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  • Tecali Process

    TECALI PROCESS

    Vestnik Kavkaza
    June 21 2012
    Russia

    It is hard to attend the meetings of the Caucasus Center for
    Peacekeeping Initiatives, even the ones organized in Tecali, a Georgian
    village easily reachable from Azerbaijan and Armenia. Yerevan reporters
    and journalists arrived through Noemberyan where they had spent the
    night. Taxi drivers ditched them and refused to take to Georgia.

    Human rights activist Georgy Vanyan, head of the Armenian Center,
    said that it is the first time such thing has happened. He has
    failed to host the Azerbaijani film festival in Armenia for over two
    years. Just as the taxi drivers, the building owners are negotiating
    rent by Vanyan and then quit agreements after "pressure from above".

    A solution has been found. The border can be crossed on foot and the
    Tecali Village can be reached using local cars. Others were taken by
    the Noemberyan taxi drivers and drivers from nearby villages.

    Tecali was reached late. Dozens of border villagers of Kazakh, Ganja,
    Baku, Tbilisi and Marneuli were settled near Borchaly (the old name
    of the Kvemo-Kartli Region, mainly inhabited by Azerbaijanis).

    "Violation of the cease-fire regime on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border:
    is public interference real?" was the topic for public discussions.

    Speeches were made by:

    -Ali Abbasov, PhD for Philosophy, head of a section of the Institute
    for Philosophy and Rights of the Azerbaijani AS;

    -Magerram Joyshoglu from the Public Association of Resources of Kazakh
    Regional Development;

    - Natig Javadly, a journalist of the Bizim Yol paper (New Way);

    - Louisa Pogosyan, coordinator of programs of the Caucasus Center
    for Peacekeeping Initiatives;

    - Yuri Manvelyan, co-editor of Epress.am;

    - Samvel Israelyan, an expert and physicist.

    There were no intense debates. Locals from Armenian and Azerbaijani
    border villages had common statements, because terms "violation of
    the cease-fire regime", "diversion", "losses", "adequate reaction",
    "symmetric response" are a daily threat and the deaths of relatives
    and friends means an inability to plant and collect harvest, wake up
    after every rustle and live in a mist with hopes for migration.

    Another benefit of the meeting is that none of the speakers tried to
    act as a guide of governmental policy, nor tried to speak on behalf
    of presidents, ministers or propagandists. Speeches were primarily
    made for their own side, not their opponents. The recent murders
    demonstrate the price of the atmosphere of hatred and gave a picture
    of distance between people spilling blood and the ones giving orders.

    Such atmosphere ruled out outcries of analysts, theorists and
    journalists serving governmental interests. They were listening and
    noting the talks, but made no declarations of "self-identification",
    "territorial unity" and "historic right", the way Kazakhs and
    Voskepartsses did in response to verbal threats and online intolerance
    at the border.

    As a result, the topic of "Is public interference real?" turned into
    a question of whether people in the region could be human rights
    activists to protect human rights, be journalists without serving
    the government, to live without fear.

    The majority of attendants spoke for public interference. Moreover,
    preliminary agreements on formation of a rapid reaction group were
    made. The group will prevent incidents on the border and inspect the
    situation at the border. Georgia may join the group if necessary.

    Doctors, taxi drivers, farmers and Aqsaqals could make the first
    steps by keeping in touch with each other, especially with account
    of the fact that the initiatives are open for everyone to join.

    The Georgraphic center of the region will host the first Tecali South
    Caucasus Cinema Festival.

    Public talks were organized by the Tecali Association (Georgia),
    the Center for Regional Cooperation and Development of Communities
    (Azerbaijan), Caucasus Center for Peacekeeping Initiatives (Armenia)
    with support of the US Democracy Assistance Fund.

    The Network of Independent Journalists - Epress.am

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