New Opposition Bloc To Be Formed In Armenia

NEW OPPOSITION BLOC TO BE FORMED IN ARMENIA

08.12.2004 14:29

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Within few days an announcement on the formation
of a new pro-west oriented opposition bloc will be made in Armenia,
Haykakan Zhamanak Armenian newspaper writes. It also reports that
with coming to power the union will strive for Armenia’s joining
the NATO and EU. Relations with Russia, in the opinion of the bloc
leaders, will be based on the “equality” principle. According to
the preliminary data, the declaration on the formation of the new
political alliance will be signed by Zharang party leader and first
Foreign Minister of independent Armenia Raffi Hovhanissian, Republic
party leader and former Prime Minister Aram Z. Sargsian (the brother
of Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsian killed in 1999) and leader of the
Liberal Progressive party Hovhannes Hovhanissian. It is not ruled out
that People’s Party and Justice bloc leader Stepan Demirchian will also
join the new union (it is still unclear, however). There are also some
questions connected with Aram Z. Sargsian and the members of his party,
who are considered to be Russia-oriented. Representatives of other
parties, the number of which is about 20, are possible to join the
bloc later. The prospects of ANM’s (Armenian National Movement, the
former ruling party) joining the bloc also remain vague. The newspaper
writes that with coming to power the new bloc representatives promise
“to solve the Karabakh problem with minimal losses”. The meaning of
such an indistinct wording is unknown.

Powell Remarks to OSCE Ministerial Meeting

Scoop, New Zealand
Dec 8 2004

Powell Remarks to OSCE Ministerial Meeting

Speech: US State Department

Remarks to the Ministerial Meeting of the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe
Secretary Colin L. Powell
NDK Conference Site
Sofia, Bulgaria
December 7, 2004

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I join my colleagues in thanking
you, your government and the Bulgarian people for so graciously
hosting us and for serving so successfully as our Chairman-in-Office.
The United States looks forward to close cooperation with next year’s
Chairman-in-Office, our distinguished colleague who we are very
pleased to see here today from Slovenia Dimitrij Rupel. All the best
to you, Dimitrij..

Friends: The Helsinki process has been and remains a key catalyst for
peaceful, democratic change. My personal experience with the Helsinki
process dates from 1990, when as Chairman of the American Joint
Chiefs of Staff I represented the United States at the first Military
Doctrine seminar, which was held in the Hall of the Congress in
Vienna. And it was a fascinating moment for me to sit with all of the
military leaders from throughout Europe–NATO, the Warsaw Pact and
all of the other non-aligned nations of Europe–for the first time. A
new era of hope had just dawned for a Europe whole, free and at
peace.
We can be proud of our accomplishments, but we also know that
Helsinki’s great promise has yet to be realized in many important
areas.

Within our OSCE community, incidents of anti-Semitism, racism, hate
crimes and discrimination against Muslims are on the rise. We must
renew our shared determination to combat racial and ethnic hatred,
xenophobia and discrimination in all participating states.

In parts of our OSCE community, frozen conflicts still remain frozen
fifteen years after the end of the Cold War. In the months since our
last ministerial meeting, there has been little headway made toward
resolution of the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh or in breakaway
regions of Moldova and Georgia. A new push from the OSCE and by the
leaders of participating states is needed.

Russia’s commitments to withdraw its military forces from Moldova,
and to agree with Georgia on the duration of the Russian military
presence there, remain unfulfilled. A core principle of the CFE
Treaty is host country agreement to the stationing of forces. The
United States remains committed to moving ahead with ratification of
the Adapted CFE Treaty, but we will only do so after all the Istanbul
commitments on Georgia and Moldova have been met. And we stand ready
to assist with reasonable costs associated with the implementation of
those commitments.

We are closely following events in Ukraine, and heartened by efforts
to ensure an outcome that reflects the will of the Ukrainian people
and respects the rule of law. The international facilitators have
provided valuable assistance. What is important now is for all sides
to cooperate fully in the implementation of the December 3 decision
of the Supreme Court.

