President Kocharyan received UNHCR new representative in Armenia

Presidnet Kocharyan received UNHCR new representative in Armenia

armradio.am
04.07.2007 12:42

President Robert Kocharyan today received the newly appointed
representative of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees in Armenia
Bushra Halepota.

Noting that there has always been a productive cooperation between the
Armenian Government and this important international structure, the
President expressed confidence that it will continue successfully
developing.

The interlocutors spoke about socio-economic problems of the refugees,
their housing problems, as well as the census of refugees.

Robert Kocharyan noted that the full integration of the refugees into
society is one of the Government’s priorities. He said the country’s
development and economic growth create opportunities for solving the
problems of the refugees.

Political prisoners unacceptable for CE member state – Euro official

Political prisoners unacceptable for CE member state – European official

Arminfo
4 Jul 07

Yerevan, 4 July: If a Council of Europe member state fulfils its
commitments, then a phenomenon, like political prisoners, is something
unacceptable for a Council of Europe member state, Rene van der Linden,
the Council of Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly [PACE] president, told a
news conference in Yerevan today [4 July] when commenting on a question
about the arrest of former Armenian Foreign Minister Aleksandr
Arzumanyan.

Without getting into "various" trials, Linden pointed to the importance
of having this issue discussed by the Council of Europe [CE]. The
rapporteur on Armenia should take this issue into serious
consideration. "If this specific case is a political arrest, then it is
unacceptable," he said.

Armenian Parliament Speaker Tigran Torosyan said, in turn, that the
report on Armenia was approved by the PACE winter session in January
and that it notes significant progress in Armenia’s fulfilment of its
commitments to the Council of Europe and further European integration.

"As for political arrests, it is absolutely unacceptable for any CE
member country. However, in this particular case, opinions of some
people cannot serve as grounds for a conclusion that it is a political
arrest. Fortunately, no political prisoners have ever existed in
Armenia, and this is a fact. No matter who the suspect is – a former
minister or a Karabakh war veteran – his activities should be assessed
after a trial. Charges have been pressed against the above mentioned
individuals and only the investigation can show whether those charges
ware fair or not," he said. He said it is necessary to demand reliable
assessment from law enforcement agencies.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Perils of Frontline Farmers

Institute for War and Peace Reporting IWPR, UK
June 5 2007

Nagorno-Karabakh: Perils of Frontline Farmers

Armenians have grown used to working their fields with assault rifles
aimed over their heads.

By Gegham Vardanian in Khachik (CRS No. 399, 5-July-07)

Arshaluis Arsenian is up and working at daybreak, opening the valve
to send the water into the fields out beyond the front line. Armenian
soldiers watch her from an observation post, although much of the
water ends up nearer to the Azerbaijani troops whose front line is at
the other end of the field.

`Ninety per cent of the village fields are situated beyond our posts.
When the villagers go down to cultivate land, we send soldiers with
them, because the enemy’s positions are so close that they could
descend and capture a peasant working,’ said the commander of the
military detachment stationed in the village, Vachik Kroian.

Arsenian’s village of Khachik is situated on the Armenian-Azerbaijani
border just a few kilometres from the Azerbaijani villages of Lower
Yaychi and Upper Yaychi. The nearest Armenian villages are almost 30
km away.

Khachik residents have grown used to working with assault rifles
aimed over their heads since the war over the province of
Nagorno-Karabakh ended 13 years ago. After the fighting, the region
was left in the hands of local ethnic Armenians, but no final
resolution has been agreed.

Despite the two countries signing a truce in 1994, no peace deal has
been forthcoming and sporadic shooting over the frontier is frequent.
Tensions are permanently high, though there have been no casualties
in this village since the end of the war.

The village’s fields mark the border between the two countries. Local
residents walk across a small hill on the outskirts of the village
and find themselves in an open field with the Azerbaijani province of
Nakhichevan at the other end.

There was fighting and bombing here during the Karabakh war. Houses
were destroyed in the village and there were deaths too.

`During the war, the Azerbaijanis somehow managed to reach our rear
and one of them died in the fighting. It was haymaking time and our
soldiers returned the corpse to them under the condition that they
would not shoot for a week, enabling us to harvest the crops,’ said
Vachagan Poghosian, head of the village administration.

Shooting regularly mars the truce along the whole border, with both
sides accusing each other of breaking the ceasefire.

