BAKU: US mediator to start visit to the region Saturday

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
July 29 2006

US mediator to start visit to the region Saturday

AssA-Irada 29/07/2006 20:12

The new US co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group brokering settlement to
the Armenia-Azerbaijan Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict, Matthew
Bryza, will start his first visit to the region in this capacity on
Saturday.

He is expected to visit Yerevan first, then Khankandi, the center of
the self-proclaimed Upper Garabagh republic, and then arrive in Baku.

The diplomat will hold talks with the Azeri and Armenian government
and then inform the other two co-chairs from Russia and France of the
outcome of discussions.

On Tuesday, Bryza is due to meet with President Ilham Aliyev, Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and the head of the Azerbaijani community
of Upper Garabagh, Nizami Bahmanov.

The spokesman for the Azeri Foreign Ministry, Tahir Taghizada, said
the US mediator’s visit aims to promote the negotiating process. He
noted that the opportunities for reaching peace have not been
exhausted yet.

`I believe that the key issue is that Bryza will pay his first visit
to the region in the capacity of the Minsk Group co-chair. Our hope
is for the visit to give an impetus to further negotiations,’ the
diplomat said.

The OSCE mediators are expected to gather in Paris after Bryza’s
visit to discuss future plans.

Ramkavars to Send a Protest Statement to British Foreign Ministry

Panorama.am

15:07 28/07/06

RAMKAVAR AZATAKAN PARTY TO SEND A PROTEST STATEMENT TO BRITISH FOREIGN
MINISTRY

Ramkavar Azatakan Party will send a statement to the British ministry
of foreign affairs rendering protest for denying 1915 Genocide
committed by Ottoman Turkey, Arutun Arakelyan, party chairman, told a
press conference today. In his words, Committee on Rights of Turkish
Nation is actively engaged in denial of Genocide facts, enrolling many
public organizations in the effort. At present, the committee is
engaged in advocacy to cancel documents condemning the Armenian
Genocide adopted in Edinburgh and Chvinet. In the words of
A. Arakelyan, the committee managed to attract the British foreign
agency on its side, too. Particularly, pro-Turkish newspapers have
interviewed the representatives of British foreign agency, saying
`1915-1916 happenings do not qualify for UN Convention on Genocide
since it is hard to judge events with 90 years of history which
happened under the conditions of war.’

The statement says, `By denying the fact of Genocide, the responsible
persons of British foreign agency put themselves on a par with the
Turkish government which pursues a policy of hiding the records of the
crime against humanity.’ The party suggests the English policy makers
to read Lord Price’s `Blue book’ which was written in 1916 upon the
order of the English foreign agency. They also suggest Agapi
Nasibyan’s books `Britain and Armenian Cause 1915-1923′ published in
1994 in Beirut.

The chairman of Ramkavar Azatakan Party indicated that despite of the
assistance rendered to Armenians who suffered during the Genocide, the
British government pursues anti-Armenian policy in the course of
history. Arakelyan also said, `Turkish special services relied on
secret police of Britain early last century.’

Arakelyan called all public organization to join efforts against the
insult of Genocide victims. In his opinion, the Armenian foreign
ministry should also send a note of protest to the British
authorities. `Several years ago, the British ambassador in Israel
also tried to deny the Holocaust and the Israeli government sent the
diplomat back. We should also take actions,’ Arakelyan
indicated. /Panorama.am/

Another Turkish writer to stand trial for book on Armenian massacres

Agence France Presse — English
July 28, 2006 Friday 3:36 PM GMT

Another Turkish writer to stand trial for book on Armenian massacres

ISTANBUL, July 28 2006

A prosecutor has sought up to three years in jail for prominent
Turkish author Elif Shafak for a novel dealing with the massacres of
Armenians under the Ottoman Empire, the Anatolia news agency reported
Friday.

Shafak, 35, was charged with "denigrating the Turkish national
identity" in lines uttered by fictional Armenian characters in her
novel, "The Bastard of Istanbul," or, in Turkish, "Baba ve Pic" (The
Father and the Bastard), Anatolia reported.

The case appears certain to draw angry reactions from the European
Union, which has warned Turkey that the prosecution of intellectuals
and journalists is casting a pall on its bid for membership.

The EU has urged Ankara to amend article 301 of its penal code, under
which Shafak is charged. The article has landed many intellectuals in
court.

They include Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who received a
six-month suspended sentence, and Turkey’s best-known novelist, Orhan
Pamuk, who saw the case against him dropped.