All of us in the OSCE community have an interest in a swift, peaceful
outcome through a democratic process. The Government of Ukraine
expects the OSCE to observe the re-running of the second round, and
we urge other participating states to join the United States in
providing the OSCE with the resources, both fiscal and manpower
resources, to carry out this mission.

At the same time, we continue to be concerned by the unfulfilled
promises of democracy and respect for fundamental freedoms in some
OSCE states. We remain concerned about developments in Russia, most
notably those affecting freedom of the press and the rule of law.
Belarus remains an egregious example of a participating state failing
to live up to its OSCE commitments on human rights, democracy and the
rule of law.

Some countries have recently argued that the OSCE’s field work
constitutes interference in internal affairs, that the OSCE has
“double standards,” and that the OSCE has concentrated its efforts in
the former Soviet republics and has done it for political reasons. I
categorically disagree. All OSCE participating states signed up to
the proposition that fundamental freedoms, democracy and the rule of
law are of legitimate concern to us all.

OSCE’s 17 field missions are among its most important assets. The
missions are working for democracy, human rights and conflict
resolution, and, they’re working from the Balkans to Central Asia. In
Georgia, the OSCE’s Border Monitoring Operation is contributing to
stability on a sensitive border, and its mandate should be extended
for another year. We all need to make sure that the missions have the
support and the resources necessary to do their jobs.

For our part, the United States takes seriously its commitments to
respect human rights, practice democratic government and uphold the
rule of law. We have sought to lead by example with transparency and
openness. At the OSCE’s annual human dimension meeting, we hosted a
side event on the abuse of detainees in U.S. custody in Iraq. These
abuses were contrary to U.S. law and policy, and the United States
chose to organize this event to show the steps being taken to
investigate and hold accountable those responsible.

The United States bases its faith in the OSCE’s future not just on
past successes, but on the significant contributions this pioneering
organization is making today. In the past twelve months alone, the
record has been impressive. The OSCE and its Parliamentary Assembly
undertook a Herculean effort to mobilize swiftly to observe and
facilitate two seminal national elections in Georgia. And, in
response to a request for help from Afghanistan, the OSCE sent its
first election assistance team outside Europe and Eurasia. OSCE’s was
the leading voice from Kabul that reassured the world that the
outcome of the election truly reflected the choice of the Afghan
people. The OSCE’s landmark work in fighting intolerance has become
the standard by which other organizations’ efforts are measured. And
the OSCE has adopted concrete steps to combat international terrorism
and trafficking in persons.

The United States always welcomes suggestions for ways to further
strengthen the OSCE. We are open to increasing the OSCE’s activities
to promote security and economic development, but not at the expense
of the OSCE’s core democracy and human rights work.

Here in Sofia, the OSCE must continue to advance an active and
ambitious agenda. The United States strongly supports the creation of
special representatives to address anti-Semitism, racism and
discrimination, and anti-Muslim sentiment. We adopted new measures to
fight corruption. And the OSCE would take an important step forward
by responding positively to requests from the Palestinian Authority
and from Iraq for election observers.

Mr. Chairman, Colleagues, I am confident that the OSCE will rise to
the challenges of a changing Europe and a changing world. I am also
confident that this valuable organization will continue to serve as a
major force for human dignity, democracy, prosperity and security and
will do so in the months and years to come and will do so
successfully.

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

2004/1314

[End]

Released on December 7, 2004

“Mr. Erdogan, history is made on the basis of facts and not assumpti

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer

Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

“Mr. Erdogan, history is made on the basis of facts and not
assumptions”, states Aram I, Catholicos of Cilicia

Antelias, Lebanon – The Prime Minister of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
recently inaugurated the first museum in Turkey to be dedicated to
the Armenian people. On this occasion he said that the museum would
refute the accusation that Turkey perpetrated a genocide against the
Armenians. “Instead of looking at facts, people have distorted history
through suppositions and misinformation”, said Erdogan. He promised
to protect the rights of the Armenians living in Turkey. He said:
“As the Prime Minister of this country, it is my duty to protect the
rights of these citizens”.