`Violations of the ceasefire are not constant. The Azerbaijani side
often disseminates misinformation. However, there are, of course,
incidents. An Azerbaijani sniper killed two civilians in 2007,’ said
defence ministry spokesperson Seyran Shahsuvarian.

Khachik itself is lucky, however, no one has been killed or wounded
since the truce was signed and villagers working in the fields said
shooting was rare from either side.

`Nevertheless, we work in fear. Fear is inevitable. You never know
what a stupid man will do. They could start shooting. You must not
underestimate the enemy,’ said Rafik Petrosian, as he worked in the
fields.

`The soldiers are in the field with us, but what could they do if the
Turks (this is how the Armenians traditionally call Azerbaijanis)
attacked? They will just kill us and that is it,’ he said.

And the villagers do not take any chances. They stay at home on days
considered important by either side, not wanting to inflame emotions.

`When they have a holiday – Bayram or something like that – we do not
go to the fields. No one works in the fields on days that are
memorable for us – Independence Day or Genocide Day – either. Even if
there is someone who would like to, the military will not allow
them,’ said one elderly peasant.

Khachik is cut off from other Armenian settlements. The closest
village is 29 km away.

`If we do not cultivate our land, our peasants will find it very
difficult to survive here. We live off agriculture and
cattle-breeding. Not many people used to leave the village to earn
money elsewhere before 2000. However, everyone that can is leaving
the village now,’ said village head Poghosian, echoing a common
lament from local residents.

`The village is isolated and we cannot sell our products. You have to
spend 4,000-5,000 drams (10-15 US dollars) to reach the closest
village of Eghegnadzor. This is quite a sum and our income is very
low as a result,’ said Arsenian.

In summer months, young people like Volodya Mkrtchian, 25, work at a
nearby quarry.

`The work is very hard and dangerous, but what is worse is that it’s
part-time; it’s only four or five months a year,’ he said.

He spends his free time with his friends watching television. He
barely remembers the war, but he knows for sure that the people on
the other side of the field are his enemies.

`We want peace to be able to cultivate our land. However, this does
not mean that we are ready to establish relations with the
Azerbaijanis. Tensions will be there until the scars disappear,’ he
said.

But Volodya’s mother, Seda, remembers how friendly they were with the
neighbouring villages in Soviet times.

`They came here and brought their goods, stayed in our homes. We too
went to them. We were on friendly terms. Therefore, if people `up
there’ come to understand each other, ordinary people will get on
with each other well too,’ she said.

Gegham Vardanian is journalist and editor of Internews. He is also
member of IWPR’s EU-funded Cross-Caucasus Journalism Network project.

IFEX: Proposed Laws Would Curb Media Freedoms

IFEX – News from the international freedom of expression community
________________________________________ _________________________

ALERT – ARMENIA

3 July 2007

Proposed laws would curb media freedoms and effectively ban regional radio
station, says Human Rights Watch

SOURCE: Human Rights Watch

**For further information on the A1+ case, see IFEX alert of 25 June 2002;
for the Babajanian case, see alerts of 12 September and 7 July 2006; please
note that in previous alerts the journalist’s name was spelled
Babadzhanian**

(HRW/IFEX) – The following is a 29 June 2007 Human Rights Watch press
release:

Armenia: Parliament Must Not Silence RFE/RL
Strike Down Proposed Laws Curbing Media Freedoms

(New York, June 29, 2007) – The Armenian parliament should not adopt two
draft laws that would effectively ban future broadcasts of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), a key source of independent information in
that country, Human Rights Watch said today.

The first, an amendment to the law "On Television and Radio", prohibits
retransmission of foreign broadcasts on Armenian public television and
radio frequencies. The second, an amendment to the law "On State Taxes",
establishes heavy fees for private companies that air foreign broadcasts.

Both draft laws passed a first reading on Friday in the National Assembly
of Armenia, but must undergo a second reading, expected on Monday or
Tuesday, before they become law.

"These new laws clearly restrict access to a crucial independent news
source for many Armenians and deal a serious blow to RFE/RL and to freedom
of the media in general," said Holly Cartner, Europe and Central Asia
director at Human Rights Watch. "The parliament should under no
circumstances pass this bill in the second reading."

The parliament’s actions appear to specifically target RFE/RL’s Armenian
service, the only foreign broadcaster that relies on Armenian National
Radio, the country’s public radio station, to reach the majority of its
audience.

