BAKU: Recep Tayyip Erdogan: Azerbaijan’s Flag Is Holy As Turkey’s

RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN: AZERBAIJAN’S FLAG IS HOLY AS TURKEY’S

Milaz.info
Oct 20 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku – APA. "I met with 11 Azerbaijani parliamentarians last week and
had very sincere talks with them. We discussed the regional processes,
including protocols signed with Armenia. I told them that I am keeping
words I said at the Azerbaijani parliament. We will never make actions
against our Azeri brothers", said Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan at the meeting of the parliamentary faction of ruling Justice
and Development Party (AKP). Erdogan said that provocateurs tried to
create discords between Azerbaijan and Turkey and to create rumors
misleading the community. "Our compatriots and our Azeri brothers
shouldn’t believe them. Everybody should be confident that we consider
Azerbaijani flag and land dear and holy as Turkish. Our martyrs in
Baku are witnesses of that. We don’t leave Azerbaijani interests behind
of Turkey’s. Azerbaijan’s grieve is grieve of Turkey and Azerbaijan’s
happiness is a happiness of Turkey".

Erdogan said accused some political forces, considering the Nationalist
Movement Party, in attempt to use the developments in own favor. "There
are some forces in Turkey, who supported those provocateurs. They
try to provoke the people. You see how the Azerbaijani-Turkish
relations were developed in seven years of our power. They try to
provoke during the Turkey-Armenia match in Bursa as well. The city
authorities fulfilled only FIFA decision there. The community knows
those who try to provoke the people. It is clear what they have done
for the Turkic world during their 3.5-year government.

Everything is clear. I know that our people will not accept that.

Azerbaijani people should also prevent this game. We were hurt when
Azerbaijani and Turkish flags were removed from the Martyrs Mosque
in Baku. I believe that our Azeri brothers will discuss its meaning".

Careful Approach Towards Azerbaijan

CAREFUL APPROACH TOWARDS AZERBAIJAN

Aysor
Oct 19 2009
Armenia

The Turkish government should be careful when dealing with the
Azerbaijani interests, said Yunus Oguz, the head of the Olaylar
information center in the interview with the Day.az media site.

Oguz believes that there are changes in the region. In fact there
is a hesitation in the area of the Azerbaijani public and Azerbaijan
on one hand and on the other hand between Turkish people and Tirkish
Government.

According to Yunus Oguz if the Armenian-Turkish boarder will not open
it will hurt the political and economic relations of Azerbaijan and
Turkey. Azerbaijan has already stated its word by signing a gas-accord
with Russia.

BAKU: Actions of Armenians in negotiations in Chisinau cause disapp

Trend, Azerbaijan
Oct 16 2009

Actions of Armenian side in negotiations in Chisinau cause
disappointment: Azerbaijani FM

Azerbaijan, Baku, 16 October / Trend News, E.Tariverdiyeva /

We can not talk about constructivism of the last meeting of the
Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia in Chisinau, Foreign Minister of
Azerbaijan Elmar Mammadyarov told Trend News on Oct. 16.

According to the minister, the last meeting of Heads of States did not
give cause for optimism, because the Armenian side suddenly began to
discuss the issues that were agreed two to three years ago.

"We understand that there is a rule that unless everything is agreed,
it means nothing was agreed, but it is impossible to move if to go
back and start to discuss proposals or ideas that were agreed at least
two or three years ago. This is, of course, disappointing,"
Mammadyarov said.

Presidents of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev and Armenia Serzh Sargsyan held
met on Oct. 9 in Kishinev. This is was the seventh meeting of Heads of
States on the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Mammadyarov believes that such actions by the Armenian side are
connected with the latest events in the region – the Turkish-Armenian
rapprochement.

"Maybe the Armenian side considers that if the process developed in
this regard, it is possible to freeze other issues," said the Foreign
Minister of Azerbaijan.

According to the minister, the OSCE Minsk Group should come to the
region approximately in late October – early November. "They need to
interpret what they heard in Chisinau, to think how to support the
dynamics that was objectively observed and are the most important, to
find all the correct arguments in order to explain to Armenia that
they can not open the questions that have already been agreed.
Otherwise, it will be an endless process," said Mammadyarov.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.
Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. – are
currently holding the peace negotiations.

US Trying To Promote Regional Conflicts’ Settlement

US TRYING TO PROMOTE REGIONAL CONFLICTS’ SETTLEMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.10.2009 21:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 8-14, US Embassy in Turkey organized
"Two mountainsides" project, featuring a dialogue between Armenian an
Turkish youth representatives. Project participants met US Ambassador
to Turkey James Jeffrey in Ankara.

