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Historic Trip To Armenia Focuses On Mediation

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  • Historic Trip To Armenia Focuses On Mediation

    HISTORIC TRIP TO ARMENIA FOCUSES ON MEDIATION

    Swissinfo, Switzerland
    June 12 2006

    Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey has signed an agreement on double
    taxation during a visit to Armenia - the first visit ever by a Swiss
    cabinet minister.

    Switzerland also offered to act as a mediator in the long-running
    conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed region
    of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Calmy-Rey also laid a wreath at a memorial for the victims of the
    massacre by troops of the former Ottoman Empire 90 years ago.

    Calmy-Rey held talks with her Armenian counterpart, Vardan Oskanyan,
    in the capital Yerevan on Monday. The discussions focused on bilateral
    relations and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, according to the Swiss
    foreign ministry.

    Switzerland offered to act as a mediator in a bid to broker a peace
    agreement. Earlier this year Calmy-Rey also visited neighbouring
    Azerbaijan.

    However, Calmy-Rey said neither of the two countries in the southern
    Caucasus region had requested further steps by Switzerland.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war over the territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh between 1988 and 1994, killing tens of thousands of
    people and forcing hundreds of thousands out of their homes.

    Massacre

    Calmy-Rey said she also discussed the killing of up to 1.5 million
    ethnic Armenians by troops of the former Ottoman Empire between 1915
    and 1919.

    She laid a wreath at the monument for the victims of massacre.

    "I wanted to express my sympathy with the people," she said. She played
    down a possible worsening of relations with Turkey over the issue.

    The Swiss government does not recognise the killings and deportations
    as genocide, but one chamber of the Swiss parliament voted in 2003
    to follow the United Nations and the European parliament in doing so.

    Calmy-Rey also signed an agreement on double taxation in Yerevan in
    an effort to spur closer economic relations between Switzerland and
    Armenia. Switzerland has been providing development to Yerevan since
    a powerful earthquake hit northern Armenia in 1988.

    Israel

    Calmy-Rey had arrived in Armenia after a brief visit to Israel at
    the weekend to discuss a planned conference of the Red Cross and Red
    Crescent Societies in Geneva later this month.

    The conference is expected to approve the introduction of a third
    humanitarian emblem - a red crystal - to accommodate Israel's Red
    Star of David organisation.

    The humanitarian agencies of Israel and the Palestinian Authorities
    agreed on the symbol at a conference in Geneva last November.

    Switzerland is the depositary state of the Geneva Conventions, a set
    of regulations to protect civilians in times of conflict.

    The Swiss foreign minister said she also criticised the Israeli army
    for firing artillery at targets in densely populated areas in the
    Gaza Strip. At least seven were killed in the attack on Friday.

    Calmy-Rey added that the Israeli foreign minister, Zipi Livni, had
    apologised for the incident and promised to launch an investigation.
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