Oskanian-Mamedyarov Meeting Takes Place In Strasbourg

OSKANIAN-MAMEDYAROV MEETING TAKES PLACE IN STRASBOURG

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 19 2006

STRASBOURG, MAY 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. RA Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian’s meeting with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mamedyarov on the issue of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement
took place in Strasbourg on May 18, with the presence of OSCE
Minsk Group Co-Chairmen Steven Mann, Yuri Merzlyakov and Bernard
Fassier. Then the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan
continued the negotiations with the Co-Chairmen in a separate
format. The Armenian and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers’ meeting was
aimed to prepare the visit envasiged to be paid late in May to the
region at the level of Deputy Ministers of the Foreign Ministries
of Minsk Group Co-Chair countries U.S., Russia and France. As Noyan
Tapan was informed by the RA Foreign Ministry’s Press and Information
Department, settlement principles and approaches put on the negotiation
table were discussed at the meeting. The Armenian side estimates the
meeting positive, in spite of the fact that there are still unsolved
and not agreed issues.

ANKARA: Restraint And Moderation, Anyone?

RESTRAINT AND MODERATION, ANYONE?
Nazlan Ertan

The New Anatolian, Turkey
May 22 2006

Last week was a difficult one, both at home and abroad. On the
international front, Turkey struggled with the Armenian genocide
revisionism bill, which, if it had passed, would have made denial of
the 1915 Armenian “genocide” a criminal offense in France.

On the domestic front, the tentative “national consensus,” on the
decline since November, suffered a serious setback at Kocatepe Mosque,
where Cabinet members were booed as they attended the funeral of a
Council of State judge assassinated by a gunman.

Armenian knot

When French Socialists wanted to introduce a new bill on the Armenian
genocide allegations, officials and civil groups alike in Turkey
were duly alarmed and got mobilized. Unlike the first such bill,
passed in 2001, which had no practical effect as it was limited to
a simple “recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide” by France, the
new law would enable anyone who denied the allegations to be fined
or imprisoned.

Given the highly organized nature of the Armenian lobby, the easy
passage of the first bill and, finally, the Turkish incapacity to
lobby effectively and moderately, there was very little doubt that
the second law would pass and erupt into a full-fledged crisis between
Turkey and France.

Then, both the Turkish government and civil groups did something that
surprised us all. Keeping public threats and insults to a minimum
(again something that contrasted deeply with the Turkish policy during
the first bill), the Turks started a steady flow of “persuasion tours”
to France, ranging from Parliament officials to government figures
to university academics. French intellectuals were mobilized in the
name of freedom of expression. And, of course, the economic stick
was also shown to France.

The first signal that these efforts were going somewhere came when
a commission of the French Parliament voted against the bill. A week
later, France shelved the critical vote. In the very lively debate that
the Turkish audience could watch live on news channel NTV, the speech
of French Foreign Minister Douste-Blazy was a notable act of balance:

“France is a loyal friend of Armenia — it was one of the first
countries to recognize its independence and since then, supported
the young republic with all its efforts. But France is also a friend
of Turkey, to which it was an inspiration during the foundation of
the republic. Since then, Turkey and France have enjoyed strong,
consistent ties. In the face of his double friendship… France must
continue to pursue a policy of peace and reconciliation.”

Was the decision a partial victory? Perhaps. As pointed out, the law
may always reappear on the agenda of the French National Assembly
although certain French sources, more optimistic than their Turkish
counterparts, think that the law, now buried, will not see the light
of day again.

But that would also depend on whether or not Turkey takes necessary
steps on its past and its relations with neighboring Armenia.

Who shot, what was killed?

The shooting attempt against five judges of the Second Chamber of the
Council of State has proved to be more than a police affair. Rather
than forge a unity against those who resort to violence, it has
sharpened the divide between the government and three key institutions
of the state which felt that they have become vulnerable due to
government policy — namely, the judiciary, the military and the
Board of Higher Education (YOK).