In response to Mr. Erdogan’s remarks, His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos
of the Great House of Cilicia, said:

“Mr. Erdogan, before you speak of so called “assumptions” and
“misinformation”, you should visit the “Cilicia Museum” of the
Catholicosate of Cilicia in Lebanon. At that museum you would see
irrefutable evidence of the genocide perpetrated by the Turks. The
remains of the spiritual and cultural heritage of the Armenian
people rescued from Cilicia speak for themselves. You would see
manuscripts, church vessels, and other articles of spiritual value,
that the Armenians of Adana, Zeytoun, Hajen, Sis, and other places
in Cilicia and Western Armenia saved as they fled the horrors of
massacre. All these precious remains of our spiritual heritage reached
Antelias via Deir Zor. No one who sees these remains would talk of
“assumptions” and “distortion” of facts. They are clear evidence
of Turkish barbarism. Shouldn’t you ask why these are currently in
Antelias? Are they there by coincidence?

Moreover, Mr. Prime Minister, before speaking of “falsification” and
“misinformation”, you should also visit the relics of our martyrs
that lie in a monument not far from the Museum. Perhaps you would
ask yourself, where did these human remains come from..?

History is based on clear facts and not assumptions. As much as you
and others may deny, the Armenian Genocide is a fact of history.

Mr. Erdogan you consider it your duty to protect “the rights of the
Armenians living in Turkey”. However, as Prime Minister, shouldn’t you
admit the guilt of your ancestors, their well-planned and executed
Genocide? You cannot deny your history. Nest year will be the 90th
anniversary of the Genocide. Armenian communities all over the world
will demand with one voice the recognition of the Genocide perpetrated
by Turkey and will ask for their Human Rights thus far denied”,
concluded Catholicos Aram I.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about
the history and the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may
refer to the web page of the Catholicosate,
The Cilician Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church
is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/

BAKU: Aliyev, Italian defence official discuss Karabakh settlement

Azeri president, Italian defence official discuss Karabakh settlement

Turan news agency
4 Dec 04

BAKU

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev recently received Pietro Ago, head
of the higher scientific defence centre of the Italian Defence
Ministry, who used to head the Ago group of the Council of Europe.

Ago said that his centre is training military officers dealing with
political matters. Together with international organizations, the
centre organizes conferences and workshops in different countries to
discuss ways of resolving local conflicts. The centre is also
interested in the Karabakh conflict and is ready to help resolve it,
Ago said.

Aliyev said he appreciates any discussions on resolving the conflict.
However, he said that the conflict can be resolved within the norms
and principles of international law and Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity. Aliyev said that Armenia’s nonconstructive position is the
only obstacle to resolving the conflict.

Eminent photographers to talk about news

Belmont Citizen-Herald, MA
Dec 3 2004

Eminent photographers to talk about news

Project SAVE Armenian Photograph Archives and the Armenian Library
and Museum of America (ALMA) will present a panel discussion on
Tuesday, Dec. 7, featuring Harry L. Koundakjian, Associated Press
international photo editor; Steve Kurkjian, Boston Globe
investigative reporter and editor; and Garo Lachinian, photographer
and former director of photography at the Boston Herald.

The topic, “Image is Everything: Photography and the World’s
Defining Moments,” is a public program accompanying the exhibit “50
Photographs/50 years: Harry L. Koundakjian, AP Photographer.”

With more than 50 years under his belt as a news photographer
and journalist, Koundakjian helped set the tone for photojournalism
in the Middle East. In 1959 he began working for the Associated Press
as a freelancer. In 1969 he joined AP as staff and established the AP
Photo Desk in Beirut. As the AP’s chief Middle East photographer, he
was responsible for covering all 13 Arab countries in the Middle
East, North and East Africa, Turkey and Iran. His current photograph
exhibition, produced by Project SAVE Archives and exhibited at ALMA,
covers an extraordinary array of events.

Stephen A. Kurkjian has been a reporter and editor at The Boston
Globe since 1968. He has served as an investigative reporter and was
a founding member of The Globe’s investigative Spotlight Team. He has
won more than 25 regional and national reporting awards, including
three Pulitzer Prizes, in 1971, 1981 and 2003. In 1986 he was named
chief of The Globe’s Washington Bureau and for six years oversaw the
paper’s 10 reporters in Washington. In addition, while in Washington,
D.C., he covered the Supreme Court, the Justice Department, and the
White House during the first war in Iraq. Last year he was honored by
New England’s Society of Professional Journalists for a lifetime of
achievement in journalism.