RFE/RL is one of the only independent broadcast media outlets remaining in
Armenia. Although there is a vibrant print media, the government maintains
close control over the much more accessible broadcast media, and recently
closed the last independent television station, A1+, in 2002.

RFE/RL is also occasionally broadcast via some private radio stations in
the country’s capital, Yerevan, and surrounding regions, but under the
proposed laws, private Armenian broadcasters would pay more than US$200 in
taxes each time they retransmit a program produced by a foreign media
organization. This fee is 70 times more than broadcasters must pay for a
locally made program.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE)
representative on freedom of the media, Miklos Haraszti, criticized the
bills, saying that they infringed Armenia’s commitments to safeguard media
pluralism and access to information, and called on the Armenian authorities
to drop them. Opposition politicians in Armenia lamented the parliament’s
decision to pass the bills and charged the government with trying to
control the media.

The two bills are incompatible with Armenia’s obligations under the
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). Article 10 of the ECHR
guarantees the right "to receive and impart information and ideas without
interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers." This right
can only be restricted for limited and specific reasons such as national
security or public safety. The restrictions placed on the rights of
expression and imparting of information by the bills do not meet these
requirements. The importance of the rights protected by Article 10 has been
repeatedly emphasized by the European Court of Human Rights. The court
maintains that freedom of expression is one of the essential foundations of
a democratic society and that the media plays a pre-eminent role in a state
governed by the rule of law. The court insists that any efforts by a
government to restrict freedom of expression be strictly scrutinized and
the reason convincingly established.

"By passing these laws, Armenia risks violating its international
commitments to freedom of expression and the media," said Cartner. "As
Armenia prepares for presidential elections in 2008, the world will
certainly be watching to see if the government respects freedom of the
media and other freedoms necessary for a free and fair vote."

The move is not the first effort by the Armenian government to limit
independent media. The independent television station A1+ lost its
broadcasting license in 2002, after regularly airing criticism of the
government, and lost 12 subsequent tenders for television and radio
frequencies. In June 2006, A1+, which produced a weekly newspaper and
maintains a website, was forced to vacate its offices, after losing a court
case in 2005 challenging a notice of eviction.

Human rights groups have reported violence against journalists in
retaliation for their work, and in September a court sentenced Arman
Babajanian, editor of the opposition newspaper Zhamanak Yerevan, to four
years in prison for failing to serve the compulsory two years of military
service. Although Babajanian admitted to forging documents in 2002 in order
to evade military service, the harsh sentence is suspected to be
retribution for the journalist’s persistent criticism of government
policies (draft evaders are usually sentenced to between two and three
years in prison).

For further information, contact Jane Buchanan, (English, Russian), New
York, tel: +1 212 216 1857, mobile: +1 917 553 4315; or Human Rights Watch,
350 Fifth Ave., 34th Floor, New York NY 10018-3299, U.S.A., tel: +1 212 290
4700, fax: +1 212 736 1300, e-mail: [email protected], Internet:

The information contained in this alert is the sole responsibility of Human
Rights Watch. In citing this material for broadcast or publication, please
credit Human Rights Watch.
___________________________________________ ______________________
DISTRIBUTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION EXCHANGE (IFEX)
CLEARING HOUSE
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Baku: Armenian-Captured Azeri Being Identified

ARMENIAN-CAPTURED AZERI BEING IDENTIFIED

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
July 2 2007

One more Azerbaijani was captured by Armenians on June 30 in Aghdam,
APA reports quoting Panarmenian agency. The military men of so-called
Nagorno Karabakh Republic said that he had no documents.

The so-called Nagorno Karabakh Republic State committee on Prisoners
of War, Hostages and Missing Persons said that the captive did not
answer any questions and introduced himself as Samandar Guliyev. He
said he was born in 1972 in Shusha and inhabited in the village of
Uchoglan of Aghdam region.

The related organizations are carrying out investigations. Karabakh
representations of OSCE and International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC) were informed of the fact.

APA’s Karabakh bureau found out that Samandar Guliyev (patronymic
Rasul, born in 1964) was registered in Aghdam and died in the battles
for Suma-Gulluja village on February 3, 1994. Aghdam executive power
reports that no one called Samandar Guliyev (patronymic Namaz) was
found. Investigations are beign carried out on the fact.

Officer of ICRC Azerbaijani office Gulnaz Guliyeva told the APA that
the committee was informed of the captured Azerbaijani citizen.

