
of the population as well.

IMF Plans Large-Scale Program in South Caucasian Countries

IMF PLANS TO IMPLEMENT LARGE-SCALE PROGRAM IN SOUTH CAUCASIAN
COUNTRIES

YEREVAN, JULY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. During the July 21 meeting with the RA
National Assembly Vice Speaker Tigran Torosian, Deputy Managing
Director of IMF Agustin Carstens expressed an opinion that the one of
the reasons for Armenia’s developing more rapidly than the other
countries of the region is the coordinated cooperation between the
power branches and the flexible economic policy of the government. He
said that certain technical assistance programs to be implemented in
Armenia’s tax and customs spheres have been developed. According to
the RA National Assembly PR Department, A. Carstens stated that the
Fund plans to implement a large-scale program in the South Caucasian
countries in the near future. T. Torosian underlined the importance of
cooperation between Armenia and the IMF, noting that it will produce
good results for the country on its path to the European Union’s
membership.

BAKU: Ethnically-Armenian Bush attacker detained

Ethnically-Armenian Bush attacker detained

Baku, July 21, AssA-Irada — Vladimir Arutyunian of Armenian descent,
suspected in masterminding the assassination of US President George
Bush during the latter’s visit to Tbilisi, Georgia on May 10, was
detained of Thursday, Georgia’s Rustavi-2 TV channel reported.

Arutyunian managed to run to a forest near the Vatvezhjyari settlement
after killing a policeman and wounding several others who attempted to
seize him. He was then detained with specially-trained dogs. Arutyunian
received bullet wounds in his shoulder and leg.

The investigation carried out by the Georgian law-enforcement was
directly overseen by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

The detainee has undergone a surgery and is presently receiving
treatment in the Georgian central hospital, which is kept in tight
security.*

NKR: Admittance Commission Assures

ADMITTANCE COMMISSION ASSURES

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
22 July 05

Recently it has become a tradition that on the eve of the entrance
exams the republic admittance commission members meet with the
applicants and their parents to discuss the entrance exams. The July
16 meeting was not an exception either. The rector of Artsakh State
University, the chairman of the admittance commission Hamlet Grigorian
first introduced the members of the commission. Three members are from
the Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport: Slava Asrian is the
secretary, expert Arkady Vahanian is the chairman of the commission
in charge of appeals, and Sos Arzumian. Two members are from the
president’s administration, Georgy Petrossian, advisor to president,
and Lyudmila Farsian. The last member is the vice rector of Artsakh
State University Artem Abrahamian. The chairman of the commission
assured that the staff is experienced and has had almost no faults in
the previous years of work, and this year they will work in the same
manner. After the introduction of the staff H. Grigorian proceeded
with a practical conversation. He said the applicants who will get
satisfactory scores will not necessarily fail. They can choose among
four specialties, and if they fail in one of them, they can try for
the other. This measure is intended to prevent young men who fail
to enter a university or find a job from leaving the country. At
least the university will keep them in the country for another 4 or 5
years. Of course, this does not mean that all the applicants with low
scores will be admitted. The applicants who did not do well at school
will have very little chance. This year for certain specialties the
competition for entering the state university is tougher than in the
previous years. For certain specialties 2.5 applicants compete for 1
place, whereas in certain specialties there are fewer applicants than
places. The chairman of the commission cited the example of the newly
opened department of political science. Although there is a lack of
political scientists in the country, there were no applicants in this
specialty. H. Grigorian pointed out the need for order during the
examinations, especially addressing to the parents. The commission
allows parents to enter the hall and monitor the exam, and often they
disturb the applicants with their conversations and prompting. If the
applicants need prompting, the commission will do this by writing a
formula or a numerical value on the blackboard but never help a single
applicant. At the exam in mathematics the applicants are allowed to
have a calculator and compass. Mobile phones are not allowed. On the
day of examination the applicant must turn up at 8 o’clock in the
morning with a passport and the examination leaflet. The journalists
are free to comment the examinations. The commission invites them as
observers. After the results are announced, the applicants can have the
copy of their work and if they disagree to the mark, they can appeal
to the commission. H. Grigorian noted that the coaches often give a
higher mark to their students to show off their work, so he asked the
coaches of the applicants to sign under the copy of the work after
they check it. In practice, however, the marks of the commission and
the coaches coincide. Although, there are also cases when the score
is not correctly calculated. In these cases, of course, the mistake
is corrected. H. Grigorian said, although entering the university is
not at all difficult, especially, as they said, they admit students
with low scores as well, there are people who present themselves as
middlemen and extort money from parents for admittance. H. Grigorian
called the parents to be careful not to be cheated. It is much
difficult to enter a university in RA. The applicants from Karabakh
who wish to study in Yerevan are mainly excellent students, and there
are several applicants for one place. The newly appointed minister of
education, culture and sport Kamo Atayan also addressed the present and
said that hopefully the admittance which is the most important event
in Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh in summer will be transparent and fair.