Those two groups, backed by remarks of the president calling for
secularism, made separate declarations which indicated all too
clearly that they found the government responsible for what has
happened. Particularly the Council of State indicated that it found
the government’s condemnation of the attack insufficient and declared
that the attack was partly encouraged by the government’s criticism
of a ruling of the chamber several months ago. The second chamber
had ruled in favor of a decision that prevented a teacher who wore
a headscarf on her way to the school from becoming principal.

The anger of the judiciary toward the government, demonstrated by the
cold reception given to the Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan at
the Council of State, spilled over to the streets and to the funeral
of a judge who died in the attack. While Prime Minister Erdogan did
not attend the ceremony, the Cabinet ministers who did were booed.

The angry public, which greeted with warmth the top brass, president
and veteran politicians such as Bulent Ecevit, shouted slogans such as
“the government is the assassin.”

While certain ministers simply downplayed the events, Erdogan, on his
way to Egypt, raged over the demonstrations. His anger also targeted
Chief of General Staff Gen. Hilmi Ozkok, who had said that he hoped the
Turkish sensitivity in protection of secularism should be consistent.

Escalation seems inevitable in the coming week. But there is something
that should not be missed in last week’s political landscape: Tens
of thousands who have marched to Anitkabir, Ataturk’s mausoleum,
were shouting slogans against the government.

Wasn’t the demonstrators precisely “the centrist voters” that the
AKP hoped to have in the next elections?

If…

There are certainly many things that can be said of Ecevit, both good
and bad. When the soft-spoken and hard-principled leader of the left
decided to go to early elections in 2002, most Turks were more than
relieved to see the ailing man bow out of politics.

But he was seen as a wise man, a model of honesty and principle —
just like the ideal man described in Rudyard Kipling’s poem “If,”
which Ecevit translated.

The firm defender of secularism lies in a coma — Turks mourn for him,
but also, perhaps, what he symbolized.

Interview of Vice Speaker of So. Ossetian Parliament Dzitsoity

Regnum, Russia
May 20 2006

Khaindrava usually gets unmasked himself: Interview of Vice Speaker
of South Ossetian Parliament Yuri Dzitsoity
Read it in Russian

REGNUM: Mr. Dzitsoity, when asked how Georgia will react to the South
Ossetian parliament’s declaration on the genocide of South Ossetians
in 1989-1992 and its political-legal assessment, Georgian State
Minister for Conflict Settlement Georgy Khaindrava said that he does
not know any such body as the parliament of South Ossetian in the
territory of Georgia. How would you comment on this statement?

I always say that one should not ask analysts to help to unmask
Khaindrava. One should just let him speak out. He usually gets
unmasked himself. And what do you expect from a man who was one of
the ideologists of the Georgian Fascism, a man who was one of the
first ardent supporters of Zviad Gamsakhurdia (first president of
Georgia, who started the Georgian-Ossetian conflict – REGNUM). Hence,
in terms of morality his hands are in blood up to the elbows.
Naturally, he looks at South Ossetia and does not see it point-blank.
But, on the other hand, he is right – there is actually no South
Ossetia in Georgia, there is no parliament of South Ossetia in
Georgia. South Ossetia is not Georgia – I absolutely agree with
Khaindrava here. South Ossetia is an independent state, consequently,
its parliament is the parliament of an independent state.

REGNUM: Why doesn’t Georgia react to such grave charges?

In fact, we did not expect Georgia to plead guilty of the genocide of
the Ossetian people. Georgia is not homogenous though: there has been
emotional reaction by Shevardnadze, who qualified the actions against
the Ossetian people as genocide. There has been prosecutor Razmadze,
who initiated a criminal action against Gamsakhurdia. One of the
charges was exactly the Ossetian genocide. That is, in Georgia too
there are sensible people. On the other hand, we don’t expect the
present Georgian authorities to give an objective assessment of what
happened. As I have already said many of the present-day Georgian
leaders were took part in those events, that is, in the genocide of
the Ossetian people. They can’t punish themselves, can they?

