Violence Postpones Cardinal’s Trip To Armenia

VIOLENCE POSTPONES CARDINAL’S TRIP TO ARMENIA

Zenit News Agency
March 3 2008
Italy

Secretary of State Still Planning Stop in Azerbaijan

VATICAN CITY, MARCH 2, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI’s secretary
of state was scheduled to arrive in Armenia today, but a state of
emergency in that nation forced the postponement of his trip.

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone was set to visit Armenia through
Thursday, and then head to neighboring Azerbaijan until March 9. But
post-election clashes between protesters and police in Armenia on
Saturday resulted in eight deaths. The Armenian government declared
a 20-day state of emergency, forbidding even small groups to gather
in the nation’s capital.

A note from the Vatican press office stated that "the visit, which
has not yet been canceled, could take place in the next several days,
with a changed schedule. The visit to Azerbaijan remains confirmed."

The decision was made "in consideration of the situation created in
Armenia following the protests and the state of emergency declared
by the government," the Holy See explained.

Protesters in the former Soviet state claim that the Feb. 19
presidential elections were rigged. They contested the victory of
Serzh Sarksyan, who is current President Robert Kocharian’s prime
minister and ally.

Cardinal Bertone is still scheduled to travel Thursday to Azerbaijian,
where he will meet with the head of the Muslim leaders and other
religious officials. He will express to them the Church’s desire to
cooperate in the common commitment to peace, concord among peoples
and the good of the human family.

In Azerbaijian’s capital, Cardinal Bertone will be present at the
inauguration of a new Catholic church built on land donated to Pope
John Paul II by President Heydar Aliyev, father of Azerbaijian’s
current head of state.

President Kocharyan Congratulates Dmitry Medvedev On His Victory

PRESIDENT KOCHARYAN CONGRATULATES DMITRY MEDVEDEV ON HIS VICTORY

armradio.am
03.03.2008 13:13

RA President Robert Kocharyan sent a congratulatory message to
the First Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Dmitry
Medvedev. The message reads:

"I sincerely congratulate you on you election to the post of the
President of the Russian Federation.

We in Armenia highly appreciate the partnership relations between
our countries and the strategic cooperation in all directions.

I’m sure that our countries and peoples will reinforce their friendly
ties, partnership and will expand the mutually beneficial cooperation.

I want to note your great contribution to the development of
Armenian-Russian relations and express confidence that in the high
position of the President of the Russian Federation you will contribute
to the deepening and expansion of these relations.

I wish you sound health, wellbeing and success in your work for eh
benefit of brotherly Russia."

ANKARA: Committee to hear Cerrah again on Dink murder

Committee to hear Cerrah again on Dink murder

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 1 2008

A parliamentary committee investigating the murder of Agos weekly
Editor-in-Chief Hrant Dink announced on Thursday that it would call
Ýstanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah to the stand once more.

The decision came after two senior police officers from Trabzon
accused Cerrah of having ignored a tip-off about the murder plot.

An ultra-nationalist teenager shot Dink dead in broad daylight
outside his newspaper’s Ýstanbul office on Jan. 19, 2007. The ensuing
investigation revealed that the police had been informed of plans to
murder the journalist. Nineteen suspects, 17 of them currently under
arrest, are facing trial on charges of having established a crime gang
to plan the assassination of the ethnic-Armenian editor. A majority
of the suspects, including the hit man, are from Trabzon, where the
local police say they had informed the Ýstanbul police about the plot
to kill Dink on more than one occasion.

Prosecuting lawyers say the police, in addition to having ignored the
warnings, destroyed crucial evidence to protect some of the suspects,
among them a one-time police informant.

A parliamentary subcommittee to Parliament’s Human Rights Commission
was set up to investigate the Dink murder last year. This past
Wednesday the subcommittee heard testimony from Trabzon Police
Intelligence Department Chief Ramazan Akyurek and the former chief
of the same unit, Engin Dinc, who both said they believed Cerrah had
not done enough to prevent the murder.

Akyurek reiterated to the subcommittee that Trabzon police had warned
the Ýstanbul police about the assassination plans. "I am not blaming
anyone for anything. Everybody has to do their job. But if it was
me, I would have ensured that Dink was safe," he said. Ýstanbul
Police Chief Cerrah, who also testified earlier, had said that his
department dismissed the information from Trabzon because it had a
"low" emergency coding.

Also on Wednesday, Dinc told the committee that: "There is no such
thing as ‘low’ or ‘high’ coding. The information given was important.

We did our job and sent the intelligence information." Dinc also
claimed he had called the chief of the Ýstanbul Police Department’s
intelligence unit and "informed them." Dinc said this was reason
enough for them to take measures to protect the slain journalist.