SVETLANA KHACHATRIAN. 22-07-2005

Armenian police received no reports on robbing flat of energy minist

ARMENIAN POLICE RECEIVED NO REPORTS ON ROBBING FLAT OF ENERGY MINISTER

Pan ARMENIAN Network, Armenia
July 21 2005

21.07.2005 06:07

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The flat of Minister of Energy and Finance of Armenia
Armen Movsisyan is robbed in Armenia. According to Armenian media,
the robbers went into the house passing over the roof and using a
rope. At that none of the family members was home. According to the
sources, gold articles and domestic appliances totaling $14 thousand
are stolen from Armen Movsisyan’s flat. Meanwhile, a representative
of the Press Service of the Armenian Police stated they do not have
any information on the incident, “the Police received no official
reports thereupon yet,” Regnum news agency reported.

Armenian-Iranian economic commission 6th meeting likely to be heldth

ARMENIAN-IRANIAN ECONOMIC COMMISSION 6-TH MEETING LIKELY TO BE HELD THIS AUTUMN

PanArmenian News Network
July 20 2005

20.07.2005 02:57

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Yesterday Special Envoy of the Islamic Republic of
Iran for Caspian Affairs Mehdi Safari met with head of the Armenian
President administration Artashes Tumanian, who also co-chairs the
joint commission for economic cooperation. The parties discussed the
issues referring to the bilateral relations, energy and abuilding
electric power plant. Both parties gave a positive estimate to the
cooperation and expressed hope that the 6-th sitting of the joint
commission for economic cooperation will be held this autumn, after
the formation of the new Iranian government, Irna news agency reported.

ANC-SF: Erdogan in S.F.”Our Ancestors Could Never Have Done Anything

PRESS RELEASE

Armenian National Committee
San Francisco – Bay Area
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
Tel: (415) 387-3433
Fax: (415) 751-0617
[email protected]

Contact: Roxanne Makasdjian (415) 641-0525

TURKISH PRIME MINISTER DEFENDS TURKEY IN SAN FRANCISCO
“Our ancestors could never have done anything like that”

San Francisco, July 7, 2005 – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan
was the guest speaker at a late-breaking World Affairs Council
program at the Fairmont Hotel. Erdogan spoke for about an hour,
addressing issues including recognition of the Armenian Genocide
and relations with Armenia, his country’s attempt to become more
democratic and accession to the European Union, the fight against
terrorism, Turkey’s alliances with the West, relations with Greece,
Cyprus and the island’s inclusion in the EU.

Among the approximately 350 people in attendance were representatives
from various countries’ embassies, Turkish government officials,
a large number of Turkish residents of the Bay Area, and others.
Armenian-Americans greeted attendees at the Fairmont Hotel with
informational flyers and picket signs outlining Erdogan’s recently
amplified denial of the Armenian Genocide. Armenian-Americans also
attended Erdogan’s speech, submitting questions to him about Armenian
Genocide recognition and Turkey’s ongoing record of human and civil
rights abuses.

