Hovhannes Danielian Passes To Final In European Boxing Championship

HOVHANNES DANIELIAN PASSES TO FINAL IN EUROPEAN BOXING CHAMPIONSHIP

Noyan Tapan

Nov 12, 2008

LIVERPOOL, NOVEMBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. The European Boxing Championship
continues in the city of Liverpool, England. The quarter final
fights of sportsmen in 48 kg weight category took place on November
11. Representative of Armenia Hovhannes Danielian (Yerevan) beat
Daran Lengle (England) with the score of 7 to 3, passed to the final
and ensured at least a bronze medal for himself.

Edward Hambartsumian (64 kg, Yerevan), Andranik Hakobian (75 kg,
Etchmiadzin), and Tsolak Ananikian (91 kg, Yerevan) continue competing
for passing to the final from Armenia.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009659

BAKU: Swiss President Upholds Turkish Call For ‘Genocide’ Study

SWISS PRESIDENT UPHOLDS TURKISH CALL FOR ‘GENOCIDE’ STUDY

Trend
Nov 12 2008
Azerbaijan

The president of the Swiss Confederation has backed Turkey’s calls for
a study of Armenian claims of genocide, saying the dispute over history
should be settled by historians, not politicians reported Todayszaman.

Pascal Couchepin is on a visit to Turkey on the occasion of the 80th
anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between
Switzerland and Turkey. He had talks with President Abdullah Gul
on Monday and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Parliament
Speaker Köksal Toptan on Tuesday. The lower house of the Swiss
Parliament accepted the genocide claims in a 2003 vote, causing
strain in bilateral relations with Turkey. Last year, Dogu Perincek,
a Turkish politician and the leader of the small Workers’ Party (İP),
was charged with denying the "genocide" under legislation passed to
punish denial of the Holocaust, angering Turkey, which says it is a
restriction on the freedom of expression and debate.

The Armenian issue was one of the items discussed in Couchepin’s talks
with Gul late on Monday. To Turkey’s dismay, the Swiss leader defended
his country’s laws penalizing denial of the Armenian claims at a press
conference with Gul. He said the laws were passed 20 years ago with
the principal purpose of punishing denial of the Holocaust and that
the Swiss judges had the flexibility to interpret laws according
to different circumstances. Couchepin also referred to Perincek,
without citing his name, as a "provocateur."

"One of the people is currently under arrest in Turkey for
provocations," he said. Perincek is one of the 86 suspects in the
Ergenekon case, in which the prosecutors blame the shadowy network
for plotting against the government and seeking stage a military coup.

Perincek was convicted in a Swiss court in March 2007 under the
country’s anti-racism laws for saying that the incidents of the World
War I era could not be described as genocide. He was ordered to pay a
fine of 3,000 Swiss francs ($2,450) and was given a suspended penalty
of 9,000 francs ($7,360).

Couchepin and Turkish leaders also discussed efforts against the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which Turkey claims is freely
operating in many European countries. At the press conference, Gul
welcomed a series of recent steps taken by Switzerland against the PKK
and said Turkey was confident that Switzerland will implement them in
the most effective way possible. Couchepin said the Swiss government
had recently taken several measures and exerted efforts to stop the
activities of the terrorist PKK organization in Switzerland.

–Boundary_(ID_id6KJs5Y2UzX/bjy62lSh g)–

Ambassador Of Kyrgyzstan Presents Credentials To RA Deputy Foreign M

AMBASSADOR OF KYRGYZSTAN PRESENTS CREDENTIALS TO RA DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER

armradio.am
10.11.2008 17:30

On November 10 the newly appointed Ambassador of Kyrgyzstan to Armenia
Raimkul Atakurov (seat in Moscow) handed the copies of his credentials
to RA Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan.

Greeting the Ambassador, Shavarsh Kocharyan noted that Armenia
attaches great importance to the development of bilateral relations
with Kyrgyzstan, expressing hope that the appointment of the new
Ambassador will facilitate the deepening and expansion of the mutually
beneficial cooperation between the two countries.

Raimkul Atakurov underlined that the activation of the trade-economic
relations between Armenia and Kyrgyzstan and the development of
the contractual-legal field can contribute to the restart of the
activity of the Armenian-Kyrgyz Intergovernmental Commission for
Economic Cooperation.

