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  • ASBAREZ Online [06-09-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    06/09/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Trial of Armenian Citizen Charged with Spying for Azerbaijan Underway
    2) Association Withdraws Award to US Envoy
    3) Ex-Minsk Group Official Takes Verbal Beating in Baku

    1) Trial of Armenian Citizen Charged with Spying for Azerbaijan Underway

    YEREVAN (Arminfo)--The trial of an Armenian citizen charged with spying for
    Azerbaijan has begun in Yerevan. Andrey Maziyev is charged with high treason
    through espionage, plotting a terrorist act, and plotting the murder of a
    state
    political figure. Maziyev worked as en engineer at Zvartnots airport at the
    time of his arrest. He is Russian by nationality.
    In October 1999, Maziyev was enlisted by Azeri special services while in that
    country.
    On the whole, he met with representatives of Azerbaijan's special services 17
    times and received approximately $2.5 thousand for his services.
    He allegedly collected and disseminated information about domestic political
    and economic developments in Armenia, information on Armenia's military,
    defense, and armed forces, as well as Mountainous Karabagh Republic.
    In the autumn of 2000, Maziyev was instructed to photograph President
    Kocharian's plane landing at the airport, helicopters protecting the territory
    of the airport, and the president and bodyguards passing by the building where
    Maziyev lives. He also took photos of the president in the hangar and building
    of the airport. He handed over the photos to the special services and
    recommended locations for snipers.
    The special services were also interested in whether Maziyev had contacts
    with
    relatives of Nairi Hunanyan who spearheaded the 1999 shooting in the Armenian
    Parliament, killing the prime minister, parliamentary speaker, and six other
    officials.
    Maziyev pleaded guilty to the charges at Thursday's trial that included the
    interrogation of seven witnesses. The trial is chaired by the judge Tigran
    Petrosyan. The prosecution is represented by Prosecutor General Aghvan
    Hovsepyan and Prosecutor Aram Amirzadyan. The trial will continue on June 13.
    He has two previous convictions for hooliganism (1994 and 1999).


    2) Association Withdraws Award to US Envoy

    Ambassador Was to Be Honored for Dissent

    By Glenn Kessler

    (Washington Post)--The American Foreign Service Association recently
    announced
    that John M. Evans, the US ambassador to Armenia, was to receive a prestigious
    award for "constructive dissent" for characterizing as genocide the deaths of
    1.5 million Armenians in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire in 1915. His
    comments stirred such a diplomatic tempest that Evans not only had to retract
    his remarks, but also had to later clarify his retraction.
    Earlier this week, however, the selection committee met again and decided to
    withdraw the honor, known as the Christian A. Herter Award. They decided
    not to
    offer any award in the category, reserved for a senior foreign service
    officer.
    Other awards are issued for officers at lower levels.
    The timing of the association's decision appeared curious, given it came just
    before Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrived in Washington for a
    meeting with President Bush to bolster strained US-Turkish relations. John W.
    Limbert, president of the association, said that no one at the organization
    can
    remember an award being withdrawn after it had been announced.
    "It is not something we do easily," he said.
    The award is intended to foster creative thinking and intellectual courage
    within the State Department bureaucracy, and the secretary of state usually
    attends the award ceremony. One of last year's awards, for instance, went to a
    mid-level foreign service officer who sent a cable challenging the
    administration's policy in Iraq. "Dissent is supposed to be controversial,"
    Limbert said.
    Speaking to an Armenian group in California, Evans referred to the "Armenian
    genocide" and said that the US government owes "you, our fellow citizens, a
    more frank and honest way of discussing the problem." He added that "there is
    no doubt in my mind what happened" and it was "unbecoming of us, as Americans,
    to play word games here."
    Armenian groups hailed his comment, noting Evans was the first US official
    since President Ronald Reagan in 1981 to refer to the Armenian deaths as
    genocide. But the comments infuriated Turkey. Evans issued a statement saying
    US policy, in which the United States "acknowledges the tragedy" and
    encourages
    "scholarly, civil society and diplomatic discussion" of the event, had not
    changed.
    Evans said he used the term "genocide" in "my personal capacity" during
    "informal meetings" and "this was inappropriate." After more complaints from
    Turkey, Evans corrected the statement a day later and removed a reference to
    genocide, instead calling it "the Armenian tragedy."
    Limbert said the committee, made up of current and former State Department
    officials, concluded that the award to Evans did not meet the selection
    criteria. He declined to comment further, saying State Department officials
    would have to explain their concerns.
    L. Bruce Laingen, who chaired the selection committee, said "very serious
    people from the State Department in particular" expressed concern about the
    award to Evans. But he said they did not raise political issues. Instead, he
    said, they focused on the fact that the award criteria specifically says the
    actions must be taken while "working in the system"; Evans made his
    comments in
    speeches.
    "Dissent has to be within the system," Laingen said. He said the committee
    did
    not focus on that fact until it was reminded by the State Department.
    But when the committee decided to withdraw the award, it was faced with a
    dilemma. The committee had received only two nominations, and it had already
    concluded the other nominee did not meet the criteria. So no award could be
    offered.
    Laingen said the committee generally receives few examples of dissent at
    senior levels of the agency. "That is regrettable," he said. "It does not
    reflect well on the foreign service broadly at that level for dissent within
    the system."


    3) Ex-Minsk Group Official Takes Verbal Beating in Baku

    BAKU (PanARMENIAN.Net)--The former Russian Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group
    Vladimir Kazimirov, was verbally accosted by the chairman and members of the
    Azeri Karabagh Liberation Organization (KLO), who told Kazimirov to either
    recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan or get out of the country.
    Kazimirov was attending a seminar on the "Strategic Importance of
    Azerbaijan."
    The event, organized the British LINKS Organization and the Yesterday
    Civilization NGO, was being held at the International Press Center in Baku.
    In his address on the Mountainous Karabagh settlement, Kazimirov recommended
    strengthening the cease fire agreement in the region and promoted
    reconciliation as opposed to the "self-deception," practiced by both the
    Armenians and Azeris.
    Though organizers tried to quell the KLO members, they shouted that he leave
    Azerbaijan instead of supporting Armenians.
    Azeri President Aliyev's Chief of Staff Novruz Mamedov's words to Kazimirov
    were equally harsh. "All those who were Co-chairs, [of the OSCE Minsk Group]
    along with you, have forgotten the issue and have personal interests. You,
    again have departed from the issue--either due to too much love for Armenia or
    some other reason. Every time, I just get the feeling you are very close to
    Armenians morally and politically because of personal interests."


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