He also told the subcommittee that he had kept Erhan Tuncel under
control. Tuncel, a former police informant from Trabzon, is also a key
suspect in the crime, as is Yasin Hayal, a neo-nationalist suspected
of having groomed the 17-year-old hit man.

The police said Tuncel helped them monitor the activity of
ultra-nationalist groups in Trabzon. Hayal was convicted in the
bombing of a McDonald’s restaurant in Trabzon in 2004 that injured
six people. He was released after serving a 10-month prison sentence.

"Yasin Hayal has serious psychological problems. I put a lot effort
into getting him after that McDonald’s bomb. We captured him in a joint
operation with the Ýstanbul police. I was there at his interrogation;
I saw that he was the type to stage attacks," said Dinc.

A department director for Trabzon police intelligence, Faruk Sarý,
told the subcommittee that Tuncel was fired for not being available
at all times and "slacking off the job."

Hearing testimonies of the two officers, the subcommittee decided to
call Cerrah to testify again in the next few weeks.

01.03.2008

Today’s Zaman with wires Ýstanbul

–Boundary_(ID_sM7qyMm0J8CIt4XhDQBs dw)–

Representatives of Armenian National Movement urges all honest membe

REPRESENTATIVES OF ARMENIAN NATIONAL MOVEMENT URGES ALL HONEST MEMBERS OF THE RULING PARTY TO JOIN THE MOVEMENT OF LEVON TER-PETROSSYAN

2008-02-29 23:00:00

ArmInfo. During today’s rally of supporters of the first president
of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrossyan, Member of the board of the Armenian
National Movement Aram Manukyan urged all honest members of the
Republican Party of Armenia and its partner parties, Prosperous
Armenia and Orinats Yerkir, to join the opposition.

He said that there was nothing shameful and bad in returning to
honest life.

Manukyan said that he already had 17 kg of returned cards of members
of the abovementioned parties.

Armenia Opposition Leader Joins Government

ARMENIA OPPOSITION LEADER JOINS GOVERNMENT
James Kilner

Reuters
Feb 29 2008
UK

YEREVAN, Feb 29 (Reuters) – An Armenian opposition leader agreed on
Friday to head the president’s security council, dealing a blow to
protesters hoping to secure his support in calling for a rerun of a
presidential election.

Thousands of demonstrators have been protesting for 10 days over
the Feb. 19 election of Prime Minister Serzh Sarksyan. They say the
election was rigged in his favour and hoped opposition leader Artur
Baghdasaryan would help fight for a rerun.

"I asked Baghdasaryan to head the security council," Sarksyan told a
news briefing. "It’s the third or fourth highest post in the country."

The Security Council is the president’s advisory body and its leader
is among the highest-ranking officials in the country.

Baghdasaryan told reporters: "I would like to thank the newly elected
president for the concrete offer made to me of such a responsible
position."

His agreement with government is unlikely to halt the protests. The
opposition’s main leader is former president Levan Ter-Petrosyan,
who came second in the election with 21.5 percent. Baghdasaryan came
third with 17.7 percent.

Baghdasaryan had held negotiations with Ter-Petrosyan but they failed
to agree to team up against the election result, which Western monitors
described as flawed but broadly in line with Armenia’s international
commitments.

5 Out 7 Armenian Boxers Do Not Qualify In Olympic Boxing Rating Tour

5 OUT 7 ARMENIAN BOXERS DO NOT QUALIFY IN OLYMPIC BOXING RATING TOURNAMENT

Noyan Tapan
Feb 27, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 27, NOYAN TAPAN. The international olympic
rating boxing tournament has started in the city of Rozetto del
Abrutsi of Italy. 5 out of the 7 Armenian boxers failed and did not
qualify. Moreover, Myasnik Sargsian (81 kg) and Arman Ohanian (91 kg)
were defeated in the third round.

Andranik Hakobian (75 kg) and Derenik Gijlarian (51 kg) are continuing
their struggle in the tournament. The latter has entered the second
stage without a single combat (the competitor has not taken part in
the tournament because of illness).

Supreme Body Of ARF Dashnaktsoutyun Is Not Going To Dispute Final Re

SUPREME BODY OF ARF DASHNAKTSOUTYUN IS NOT GOING TO DISPUTE FINAL RESULTS OF PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION AND WISHES SUCCESS TO NEWLY ELECTED PRESIDENT SERZH SARGSYAN

arminfo
2008-02-25 19:32:00

ArmInfo. The Supreme Body of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Dashnaktsoutyun is not going to dispute the final results of the
past presidential election and wishes success to the newly elected
president Serzh Sargsyan, says the party’s statement.

The past presidential election has become one more test for Armenia in
its way to democratization. We can and must pass it. The party regrets
that there was an atmosphere of mutual hostility and hatred during
the electoral campaign. The society was artificially polarized. The
presidential candidate from ARFD Vahan Hovhannissyan did his best
to keep the race within normal course so the country could develop
in healthy atmosphere. However, his approach did not receive wide
support. Hovhannissyan showed a firm and well-balanced position
throughout the race. The voting process saw lots of violations. The
supporters of the favorite-candidates openly bribed voters, stuffed
ballot papers and even used force. The recount was also inappropriate.