She said the committee representatives have not yet met with the
captured. APA could not contact Azerbaijani State committee on
Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons. /APA/

36th District NA Election under majority system must be voided

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
June 29 2007

PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS UNDER MAJORITY SYSTEM IN 36TH ELECTION
DISTRICT IN ARMENIA MUST BE VOIDED

YEREVAN, June 29. /ARKA/. The parliamentary elections in Armenia
under the majority system in the 36th election district must be
voided due to numerous violations in the course of elections, Sevak
Saghatelyan, lawyer and representative of the declarant, appealing
against the election results in this election district, reported at
the sitting of the Constitutional Court on Friday.

`The mass violations, committed in the course of elections, call the
justice of elections in question, and are a proper ground for voiding
the election results,’ he said.

According to Saghatelyan, protocols of divisional election committees
testify to mass violations. In particular, the information about the
number of ballots and ballot envelopes provided for election
committees, as well as the information about the number of voters
mismatch. He said that the number of inaccuracies in one of the 36th
election district’s polling stations alone totaled 697, and the total
number of inaccuracies in polling stations makes 2 to 129.

`A total of inaccuracies in the 36th election district amounts to
1441 that exceeds the difference of votes cast for deputy nominees
who won the first and second places. This is at least doubtful,’
Saghatelyan reported.

The parliamentary elections in Armenia were held on May 12. Non-party
Mkhitar Varaghyan won the elections in the 36th election district. He
collected about 14.8ths votes. His contenders Musheg Petrosyan and
Musheg Saghatelyan collected 13,600 and 7,100 votes respectively.

Musheg Saghatelyan submitted the application for voiding the decision
of the 36th election district’s committee `On approval of the results
of the parliamentary elections under the majority system’. R.O. -0–

Virage Logic Key Participant in Inaugural Armenian Tech. Congress

Business Wire (press release), CA
June 26 2007

Virage Logic Key Participant in Inaugural Armenian Technology
Congress

Semiconductor IP Leader Helps Promote Strength of Country’s
Engineering Talent

ArmTech Congress 2007

FREMONT, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Virage Logic Corporation
(NASDAQ:VIRL), the semiconductor industry’s trusted IP partner and
pioneer in Silicon Aware IP’, today announced its participation in
the inaugural Armenia Technology Congress (ArmTech Congress 2007) to
be held July 4-7, 2007, at the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco. The
company boasts a significant presence in the Southwest Asian nation
and has contributed the time and talents of key executives –
including President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Dan McCranie,
who will deliver a keynote address, and Vice President and Chief
Scientist Dr. Yervant Zorian, who serves as Program Chair – to help
define and execute the conference program.

`Virage Logic’s extensive participation in ArmTech Congress 2007
reflects our deep commitment to Armenia as a center for world-class
engineering talent and a region in which we expect continued
expansion,’ said Dan McCranie, president, CEO and director of Virage
Logic. `We are proud to support this inaugural conference and I trust
that anyone who attends will come away with a profound appreciation
for the wealth of intellectual resources Armenia has to offer.’

Virage Logic in Armenia

Recognizing a vital source of technology engineering talent, Virage
Logic established its research and development center in Armenia in
1999, three years after the company’s founding. Today the company’s
more than 100 employees in Armenia account for nearly one-quarter of
its worldwide workforce and contribute to several important product
development initiatives. The Armenian research and development (R&D)
organization is central to the company’s groundbreaking Self-Test and
Repair (STAR) Memory System’, the semiconductor industry’s first
integrated embedded test and repair memory system and the first of
the company’s Silicon Aware IP solutions. In addition to development
of the STAR Memory System, the Armenian engineering team is involved
in the development of the company’s software, NOVeA® non-volatile
embedded memory product, I/O products and overall memory design.

`Our Armenia R&D center was largely responsible for the STAR Memory
System, a significant product that has enabled customers to improve
their semiconductor yield by up to 250 percent,’ said Dr. Zorian.
`Based on the consistent innovation and results our Armenian
engineers have produced, we see our growing investment in the region
as offering substantial dividends for our products and our
customers.’