Belmont resident Garo Lachinian has been a news photographer for
nearly 20 years. At the Concord, N.H. Monitor, he covered New
Hampshire’s reaction to the death of its hometown teacher/astronaut
Christa McAuliffe in the 1986 Challenger explosion. At the Baltimore
Sun, he did a five-part series on corruption in the Baltimore City
Police Department, and covered three presidential primaries and two
presidential elections. He joined the Boston Herald in November 1998
as its special projects photographer. Later as director of
photography, he oversaw all aspects of the Photography Department’s
operations and managed the staff of 25 photographers and picture
editors. He was named Photographer of the Year in July 2000 by the
Boston Press Photographers Association. In addition to five Pulitzer
Prize nominations, Lachinian’s honors include first place for General
News Photography in the 1995 World Press Photo Competition, and
numerous awards from the National Press Photographers Association and
the Associated Press.

These three distinguished panelist will discuss the role
photography plays in today’s news reporting, from the point of view
of the photographer, the journalist and the public. The panel will be
moderated by Ruth Thomasian, executive director of Project SAVE
Archives.

The public is invited to this free panel discussion which starts
at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 7, and will include a question-and-answer
period.

The exhibit, “50 years/50 photographs: Harry L. Koundakjian, AP
Photographer,” will be open for viewing starting at 7 p.m. The
exhibit will run through Jan. 14, at Project SAVE Armenian Photograph
Archives and the Armenian Library and Museum of America, 65 Main St.,
third floor gallery, Watertown. ALMA is wheelchair accessible.

For directions and more information, contact Project SAVE
Archives at 617-923-4542 or [email protected].

Armenian diplomats still in Equatorial Guinea to get pilots released

Armenian diplomats still in Equatorial Guinea to get pilots released

Arminfo
30 Nov 04

YEREVAN

After the six Armenian pilots were imprisoned in Equatorial Guinea,
the Armenian delegation is still in that country to discuss the
further fate of the Armenian pilots with the local authorities.

The Armenian delegation has been allowed to visit the pilots, the
press service of the Armenian Foreign Ministry told Arminfo news
agency. Ambassador Sergey Manaseryan and the deputy head of the
Armenian state protocol service, Gevorg Petrosyan, are having ongoing
negotiations with various representatives of the Equatorial Guinean
leadership, including the secretary-general of the ruling Democratic
Party, Filiberto Ntutumu Nguema. Meetings have been scheduled with the
Equatorial Guinean foreign minister. A statement by the Armenian
government in connection with the review of the case of the Armenian
pilots will be submitted during the meeting. The Armenian delegation
maintains close contact with the pilots’ defence lawyer (?Ponciano
Mbombo Nwo) who intends to appeal against the sentence at the Supreme
Court of Equatorial Guinea.

However, the court has still not provided the written version of the
sentence, only after which it will be possible to appeal to the
Supreme Court.

[Passage omitted: South Africans’ defence lawyers are also waiting for
the sentence in a written form; background to the case]

Mark Thatcher’s trial postponed until April

Mark Thatcher’s trial postponed until April
By ELLIOTT SYLVESTER

AP Worldstream
Nov 25, 2004

A South African court on Thursday postponed Sir Mark Thatcher’s
trial for allegedly helping finance a foiled coup attempt in oil-rich
Equatorial Guinea until April 8 for further investigation.

Thatcher, the 51-year-old son of former British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, appeared smiling and relaxed during the brief hearing. He
was not asked to plead.

Magistrate Awie Kotze granted the delay at the request of
prosecutors. He also extended Thatcher’s bail conditions, which require
that he remain in the Cape Town area and report daily to police.

Thatcher, who has lived in South Africa since 1995, was arrested at
his suburban Cape Town home on August 25 and charged with violating
this country’s anti-mercenary laws.