The Ambassador expressed his pleasure at the opportunity to meet
Armenian and Turkish students at such a historic moment. He especially
noted improving relations between the two countries. " There mustn’t
be closed borders between neighboring counters and we’re glad both
states’ authorities understand this. After USSR collapse many wars and
conflicts were stirred in the region. US, along with Europe are trying
to promote peaceful settlement. Despite RF-Georgian war of last year,
we’re sure it’s possible to establish peace, and recent developments
in RA-Turkey relations serve as a proof of this," he emphasized. In
reply to PanARMENIAN.Net. reporter’s question, James Jeffrey noted
that the opening should not be precipitated. "Opening of RA-Turkish
border is directly linked to Karabakh conflict. Balanced steps should
be undertaken for successful settlement of both issues."

Armenian Permanent Representative In Council Of Europe Met With The

ARMENIAN PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE IN COUNCIL OF EUROPE MET WITH THE NEWLY APPOINTED SECRETARY GENERAL

ARMENPRESS
Oct 16, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 16, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Permanent Representative
in the Council of Europe, Ambassador Zohrab Mnatsakanyan met October
15 with the organization’s newly appointed Secretary General Torbyor
Yagland. At the beginning of the meeting Ambassador Mnatsakanyan
conveyed to the secretary general Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan’s
congratulatory message on the appointment.

Armenian Foreign Affairs Ministry’s Media and Information Department
told Armenpress that the interlocutors discussed the agenda issues and
problems of the organization, the necessity of implementing reforms
and the methods. An importance has been attached to the improvement
of the organization’s recourses and to the increase of the efficiency
of the implemented programs. The necessity of the cooperation with
European institutions, mutual complementation of the activity within
the frameworks of the mandates, as well as of avoiding from duplication
has been noted as well.

Z. Mnatsakanyan pointed out the rich expert potential of the
organization, which efficiently contributes to the development
of the democratic systems in Armenia. Both sides underscored the
primary importance of the member-states in the activity of the
organization. They referred to the latest regional events as well. The
secretary general welcomed the progress registered in Armenian-Turkish
relations once more and highly assessed the steps carried out toward
that direction.

Shevket Shaydullin Announced Man Of The Year In Economic Collaborati

SHEVKET SHAYDULLIN ANNOUNCED MAN OF THE YEAR IN ECONOMIC COLLABORATION SPHERE

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.10.2009 14:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 15, at Russian-Armenian University’s
10th anniversary celebration, South Caucasian Railways CJSC Director
General Shevket Shaydullin was presented with a "Man of the Year in
economic collaboration sphere" award, SCRW press service reported.

"As of today, Shevket Shaydullin can be named the best businessman
in Armenia, as within shortest terms he managed to create the most
effective enterprise in RA," RAU Rector Armen Darbinyan stated.

On August 4, 2009, Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University rector
Armen Darbinyan and South Caucasian Railways Director General Shevket
Shaydullin signed a memorandum on establishment of a corporate
management school.

SCRW CJSC is a 100% shareholder of "Russian Railways" OJSC. Armenian
Railways CJSC was transferred to South Caucasian Railways’
concessionary management under a concessionary agreement dated
February 13, 2008. The agreement was signed for the term of 30 years,
with possible extension of 10 years.

Turkey Receives a Mixed Progress Report

Turkey Receives a Mixed Progress Report

The Wall Street Journal
EUROPE NEWS
OCTOBER 15, 2009

By MARC CHAMPION and ADAM COHEN

BRUSSELS — The European Union criticized a tax case against Turkey’s
biggest media group as posing a threat to press freedom, but also praised
the government’s foreign policies and its overtures to the country’s large
Kurdish minority, in a progress report on the country’s EU membership talks.

The $4 billion in fines and penalties that Turkey’s tax authority is
demanding from Dogan Yayin Holding AS in two cases, "potentially undermine
the economic viability of the Group and therefore affect freedom of the
press in practice," the European Commission said in a mixed annual progress
report on Turkey’s bid to join the 27-nation bloc.

Olli Rehn, the commissioner for enlargement, told reporters his team had
analyzed the Dogan tax case. "I have asked the Turkish authorities to treat
this matter very seriously," he said. He added that with fines larger than
the company’s annual turnover, the case "feels like a political sanction" as
well as a fiscal one. Dogan controls about 50% of media outlets in Turkey
and has been critical of the government.