REGNUM: Do you expect any reaction from the international community?
For example, the head of the OSCE mission Roy Reeve just said that he
has given relevant documents to the OSCE president…

I thank him very much. In this light, I should note that not
everybody has recognized the Armenian Genocide yet. It took place 91
years ago, but neither Turkey nor many other states have officially
recognized it to date. The point is that we take the declaration on
the genocide and its political-legal assessment as a basis of our
relations with Georgia. Our position is that in the 20th century
Georgia committed two horrible genocides against the Ossetian people.
That’s why, when the international community urges us to go back to
Georgia, we say we can’t do that. All that happened is enough for the
Ossetian people to open its eyes and to see, mildly speaking, an
opponent in the Georgian authorities.

REGNUM: Do you see parallel between the genocides of Armenians and
Ossetians?

As a matter of principle, we can draw such a parallel. On the other
hand, there can’t be precise analogues in history. The situation was
different, the times were different, the scales are different. 1,000
people were annihilated in South Ossetia in the 90s: among them were
Russians and Georgians, but 98% of them were Ossetians. With the
total population of South Ossetia being 98,000, this is 1% and, with
Ossetians making up 68% of the total population, this is already 6%.

Paris Won’t Support Bill On Armenia

PARIS WON’T SUPPORT BILL ON ARMENIA

Gulf Times, Qatar
Published: Friday, 19 May, 2006, 01:01 PM Doha Time

PARIS: The French government said yesterday it would not support
a proposed bill to punish anyone denying Armenian genocide claims
because it would upset Turkey, the alleged perpetrator of the killings.

Turkish officials have warned France of “irreparable damage” to
bilateral ties if Paris passes the law, presented in parliament by
the opposition Socialists. Ankara recalled its ambassador to France
this month and a leading deputy there warned of a possible boycott
of French goods.

But without the support of the ruling UMP party, the bill is unlikely
to ever become law.

Turkey denies claims that 1.5mn Armenians perished in a genocide
committed by Ottoman forces during and immediately after World
War One. Around 400,000 people of Armenian descent live in France,
Europe’s largest Armenian diaspora.

“We cannot accept this proposed law,” Foreign Minister Philippe
Douste-Blazy told deputies during a debate on the bill.

“The Armenian cause is just and should be defended and respected,”
he said. “But the bill you have submitted today would, if passed,
be considered as an unfriendly gesture by a large majority of Turks,
whether you want this or not.

“That could have serious political consequences and weaken our
influence, not only in Turkey but in the whole region.”

Turkish media say the bill is an attempt by politicians to court the
Armenian vote as France gears up for presidential elections in 2007.

Turkey says the Armenians who died after World War One were victims
of partisan fighting that claimed even more Turkish lives as the
Ottoman Empire collapsed.

The bill suffered a second blow yesterday when deputies had to cut
short the debate for time reasons. The next time they can review it
under the procedure used for this debate is next November, they said.

Groups of Armenians and Turks demonstrated outside the National
Assembly as the debate was taking place.

EBRD To Issue Armenia’s Shen $5-$6 Mln Loan To Build Drywall Plant

EBRD TO ISSUE ARMENIA’S SHEN $5-$6 MLN LOAN TO BUILD DRYWALL PLANT

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS Business and Financial Newswire
May 19, 2006 Friday 2:14 PM MSK

The Yerevan-based Shen Concern, Armenia’s largest producer of
construction materials, plans to receive a $5-$6 million loan from the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), which owns a
blocking stake in the company, for the construction of a drywall plant.

This project will be considered at an EBRD shareholder’s meeting in
London at the end of June, Shen president Samvel Beglarian said.

The project would then be discussed at the Shen annual shareholders
meeting in Yerevan on July 9.