Speaking through an interpreter, the Turkish Prime Minister
spoke for several minutes about the Armenian Case. He derided the
Armenian-American community for “always creating lobbies,” which he
said didn’t achieve anything, and said Armenian-Americans should stop
bringing up the issue, calling on the U.S. to help build “constructive
relationships” between the two countries.

Labelling the Armenian Genocide “unfounded propaganda,” Erdogan
remarked on resolutions passed by various nations recognizing the
Armenian Genocide. “Irrelevent countries and people are taking
decisions… I don’t really care,” he said.

“We have no feelings of hostility in ourselves,” said Erdogan, pointing
to Turkey’s opening of cargo flights to Armenia, and its step towards
reconstructing the Akhtamar church. He said his government has even
asked Armenia to provide an architect for the project, to avoid
accusations that it would be rebuilt incorrectly. Armenian-Americans
in the audience grumbled aloud at the sad irony of so many of their
historic churches having been intentionally destroyed, used as death
chambers for their ancestors during the Genocide, and as barns today.

Touching on Karabagh, Erdogan neglected to describe the origins of
the war over the Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, saying the Council of
Europe had declared Armenians in Karabagh as the aggressors in the war.

Audience questions were submitted on index cards to the moderator, who
said hundreds of questions had been submitted and she grouped them into
categories: developments in the region/Iraq; domestic situation/economy
& religion; entry into EU; and relations with Armenia.

After lengthy answers to each, Erdogan remarked on the prospect of
Armenian Genocide recognition posing a problem for Turkey’s accession
to the EU. The Prime Minister said there was no Armenian clause in
the recent Copenhagan agreement on requirements for EU admission,
and that Europe should not add more criteria. “That phase is over.”

Erdogan received loud applause when he said, “If we need to face our
own history, we will face our own history.” He then received boos
when he added, “But we’re very proud and confident… Our ancestors
could never have done anything like that.”

Erdogan said he suggested to Armenian president Robert Kocharian
that historians and “scientists” of law and archives should bring
their findings, and then politicians should discuss it and come to
a decision. This statement also garnered strong applause.

Erdogan also spoke broadly about his government’s efforts to stem
corruption and fraud among officials, as well as the growth of Turkish
trade, tourism, and per capita income.


Armenian National Committee
San Francisco – Bay Area
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
Tel: (415) 387-3433
Fax: (415) 751-0617

http://www.ancsf.org/pressreleases/2005/07122005.htm
www.ancsf.org
www.ancsf.org

Tbilisi, Georgia: the rose revolution’s rocky road

Open Democracy, UK
July 15 2005

Tbilisi, Georgia: the rose revolution’s rocky road

Neal Ascherson

The liberating unity Georgians discovered in late 2003 is dissolving
under the pressure of political disputes, energy shortages, and
regional turmoil. In Tbilisi, Neal Ascherson finds a country more at
home with its past than its future.

A few revolutions open the way to golden futures. All, without
exception, open the path to golden pasts. Georgia’s “rose
revolution”, which brought young Mikhail (“Misha”) Saakashvili to the
presidency eighteen months ago, is doing great things in that
respect.

Walking down Rustaveli Avenue in Tbilisi recently, I found the
novelist Dato Turashvili surrounded by uproar in a new shopping mall.
He was organising a marathon read of Georgia’s medieval epic, The
Knight in the Panther Skin by Shota Rustaveli (the avenue is named
after him). Applauding shoppers sat in rows as a queue of volunteer
children hopped up to the lectern to read their two minutes’ worth.
Did they understand much of the Old Georgian words? Probably not, but
that wasn’t the point. This was a rite to celebrate cultural roots.

Further down the avenue, I admired the new hangings over the National
Museum door proclaiming: Colchis, Land of the Golden Fleece. The
latest finds of dazzling Iron Age gold ornament, from royal tombs at
Vani, were on display. And inside I found that the two little hominid
skulls from Dmanisi, some 1.8 million years old, had been promoted in
every sense. A huge poster behind them announces: Georgia, Cradle of
First Europeans. Their faces, modelled from the skulls by a French
artist, now have names: Zezva and Mzia. They also have a new
taxonomic title – Homo Georgeous (sic).