At the request of the guest, the Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia
dwelt on the process of settlement of the Artsakh issue and in this
context expressed appreciation for the balanced position demonstrated
by the Kyrgyz side on the issue. Views were exchanged on a number of
international and regional issues.

BAKU: Azeri Think-Tank Group Predicts No Changes Under Current Presi

AZERI THINK-TANK GROUP PREDICTS NO CHANGES UNDER CURRENT PRESIDENT

Turan News Agency
Oct 28 2008
Azerbaijan

‘Calm start’ of the second term in office

A formal and imperceptible presidential election that ended with
similar formal and indiscernible inauguration ritual has been left
behind. The re-elected president has started his second term in office
in a similar formal and imperceptible vein.

Actually, Azerbaijani society has had time neither notice the
election nor the absence of the real opposition in this process,
nor the start of the second term in office of Ilham Aliyev. In its
turn, the international community preferred to assess this as the
"election without a choice" and as another step towards democracy.

In his post-inauguration speech, the president went further, stating
that democratic society has been established in Azerbaijan. But as
democracy and modernization are endless processes, then consequently,
resources and opportunities of further democratic progress have not
fully exhausted.

There will be similar elections and consequently, new steps towards
democracy. The fatal, calm and indifferent climate of the election also
conditioned fatal, calm and indifferent nature of the post-election
situation from which actually no serious innovations are expected.

On the one hand, it seems the authorities did not knowingly lay
an election bid into the scenario of the current election for a
fundamentally qualitative innovation. On the other hand, formal,
indiscernible and "pointless" nature of the electoral process did
not absolutely tune society into expectations for any significant
and positive innovations in the post-election period.

If we set aside general showy and regular rhetoric, then actually,
the president in no way specifically outlined key priorities of his
next term in office and still is not in a hurry to make his real
plans and steps public with regard his readiness to this or another
significant changes.

In all likelihood that the start of his second term in office will pass
in a quiet and formal vein and will not be marked by any fundamental
changes and innovations. Nevertheless, calm, smooth and problem-free
entry of the authorities into a new cycle of the presidential term
will hardly secure calm, smooth and problem-free move in the course
for a quite long time.

Irrespective of the fact whether or not the authorities are ready
for this or another innovations, regardless of the fact whether or
not it wants to form its opinion on this or another issue, there
are problems and priorities which are demanded by the dynamics of
development of situation across the world, in the region and in the
country. In this plan, neither calm election, nor calm promotion of
the post-election processes is able to deactualize real problems and
prevent intrigue of matured changes.

In a row of key priorities and problems, on which the president has
to make up his mind in the near future, many political experts mention:

– identifying real opportunities and limits for compromise for the
resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict (the Karabakh problem)
in the light of fresh initiatives and complex (post-Georgian) situation
in the region;

– on maintaining definite balancing elements in the foreign policy,
ensuring more clear and precise geopolitical orientation of the
country, especially in the issue of integration into Euro-Atlantic
structures;

– on implementing a complex of legal, political and economic reforms
for the purpose of minimizing risks for the country from the global
financial crisis;

– by virtue of depleting resources for upgrading the country in
conditions of strict authoritarian, corrupt and neo-Soviet political
system, the necessity for personnel, political, legal and "conceptual"
rethinking (renovation) of style of governing the state.

One way or another, however, the head of the state has to determine
on all these issues of principal importance. And, the earlier, the
better for the country and for the authorities.

Starting From 2009, Armenian Tour Packages To Be Sold Via "Silk Road

STARTING FROM 2009, ARMENIAN TOUR PACKAGES TO BE SOLD VIA "SILK ROAD" WEBISITE

Noyan Tapan

Nov 7, 2008

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. Starting from January 2009, Armenian
tour packages will be sold via Uzbekistan-based Silk Road website
(OrexCA.com).

Silk Road website is the first and largest tourist network in the CIS,
through which six countries currently sell their toursist services.

NT correspondent was informed by Silk Road’s director for marketing
Mikael Shamshidov that about 2,500 people visit the website each
day. It services not only tourists and tourist groups but also
individuals and organizations engaged in business.