He also faces charges in Equatorial Guinea, where 19 other defendants
are already on trial in connection with an alleged plot earlier this
year to overthrow President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, who has ruled
Africa’s third-largest oil producer for the past 25 years. Officials
there have said they will seek Thatcher’s extradition from South
Africa.

On Wednesday, the Cape High Court ruled Thatcher must answer questions
under oath sent by Equatorial Guinea.

Thatcher’s lawyer, Alan Bruce-Brand, said Thursday the legal team had
not yet decided whether to appeal. Earlier, he told The Associated
Press that his client would most likely answer the questions before
a magistrate on Friday.

Equatorial Guinea alleges Thatcher and other, mainly British financiers
worked with the tiny country’s opposition figures, scores of African
mercenaries and six Armenian pilots in a takeover attempt foiled in
March. Thatcher maintains he played no part in the alleged conspiracy.

Simon Mann, a former British special forces commander accused of
masterminding the plot, was arrested and convicted with 67 accused
accomplices in Zimbabwe on weapons and other minor charges. Three
others later pleaded guilty to violating South Africa’s Foreign
Military Assistance Act as part of a plea bargain under which
they agreed to give evidence in court against other alleged coup
participants.

BAKU: Details of Azeri, Armenian FMs’ meeting not disclosed

Details of Azeri, Armenian FMs’ meeting not disclosed

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Nov 25 2004

On Friday foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia met in Berlin,
Germany to continue discussions on the issues considered during
the previous round of negotiations on the Upper Garabagh conflict
settlement.

The details of the meeting were not reported.

All the four previous meetings of the two countries’ foreign ministers
were held in Prague, Czech Republic.

The Friday meeting was initially scheduled for October 25, but was
postponed after the Armenian side requested some time to analyze the
results of previous meetings.

Azeri officer admits killing Armenian with axe-MTI

Azeri officer admits killing Armenian with axe-MTI

Reuters
11/23/04 11:51 ET

BUDAPEST, Nov 23 (Reuters) – An Azeri officer who killed an Armenian
with an axe at a Budapest military academy pleaded guilty in court
on Tuesday, saying he took revenge for Armenian attacks on Azeris,
Hungarian news agency MTI reported.

Former Soviet republics Armenia and Azerbaijan declared an uneasy
ceasefire after going to war in 1988, part of a long and bitter
territorial dispute.

“It was not my plan to be so cruel, savage,” 27-year-old Ramil Safrov
Sahib told the court.

When asked why he almost severed the head of the victim he said
“because they did the same to 8,000 people of ours.”

In February, Sahib entered the Armenian’s room, stabbed him several
times with a knife and struck him repeatedly with an axe, almost
severing his head.

The pair were on an English language course run under the auspices
of NATO’s Partnership for Peace.

Sahib was charged with committing premeditated murder with extreme
cruelty, and faces possible life imprisonment if found guilty,
a Budapest Capital Court press official told Reuters.

From today’s Turkish press

Mideast Mirror
November 22, 2004

>>From today’s Turkish press

[parts omitted]

EU: An editorial in the secular, Kemalist Cumhuriyet reveals some
deep concerns about Turkey and the EU: “EU sides are eager to insist
on severe political terms for Turkey at the negotiation phase. What
has come onto the agenda on Cyprus is quite striking. The Armenian
genocide claim is being put before us. Greece follows the strategy
of exploiting any opportunity it gets. Calculations about ethnic
contradictions in Anatolia are being made. Let us say that for
the sake of joining the EU, we accept in advance all the political
terms that are being thrust upon us and yet the bargaining is still
open-ended. What will happen if Turkey faces a ‘No’, years after it
says ‘Yes’ to everything in advance?”

Engin Ardic also has doubts about the EU in the centre-Right Aksa:
“We cannot say ‘Let’s join the EU but on our own terms’. Either you
accept their terms or you do not. There is nothing in between. If you
insist on joining the EU, you must pull your troops out of Cyprus,
recognize the South the internationally-recognized Greek Cypriot
authority over the whole of Cyprus and moreover be a mere bystander as
it swallows the North self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
. It will be very good if you can make them add some ‘guarantees’
to the agreements you will make. Still, there is no guarantee that
you will join the EU even after you have made all these concessions…”