Also in openDemocracy on Georgia’s “rose revolution” and its
aftermath, see our “Caucasus: regional fractures” debate. Among the
highlights:

George Hewitt, “Sakartvelo: roots of turmoil” (November 2003)

Alexander Rondeli, “Georgia: a rough road from the ‘rose revolution’
” (December 2003)

Nino Nanava, “Mikhail Saakashvili: new romantic or modern realist?”
(December 2003)

Sabine Freizer, “The pillars of Georgia’s political transition”
(February 2004)

If you find this material valuable please consider supporting
openDemocracy by sending us a donation so that we can continue our
work and keep it free for all

The past, in short, is still thriving on the freedom it gained in
2003. The future is looking less happy. The initial surge of joyous,
patriotic confidence is gone, and so is the passion for Misha, who at
first seemed to do nothing wrong. Instead, the capital is twitching
with rumours, some plausible and others total phantasms, but all
alarming. After the revolution of roses, the mood of unity and
purpose suggested a Georgia which could stand up to any of its
neighbours – even, at the diplomatic level, to Russia. The programmes
for economic reform and the war on corruption would be hard but they
could be won. But now, for the first time, things feel fragile.

A spreading mistrust

Take the absurd, yet sinister events on 30 June 2005. Three notorious
Georgian all-in wrestlers, accused of extorting thousands of dollars,
were refused bail when they appealed to the supreme court. Their
supporters smashed up the courtroom furniture and then poured out to
block the main avenue outside parliament. Some opposition MPs joined
them. There were yells about “dictatorship”.

Then heavily-armed special police rushed up and began to club and
arrest the demonstrators. In parliament itself, opposition members
punched government supporters and rolled about the aisles. A
Caucasian farce? But nobody laughed, and many people shivered to see
how easily political violence had foamed back across the streets of
Tbilisi.

A Georgian said to me: “Look, it’s not really about reform
programmes. It’s about state survival!” On the surface, this seems
exaggerated. After all, some things have gone well. In Tbilisi, at
least, the winter passed without serious power cuts: there was
heating and light. Some of the worst monsters of state and private
corruption have been arrested. Police pay and conditions have been
improved – an essential anti-corruption measure – and a start has
been made on giving Georgia a modern planning and banking
infrastructure.

An ambitious educational reform is going ahead, designed to remove
unqualified teachers (but also purging perfectly good lecturers who
had no chance to qualify). The 250,000 refugees who fled Abkhazia
after the 1993 independence war are at last being offered permanent
housing (they spent ten years fermenting their hatred in camps or
derelict slums). There are funds in the treasury now, and more to
come from oil transit royalties as Caspian oil crosses Georgia by
pipeline on its way from Baku to Ceyhan in Turkey.

There have been political successes too. In May 2004, Saakashvili
regained control of the semi-seceded Adzharia region without firing a
shot. Only a month ago, Georgia and Russia agreed on terms for the
removal of Russia’s last two bases on Georgian soil – “the end of 200
years of Russian military occupation”, boasted the defence minister,
Irakli Okruashvili. Conversations about a Georgian approach to Nato
and (an even more distant prospect) to the European Union have at
least produced friendly western oratory and many visits to Tbilisi.

Above all, Mikhail Saakashvili has snatched the imagination of the
White House. The ecstatic state visit of President George W Bush and
Condoleezza Rice in May scored two superlatives. It gathered the
biggest crowd ever seen in living Georgian memory, to greet the
president in the huge square at the end of Rustaveli Avenue. This
provided Bush with the biggest, warmest welcome he has ever received
in a foreign country. (It’s true that somebody chucked a grenade at
him, but it didn’t go off. Although the grenade was thrown a dozen
metres from the president, in a crowd scanned by a dozen film
cameras, nobody has been arrested. Odd, that.)