Turkey’s government strongly denies that the Dogan case is politically
motivated. Officials note the country has a large underground economy and
say they are merely pursuing unpaid tax from Dogan and thousands of others.

Turkey’s chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis welcomed the report, describing it
as the most objective to date, in remarks to Turkish media.

The progress report on Turkey was one of three on EU candidate countries,
along with Croatia and Macedonia, as well five on ex-Yugoslav nations,
including Albania, Serbia and Bosnia Herzegovina, which the EU has agreed
should eventually be allowed to join the bloc.

Talks with Croatia are nearing their final phase, the commission said, after
the ex-Yugoslav republic resolved a border dispute with neighboring
Slovenia. All member states countries have to approve a new member, and
Slovenia joined in 2004.

Turkey faces a much tougher road. Eight so-called negotiating chapters have
been blocked in a dispute with Cyprus over Turkey’s treatment of the divided
island.

The commission praised Turkey’s recent signature of a deal with Armenia to
reopen the border between the two countries and establish diplomatic
relations. Turkey’s effort to improve relations with the Kurdish authorities
in Iraq and with its own Kurdish minority also gained praise from the
commission. So, too, did a law passed in June to demine Turkey’s border with
Syria, and Turkey’s efforts to mediate in the Middle East.

But EU officials say Turkey’s EU bid isn’t helped by such high-profile cases
as Dogan. Turkish authorities levied fines and penalties of 915 million
Turkish lira ($633 million) on the Dogan group’s media unit in February, and
a further 4.8 billion lira last month. The government on Tuesday put a lien
on some of the company’s assets after rejecting collateral it offered to put
up while fighting the tax charges.

Write to Marc Champion at [email protected] and Adam Cohen at
[email protected]

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A12

NKR HR Ombudsman Has Received 176 Petitions To Date

NKR HR OMBUDSMAN HAS RECEIVED 176 PETITIONS TO DATE
Anahit Danielyan

2 009/10/14 | 16:17

Nagorno Karabakh society

At a press conference held yesterday, NKR Human Rights Ombudsman Yuri
Hayrapetyan announced that his office had recently been accepted as
a full member in the European Institute of Ombudsmen.

This decision was taken after the visit of Nicholas Shvartsler,
the Institute’s Executive Director, to the NKR this past July.

Mr. Hayrapetyan noted that membership would afford his office greater
capabilities by relying on the multi-sector experience of Europe and
would allow the NKR to present itself to the world as an open and
reliable country that accepts European norms without being coerced
to do so.

As a member, Mr. Hayrapetyan traveled to Florence on October 5 to
take part in the Institute’s general assembly.

The NKR Human Rights Ombudsman’s Office was founded in April 2008
and has already received 176 petitions from 333 citizens.

http://hetq.am/en/society/artsakh-45/

Inside Saudi Succession

INSIDE SAUDI SUCCESSION
Simon Henderson

.php?article=11655
October 12th 2009

Factors Affecting Saudi Succession are a Family Affair

Washington Institute

The process by which government decisions are made in Saudi
Arabia remains obscure despite continual analysis by diplomats,
oil executives, foreign business executives, and others. The more
well-informed analysts believe that the number and identity of
the princes and nonroyal participants varies, depending on the
issue. Important decisions are made by the king alone but usually
once he feels a consensus has been reached. (The ulama-the senior
Muslin clergy–have a leading role in making religious decisions, but
since they depend on the king for their appointments, they are probably
reluctant to oppose a royal family consensus. They can dither, however;
when the Grand Mosque in Mecca was seized in 1979, the ulama reportedly
took thirty-six hours to approve the use of military force.) When
consensus remains elusive, decisions are delayed. This was the case
in the late 1990s when Crown Prince Abdullah was seeking to involve
foreign companies in the development of the kingdom’s natural gas
resources. The decision was postponed and the proposal eventually
dropped after opposition from the petroleum company Saudi Aramco and
the Saudi ministry of oil, assumed to be backed by Abdullah’s rivals
in the royal family. (The exception that proves this rule is said
to be Kind Fahd’s decision to ask for U.S. military support after
the 1990 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. Other senior princes, including
then Crown Prince Abdullah, wanted time to consider other options,
but they were overruled by Fahd.)