Much to Turkey’s ire, the massacres, which took place during World
War I, have been recognized as genocide by many countries and open
debate of the issue often sends nationalist sentiment into frenzy.

The proceedings against Shafak were initiated after a complaint filed
by Kemal Kerincsiz, a nationalist lawyer notorious for relentlessly
pursuing before the courts intellectuals who dispute the official
line on the Armenian massacres.

A first investigation resulted in the complaint being rejected, but
this was overturned by a higher court.

"The Bastard of Istanbul," originally written in English, was
published in Turkish in March 2006 and quickly became a bestseller.

The novel moves between Turkey and the United States as it follows
four generations of women to tell the story of an Armenian family and
the descendants of a son left behind during the deportations, who
converts to Islam and lives as a Turk.

It was not immediately known when the trial will start.

Shafak, who was born in France and spent her teenage years abroad as
the daughter of a Turkish diplomat, writes both in English and
Turkish. Her books have been published in Britain and the United
States.

She is also an assistant professor at Arizona University’s Near
Eastern Studies department and divides her time between Turkey and
the United States.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their people were slaughtered in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 and want the massacres to
be internationally recognized as genocide.

Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 300,000 Armenians
and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

Maybe It Was Impossible To Save The Plane

MAYBE IT WAS IMPOSSIBLE TO SAVE THE PLANE

Lragir.am
27 July 06

The cause of the crash of the Armenian plane announced officially is
supposed to put an end to three months of uncertainty and waiting,
when almost entire Armenia wanted to know what was the real cause of
the crash. The Interstate Aviation Committee announced that the cause
of the crash was the human factor, more exactly the insufficient
action of the crew. In other words, it was the fault of the pilot.
This is the conclusion of the task force, which conducted different
types of investigations, simulated the flight, deciphered the black
boxes, and so on. In other words, they did everything, because the
head of the IAC Tatyana Anodina announced two weeks ago in Yerevan
that they possess all the important facts to state the cause of the
crash "absolutely" definitely.

Therefore, it should be supposed that the fault of the pilot is the
cause of the crash. However, similarly it can be supposed that it was
not the real cause of the crash. The point is that there are no clear
and irrefutable facts about the fault of the pilot and the dishonesty
of the task force which carried out the investigation. The task force
says they possess all the necessary facts and data. But the public
did not see these facts, therefore they have the right to doubt that
the cause of the crash could be another factor than the human factor.

The point is that in order to trust the conclusion of the IAC the
public needs to become convinced that the crew could find a more
correct way out. And maybe it was impossible to save the plane, and
it appeared in a state when the actions of the pilot were formal and
merely "supported" his fault. In other words, either he had to do
something or not to do anything. Having two option, to be accused
posthumously of "doing wrongly" or not doing anything. After all,
was it the guilt of the pilot that the plane appeared in an extremely
difficult state? The answer to this question is very important,
in fact. Why did the pilot switch off the autopilot and conduct the
plane himself? Maybe the autopilot went out of order. By the way,
the Moskovski Komsomolets published information from an anonymous
source about the deciphering of the black boxes that the autopilot
went off, and the pilot had to conduct the plane himself.

In other words, the conclusion of the IAC is not reliable for the
public, and to say "we have grounds" does not mean it is true. It
is also possible that the IAC experts have grounds but of another
cause. And it is not known whether the cause stemming from these
grounds is published or whether the grounds of the published cause
are meant.

HAKOB BADALYAN

BAKU: Armenian Organization Call Armenia to Accept OSCE Minsk Group

Armenian Organization Call Armenia to Accept OSCE Minsk Group Proposal

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
July 27, 2006

Frame document for settlement the Karabakh conflict published by the
OSCE Minsk Group’s cochairmen is the end of the mislead the Armenian
and Azerbaijani people by their presidents, reads the statement of
the Armenian Common National Movement (ACNM).

These principles once again prove that stage by stage settlement of
the conflict on which ACNM insisted does not have alternative.

Armenia’s uncertain position in the negotiation process testifies
Yerevan’s willingness to postpone settlement of conflict, what isolated
Armenia from participation in regional political and economic programs,
the statement reads.

Variants of the conflict’s settlement proposed today run counter
Armenia’s interest more than it was eight years ago, statement’s
authors consider. They are sure that documents, which will be
submitted later, will less and less meet Armenia’s interests. Taking
into account geopolitical and economic processes, and perspectives
of further development of situation, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh
must accept the Minsk Group’s proposals, because fair resolution of
the conflict will provide security guarantees for Karabakh’s people,
and allow them to carry out state building at their discretion.