And yet there is this growing nervousness, this spreading mistrust.
It’s hard to source it precisely. But two things have contributed
heavily. One was Misha’s disastrous grab at the secessionist South
Ossetia region a year ago, which ended in failure and some dozen
deaths. This dissipated all the “machismo” capital he had won by
defying Russian threats and repossessing Adzharia three months
earlier.

The other was the death in February of the prime minister, Zurab
Zhvania, found dead with a friend in a Tbilisi apartment. Zhvania, an
older man with more government experience, was felt to be the
essential realist who kept the mercurial Misha’s feet on the ground,
and there is anxiety about how Saakashvili will handle crises without
him. This will not be allayed by Misha’s long-trailed replacement of
the mayor of Tbilisi, Zurab Chiaberashvili, on 12 July, by Gigi
Ugulava, civil-society activist and former leader of the Kmara! youth
movement that was central to the “rose revolution”.

Inevitably, everyone knows for a fact that Zurab Zhvania was murdered
– by gay bandits, by jealous colleagues, by Russian agents or by
“Zviadists” (fanatical nationalists loyal to the memory of the late,
mad president, Zviad Gamzakhurdia, who pitched Georgia into civil war
in the early 1990s). More probably, he was killed by fumes from
Georgian central heating, but that’s too boring to believe.

Sakartvelo not at ease

On Rustaveli, there is a poster showing a beaming crowd in assorted
folk outfits. It’s labelled (in English and Russian as well as
Georgian) Celebrating Georgia’s Diversity. But at present, people
feel too aware of Georgia’s ethnic diversity to celebrate it.
National self-confidence has sagged, and there’s a suspicion that the
non-Georgian minorities are threatening the state with
disintegration.

Once, the guidebooks spoke of 5.3 million people of whom almost 80%
were Georgian. Today, the population figure you hear in conversation
is nearer 4 million, and the Georgians are alleged to form only 69%
of it. In the civil wars and economic collapse of the 1990s, maybe
half a million Georgians left the country, especially from Tbilisi.
So far, in spite of the rose revolution, they have not come back.

It’s difficult to know the truth about such figures. Georgia has
effectively lost Abkhazia, which has been de facto independent for
over ten years. South Ossetia is much smaller but still defying
Tbilisi’s control. But the focus now is on two other regions: Kvemo
Kartli, with a majority population of some 300,000 Azerbaijanis, and
Samstkhe-Javakheti with a population of over 90,000 Armenians.

Few in either minority speak Georgian. The Azeris, relatively
“quiet”, are Muslims of highly conservative practice; almost all
girls must leave school at 13 to marry. Among the Armenian minority,
in contrast, discontent is reaching boiling point. There is atrocious
poverty and unemployment is around 80%. The current crisis in the
region is over electricity bills, where an American-led power company
has tried to extort payment by cutting off whole blocks and streets
if one household defaults. “Let them live in darkness until they
start paying for the electricity they use!”

There have been riots, and the (Georgian) governor has threatened to
call in troops. Meanwhile, the Armenians accuse the Georgians,
rightly or wrongly, of seizing Armenian churches for the Georgian
patriarchate. Worse still, the minorities are discovering that the
higher-education reforms are setting a tough examination in Georgian
language and literature as condition for university entrance. This is
all ominous news. In the Caucasus, situations like this eventually
blow up.

Also by Neal Ascherson in openDemocracy:

“From multiculturalism to where?” (August 2004)

“Pope John Paul II and democracy” (April 2005)

And everyone seems to carry a gun. This has been true since the
1990s, but there have been times when it was less obvious. My best
Tbilisi friends’ car has a bullet-hole in the windscreen. They parked
the car outside a theatre some weeks ago, and when they returned,
they found the hole and a bullet stuck in the driver’s seat. Then,
the night before I left, their pretty daughter Tamara went to a
birthday party in a restaurant. A man at the next table came over and
asked her to dance. When she refused, he pulled a gun. When she
refused again, he fired four rounds into the ceiling. When Tamara
(being Georgian) still refused, he shrugged and marched off, stuffing
the pistol back into his waistband. Nobody seems to have sent for the
police. One doesn’t.