According to the statement’s authors, as a result, the citizens assess
the election ambiguously, and public tension is observed today. The
country should suppress the post-electoral dissociation and restore
the atmosphere of tolerance. In this situation ARFD is ready to play
the role of a bridge.

Summing up the reports from all regions and polling stations and
taking into account the data published by the Central Electoral
Commission and the positive reaction of international structures,
the ARFD Supreme Body took a decision not to dispute the election
returns and to wish good luck to newly-elected Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan. At the same time, remaining faithful to the Agreement
on Cooperation signed in 2007, the party expresses its willingness
to renunciate its ministerial portfolios and appeals to the political
coalition to suspend the cooperation.

The statement also expresses demand to investigate all the facts
of electoral violations and punish the falsifiers, it condemns the
attempts to change the power by force, as well as the application of
force against displeased people. Immediate measures should be taken to
consolidate the international image of Armenia, an electoral system
without criminal elements and use of administrative resource should
be formed, real pluralism and freedom of speech, as well as full
possibilities for the opposition’s participation in the political
life of the country should be ensured in Armenia, the government
should be able to lead the country along the path of democratic and
socio-economic development, the ARFD Supreme Body’s statement says.

BAKU: Azerbaijan and Armenia Coordinate Number of Issues on NK – ICG

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
Feb. 26, 2008

Azerbaijan and Armenia Coordinate Number of Issues on
Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict: International Crisis Group
26.02.08 10:45

Azerbaijan, Baku, 25 February / corr. Trend News K. Ramazanova/
Azerbaijan and Armenia coordinated issues of demilitarization,
deployment of international peacekeepers, and the return of occupied
lands and refugees to the occupied lands of Azerbaijan, Sabina
Freizer, the director of the European Program of the International
Crisis Group said to Trend News over the telephone from Brussels on
25 February.

`The parties cannot coordinate some key aspects concerning the width
of the corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia and the
method of voting in Nagorno-Karabakh,’ Freizer said.

Representatives of the Crisis group say that a solution to the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can be spoken about after the presidential
elections are held in Azerbaijan in October 2008.

`It is possible that the parties will be able to hold negotiations to
settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict after a new president is elected
in Armenia and presidential elections are held in Azerbaijan,’
Freizer said.

According to Freizer, Armenia and Azerbaijan should take steps to
inform the population of the details of the negotiations and to
assure them about the importance of compromise,’ Freizer said. `Both
sides should lower the military rhetoric,’ Freizer said.

The conflict between the two countries of the South Caucasus began in
1988 due to Armenian territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Since
1992, Armenian Armed Forces have occupied 20% of Azerbaijan including
the Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven surrounding districts. In
1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which
time active hostilities ended. The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group
( Russia, France, and the US) are currently holding peaceful
negotiations.

Birth of a Nation

TIME Magazine
Feb. 22, 2008

Birth of a Nation

Thursday, Feb. 21, 2008 By DEJAN ANASTASIJEVIC

There’s a famous saying that everyone is better off not seeing how
sausages and laws are made. The same applies to countries. In less
than two decades, I’ve seen no less then six new nations born in my
immediate neighborhood, the Balkans, and it was a messy process every
time. So please forgive me if I’m not greeting the latest one –
Kosovo, which declared independence on Sunday, Feb. 17 – with the
respect and admiration it probably deserves.

Just like its slightly older siblings – Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia,
Macedonia and Montenegro – Kosovo rose from the ashes of the former
Yugoslavia, whose destruction was caused by the brutal policies of
Serbian dictator Slobodan Milosevic. But there are key differences.
Unlike the others, Kosovo was not a Yugoslav republic, but an
autonomous province within Serbia. It is mostly populated by ethnic
Albanians, while the other post-Yugoslav states have Slavic
majorities. And Kosovo has been effectively ruled by the United
Nations since 1999, when Milosevic’s troops were forced to pull out
under NATO bombs, although Serbia was allowed to retain a token
sovereignty over the province.

Now that this sovereignty is being voided by Kosovo’s elected
government, Serbia is furious, blaming the Kosovars and their Western
backers, especially the United States, one of the first countries to
recognize Kosovo’s independence. This anger reflects the special
place Kosovo holds in Serbs’ hearts and minds, as the birthplace of
their culture and religion. But it is fueled as well by memories of
the U.S.-led bombing campaign, described at the time as "humanitarian
intervention" but viewed in Belgrade as part of a cynical plan to rip
off a piece of Serbia.