About ArmTech Congress 2007

The inaugural ArmTech Congress 2007 is expected to draw several
hundred attendees – from the United States, Armenia and around the
world – from various disciplines including technology, investment,
government and academia. The conference program will offer tracks on
Education, Telecom, Software, Digital Media, Semiconductor Design and
Test, Renewable and Alternative Energy, Research and Development,
Investment, Bio Tech, and Fine Chemical Technologies to showcase the
breadth of opportunities in Armenia. For more information or to
register for the conference, please visit

Virage Logic at ArmTech Congress 2007

The following sessions include participants from Virage Logic’s U.S.
and Armenia operations:

Thursday, July 5
8:30 a.m. to 10:20 a.m.
Keynote Address: "Program Introduction"
Dr. Yervant Zorian, vice president and chief scientist, Virage Logic;
ArmTech Congress 2007 Program Chair

10:50 a.m. to 12:10 p.m.
Paper Presentation: "Digital Media Content: E-Learning"
Dr. Yervant Zorian, vice president and chief scientist, Virage Logic;
ArmTech Congress 2007 Program Chair

1:40 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Paper Presentation: "Demand in High Tech Education"
Varoujan Maserejian, general manager, Virage Logic Armenia,
Samvel Shoukourian, research and development program director, Virage
Logic Armenia, and Dr. Yervant Zorian, vice president and chief
scientist, Virage Logic; ArmTech Congress 2007 Program Chair

Friday, July 6
8:30 a.m. to 10:20 a.m.
Keynote Address: "Semiconductor Industry: Opportunities and
Challenges"
Dan McCranie, president, CEO and director, Virage Logic

10:50 a.m. to 12:10 p.m.
Track Organizer: "High Tech Research and Innovation in Armenia"
Samvel Shoukourian, research and development program director, Virage
Logic Armenia

1:40 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Paper Presentation: "R&D Collaboration and Affiliate Programs"
Valery Vardanian, manager embedded test & repair methodology team,
Virage Logic Armenia, and Avetik Yessayan, senior manager
system-on-chip interface team, Virage Logic Armenia

Invited Presentation: "Semiconductor Manufacturability Challenges &
Opportunities"
Dr. Yervant Zorian, vice president and chief scientist, Virage Logic;
ArmTech Congress 2007 program chair

Saturday, July 7
10:50 a.m. to 12:10 p.m.
Congress Report: "ArmTech 2007 Concluding Results"
Dr. Yervant Zorian, vice president and chief scientist, Virage Logic;
ArmTech Congress 2007 program chair
Virage Logic Availability for the Media

Dan McCranie and Dr. Yervant Zorian will be available for press
interviews regarding Armenia and the company’s operations there
during ArmTech Congress 2007, July 4-7. To arrange an interview,
please contact James McIntyre at [email protected]. Additionally, Dr.
Zorian will be in Armenia July 14-19 and is available for interviews
with local media. To arrange an interview, please contact Peter
Maghdashyan at [email protected]. For more information
about ArmTech Congress 2007, please visit
ndex.php.

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http://www.armtechcongress.com.
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Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink’s murder trial opens Monday

Agence France Presse — English
June 30, 2007 Saturday 3:03 AM GMT

Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink’s murder trial opens Monday

by Nicolas Cheviron

The trial of 18 people charged with involvement in the murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink opens behind closed doors here
Monday, with his lawyers complaining that several security officials
they say should also be tried are not among the accused.

The central figure of the trial is trigger man Ogun Samast, who has
admitted to killing Dink by shooting him twice in the head and once
in the neck on a busy Istanbul street on January 19, in front of the
offices of his bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos.

The unemployed 17-year-old Samast, who said he came to Istanbul to
kill Dink from his native Trabzon, where he was known for his close
ties to ultranationalist circles, faces 18 to 24 years in jail for
the murder and a further 8-1/2 to 18 years for belonging to a
terrorist organisation.

The prosecution did not seek life because Samast is minor, which is
also why the trial is closed to the public.

Two men accused of being the leaders of the far-right group and
ordering the murder, Yasin Hayal and Erhan Tuncel, could be jailed
for life without the possibility of parole if found guilty.

The 15 others on trial face jail sentences of seven-and-a-half to 35
years.

Before being arrested for the Dink murder, Hayal had already served
jail time for the 2004 bombing in Trabzon of a McDonalds restaurant
in which six people were injured.

He faces a separate trial for having threatened Turkey’s 2006 Nobel
Literature laureate Orhan Pamuk, whose views on the World War I
massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire are unpopular in
Turkey.