This is a taut period in Georgia. But the big hope which pulled
Mikhail Saakashvili to power is not yet extinct. Grafting a
capitalist infrastructure into a desperately poor and corrupt
country, whose very unity is fragile, was always going to be slow.
Things are starting to change, but as they do, the gap between
glittering cities and dark villages – places where parents dream that
their children might one day learn to tell the time and count coinage
– grows wider.

The answer is not just foreign money and protection. The Georgians
themselves must make peace around and within their borders and that
means, above all, a “land for peace” deal which recognises the fact
of Abkhazia’s independence. And, secondly, they must cherish the
small democratic opposition which dares to criticise the charming,
erratic president and his slapdash handling of power. Those who work
in television, for example, say that restrictions on reporting have
become tighter than they were under the Eduard Shevardnadze regime
which Misha overthrew. Only the Georgians, in other words, can save
their revolution.

Canadian Armenian leaders meet with Toronto Star Editorial Board

ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF CANADA
COMITÉ NATIONAL ARMÉNIEN DU CANADA
3401 Olivar-Asselin
Montréal, Québec
H4J 1L5
Tél. (514) 334-1299 Fax (514) 334-6853
Communiqué de Presse – Press Release
July 15 juillet, 2005

Contacts: Shant Karabajak 514-334-1299
Roupen Kouyoumdjian 514-336-7095
Aris Babikian 416-317-8972
For immediate release:
Pour diffusion immédiate:

Canadian-Armenian Community Leaders Meet with the Toronto Star Editorial Board

Toronto- A delegation representing the Canadian-Armenian Community
met the Toronto Star editorial board to discuss issues of concern
to the Canadian-Armenian community. The Armenian Genocide, Canada-
Armenia bilateral relations, Nagorno Karabagh, and the establishment
of a Canadian Embassy in Armenia were among the issues discussed
during the June 28th meeting. Bob Hepburn, editorial page editor,
headed the five-member Toronto Star board. The Canadian-Armenian
community delegation included Aris Babikian, president, Armenian
National Federation of Canada (ANFC); Shaen Mirakian, of the Armenian
Community Centre of Toronto (ACC); and Vahan Ajemian, Armenian National
Committee of Toronto (ANCT).

A frank and open exchange of views took place during the one-hour
meeting.

`It was an important and constructive meeting,’ said Babikian. `We
had to update and sensitize the Toronto Star editorial board with
the concerns of the Canadian-Armenian Community in light of recent
developments, especially after the House of Commons April 21, 2004
resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide,’ stated Aris Babikian,
ANFC president.

At the end of the meeting the Armenian delegation provided the
editorial board with books and documentation on the aforementioned
issues.

Since last year’s House of Commons resolution, the Armenian National
Committee of Canada and the Armenian National Federation of Canada
and their affiliated chapters in Montreal, Laval, Toronto, Hamilton,
Cambridge, St. Catharines, Kitchener, London, Guelph and Vancouver
have regularly contacted the Canadian media to inform them of the
House of Commons resolution and asked them to clarify their stand on
this important moral and ethical issue.

On January 14, 2004 ANCC was successful in securing a resolution from
the National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada, which represent
over 400 newspapers and magazines, to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

In additional and due to the persistence, hard work and behind the
scenes efforts of ANCC and its members, The Globe and Mail and the
National Post now refer to the Armenian Genocide without ambiguity
and without quotes or the prefix `alleged’ in their editorials and
stories. ANCC members continue to be in touch with various Canadian
media reporters, columnists, editors, board members, publishers
and presidents.