According to Mr. Shamshidov who is participating in the 8th
international tourism exhibition "Country of Talking Stones" CTS –
2008 in Yerevan, by connecting to their website, Armenia will get
a "large audience" and will be able to present its tour products:
hotels, transport, culture, weather forecast, climate, etc.

Mikael Shamshidov said that he has already seen quite a lot of
historic and cultural monuments in Armenia. "I have been traveling
around Armenia for 5 days. I as a director for marketing want to see
what tour products Armenia can offer to tourists. Your country is
very beautiful, it has many historic and cultural monuments and an
exceptional and original geographical location," he underlined.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1009579

ANKARA: Turkey Says No Plan For Tripartite Summit With Azerbaijan, A

TURKEY SAYS NO PLAN FOR TRIPARTITE SUMMIT WITH AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA

Nov 7 2008
Turkey

Several media reports claimed that Turkish President Abdullah Gul would
invite Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh
Sargsian to Istanbul to hold a summit for the solution of problems
in Caucasia.

A foreign ministry spokesman said Friday that Turkey had no efforts
to organize a tripartite summit with the presidents of Azerbaijan
and Armenia.

Several media reports claimed that Turkish President Abdullah Gul would
invite Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh
Sargsian to Istanbul to hold a summit for the solution of problems
in Caucasia.

"Of course, we would be pleased by visits of the presidents of
Azerbaijan and Armenia. But there is no such an effort (to hold a
tripartite summit) at this moment," Burak Ozugergin,spokesman for
the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told the A.A.

www.worldbulletin.net

Obama Presidency: A New Era In Turkish-American Relations?

OBAMA PRESIDENCY: A NEW ERA IN TURKISH-AMERICAN RELATIONS?
By Saban Kardas

Eurasia Daily Monitor
Nov 7 2008
DC

Many Turks joined the worldwide rejoicing over the Democrats’ victory
and Barack Obama’s election as the next president of the United
States. The Turkish public is sympathetic to Obama’s call for change
as they find parallels in his story to Turkey’s experience with the
reformist wave brought about by the Justice and Development Party’s
(AKP) landslide electoral victory in 2002.

President Abdullah Gul, in a letter to President-elect Obama,
reflected this positive mood in Turkey: "Your message of change and
hope is one that meets the expectations of our day. It is a message
that Turkey embraces" (, November 5). Similarly, by
emphasizing Obama’s background, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
presented Obama’s victory as evidence of the American political
system’s democratic credentials (, November 5). Obama’s
vision on pressing issues of American politics aside, his promises
of reorienting America’s role in the world instilled hope for a new
direction in American foreign policy, hence reinvigorating the Turkish
American relations in the wake of the Bush administration.

Growing anti-Americanism in Turkey, caused by the current
administration’s unpopular policies, has been one of the factors
adversely affecting Turkish-American relations. Several studies
have found that the Turkish people harbored unfavorable views
about the United States and preferred the Democrat Obama over
Republican John McCain (Pew Global Attitudes Survey, June 12;
). Given the positive image of
Obama among the Turkish people, analysts expect him to take important
steps toward saving the United States’ image in Turkey and helping
to revitalize the relationship (Turkish Daily News, November 6).

When the candidates’ views on specific issues of concern to Turkey were
compared, however, many within the Turkish policy community tended
to favor McCain. Given his refusal to pledge to recognize the events
of 1915 as genocide against the Armenians (in contrast to Obama’s
commitment to support Armenian claims) and his familiarity with and
appreciation of Turkey’s strategic importance to U.S. interests, McCain
had appeared to be the more favorable choice (Today’s Zaman, February
21). Similarly, the widespread belief that Obama’s position on certain
issues might damage Turkey’s interests led many Turkish-Americans to
support McCain despite their overall preference for Obama (Newsweek,
November 1).

