ANKARA: Baykal okayed Erdogan’s proposal to Kocharian

Turkish Press
April 28 2005

Baykal Okayed Erdogan’s Proposal To Kocharian

ANTALYA – Deniz Baykal, the leader of the main opposition Republican
People’s Party (CHP), qualified the proposal made by Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Armenian President Robert Kocharian
(to form a joint committee comprised of historians of the two
countries to examine the archives) as positive.

Baykal told A.A correspondent, ”this proposal is the common proposal
of CHP and the government. And, I think some developments may occur
in coming days.”

”We are ready to open our archives, and we are not evading from the
realities of the past. We want this topic be researched,” said
Baykal.

Baykal added that Turkish citizens living in Europe should be
informed, and take action against the initiatives in these countries
aiming at recognizing the so-called Armenian genocide allegations.

Gifts that shine

Rockingham News, NH
April 29 2005

Gifts that shine

By Nancy Shuffleton
rockinghamnews@seacoastonline
Complete Business Index

PLAISTOW – Rafik Papalian didn’t want to be a jeweler when he was 9
years old and learning the trade by helping his father repair jewelry
in the basement of the Tehran, Iran, home where the Armenian
immigrant family had settled.
Fast forward 35 years through some dogged determination and
professional detours, and Papalian, a proud American citizen since
1983, is an example of the American dream as owner-operator of
Papalian’s Jewelry in Plaistow.

Papalian’s is a self-described full-service jeweler whose products
include diamond engagement rings; wedding rings; diamond earrings and
tennis bracelets; mother’s rings; men’s jewelry; fine gold jewelry;
and precious and semi-precious stone jewelry. One of his specialties
is custom jewelry and he can even create a piece from a photograph.
He also sells children’s jewelry, anniversary gifts and gifts
imported from Italy, as well as selling and repairing watches.

A certified gemologist, Papalian also does on-site jewelry repairs
and appraisals for estates and insurance. He can reset stones in new
or old rings, size rings and do engraving. Papalian also buys
jewelry, such as estate pieces, and works with customers who want to
trade in jewelry to upgrade. He either melts the pieces down and
remakes them into other pieces or sells them to customers or other
dealers.

Papalian estimates that about 50 percent of his business is in
engagement and wedding rings – many to professional athletes, with
about 20 percent in gifts, 20 percent in repairs, and 10 percent in
watch sales.

Papalian said that he works with manufacturers in New York City on
his custom pieces. He said that he has 4,000 to 5,000 jewelry molds
that he has designed, assigned an identification number, and placed
with New York manufacturers. He tweaks the various designs, adding or
subtracting details or stones, and then orders them. He usually
inserts the stones himself unless he feels another expert can do it
better.

For his diamond business, Papalian works with one factory in Israel
that he has worked with for 22 years. He said he makes “sure that
they all come with papers,” adding that 80 percent “could be
certified” and he “knows the cutters and where they come from.”

Papalian said he is proud that he has loyal, long-time customers who
he knows by name and that he is known for his service and his
honesty. He advises people shopping for jewelry to “make sure the
person behind the counter has knowledge … You are buying my
expertise at my store … Tell me what you want and I’ll go find it.”

The 1,250 square-foot shop includes a showroom in front, with a
workshop and offices in the back, all protected by an alarm system.

The shop is run by Papalian and three part-time employees, with some
help from his children around the Christmas holidays. Papalian said
he works in the shop about 40 hours a week, including specific
appointments, and balances the jewelry shop business with his family
and his growing real estate development success.

Papalian’s biography is the stuff of movies. He has come a long way
since he left his family in Iran, lived in Bombay, India, and London,
and entered the United States with an Iranian student visa and
backpack on July 2, 1977, at the age of 17. He recalls warmly the
older customs worker who processed him and asked where his baggage
was. Speaking very little English, Papalian answered nervously that
all he had was his backpack. The agent shook his hand and said,
“Welcome to the United States.”

He managed to complete high school in Haverhill, Mass., by paying his
tuition through pizza shop jobs and worked his way to an electrical
engineering degree from Lowell University. Several years later, an
uncle moved to California from Armenia to start a jewelry business.
Papalian moved there with his future wife to help. They married,
started their family of four children, and moved back to New
Hampshire four years later.