`We firmly believe that the media has an important role to educate
and bring the truth of the Armenian cause to the Canadian public. With
that in mind, the ANCC has, over the years, established an excellent
relationship with Canadian media, based on mutual trust and respect,’
stated ANCC President Dr. Girair Basmadjian. `As in the past, we
intend to continue our communication with the Canadian media in an
open, objective and positive manners,’ said Dr. Basmadjian.

-30-

–Boundary_(ID_MEXN5ReBbz8IK31cMx4mlg)–

BAKU: KLO critical of authorities’ handling of Karabakh talks

Azeri pressure group critical of authorities’ handling of Karabakh talks

Ayna, Baku
14 Jul 05

There is no progress in the Azerbaijani-Armenian talks on Nagornyy
Karabakh and the Azerbaijani authorities are to blame for that, the
leader of the Azerbaijani pressure group Karabakh Liberation
Organization has said. Akif Nagi also blamed international
organizations for their inability to solve the conflict and for siding
with Armenia. Trying to use the election situation in Azerbaijan and
ensure the security of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan major oil pipeline, the
OSCE Minsk Group mediators are in a hurry to sign a peace accord which
will be unfavourable for Azerbaijan. At the same time, Akif Nagi
rejected the idea of holding a referendum in Karabakh to determine the
region’s future as the outcome of the referendum is already clear, he
said. The following is an excerpt from report by Azerbaijani newspaper
Ayna on 14 July headlined “Status of Nagornyy Karabakh should not be a
subject of discussion” and subheaded “The KLO chairman believes that
the Minsk Group is in a hurry to prepare a peace accord which is
unfavourable for Azerbaijan”. Subheadings have been inserted
editorially:

Following a one-month hiatus, the [OSCE] Minsk Group co-chairmen have
paid another visit to the region. The mediators did not disclose
anything regarding the talks they had in Baku. However, they sought to
make people believe that the sides are very close to signing a peace
accord and that there are certain agreements on some issues. Yet there
are people who do not share this optimism of government officials and
mediators. The chairman of the Karabakh Liberation Organization (KLO),
Akif Nagi, is one of them. The KLO chairman explained his position in
an interview with Ayna newspaper.

Minsk Group

[Correspondent] The mediators held another round of talks in
Baku. What is your view?

[Akif Nagi] One of the co-chairmen said that they were in Baku a month
and a half ago and that it is good that they are here now. I would say
that it is not good for Azerbaijan if their visits are so
frequent. Because we do not believe that the Minsk Group will put
forward a plan for settling the conflict and that the plan will
reflect the reality. I mean that the Minsk Group will produce a
document which is in line with its principles.

That document will not reflect the aggression against Azerbaijan. The
document will be detrimental to Azerbaijan. That’s to say, it may be
in favour of Armenia which has invaded our lands.

As for our impressions about the visit, we have repeatedly stated that
the activities of the Minsk Group are directed at strengthening
Armenia’s positions. The Minsk Group is not taking a single step to
recognize Armenia as an aggressor. The group always wants to carry out
a balanced policy as if Armenia and Azerbaijan were equally guilty of
the conflict. However, we will never be able to accept this logic
since one of the sides has been subjected to aggression while the
other is the aggressor. They themselves sometimes acknowledge this.
If this is so, then how can one take a balanced position on the issue?

The foreign minister [Elmar Mammadyarov] recently said that the OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly session in Washington has adopted a balanced
position which suits Azerbaijan. This stance is completely
incompatible with Azerbaijan’s foreign policy and goes against
Azerbaijan’s position. We always protested when international bodies
adopted a balanced position. Now we are portraying this position as
our success? The visit of the Minsk Group co-chairman took place along
the same lines. I must say that they are in a serious hurry and seek
to achieve some results.

I believe that this is related to two factors. First, the elections in
Azerbaijan are approaching and both the opposition and authorities are
dependant on international bodies in their attempts to earn their
respect. In such a situation, the Minsk Group believes that neither
the opposition, nor the authorities will protest and go against their
proposals. A favourable situation has developed for them here and they
can impose any document on Azerbaijan.