Week of Armenian Films to Be Held in Sao Paulo on September 19-24

WEEK OF ARMENIAN FILMS TO BE HELD IN SAO PAULO ON SEPTEMBER 19-24

SAO PAULO, JULY 25, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. On September 19-24,
within the framework of events dedicated to the 15th anniversary of
independence of Armenia, a Week of Armenian films under the title
"Ararat: Film masters of Armenia and Diaspora" will be held at the
biggest cultural complex of Brazil, "Sao Paulo Cultural Center".

Works of Sergei Parajanov, Haroutiun Khachatrian, Vigen Chaldranian,
Albert Mkrtchian and Ruben Kochar, as well as the films by Atom Egoyan,
Henry Vernoy and Robert Keshishian (11 films) will be presented to
Brazilian audience. At the suggestion of Brazilians, the musical film
"My Sardarapat" will also be presented.

As Noyan Tapan was informed from the Press and Information department
of the RA Foreign Ministry, the event is organized by the joint
efforts of the Consulate General of Armenia in Brazil, RA Ministry
of Culture and Culture Secretariate of Sao Paulo.

On the same days, the photo exhibition named "Armenia, the country
of my ancestors" by young Brazilian Armenian photographer Norayr
Shahinian will be opened at the same cultural center. Three dozen
big-sized photos from the 10 thousand ones that he did in Armenia in
2004 will be presented at the exhibition.

The Kurds’ cunning plan: Good Actors

THE KURDS’ CUNNING PLAN.Good Actors

The New Republic, DC
July 25, 2006

By Spencer Ackerman

Erbil, Iraq

On the highway leading out of Erbil, the capital city of Iraqi
Kurdistan, the only place to eat before reaching the city of Kirkuk
is the Kurdistan Restaurant. The low-slung cinderblock building is in
the Baghdad-controlled governorate of Tameem, but you wouldn’t know it
from the image on the restaurant’s facade. Superimposed against the
red, yellow, and green colors of the Kurdish flag is an impressive
map of Greater Kurdistan, the ideational Kurdish homeland stretching
from southern Turkey to western Iran.

That such a map appears just outside of Kirkuk is no coincidence.
Kirkuk, which Kurds call their Jerusalem, is a fundamental component
of the dream of Greater Kurdistan. Every Kurd can recite the story of
how Iraq’s Arabs stole the city from them. Located about 150 miles
northeast of Baghdad, Kirkuk had never been of great historic or
political significance. But, in 1927, a consortium of oil prospectors
headed by Calouste Gulbenkian, the legendary Armenian oil magnate,
discovered that the city was afloat some of the richest oil fields
on the planet. The then-fledgling Iraqi government started exerting
control over Kirkuk, moving Kurds out and Arabs loyal to Baghdad’s
Hashemite monarchy in. For nearly 80 years, the city has been a symbol
of the Kurds’ fragmented and oppressed status. With Saddam Hussein
gone and Iraq’s Arabs mired in sectarian disarray, they intend to
take it back.

The reconquest of Kirkuk has begun not with an army but with a creeping
of Kurdish settlers along the highway south from Erbil. Before Saddam
was ousted in 2003, the Iraqi army prevented Kurds from living south
of the Qushtapa checkpoint, just a few miles outside Erbil. As soon as
the Iraqi army abandoned its positions during the U.S.-led invasion,
however, defiant Kurdish civilians immediately occupied the barracks
to mark their new frontiers. Over the last three years, they have
pushed closer and closer to Kirkuk. Crumbling stone structures along
the road have become new Kurdish villages, displaying red, yellow,
and green flags. And, in the northernmost sector of Kirkuk itself,
just beyond where plumes of fire illuminate some of the world’s
richest oil fields, the first outpost isn’t an Arab area, but rather
the Kurdish neighborhood of Rahimawa.

What the highway from Erbil to Kirkuk reveals is that, for three years,
while Sunni and Shia Arabs have bitterly fought one another–and the
U.S. occupation–the Kurds have methodically established a presence
on the ground. Any peshmerga–guerrillas who serve as Kurdistan’s
army–who travel south to take Kirkuk will be treated as heroes along
the road. Any Iraqi soldiers who travel north to retain it will have
to subdue a hostile population.