He opened a jewelry store in Haverhill but closed when it was robbed
several days later. He opened a variety store in Plaistow and started
doing jewelry repairs on the side. Eventually he rented the present
store and “we’ve had nothing but success since then.” Papalian said
that he opened in a “bad economy,” but that doesn’t “stop people who
buy jewelry … When we have 6 percent unemployment, that means 94
percent are working. I keep my expenses at a level where I’m
comfortable. I control my budget.”

Papalian said that the United States “is a wonderful country to come
to. I am first generation. I thank the country for the great
experience I have had. There have been some rocky roads, but I’m here
and I’m proud of what I’ve done.”

Armenian police detain 13 opposition members over Sevan rally

Armenian police detain 13 opposition members over Sevan rally

Regnum, Moscow
29 Apr 05

“Without any notification the Armenian law-enforcement bodies have
detained and are currently questioning 13 members of the opposition
New Times Party, which is not represented in parliament. In parallel
with questioning, the houses of the party activists are being searched
for illegal possession of weapons,” Edik Grigoryan, the political
secretary of the party, has told Regnum news agency.

Disturbances occurred in the town of Sevan in the course of a rally
staged by the New Times Party on 20 April 2005. As a result, a member
of the party, Garegin Petrosyan, was rushed to hospital with a bullet
wound in his head. A number of political parties of Armenia, including
those from the ruling coalition, have made statements condemning the
incident.

The party leader, Aram Karapetyan, and his deputy Aleksandr Minasyan
were questioned in the prosecutor’s office of Sevan at around 1200
[0700 gmt] today, Grigoryan said. He himself was questioned at night.

“The police purposefully try to discredit the rallies staged by the
party,” Grigoryan said. At the same time, he said that the party has
no grudges against the Sevan police “because they are only fulfilling
orders”. Grigoryan also said that only one person from the side which
shot during the meeting (the person who shot has not yet been
identified) has been questioned. “We are the ones who were shot at,
but they are searching for weapons among members of the party,” the
secretary of the New Times Party said.

Turkei und Armenien kommen sich neher

, 1

Die Tageszeitung 28.4.2005
Türkei und Armenien kommen sich näher

Armeniens Präsident spricht sich für Historikerkommission aus. Aber
erst nach Aufnahme diplomatischer BeziehungenISTANBUL taz In die seit
1994 eingefrorenen türkisch-armenischen Beziehungen kommt neue
Bewegung. Mit der Forderung nach Wiederaufnahme der diplomatischen
Beziehungen antwortete Armeniens Präsident Robert Kotscharijan in
einem am Dienstag veröffentlichten Brief auf eine Aufforderung des
türkischen Premiers Tayyip Erdogan, eine gemeinsame zwischenstaatliche
Kommission zur Untersuchung der Massaker an der armenischen
Bevölkerung des Osmanischen Reiches bilden. “Lassen sie uns normale
Beziehungen aufnehmen, dann können wir uns auch gemeinsam der
Untersuchung der Vergangenheit widmen”, schrieb Kotscharijan. Ohne an
die Gegenwart und die Zukunft zu denken, könne man sich auch nicht
gemeinsam der Vergangenheit zuwenden.

Erdogan hatte seinen Vorschlag bei einer Debatte über die Massaker an
den Armeniern des Osmanischen Reiches gemacht, während der Politiker
aller türkischen Parteien erneut bestritten, dass die damaligen
Ereignisse den Charakter eines Völkermordes hatten. “Forschen wir in
den Archiven beider Seiten gemeinsam nach der Wahrheit”, hatte Erdogan
Armeniens Regierung aufgefordert.

Armenien hat ein solches Ansinnen bislang immer mit dem Argument
abgelehnt, die Geschichte sei erforscht und der Völkermord historisch
nicht zu bestreiten. Gespräche darüber setzten deshalb zunächst ein
Schuldeingeständnis der türkischen Seite voraus. Darauf hat
Kotscharijan jetzt verzichtet.

Die Türkei hat Armenien nach seiner Unabhängigkeitserklärung 1991 zwar
schnell anerkannt, die Grenze aber geschlossen, als Armenien in den
Bürgerkrieg in Berg-Karabach eingriff. Bislang hat die Türkei für die
Aufnahme diplomatischer Beziehungen und die Öffnung der Grenze zur
Bedingung gemacht, dass die armenischen Truppen die besetzten
aserischen Gebiete räumen und den Status quo ante in Berg-Karabach,
das völkerrechtlich zu Aserbaidschan gehört, wiederherstellen.