On the other hand, the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline will be put into
operation at the end of the year and the export of oil will
commence. I believe that major countries do not want even the
slightest threat to the pipeline.

This hurry is connected with these factors. It follows that whatever
the document they will try to pass, it will be based on their previous
activities.

[Passage omitted: details of the Minsk Group’s proposals in 1997]

Authorities are to blame

[Correspondent] The co-chairmen say that it is the leaders of the
countries, not the Minsk Group, who are responsible for the delay in
resolving the conflict.

[Akif Nagi] The authorities are to blame for this in the first
place. An army capable of waging a war has yet to be set up and there
have been no serious achievements on the diplomatic front.

Let me tell you about one fact: one of the topics on the agenda in
1995 concerned Lacin and Susa [towns in the Armenian-controlled
territory, Lacin is outside Nagornyy Karabakh]. Nowadays, the talks
are not discussing the fate of Lacin and Susa at all. This testifies
to a diplomatic setback for Azerbaijan and this is the fault of the
authorities.

Why don’t we differentiate between the views of international
organizations? Sometimes we are criticized for blaming international
organizations, not the Azerbaijani government. Today we see that the
fate of Nagornyy Karabakh depends on international bodies. Let
international organizations know that there is a public opinion and
position in Azerbaijan. Let them know and heed the position of the
public. They ignore the position of the Azerbaijani authorities in any
case.

[Passage omitted: Nagi says there are no apparent reasons for
optimism]

Referendum in Nagornyy Karabakh

[Correspondent] The Armenian bureau of Radio Liberty has reported that
the issue of holding a referendum in Nagornyy Karabakh in 10-15 years
is being discussed. Can this proposal be implemented?

[Akif Nagi] In general, it is absurd. Armenia has suggested on several
occasions that a referendum should be held to let the people of
Nagornyy Karabakh determine their fate. Raising such issues as the
referendum and status is part of Armenia’s foreign policy. In doing
so, they are trying to make people forget the real gist of the
issue. They are trying to make everyone forget about the invasion, as
if there has been a violation of the rights of the Nagornyy Karabakh
Armenians, they are trying to expand their rights and so on. It is not
realistic to put forward the issue of holding the referendum at this
moment. Holding any referendum in Nagornyy Karabakh is not in line
with international practice. The latest figures alleged that the
number of Azeris in Nagornyy Karabakh has reached 80,000 and Armenians
are preparing to carry out a census. So far they have been saying that
150,000 Armenians live there, although there were not even 50,000
Armenians there in the past.

They will probably overstate these figures. If the referendum takes
place, the results are already known, and therefore, there is no need
for it. On the other hand, if international organizations insist, then
the Azerbaijani population can be polled.

Only the Azerbaijani population can hold a referendum and take a
decision concerning its territory. In addition, the population of the
Karabakh region is three million people. If this concerns part of
Karabakh, then the population of the entire region has to be
polled. Karabakh was artificially divided into Nagornyy [Mountainous]
Karabakh, Lowland Karabakh and Aran Karabakh. The population of all of
Karabakh can voice its opinion.

No progress in talks

[Correspondent] Some experts say that using the positive changes that
are being observed, it is necessary to take the talks as far as
possible and then link the remaining issues to Azerbaijan’s
development. What is your attitude to this position?

[Akif Nagi] There are no positive changes. Armenia has not made a
concession regarding its three principles: that Nagornyy Karabakh is
no longer part of Azerbaijan, that there must be a ground link between
Nagornyy Karabakh and Armenia, and that the Armenian population must
be given international security guarantees. What progress can we talk
about?

In turn, major countries act in accordance with their own interests.
Azerbaijan continues to develop in these conditions and its budget is
increasing year by year. Armenia senses this, and therefore, it must
be in Armenia’s interests to end the situation. Armenia must
understand this and give up its current stance. If it does not give it
up… [ellipsis as published] If both of us are to be destroyed, then
Armenia will be the first to be destroyed.

[Passage omitted: similar ideas]