In his campaign Obama partly overcame some of Turkey’s concerns,
and grew more sensitive to the strategic value of Turkish-American
relations. His new draft agenda for partnership with Europe
had a section entitled "Restoring the Strategic Partnership
with Turkey." Having emphasized the negative legacy of the Bush
administration, Obama has promised to "lead a diplomatic effort to
bring together Turkish and Iraqi Kurdish leaders and negotiate a
comprehensive agreement that deals with the PKK threat, guarantees
Turkey’s territorial integrity,… [and supports Turkey’s] efforts
to join the European Union." Obama appeared to satisfy Turkey’s
concerns on the issues of Cyprus and nuclear proliferation in Iran
( nal.pdf).

The specifics of Obama’s foreign policy have not yet materialized;
hence, they are full of uncertainties for Turkey. Obama’s broad goals,
such as supporting global peacemaking efforts, buttressing regional
allies, and refocusing on energy security in regions surrounding
Turkey, are definitely welcome to Turkey and partly explain the Turkish
leaders’ warm congratulations. Moving away from militarization of
U.S. policies in favor of diplomacy, for instance, resonates well with
Turkey’s new role as a regional peacemaker. Now that Turkey will be
on the UN Security Council, cooperation between the two countries in
this area will be increasingly important. Erdogan therefore expressed
his hope that Barack Obama would contribute to international peace,
particularly in the Middle East. Erdogan reiterated his belief that
the two countries would maintain strategic relations. Erdogan is
due to visit the United States on November 15 and reportedly plans
to meet Obama during that trip (Taraf, November 6). The Turkish
business community, which has started to feel the effects of the
global financial crisis, is also positive about Obama’s election. They
believe Obama is better placed to solve the financial crisis (Dunya,
November 6).

Nonetheless, it remains to be seen how the Obama-Biden ticket’s
previously announced plans about such issues as the rapid
withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq and possible partition of
the country and its controversial statements about Cyprus will
affect Turkish-American relations (see "Yeni Amerikan Baskani
Obama ve Turk Amerikan Iliskileri," ASAM Bakis, No.8, November
2008; ). Obama’s persistent
and unequivocal commitment to the Armenian interpretation
of the events of 1915 and the Karabakh conflict remain the
main roadblock to improving Turkish-American relations under
the new administration (). Just days before the
election the Obama-Biden campaign reaffirmed its pledge to
recognize the events of 1915 as genocide (ANCA, Press Release,
s.php?prid=1620). Many
Turkish foreign affairs experts believe that mismanagement of the
"G" word issue might not only strain relations but also negatively
affect ongoing efforts for reconciliation between Azerbaijan, Armenia,
and Turkey (, November 5).

Erdogan was optimistic about avoiding such a head-on collision. He
hopes that the promises made on the Armenian theme by Obama the
candidate will remain election rhetoric for Obama the President. He
believes that Obama will tone down these arguments when he assumes
office, because there is a dimension of Turkish-American relations
dictated by strategic reality that will not be altered by a change in
the White House (Star, November 5). The Turkish leader had demonstrated
a similar optimism about the moderating effect of holding office
with regard to Obama’s reported reference to Turkey as an "occupier"
in Cyprus. Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan maintained, however,
that this was part of campaign politics and once elected Obama would
adjust his position (Zaman, October 20).

As the AKP leaders’ own experience in power has shown, political
office comes with certain responsibilities and definitely has a
transformative impact on political leaders. The party believes that
"common sense" might well prevail and that Obama will step back
from some of his election rhetoric, which might help avoid tension
in bilateral relations. What the AKP’s own experience also shows,
however, is that reformists’ return to former practices can entail
certain costs. If Obama goes down a similar path, following the
dictates of "strategic reality," he will fail to meet worldwide
expectations for drastic changes in American foreign policy, including
in Turkish-American relations.

www.cankaya.gov.tr
www.cnnturk.com
www.pewglobal.org/reports/pdf/260.pdf
www.barackobama.com/pdf/fact_sheet_europe_fi
www.asam.org.tr/temp/temp1181.pdf
www.obama.com
www.anca.org/press_releases/press_release
www.cnnturk.com

Hopes And Fears After Karabakh Declaration

HOPES AND FEARS AFTER KARABAKH DECLARATION
By Sabuhi Mamedli, Naira Melkumian and Karine Ohanian

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Nov 6 2008
UK

Russian-inspired initiative provokes furious debate on future of
Karabakh conflict.