This decision-making process owes its origins to the traditional
way decision are made in nomadic Bedouin Arab tribes–the so-called
bedoucracy–in which the ruling sheikh consults with the elders of the
tribe. The process is not one of equality, but it generally ensures
loyalty and acquiescence rather than protest and revolt.

Succession, however, is a special decision that tolerates little
delay. According to convention, a new Saudi king relies on the other
princes to confirm his position by swearing an oath of allegiance. The
ulama must then declare the new king an imam (Muslim leader). The
declaration can only be made on the basis of a fatwa indicating that
the decision is legitimate. The approval of the nation’s religious
leaders not only authenticates the succession on religious grounds
but also serves as a reminder of the historically close relationship
between the House of Saud and the dominant Wahhabi version of Islam
in the kingdom.

In theory, a danger exists that the ulama will be independent in its
judgment and issue a fatwa bequeathing leadership outside the normal
line of succession, but this has never happened. The ulama issuing the
fatwa comprises members of the Supreme Religious Council appointed by
the king. This group has never taken a view contrary to the wishes of
the senior members of the family, as part of what appears to be an
unwritten bargain in which the ulama can largely do as it wishes on
religious issues so long as it does not tread on areas th ntial for
national security. (It was perhaps Kind Saud’s mistake not to have
appointed religious leaders who were sufficiently loyal. This might
have prevented the fatwa issued again him in 1964 that legalized
his deposition.)

Thus, the choice of king is effectively the preserve of the royal
family, although the individuals involved and the relative size of
their "vote" has, at least in the past, varied substantially. Standard
books on Saudi Arabia refer to a decision making body loosely known as
the royal council or ahl al-aqd wa’l-hall (literally, "Those who bind
and loosen"). In reality, this group appears to be an informal body
of senior, important princes, wherein the weight of an individual’s
votes varies with age, closeness of relationship, and government
position. In the mid-1080s diplomats based in the kingdom said this
group comprised sixty-five people. This will change in the future if
the Allegiance council, announced in 2006, takes on the role of helping
select future kings, at least at the level of crown prince. By 2009,
the number of living sons of Ibn Saud had fallen to twenty. Prior
to the establishment of the Allegiance Council, the number of these
princes with crucial votes in choosing future leaders would probably
have been fewer than ten. The Allegiance Council, with thirty-five
members, has effectively given voting power to princes or their sons
who were otherwise thought to have been of little consequence within
the al-Saud family.

The role of the royal women. Despite a general belief to the
contrary, the women of the House of Saud play a role in the politics
of succession in at least three ways. First, they are the true
"Masters" of their homes; behind the privacy of the palace walls,
they are thought to let their husbands and sons know their views
in a forthright manner. Second, intermarriage within the al-Saud
means that alliances can be built up between different branches,
depending on the degree to which a wife has maintained strong links
to her original family and is liked within her new family. Third,
at least in the case of Kind Fahd, meetings occurred regularly with
the women of the Al-Saud so that the king could explain his views
and listen to those of the women. It was yet another example of the
importance attached to building consensus.

The role of the wider family. During the years of crisis in the reign
of Kind Saud, some of Ibn Saud’s brothers were influential in ensuring
that the ulama could issue a fatwa deposing Saud. By the time Fahd
became king in 1982, all of his father’s brothers had died. But a role
had opened up for the sons of Faisal, the one king since the death of
Ibn Saud who was respected universally within the family. Apparently,
one of Faisal’s sons, Saud al-Faisal, was at the gathering when Fahd
received the oath of allegiance, a presence perceived as opening the
door to future involvement by Ibn Saud’s grandsons in the choice of
king and crown prince.

An unknown is the extent to which other branches of the family, other
than the sons and grandsons of Ibn Saud, have any voice at all. One
of the legacies of more than 250 years of history is the emergence
of multiple branches on the family tree, at varying distance ritance
and thus from power. A key strength of the House of Saud for the past
century has been its ability to unite the family’s various branches in
the common purpose of running the country, rather than openly feuding
about which branch is paramount and where the line of succession should
run. Although many members do not have a direct role in government,
their unity and support are crucial in maintaining rule by the al-Saud.

Of additional importance is the sheer number of princes in these
branches (distinguished by the honorific "HH"–His Highness–rather
than the "HRH," meaning "His Royal Highness," conferred on the
sons and grandsons of Ibn Saud). The main line of the House of Saud
numbers in the hundreds (King Saud alone had more than fifty sons),
but the cadet branches, sometimes known as the collateral branches,
multiply that figure by many times. In the early 1990s, an estimated
twenty thousand males were entitled to call themselves "prince,"
with the prefix HH or HRH. (Confusingly, Saudi tribal leaders can
also use the title amir [prince] but not the honorific prefix.)

