Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Yerevan School Kicks Off 'Days Of Azerbaijan'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Yerevan School Kicks Off 'Days Of Azerbaijan'

    YEREVAN SCHOOL KICKS OFF 'DAYS OF AZERBAIJAN'
    By Astghik Bedevian

    Radio LIberty, Czech Rep.
    Dec 17 2007

    A public school in Yerevan began on Monday a four-day series of events
    designed to promote Armenian-Azerbaijani reconciliation by enabling
    its students and teachers to hold discussions with visiting public
    figures from Azerbaijan.

    The Days of Azerbaijan at the Mkhitar Sebastatsi Educational Complex
    will also feature presentations by the visiting Azerbaijanis and their
    Armenian partners as well as an arts exhibition and the screening
    of a documentary film on the conflict between the two South Caucasus
    nations. The events are sponsored by the British Embassy in Armenia
    and the Armenian Center for Peace Initiatives, a non-governmental
    organization.

    The Azerbaijani delegation that arrived in Yerevan on the occasion
    includes three human rights campaigners, a journalist, a writer and
    an NGO activist.

    "This is just an attempt to give our students and teachers a better
    idea of our neighbors and to discuss our outstanding problems in the
    process," Ashot Bleyan, the Mkhitar Sebastatsi director, told RFE/RL.

    He expressed hope that such initiatives will make Armenian society
    "more tolerant."

    A former education minister and prominent critic of the
    current Armenian government, Bleyan has long been championing
    Armenian-Azerbaijani dialogue. He went as far as to pay a high-profile
    visit to Baku in 1992 at the height of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh. The
    trip was condemned as high treason by Armenian nationalist groups
    who continue to accuse Bleyan of favoring Karabakh's "sellout."

    Seymur Bayjan, an Azerbaijani writer who will lecture Mkhitar
    Sebastatsi students on his country's contemporary literature on
    Tuesday, complained that despite occasional contacts between small
    groups of Armenians and Azerbaijanis the two nations as a whole are
    still not prepared for peace. "A single cannon shell can reverse all
    these peace initiatives," he told RFE/RL.

    The Armenian Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, welcomed the Mkhitar
    Sebastatsi initiative, saying that it will have a positive impact on
    the long-running Karabakh peace talks. "We believe that this initiative
    is vivid proof of our commitment to peace and dialogue," said the
    ministry spokesman, Vladimir Karapetian. "Such events ... should have
    a continuation in all the countries included in the program."

    It was an apparent reference to the fact the holding of similar
    Armenian-Azerbaijani contacts in Baku has been practically impossible
    in recent years due to a government policy that considers the very
    presence of Armenian citizens on Azerbaijani soil an affront to
    Azerbaijan's honor and territorial integrity.
Working...
X