In einer ersten Reaktion lehnte Erdogan gestern die Aufnahme von
diplomatischen Beziehungen ab. Erst müsse die Vergangenheit geklärt
werden sagte er vor Journalisten.

Nach Informationen der türkischen Presse finden bereits vertrauliche
Gespräche zwischen den Außenministerien statt, wie Fortschritte in den
Beziehungen erzielt werden können. Als Zeichen guten Willens hat die
Türkei unlängst eine zweite direkte Flugverbindung nach Eriwan eröffnet
und akzeptiert 40.000 Armenier, die in der Türkei arbeiten. Gegenüber
ausländischen Pressevertretern wollte Außenminister Gül seine
vertraulichen Gespräche mit seinem armenischen Partner Oskanijan nicht
kommentieren. Beide Seiten seien aber an einer Normalisierung
interessiert. JÜRGEN GOTTSCHLICH

meinung und diskussion SEITE 11
taz Nr. 7651 vom 28.4.2005, Seite 10, 93 Zeilen (TAZ-Bericht), JÜRGEN
GOTTSCHLICH

http://www.taz.de/pt/2005/04/28/a0121.nf/text.ges

Tbilisi: PM: Privatization of Trunk Gas Pipeline Ruled Out

Civil Georgia, Georgia
April 26 2005

PM: Privatization of Trunk Gas Pipeline Ruled Out

In an interview with Russian news agency Interfax on April 25
Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli said, that the Georgian
authorities made `a pragmatic’ decision to rehabilitate the gas
pipeline system of the country instead of its privatization.

`This is a final decision,’ Nogaideli stated.

`We are following our own interests and in this particular case, our
economic interests. Previously, we had particular problems with
attraction of funds for rehabilitation, but very soon we will receive
USD 40 million from the U.S. program [referring to the Millennium
Challenge Account],’ the Georgian PM said.

Russian energy giant Gazprom was interested in purchasing trunk
pipeline. Georgian leadership’s statements made in February over
possible privatization of gas pipeline system to the Russian
state-controlled Gazprom triggered concerns of not only Georgian
opposition, but also of the United States.

Zurab Nogaideli said that Georgia needs these pipelines’
rehabilitation in order to ensure Russian gas supply to both Georgia
and Armenia via Georgia. `Hence, we will profit by transiting gas
through the pipeline,’ Nogaideli said, adding that Georgia will
receive 10% of transited gas as a transit fee.

`We will not create any problems to Russian gas transit to Armenia,’
he said.

The Georgian Prime Minister stressed that Georgia is also interested
in alternative ways of gas supplies. `Frankly speaking, if the gas
from [U.S.-backed] Shah-Deniz [Azerbaijan] is cheaper than the
Russian gas, we will buy gas from them, or vice versa. This is a
clear and pragmatic approach,’ Nogaideli added.

90th Anniversary Commemorated at Embassy of Armenia

April 25, 2005
PRESS RELEASE
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia
2225 R Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20008
Tel: 202-319-1976, x. 348; Fax: 202-319-2982
Email: [email protected] ;Web:

90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide Commemorated at the Embassy of
Armenia

To honor the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian Embassy
in Washington, DC hosted a commemoration at the Embassy khatchkar memorial
on April 22, 2005. Over 200 Armenian Americans and friends of Armenia,
representing Armenian- American political and cultural organizations and
individual members of the community laid flowers and wreaths at the
khatchkar on the Embassy premises.

Ambassador of Armenia to the U.S. Tatoul Markarian noted in his address that
the sad and tragic occasion of the Genocide anniversary is also a unifying
factor, bringing together all Armenians, be it in Armenia, Artsakh, or
Diaspora, who thus honor the one and half a million Armenians who perished
in 1915-1923. Ambassador Markarian also mentioned that the decades-long
efforts for recognition of the Armenian Genocide are now significantly
reinforced by the independent Armenian statehood.