Russia, China and several European countries claim that an
independent Kosovo sets a dangerous precedent, encouraging separatist
movements throughout the world, from Taiwan to Nagorno-Karabakh. To
this, the United States and its European allies reply that Kosovo is
a unique case, and that other regions would not be allowed to use it
as a precedent.

As a Serb, I empathize with my compatriots’ anger and frustration
over losing Kosovo. But as a reporter who witnessed the atrocities
against ethnic Albanians in the ’90s, I can understand that the vast
majority of them would under no circumstances accept living under
Serbian patronage, even though Milosevic is dead and Serbia is now a
democracy. And as for setting a precedent, I don’t think that
Kosovo’s independence would have much effect on the rest of the world
– and frankly, I don’t really care.

But I am deeply concerned about something else: what kind of country
has just been created, and what kind of life its citizens will have.
Kosovo holds three European records: it has the highest unemployment,
the worst infant-mortality rate and the lowest living standards on
the Continent. The latest Human Rights Watch report chronicles
widespread oppression and discrimination of non-Albanian ethnic
minorities – Serbs, Turks and Roma – along with organized crime,
rampant corruption and a dysfunctional justice system.

And if that’s not enough, Kosovo already faces its own separatist
movement: Serbs in northern Kosovo, many of whom were evicted from
their homes in revenge attacks by ethnic Albanians, don’t accept
being dominated by Pristina for exactly the same reasons Pristina
refuses to be dominated by Belgrade. With the backing of the Serbian
government, they are resolved to keep their territory – some 15% of
Kosovo – within Serbia.

So instead of stabilizing the Balkans, the creation of Europe’s
youngest state could be paving the way for future troubles. How
things turn out largely depends on the European Union, which just
decided to dispatch some 2,000 police officers, prosecutors and
judges to Kosovo. Their goal, in essence, is to establish the rule of
law in Kosovo so that the 15,000 NATO peacekeepers currently deployed
there can go home. The E.U. must also keep an angry and frustrated
Serbia on the path toward European membership, because that prospect
is just about its only inducement to good behavior toward its new
neighbor.

I dearly hope that E.U. officials know what they’re doing, and that
they’re up to this challenge. Declaring Kosovo’s independence was
easy, but making it a decent place to live will be a long haul. The
price of failure will be paid in the lost lives and torched homes
that have become a tragic pedal note to recent Balkan history. And
this time, it would not be quite as easy to blame the Serbs.

,9171 ,1715152,00.html

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0

Ex-deputy prosecutor-general detained in Armenia – police

Interfax, Russia
Russia & CIS General Newswire
February 24, 2008 Sunday 12:28 PM MSK

Ex-deputy prosecutor-general detained in Armenia – police

YEREVAN Feb 24

Police in Armenia have confirmed the detention of former Deputy
Prosecutor General Gagik Dzhangirian, who has joined opposition
forces, his brother Vardan and his driver.

The Dzhangirian brothers were detained after the department for
combating organized crime received intelligence that weapons were
being carried in the Dzhangirian brothers’ two cars from Echmiadzin
to Yerevan, police told Interfax.

Shots were fired when the cars were being blocked and two police
officers and Vardan Dzhangirian sustained wounds. The injuries are
not life-threatening.

Four pistols and a hunting rifle, as well as a bullet-proof jacket
and handcuffs, were discovered in the cars. Checks are being
conducted to find out whether the Dzhangirian brothers possessed the
weapons legally, police spokesman Sayat Shirinian told Interfax.

The press service of former presidential candidate Levon Ter-
Petrosian’s campaign earlier informed Interfax that the two brothers
had been stopped by unidentified men wearing masks and taken in an
unknown direction.

Dzhangirian’s car was stopped at about 10 p.m. on Saturday, local
time, on the Yerevan-Echmiadzin highway not far from Yerevan, the
campaign said.

Dzhangirian said at a rally on Friday that he had joined the
opposition led by Armenia’s First President Ter-Petrosian and urged
the rally to help clear up the terror attack carried out on October
27, 1999. Shortly after his statement the deputy prosecutor general
was suspended and on Saturday was dismissed by the prosecutor general
and stripped of his rank as a lawyer.

On October 27, 1999, five terrorists gunned down the Armenian prime
minister, parliamentary speaker, two deputy speakers, a minister and
three deputies in the parliament building. Eight other people were
wounded. The investigation and the trial lasted for three years and
all of the suspected terrorists received a life sentence. Dzhangirian
was then chief military prosecutor and was in charge of the
investigation.

Presidential elections were held in Armenia on February 19. Prime
Minister Serzh Sargsyan was elected president. Ter-Petrosian and his
supporters declared the election rigged and launched rallies, marches
and pickets. The terror attack in the parliament is often cited
during rallies. Ter-Petrosian and his supporters blame former
President Robert Kocharian and Sargsyan for the killings.