An agreement between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia on the Nagorny
Karabakh conflict this week has renewed hopes of peace – but also
sparked fears amongst Armenians and Azerbaijanis about what this
would mean for them.

The November 2 declaration by the presidents of the three countries
marked the first occasion that the leaders of the opposing sides had
put their signature to the same document since the 1994 ceasefire
agreement that halted three years of war.

Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, who hosted the talks at his
residence, the Meidendorf castle outside Moscow, read out the
declaration, which reaffirmed a commitment by all sides to the current
negotiations under the so-called co-chairmen of the Minsk Group of
the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, OSCE, France,
Russia and the United States.

In the declaration, the three presidents pledge to "facilitate
improvement of the situation in the South Caucasus and establish
stability and security in the region through political settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict based on the principles of international
law and the decisions and documents approved within this framework,
thus creating favourable conditions for economic growth and all-round
cooperation in the region".

The agreement emphasises that all steps in the process "should be
accompanied by legally binding guarantees for every aspect and stage
of the settlement process".

Its final point calls for "confidence-building measures" to assist
a peace agreement.

The document pledges its support for continued discussion on the basis
of negotiations last November in Madrid. This implicitly means the
basis of talks will be the "Madrid document", a three-page "document of
basic principles" whose latest draft was written down at that meeting.

This sets out the first stage of an agreement, with withdrawal of
Armenian forces from the seven Azerbaijani regions outside Nagorny
Karabakh wholly or partially under Armenian control; the granting of an
intermediate international status for the disputed territory itself;
and the prospect of an eventual vote by the residents of Karabakh on
its status.

In Azerbaijan, neither the president nor the foreign minister have
commented publicly on the declaration. Foreign ministry spokesman
Khazar Ibragim said that it reaffirmed the Azerbaijani position that
the Nagorny Karabakh was a conflict between two states, Armenia and
Azerbaijan, and that respect for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity
was reaffirmed by the document’s reference to international law.

Most analysts said the document was too vague to have real
significance.

Azerbaijani political analyst Rasim Musabekov said, "In the declaration
there are no concrete opinions on serious issues. It does not talk
about territorial integrity nor about the status of Nagorny Karabakh,
nor about the liberation of the occupied territories by the Armenians."

Vafa Guluzade, formerly foreign policy aide to former president
Heidar Aliev, called the document a "manoeuvre by Russia designed to
demonstrate its importance to the West. But the gesture turned out
to be an empty one as the result was a document that had no weight
and means nothing".

Guluzade said the document could have a calming effect on the Armenian
side, "In Armenia people could be worried that Armenia could go on
the [military] offensive. And now there is no threat of this kind,
neither in fact nor in words."

Opposition leader Isa Gambar was more hostile, saying that several
of its points "contradict the interests of Azerbaijan", because they
potentially meant a referendum on the status of Nagorny Karabakh and
the deployment of Russian peacekeepers, which he said was a "direct
threat to the territorial integrity of our country".

But some Azerbaijanis refugees from Nagorny Karabakh derived hope
from the meeting.

"I saw on television that our president had signed something with the
Armenian president. Does that mean it’s all over? My husband didn’t
live to see this, he’s dead now and we buried him in Baku. Does this
mean I can die in my native land? May Allah grant this!" said Nasiba,
an elderly woman from the Karabakhi town of Shusha, now living as
a refugee.

On the Armenian side, officials have hailed the declaration as an
important step forward in the peace settlement.

"This initiative is extremely important in opening a new phase from the
point of view of activating the negotiations," said Armenian foreign
minister Eduard Nalbandian. "The presidents have entrusted the foreign
ministers of the two countries to re-activate the negotiations."

Analyst Levon Melik-Shakhnazarian welcomed the document on the grounds
that it did not specifically emphasise the territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan and underlined the importance of a peaceful settlement of
the conflict.

Others were more sceptical. Alexander Iskandarian, director of the
Caucasus Institute, said, "There’s nothing bad written there, but
it seems to me that nothing of enough importance is written there to
make me think that serious progress is on the way.

"The motivation for signing this document lies more in Moscow,
than in Yerevan, Baku and Stepanakert and has more to do with the
Russian-Georgian conflict than with Karabakh itself."