Following address by Ambassador Markarian, a joint prayer was read by the
Rev. Fathers Vertanes Kalayjian and Sargis Aktavoukian, pastors of St. Mary’s
and Soorp Khatch Armenian Apostolic Churches in Washington, DC,
respectively.

www.armeniaemb.org

Armenia ready to normalize relations with Turkey – Kocharian

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
April 24, 2005 Sunday

Armenia ready to normalize relations with Turkey-president

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

Armenia is ready even now to establish normal relations with Turkey,
said republican President Robert Kocharyan in his address on the
occasion of the 90th anniversary of the 1915 genocide of Armenians in
the Ottoman Empire.

“A crime had been committed, and it had no analogues in the history
of Armenian people and mankind and even had no name,” says the
address, circulated by the presidential press service. “We lost
million-strong victims as well as a huge waste of cultural, spiritual
and material heritage,” the Armenian president emphasized.

“The year 1915 became a water-divide in destinies of all parts of the
Armenian people. It drastically changed and distorted the normal way
of their development,” Kocharyan noted. The heavy consequences of the
genocide are felt up to this time in the life of both people of
Armenia and the Armenian diaspora, he added.

In the president’s opinion, the international recognition and
condemnation of Armenians’ genocide is “a problem which concerns not
only Armenia: it should be regarded now in the context of regional
and international policies”. Turkey’s negative stand on recognition
of the genocide “provokes puzzlement not only among us, but among the
international community as well,” the president stated.

Thousands of people are streaming on Sunday to the memorial in
Yerevan on the Tsitsernakaberd Hill, piled up in memory of genocide
victims. Representatives of political parties, the general public and
the diaspora lay flowers at the Eternal Flames.

The head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Garegin II,
performed an office for the dead at the Eternal Flames. In the
evening, the Supreme Patriarch will conduct an ecumenical ceremony of
memory at Yerevan’s St. George the Illuminator Cathedral. It will be
attended by representatives of the Russian Orthodox, Assyrian
Orthodox, Georgian Orthodox, Romanian Orthodox, Greek Orthodox,
Anglican churches and the European Conference of Churches.
Delegations of dozens of countries stay in Yerevan. Russia is
represented by vice-speaker of the Russian State Duma lower house
Georgy Boos.

A statement by president of the World Armenian Congress Ara Abramyan
calls for a sober political appraisal of the situation on
international recognition of Turkey’s responsibility for the genocide
of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, taking into account present-day
realities.

“The genocide of Armenians continues to be a pressing political as
well as international and legal problem. That is why it reached again
the level of world politics,” the statement says. “This date prompts
us to make a sober political appraisal of the situation on
international recognition of Turkey’s responsibility, taking into
account realities of the present-day world.”

In Abramyan’s opinion, recognition of this responsibility should take
place “on the grounds of international law and with assistance from
peaceful means (established in international law) for settling such
disputes”.

The congress president claimed that “we can and must speak now of
political responsibility of the Turkish state under the international
law for the crime committed by it”.

Sylvie Vartan Named WHO Ambassador

VARTAN NAMED WHO AMBASSADOR

French singer SYLVIE VARTAN has been named a WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION
(WHO) goodwill ambassador, to promote child care throughout Europe.

The IF I SING star, 61, who has spent years helping ailing children
and orphans in her ancestral home of Bulgaria, will focus her
ambassadorial work in central and eastern Europe.

At a press conference in Sofia, Bulgaria, yesterday (11APR05), MARC
DANZON, WHO regional director for Europe, said, “I am happy to name
officially Sylvie Vartan ambassador of the WHO for child care in
Europe.

“I am very proud to be part of this world organisation. For many years
now I have been very concerned about the health care and welfare of
the children,
especially in this country.” 12/04/2005 13:51

email: [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])
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VoA: Armenia Marks 90th Anniversary of Ottoman Empire Massacres

Voice of America
April 24 2005

Armenia Marks 90th Anniversary of Ottoman Empire Massacres
By VOA News

Armenians visit the hilltop memorial in Yerevan
Armenia is marking the 90th anniversary of massacres inflicted on
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire – events Yerevan calls genocide
directed against its people.

Thousands of people marched through the Armenian capital Sunday,
climbing a hill to lay wreaths in remembrance of the 1.5 million
people Armenia says were slaughtered during the final years of the
Ottoman Empire.

Turkey says 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks died during
between 1915 and 1923, as a result of a Russian-backed Armenian
uprising against Ottoman rule. Turkey contends those deaths were not
part of a campaign of genocide aimed at Armenians.