At present, drywall is not produced in Armenia and is imported from
Iran and partially from Russia. Armenia annually imports about 1
million-1.5 million square meters of drywall for a total of $5 million,
Shen said.

To set up production, Shen intends to begin developing a gypsum field
in Armenia. Beglarian expects the EBRD funds will be sufficient for
the development of the field and the construction of the plant.

Shen saw its sales grow a tentative 20%-25%, or by $300,000-$400,000,
in 2005, he said.

Shen Concern was set up in 1995. The EBRD has a 36% stake in the
concern, while the remaining shares are distributed among various
residents of Armenia.

New Wave Of Anti-Armenian Moods In Akhalkalak

NEW WAVE OF ANTI-ARMENIAN MOODS IN AKHALKALAK

AZG Armenian Daily
19/05/2006

Three days ago leaflets with anti-Armenian content signed “brigade of
Akhalkalak liberation” were disseminated in Akhalkalak. The leaflets
featuring half moon and star read: “The time of revenge for our
humiliation has come. Remember the 1915. Gevorgian has croaked;
Rstakian is the next,” A1+ reports referring to A-Info agency of
Javakhk.

Davit Rstakian mentioned in the leaflet is the co-chairman of Virq
Party. “If on occasion of the Russian base’s withdrawal Georgia’s
defense and national security minister states that he keeps the
situation under control, then he has to disclose those behind the
leaflets,” he said.

The next name mentioned in the leaflet is Gevorg Gevorgian who was
murdered in Tsalka this March.

Georgian law enforcers have done nothing so far to disclose the crime.

Suchlike leaflets were also disseminated last October.

Georgian national security service is also to take action. “Now we can
raise the issue of security of Javakhk Armenians at the international
structures,” said Khachatur Stepanian of the board of Samtskhe-Javakhk
Armenian NGOs.

Istanbul Court Postpones New Trial On Dink’s Case

ISTANBUL COURT POSTPONES NEW TRIAL ON DINK’S CASE

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 18 2006

ISTANBUL, MAY 18, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Istanbul court
started on May 16 the new trial on “Akos” newspaper editor Hrant Dink’s
case. As the “Turkish Daily News” informs, when Dink was to enter
the court hall, “traitor” statements were made from the hall. When a
brawl started among Dink’s supporters and those calling him “traitor”
and giving other qualifications, the judge decided to postpone the
trail. Hrant Dink is accused of making attempts to influence on the
judicial power as his newspaper published articles in which the law
considering “insulting Turkishness” as a crime is critized. To recap,
Dink was sentenced to 6-months imprisonement by the Istanbul Shishlu
court for “insulting Turkishness” as in one of his articles he called
on the Armenian people in Armenia and Diaspora not to poison its
blood by enmity towards Turks. The Court of Cassations of Ankara
re-affirmed recently the punishment defined for Dink and announced
invalid the decision on postponing the punishment.

Post-Soviet States, China Set To Hold Joint Military Exercises

POST-SOVIET STATES, CHINA SET TO HOLD JOINT MILITARY EXERCISES

RIA Novosti
18/05/2006 15:03

MOSCOW, May 18 (RIA Novosti) – Two regional security organizations
comprising post-Soviet nations and China are planning joint military
exercises, the chief of Russia’s general staff said Thursday.

“We are currently discussing a joint exercise under the aegis of
the SCO [Shanghai Cooperation Organization],” Yury Baluyevsky said,
adding that the date of the exercise, which would also involve troops
from Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) nations, had yet
to be decided.

Baluyevsky said the exercises would practice joint counteraction
against terrorist threats.

The chiefs of the CSTO nations’ general staffs held a meeting in Moscow
Thursday to discuss ways to make the collective security system more
effective, including by improving control of the Collective Rapid
Reaction Force, which currently numbers 1,500 military personnel
deployed in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which comprises the former
Soviet republics in Central Asia – Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan – as well as Russia and China, was created in 2001 to
deal with security issues, including border conflicts, terrorism,
and militant Islam.