Aram Sarkisian, leader of the small opposition Democratic Party
of Armenia, said the document contained points that worked against
each other.

"On the one hand it records the vital importance of a settlement of
the conflict by political means, on the other hand [of settlement] on
the basis of principle of international law," he said. "In diplomacy
the concepts ‘political’ and ‘legal’ cannot work together at the
same time."

Former Armenian president and opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian
criticised the declaration on the grounds that it formally excluded
the Nagorny Karabakh Armenians from the peace process.

"In this way, the declaration conclusively buries the decision by
the Budapest summit of the OSCE in 1994 under which Nagorny Karabakh
was recognised as a full third party to the conflict," Ter-Petrosian
told the A1+ television company. "And that means that Karabakh will
not play any role in the process of further negotiations that will
determine its own fate."

In Nagorny Karabakh itself, officials welcomed the declaration, while
stressing their determination to play a role in the peace process.

Movses Hakopian, defence minister of the unrecognised Nagorny Karabakh
Republic, said, "Politicians have come to the conclusion that there
is no solution of the problem by military means."

David Babayan, head of the presidential information department, said
the document was a recognition of the new realities that had formed
after the August conflict in Georgia.

"The declaration is a positive event," said Babayan. "Its key aspect
is the readiness of the parties for a peaceful settlement of the
issues that exist through direct dialogue."

He said that although the Karabakh Armenian side was not mentioned
directly in the document, its first point referred to previous
documents, which did ensure that Nagorny Karabakh would be represented
in future negotiations.

Another analyst, David Karabekian, was less happy, saying that that
failure to mention Nagorny Karabakh as a party to the conflict and the
reference to the Madrid principles would not please the inhabitants
of Nagorny Karabakh.

Many in Karabakh are opposed to the current draft peace plan, as they
say it will require Armenians to give up the occupied territories
without sufficient security guarantees.

"The ‘big daddies’ who sign these documents don’t think about people,
who know from their own personal experience know what a danger bombs
and real war can present to the inhabitants of Karabakh," said Lilit
Tovmasian, a teacher and mother of two children.

"The most important thing for us is our security and this is not
guaranteed in the points of our declaration. There is no mention even
here of what people here feel – the people who really live here and
for whom a settlement is not just a signature on a document but a
matter of life and death."

Sabuhi Mamedli is a correspondent with Yeni Musavat newspaper in
Baku. Naira Melkumian is a freelance journalist in Yerevan. Karine
Ohanian is a journalist with Demo newspaper in Nagorny Karabakh.

"Pizza Di Roma" Workers Released

"PIZZA DI ROMA" WORKERS RELEASED

A1+
[08:55 pm] 06 November, 2008

Director of "Pizza di Roma" and waitress Anush Ghavalyan were released
from the courtroom a couple of hours ago. Judge of the Criminal
Court of Yerevan Eva Darbinyan ratified today the intermediation
of attorney Diana Grigoryan to release the defendants due to health
problems. Anush had been imprisoned since March 21 of this year and
is currently at home after eight months in jail.

Let us recall that Anush Ghavalyan was charged with maliciously hiding
large amounts of taxes (2nd part of article 205 of the Criminal Code)
and backing her director Gevorg Safaryan (article 38).

U.S. Welcomes Russia’s Initiative For Presidential Talks On Karabakh

U.S. WELCOMES RUSSIA’S INITIATIVE FOR PRESIDENTIAL TALKS ON KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.10.2008 13:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The U.S. welcomes Russia’s initiative for
presidential talks on the Nagorno Karabakh issue.

"We have been working on this issue for quite some time. I think a
lot of you have catalogued those efforts over the years, and working
through the OSCE and the Minsk Group. But I guess to bottom-line for
you, we’re pleased by this initiative that Moscow is undertaking. We
hope that the initiative succeeds. We are monitoring it very closely,"
said Sean McCormack, a spokesman for the Department of State.

Presidents of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan are reported to meet in
Moscow on November 2 to will discuss the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
settlement process

On October 31, Foreign Ministers of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan
are scheduled to meet in Moscow. On November 1, they will meet with
Co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. The outcomes of the meetings will
be briefed to the Presidents, who will meet for talks in the future.