The senior of the cadet branches, and nominally the titular senior
branch of the family, is the al-Saud al-Kibir, the descendants of
Saud, the elder brother of Ibn Saud’s father. In 1903, the son of this
elder brother contested the right of Ibn Saud to become the head of
the al-Saud. The feud was only smoothed over when Ibn Saud arranged
for his sister Nura to marry the most powerful surviving member of
the clan, Saud al-Kabir. Since then, the al-Kabir clan has become an
influential branch of the Saudi royal family, but it tends to be kept
away from political power.

Another branch is the Bani Jiluwi, descendants of the younger brother
of Ibn Saud’s grandfather Faisal. The Bani Jiluwi allied themselves
with Ibn Saud to defuse the threat posed by the al-Kabir clan. Abdullah
al-Jiluwi served as Ibn Saud’s deputy commander and helped conquer
the eastern region of Arabia. The members of a third branch, the
al-Turki, descend s the Thunayyan, who descend from a brother of
Muhammad, first ruler of the al-Saud, and who have the additional
legitimacy of providing the ninth ruler, Abdullah. A fifth branch,
the al-Farhan, descend from one of Muhammad’s other brothers.

These cadet branches were represented in a family council established
by then Crown Prince Abdullah in 20000. Its eighteen members included
Abdullah and Prince Sultan along with a spread of princes across the
family tree. At the time, there was speculation that the council
would be involved in a decision to allow then-ailing King Fahd to
retire and be replaced by Abdullah. A different line of speculation
held that the council would have a private role, internal to the
royal family, perhaps tackling vexing issues like establishing
guidelines for royal involvement in business and allowing al-Saud
princesses to marry commoners. Perhaps significantly, Prince Salman,
the governor of Riyadh province, known as a family conciliator, was a
member. Interior Minister Prince Nayef was not named to the council,
but any thought that he was being sidelined was blunted by his public
statement at the time that the council would have no political role.

What Makes a King?

Age. Whether Ibn Saud ever said his sons should success him by order
of birth (given fitness to rule) is doubtful. But since the al-Saud
respect age more than almost any other attribute, order of birth
remains the preeminent qualification.

Being a good Muslim. Ibm Saud is said to have decreed that a future
king must be a good Muslim. By this he is supposed to have meant that
the person should not drink alcohol. Yet this condition would narrow
the field considerably, and so it has been ignored.

Having a Saudi mother. Ibn Saud supposedly said that a king should
not be the child of a foreigner. This is a probably reference to the
fact that many of his twenty-two wives were not Arab. (In keeping
with Islamic tradition, Ibn Saud had only four wives at any one
time.) Excluding the children of Ibn Saud’s foreign wives would subs
sons still eligible to be king. The mother of Bandar bin Abdulaziz
was Moroccan, while the mothers of Miqrin and Hidhlul were Yemeni. At
least these mothers were Arab: the mothers of Mishal, Mitab, Talal,
and Nawaf were Armenian. Excluding these princes reduces the pool
of those now eligible from twenty to just thirteen. Another ways
of looking at the need to have a Saudi mother is the importance of
having maternal uncles (akhwal) to back ones’ candidacy.

Experience. Whereas King Khalid had neither experience nor interest
in governing, administrative capability is increasingly cited as
necessary. Many of Ibn Saud’s sons have had government experience, but
their competence has varied. Those with current official positions
are few. Apart from Abdullah Sultan, and Nayef, office holders
today are Mitab (minister of public works and housing), Abdulrahman
(vice minister of defense), Ahmad (ice inister of Interior), Salman
(governor of Riyadh province), Sattam (vice governor of Riyadh
province), and Miqrin (head of General Intelligence Directorate).

Acumen. It is not surprising that Saudis want kings with prudence and
a steady touch. However, with the exception of Faisal, who combined
these qualities with intellectual ability, acumen has often been more
evident in the public relations presentation of kings than in reality.

Popularity. Since consensus is central to Saudi decision making, the
ability to achieve it rates high. The simplest measure of popularity
is the style of majlis–a forum for listening to ordinary people’s
concerns–held by a prince. Is he generous? Is the food good? Is
there plenty of it? Will favors be granted? Sultan reportedly gives
a good majlis, but Saud al-Faisal has not been known to hold such
gatherings. (Perhaps this is an indication of his total lack of
ambition to be king, despite being named often by foreigners as a
possibility.) A prince with ambition likes to know what the people
are thinking, and he gets a feel for that by allowing ordinary people
to see him.