Notable for their absence in the dock, according to Dink family
lawyer Fethiye Cetin, are several unnamed security officials.

"Members of the security forces in Trabzon, where the killing was
planned, in Istanbul, where it was executed, and in Ankara, where the
intelligence was gathered, were not included among the accused," she
told a news conference Friday.

"And this despite the established fact that they had links with the
suspects, failed in their duty, concealed evidence and even sought to
vindicate the murder and the murderer," she said.

"Hrant Dink’s murder trial is a critical test of the Turkish
judiciary’s independence," the international rights organisation
Human Rights Watch said in a statement Friday.

"The Turkish judiciary must hold accountable any security forces
responsible for negligence or collusion in the murder," it said.

Dink, 52, had drawn the ire of the Turkish far right for having
openly argued that the mass killings of Armenians in the dying days
of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917 constituted genocide — a
label most Turks despise and Turkey officially rejects.

The murder sent the country into prolonged shock, and more than
100,000 people from all walks of life took to the streets of Istanbul
on the day of Dink’s funeral, chanting "We are all Hrant Dink" and
"We are all Armenians."

Dink’s friends and followers said they plan to hold a rally in his
memory near the courthouse where his murder trial opens on Monday.

According To European Court, Ra Citizen Imprisoned For 10 Years Is D

ACCORDING TO EUROPEAN COURT, RA CITIZEN IMPRISONED FOR 10 YEARS IS DEPRIVED OF RIGHT OF FAIR TRIAL: CASE NOT RECONSIDERED AFTER FACT OF TORTURE CERTIFIED

Noyan Tapan
Jun29, 2007

YEREVAN, JUNE 29, NOYAN TAPAN. The seven judges, with M. Zupanchich at
the head, of the European Court of Human Rights delivered a judgement
on June 28, according to which, Misha Haroutiunian, an RA citizen, who
was sentenced to ten years of imprisonment on the charge of killing his
fellow serviceman, has been deprived of the right of a fair trial. A
decision was also made concerning moral damage compensation within
the limits of four thousand euros.

Hayk Alumian, the lawyer of M. Haroutiunian, informed a Noyan Tapan
correspondent that the above-mentioned decision of the European
Court gives an opportunity to submit an application to the RA Court
of Appeal on criminal cases and claim a "not guilty" verdict on the
basis of this new circumstance. The lawyer can make use of this right
during three months.

It should also be mentioned that M. Haroutiunian was condemned
to ten years of imprisonment on the charge of killing his fellow
serviceman on December 4, 1998 by the verdict passed by the Court of
First Instance of the Syunik region on June 19, 2002. After serving
2/3 of his sentence, M. Haroutiunian was set free. In parallel with
the trial of this case, the court also heard the criminal case filed
against collaborators of the Military Police.

According to this case, M. Haroutiunian and the two fellow servicemen
who gave evidence against him were submitted to torture by the
collaborators of the police. However, the assertion of the fact
concerning torture did not become a basis for the RA Court of Appeal
on criminal and military cases to reconsider the criminal case filed
against M. Haroutiunian.

BAKU: Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict To Be Discussed In Geneva

NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT TO BE DISCUSSED IN GENEVA

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
June 28 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / corr Trend S.Ilhamgizi / The Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict will be discussed in Geneva, Switzerland on 29 June during the
international conference of ‘World’s Unsettled Conflicts’ organized by
Socialist International, the Chairman of the Socio-Democratic Party
of Azerbaijan (SDPA), Araz Alizadeh, who plans to take part in the
event, reported.

Socialist International is an organization uniting socialistic parties
of the world.

According to Alizadeh, at the Geneva conference he will deliver a
report on the lingering conflicts in the world, including that of
Nagorno-Karabakh. Alizadeh will inform the attendees of the history of
the Karabakh conflict, as well as his party’s position on this issue.

SDPA is a left-wing party in Azerbaijan. The leader of the party is
emigrated Azerbaijan’s ex-President, Ayaz Muttalibov. The SDPA is
represented in the Socialist International.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries broke out in 1988
due to Armenian territorial claims to Azerbaijan. Since 1992, 20% of
Azerbaijani territories (Nagorno-Karabakh and seven nearby regions),
have been under the occupation of the Armenian Armed Forces. In May,
1994 the two sides signed a ceasefire. Peace talks are still being
held under the auspices of the Minsk Group of the OSCE chaired by
Russia, France, and the United States, but in vain.