There would seem to be few better moments for the peshmerga caravans
to fly down the Erbil-Kirkuk highway. This week’s orgy of violence–in
which Sunnis bombed Shia shrines and Shia militiamen pulled Sunnis out
of their homes for execution in broad daylight–underscores how Iraq
is at a point of permanent sectarian emergency. But the independence
of Kurdistan is not imminent. After the attack on the Askariya shrine
in February, instead of exploiting increased sectarian tensions, Jalal
Talabani of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), the president of
Iraq, worked energetically to restart talks between Sunni and Shia
leaders. Indeed, at every turn, the Kurds have opted not to declare
independence but to keep the country united. "It’s ironic," wrote
Turkish columnist Cengiz Candar, "that Talabani … long considered
a secessionist, is now functioning as the glue most likely to make
Iraq stick together and to prevent it from breaking apart."

But Talabani’s efforts aren’t ironic. They’re strategic. The current
generation of Kurdish leaders has reached a consensus about Kurdistan’s
future: For the next several years, the Kurds must remain part of Iraq
if they are to achieve statehood. That’s because they need to convince
Iraqis, often-hostile neighbors like Turkey, and foreign powers like
the United States that Kurdish independence is a positive–or at
least nonthreatening–development. The timetable for independence
varies: Some Kurdish leaders suggest independence is only a few
years away, while others see it in a decade or even a generation. The
most important factor in winning recognition, however, will be the
visible and consistent demonstration that they paid, in the words of
one Kurdish leader, "more than our fair share" for building Iraq.

But, in order to have a shot at independence, the Kurds must also
set up an economic and political infrastructure that will make
their dream of statehood viable. They must develop their copious oil
resources. They must cement ties with bordering countries. And they
must consolidate their hold over Baghdad politics. These moves run
directly counter to the interests of Iraq, the country the Kurds are
supposed to be paying more than their fair share.

ver a dinner of grilled fish, Tariq Namiq, a bespectacled
thirtysomething journalist, argues passionately that Americans are
fooling themselves if they don’t consider all Arabs terrorists. His
virulence reflects a long-standing fear. Ever since British and
French imperial machinations grafted a portion of the mountainous
Kurdish homeland to the artificially created Iraq after the collapse
of the Ottoman empire, the Kurdish experience in Iraq has been a
story of relentless and bloody repression. That repression reached
its apogee in 1987 and 1988 with the Anfal genocide, during which
Saddam murdered 100,000 Kurds, destroyed hundreds of Kurdish villages,
and evicted thousands of Kurds from Kurdish cities like Kirkuk. Namiq
hosts a weekly TV program on the Kurdish network Zagros TV, which, he
explains, reminds viewers that Kirkuk by rights belongs to Kurdistan,
despite also being home to thousands of Arabs. When I ask if the
Arabs can remain in the city–the Kurdish leadership insists they be
relocated, and American diplomats have traced over 180 disappearances
and kidnappings of Arabs to Kurdish forces–Namiq equivocates.

Namiq is hardly alone in his distrust of Arabs. Despite Kurdish
prominence in Baghdad, no one in Kurdistan has much faith that
post-Saddam Iraq offers the Kurds anything more than the torments
of the past. The entrance of the Sunnis into the political process
in December was met in Kurdistan with apprehension that the formerly
dominant minority is simply trying to use ballots as well as bullets
to regain power. "Everyone has to have both legs in–not one leg in
terror and one leg in the cabinet," says Fadhil Merani, the head of
the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) politburo who helped negotiate
the sectarian character of the new government in Baghdad. Not that
everyone thinks the Shia, with whom the Kurds allied against their
mutual Sunni enemies, are much better. Many Kurds describe them as
fanatical and backward proxies of Iran. Sunnis and Shia may not be
able to find common ground in Baghdad, but, in Kurdistan, both are
simply Arabs, and so both merit contempt.

For the last three years, American and Iraqi officials thought they
had a solution to the Kurdish problem: federalism. Transforming
Iraq from a centrally administered state into one where the various
regions enjoy considerable autonomy from Baghdad was intended to
mollify the country’s mutually suspicious factions and keep the
country whole. Indeed, federalism has been a nonnegotiable demand
of the Kurds, who have always said that, unless post-Saddam Iraq
allowed them tremendous freedom of action, they would have no
choice but to secede. Accordingly, both the interim and permanent
Iraqi constitutions contained far-reaching guarantees for regional
autonomy. The permanent constitution, approved in October, allows
Kurdistan to nullify unacceptable national legislation; to retain
the 100,000-strong peshmerga; and to control much, if not all, of
Kurdistan’s oil wealth. But federalism has proved unacceptable to
the Sunnis, who rejected the constitution en masse and only agreed to
participate in the December elections after receiving U.S.-brokered
assurances that they could seek to amend the document this year.
Defending the controversial provisions of the Iraqi constitution in
October, American Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad explained, "You couldn’t
bring the Kurds back into Iraq without federalism."