Simon Henderson is Ba r of the Washington Institute’s Gulf and Energy
Program, from which this article is adapted.

http://www.thecuttingedgenews.com/index

Resignation Or Extraordinary Parliamentary Elections

RESIGNATION OR EXTRAORDINARY PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS
Armine Avetyan

October 10, 2009

The opposition to the protocols between Armenia and Turkey is growing
not only in the Diaspora, but in Armenia as well.

A unity of 12 political powers from Armenia came up with a joint
announcement against signing the documents, approving by the parliament
and compromising Karabakh. The people of the Armenian Diaspora were
so angry that the authorities of other countries had to mobilize
police and security powers to protect the Armenian president from the
Armenian Diaspora. As for the president, he not only is decisive in
his initiative to sign the document but also says that those who are
"threatening" him are naive. The president is in a very bad situation
and during his trips to the Diaspora centers he had to face opposition
of Diaspora Armenians and he was rejected by them. Is the president
able or may he refuse these protocols, which was called "treason"
by the Diaspora Armenians? The head of the ARF party board Armen
Martirosyan, which is one of the mentioned 12 parties, says that only
the political will may make Serzh Sargsyan refuse this document.

However he does not hope that the president may have a political will
and thinks that the protocols will be signed on October 10 and will be
adopted by the parliament. "I think that the only factor preventing
it may be either the president’s resignation or the dissolution of
the parliament. I am for either of these two solutions. I am only
against the signing of these protocols and will advocate for the
other solutions resulting in failure to approve this protocol in the
parliament. Otherwise he will have to give up on the Constitution
and his responsibilities toward the state," says A. Martirosyan. He
doesn’t believe that Serzh Sargsyan may ever resign voluntarily. He
says that the president may resign anyway because there is civic demand
for his resignation. However, on the one hand the wide spectrum of
the society does not oppose to the Armenian-Turkish developments. "I
think the passiveness of the society that we see now is just apparent,
but not deep. Armenia is waiting for the unity of political powers for
this purpose," says the MP. We wonder why the Heritage does not demand
the president’s resignation if they believe this is the only way to
stop the signing or adoption of the Armenian-Turkish document. "We
will wait till October 10," said the MP but did not say what they
can or are going to do if the documents are signed already.

Former member of the Republican party of Armenia and speaker of the
Armenian parliament Tigran Torosyan thinks that nothing can stop Serzh
Sargsyan from his decision but he believes the protocols should not be
approved in this form. We wonder whether it is not possible to stop
the process the president has started. "If you mean the adoption,
yes. There should be something extraordinary to prevent its adoption
in Armenia.

For example, if the adoption is delayed in Turkey, it may be prolonged
in Armenia as well. However, the parliament may discuss the issue in
3 months or one year and cancel this decision. Several months before
the collapse of the Soviet Union no one could say what was going to
happen," says Tigran Torosyan. He says the reaction of the Armenian
society is not the same as the reaction of the Diaspora. He says the
reason is the fact that the society is in an information blockade
and the government does not provide true and reliable information
concerning the documents to the society. Plus, most of the people who
are advocating for the document are trying to change the provisions
to present in a better context. "They are raising a question whether
they are for the opening of the border. Smart people cannot be against
it. But the problem is different and is whether the documents should
be approved as they are or no. Even in such conditions most part of
the society is against these documents. Thus, if all the sources are
closed there is no need to talk about the society’s reaction. Also
it is wrong to say that this relative quiet environment means lack
of concerns. The authorities should worry about it first of all,"
says the MP.

Tigran Torosyan thinks that it is up to the president only whether
this issue will have a pro-Armenian solution. "When everything was
almost finished in Key-West and it seemed the parties would sign
a document, Aliyev said he had to go to Baku and would sign after
it. But he left for Baku and said no. In a word, if he wants he can
pronounce this word," says Tigran Torosyan.

On the other hand, there are rumors that the president does not
have a choice and cannot step back because he cannot do it under the
pressure of other countries as he has problems with legitimacy. "Always
there may be pressure and it is evident that the major countries are
interested in this document. But I don’t think the problem is there. I
believe the price of these documents is much higher than any inner
issue. In a word, this is not a justification," says Tigran Torosyan,

http://168.am/en/articles/6925