These countries, without China, also form the CSTO, which also
includes Belarus and Armenia. The CSTO is seen by some experts as a
counterbalance to NATO’s eastward expansion.

Unlike the CSTO, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization does not have in
its charter a provision on collective defense of its member by others
in the event of an outside attack. It was created to counter attacks
by illegal armed groups if they cross the border of a member-country,
and its military activities are rather limited, although two of its
members, Russia and China, held major war games last fall.

French Lawmakers Postpone Sensitive Debate On Armenian Killings

FRENCH LAWMAKERS POSTPONE SENSITIVE DEBATE ON ARMENIAN KILLINGS

AP Worldstream
May 18, 2006

French lawmakers bowed to pressure from Turkey and postponed debate
Thursday on a proposal that would make it a crime to deny that the
killings of Armenians during World War I constituted genocide.

The National Assembly put off indefinitely debate on a proposal by
the opposition Socialists that would recognize the killings of up to
1.5 million Armenians from 1915 to 1919 as genocide.

Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy, speaking earlier, told
lawmakers that the proposal would be seen as “an unfriendly gesture
by the vast majority of Turkish people.”

“We cannot accept this bill,” Douste-Blazy said. “It would have serious
political consequences, (and) weaken our influence not only in Turkey
itself _ but also beyond the region.”

As lawmakers appeared to hesitate about the debate, dozens of members
of Armenian groups yelled “The vote! The vote!” and pounded their
fists for five minutes from a balcony over the Assembly floor.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told French corporate
leaders in a private meeting recently that the bill would damage
bilateral ties.

Armenia accuses Turkey of massacring Armenians during World War I,
when Armenia was under the Ottoman Empire. Turkey says Armenians were
killed in civil unrest during the collapse of the empire.

Under the proposal, people who contest an Armenian genocide would risk
up to a year in prison and face fines of up to A45,000 (US$57,555).

Tension between Armenians and Turks in France increased last month,
when a memorial in the southeast city of Lyon commemorating Armenian
genocide was desecrated.

Turkey has made it government policy to fight genocide assertions
with diplomatic and economic sanctions if necessary. That stance has
come under pressure with Turkey’s campaign to join the European Union.

In 2001, Turkey, which has no diplomatic ties with Armenia, canceled
millions of dollars (euros) worth of defense deals with French
companies after a law recognizing the Armenian killings as genocide
was passed.

Turkey also sent a parliamentary delegation to Paris while Turkish
chambers of commerce sent letters to French counterparts warning of
a boycott.

France : Seance Parlementaire Houleuse Sur Le Genocide Armenien

FRANCE : SEANCE PARLEMENTAIRE HOULEUSE SUR LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN

Euronews.net, France
May 18 2006

La question du genocide armenien continue de provoquer des remous
en France. Les services de securite avaient ete renforces ce jeudi
autour de l’Assemblee nationale a Paris pour eviter des heurts entre
pro-Armeniens et pro-Turcs. Les deputes devaient en effet examiner
une proposition de loi socialiste visant a sanctionner toute negation
du genocide armenien. Mais le debat a ete très vite suspendu par le
president de l’Assemblee. Plusieurs dizaines de personnes ont proteste
dans les tribunes.

La poursuite du debat ne devrait pas intervenir avant le mois de
novembre. Le gouvernement francais, par la voix de son ministre des
Affaires etrangères, a dit aujourd’hui son opposition au projet de
loi. Il risque en effet de provoquer la fureur du gouvernement turc
dirige par Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Ankara a d’ailleurs encourage les
deputes francais a abandonner pour de bon l’examen du texte. Le 18
mars dernier, plusieurs milliers de membres de la communaute turque
ont defile dans les rues de Lyon pour protester contre un memorial
du genocide armenien qui a ete construit dans la ville. Les Armeniens
estiment qu’1,5 million des leurs ont peri entre 1915 et 1917.

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