But, contrary to the White House’s claim that federalism is "a
prerequisite for a united country," federalism has stoked, not
tempered, secessionism. In January 2005, as Iraqis voted to elect
their first government, a referendum was held in Kurdistan asking
respondents whether they would prefer independence. Nearly 98 percent
of an estimated two million voters said yes. "Federalism is a fact
that’s imposed on us," explains Dilshad Farriq, a 27-year-old
Persian-literature student at the University of Salahuddin.
"Independence is something we want."

24&s=ackerman072406

http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=200607

NKR Deputy Foreign Minister Delivered Report Of Office Of Osce Prc-I

NKR DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER DELIVERED REPORT OF OFFICE OF OSCE PRC-I-O
ON INFLAMMATIONS IN AREAS ADJOINING ARTSAKH

STEPANAKERT, JULY 21, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. On July 20, Deputy
Foreign Minister of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Masis Mayilian
received Field Assistant of Personal Representative of the OSCE
Chairman-in-Office (PRC-i-O) Gunter Folk. During the meeting Mr. Folk
delivered NKR Deputy Foreign Minister a report of the Office of the
OSCE PRC-i-O on inflammations, which took place in the contact-line
zone of Azerbaijan and Nagorno Karabakh armed forces.

As it was informed before on June 15, 2006, the NKR Ministry of Foreign
Affairs addressed to the Office of the OSCE Personal Representative
Chairman-in-Office with a request to conduct a monitoring in bordering
with Azerbaijan zone for giving real estimate to the situation and
making certain of the strained accusations of Baku on the alleged
burnings of the adjoining settlements on the territories controlled by
the Nagorno Karabakh Republic. On July 3-5 the OSCE mission conducted
a series of monitorings in the bordering zone. By the results of the
monitorings a corresponding report was prepared.

According to NKR Foreign Ministry Press Service, at present the
document is being studied at the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
one can already ascertain that the OSCE mission did not reveal any
facts of damage caused by fire to the settlements, situated in the
NKR security zone, as the Azerbaijani side tried to present.

Republican Party Won’t Sweat For It

REPUBLICAN PARTY WON’T SWEAT FOR IT

Lragir.am
21 July 06

The Republican Party is in good health, stated Rep. Member of
Parliament Armen Ashotyan at the Pastark Club, the day before the July
22 extraordinary assembly of the Republican Party. He even advised
other political forces, which predict sickness of the Republican, to
repeat the Republican step of consolidation. Armen Ashotyan thinks
that effective activities in the political sphere of Armenia is no
longer possible without this.

"First of all, in my opinion, people who speak about a political
crisis in Armenia, a crisis of the political system, and relate it to
our assembly, are concerned about their political crisis, their own
careers, because it is clear that a political fist, which is forming,
will form tomorrow, will leave little space for the other players,"
says the Republican member of parliament.

He thinks that the consolidation of the Republican is characterized
by obviously positive tendencies, which are visible, and others also
noticed them. For those who fail to notice, Armen Ashotyan describes,
"All that is going to happen means that the political sphere in
Armenia is headed for consolidation. It means that the imperfection
of the political system persisting in Armenia at last has a chance
to be reshaped, regrouped, and appear to the voter and the public
in a more concrete form," says Armen Ashotyan. His logic refers to
downplaying the factor of personality in the political sphere of
Armenia, or in other words, his partisanization, when the political
personality factor Serge Sargsyan starts making his actions fit in
the framework of a political party. Armen Ashotyan believes that the
Republican Party thereby sets a new record, and the other political
parties have to keep ups.

Armenian Peacekeepers Contingent to Dispatch to Iraq on Sunday

ARMENIAN PEACEKEEPER CONTINGENT TO DISPATCH TO IRAQ ON SUNDAY

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 19 2006

YEREVAN, July 19. /ARKA/. Ceremony of the third-rotation Armenian
peacekeeper contingent dispatch to Iraq is to take place on July 23,
Armenian Defense Ministry Spokesman Seyran Shahsuvaryan said Wednesday.

Armenia joined the campaign focused on this war-stricken country
recovery in January 2005 by sending a 46-memebr group to Iraq.

The third group is made up of 3 officers, 2 military doctors, 10
field engineers and 31 drivers. M.V.-0–