But Ankara has come under increasing international pressure to
acknowledge its actions during those years, especially as it seeks
membership in the European Union.

Several European countries, including France and Switzerland
recognize the event as genocide.

For Armenians, scars of genocide remain visible

Posted on Sun, Apr. 24, 2005
The Philadelphia Inquirer

For Armenians, scars of genocide remain visible

Joy E. Stocke
lives and writes in Stockton

Osman sits behind his desk in the tiny antique shop he owns tucked
into one of the labyrinthine streets of Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar. “Yes,
it happened,” he says. “To my father and my grandparents near Erzincan
in what was then eastern Anatolia.”

Osman speaks slowly and clearly, a British inflection threading
through his perfect English. “My father was 6 and his brother was
4. When the soldiers came for my grandparents, two families of Alevi
Turks [who follow the tradition of Shia Islam] hid my father and his
brother. The soldiers gathered the people of the village and brought
them to the fields in the shadow of the mountains, and slit their
throats. For three years, the Alevis hid my father and his brother in
the chimneys of their baking hearths. To protect the boys, they
changed their Armenian Christian names to Muslim names.”

Osman’s son arrives with small cups of coffee, and then shuts the door
behind him. The air grows warm and stuffy, but Osman doesn’t seem to
notice. “When my father and his brother were freed, they became
separated. For the rest of his life, my father looked for him,
visiting every town no matter how small, hoping that his brother would
appear on the street or in a coffee house.

When I was 12, my father died of a broken heart, I’m sure. But there
is irony in my story, because the government had a special program for
orphaned boys.

They sent me to one of the best schools in Turkey.”

In that school, Osman met Nuri, who owns a carpet shop nearby. “All
these years, Osman and I have been friends,” says Nuri, “brothers
really, but we’ve never talked of this subject. He knows it happened;
I know it happened. Why make problems between us?”

Nuri and Osman spoke these words two weeks ago, well aware that today
– April 24 – many Western countries will mark Armenian Genocide
Remembrance Day, the 90th anniversary of the beginning of massacres
and deportation of Armenians from a land where they had lived for more
than 3,000 years.

Five years ago, most Turks wouldn’t speak openly about what they say
is a “so-called genocide,” but with Turkey’s bid to enter the European
Union, friends who once were afraid to voice their opinions about an
event deleted from their history books are beginning to talk.

The Turkish government, at odds with many of its citizens, denies that
systematic deportations and killings of Armenians occurred. Yet, if
you travel to the eastern border of Turkey, you will find abandoned
churches. And in travel posters and ads in most tourist offices, you
will see a lone red brick church sitting on an island called Akdamar
in the center of a lake called Van, named for a once-thriving
metropolis of Armenian farmers, craftsmen, businessmen, and traders.

You begin to wonder: If a well-photographed Armenian church sits on an
island – and in the nearby abandoned city of Ani sit hundreds more
churches – where did the Armenians go?

Until the 19th century, the Ottoman empire was known for tolerance of
its Christian minorities, but things changed when the Ottoman empire
went into decline. In July 1908, a group of Turkish nationalists known
as the Young Turks – junior officers in the Turkish Army – forced the
Sultan to allow a constitutional government guaranteeing basic rights
to Turkey’s citizens.

But in 1913, three leaders of the Young Turks seized control of the
government, planning to expand the borders of Turkey into Central
Asia, creating a new empire called Turan with one language and one
religion.

Armed roundups of Armenians – who, encouraged by the European powers
and Russia, had considered establishing their own state – began on the
evening of April 24, 1915. Three hundred Armenian political leaders,
educators, writers, and clergy in Istanbul were jailed, tortured, then
hanged or shot.

In the following three years, somewhere between 700,000 to more than 1
million Armenians were killed or died of starvation, thirst and
disease, and deported to camps in the Syrian desert.

Ninety years later, the Turkish Parliament has launched an offensive
saying that no genocide took place during what they claim was a war.
Meanwhile, in the United States, Armenians are lobbying for formal
recognition that the first genocide of the 20th century took place in
Turkey.

Osman finishes his coffee, gently setting the cup in its saucer. “You
ask me what to call the murders of my family?” he says. “What good is
a name if we can’t openly admit it happened?”