Turkey Threatens Sanctions If France Adopts Armenian Genocide Law

TURKEY THREATENS SANCTIONS IF FRANCE ADOPTS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LAW
Jeannie Shawl

Jurist
School of Law, University of Pittsburgh
May 15 2006

[JURIST] Turkey will impose trade sanctions on France if the French
parliament adopts a bill that would criminalize the denial that the
World War I-era massacre of Armenians [ATI backgrounder] in Turkey
constitutes genocide, according to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan [BBC profile]. As many as 1.5 million Armenians were killed
in the then-Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917 in what Armenians
consider a genocide; Turkey has insisted that the deaths do not
constitute genocide [Turkish DC Embassy backgrounder].

The French National Assembly is slated to consider an opposition
Socialist party-sponsored bill [National Assembly materials] this
Thursday that would make denying the massacre was genocide illegal.

Offenders could face a five-year jail sentence and fines up to
$57,000. France already has a law on the books which recognizes the
massacre as genocide.

The Coalition Does Not Have Problems Of Enlargement

THE COALITION DOES NOT HAVE PROBLEMS OF ENLARGEMENT

A1+
[08:37 pm] 15 May, 2006

“The coalition does not have problems of enlargement”, head of the
Republican party faction Galoust Sahakyan informed “A1+” today. “There
is no need to introduce a new political power to the coalition. It
present it consists of two parties only and we have taken up the
responsibility to realize the principles of the coalition till the
end. Naturally, we will cooperate with the other powers more actively”,
this way Mr. Sahakyan tried to change our opinion that no power would
like to join the coalition before elections.

At present Tigran Torosyan is the main candidate for the post of the
NA President. But head of the National Democratic Party Shavarsh
Kocharyan has doubts about the final decision. “Before the coming
elections it would not be favorable for the President to have the Prime
Minister and the NA President members of the Republican Party”. If we
take into account the fact that the Republican party acts under the
support of Serge Sargsyan, we can say that Robert Kocharyan would no
like to have absolutely Republican authorities.

According to Galoust Sahakyan, it is the Republican party who must
decided who will be President of the NA for the coming year. “The power
which forms the political majority decides its future actions itself.

There won’t be problems with the Revolutionary Federation as it is a
classical experienced party and I don’t think the existing resolutions
can be negative for them”.

Govt Official To Fly To Sochi To Oversee Plane Crash Probe

GOVT OFFICIAL TO FLY TO SOCHI TO OVERSEE PLANE CRASH PROBE

ITAR-TASS, Russia
May 10 2006

MOSCOW, May 10 (Itar-Tass) –The head of Russia’s Federal Agency for
Sea and River Transport, Alexander Davydenko, will fly to the Black
Sea resort city of Sochi on Wednesday to “supervise the operation to
determine the exact location of the crashed plane,” Transport Minister
Igor Levitin said.

“The plan of further steps will be approved by specialists together
with the Emergencies Ministry, the Navy, and French colleagues,”
the minister said.

“Work will begin according to the approved schedule,” Levitin said,
adding that all the necessary equipment has already been delivered.

Meanwhile, the search for the flight recorders from the crashed
Armenian Airbus-320 in the Black Sea off Sochi has not stopped despite
rough seas.

Specialists plan to examine the seabed at a death of 450-800 metres
where a large number of the plane’s fragments and the “black boxes”
are lying.

The area where the debris are scattered is quite big and the French
equipment will help to distinguish between the plane’s fragments and
personal belongings of the passengers.

Earlier, a deep-water apparatus, Kalmar, traced four unidentified
objects at the crash scene at the depth of 450 meters.

“Four objects have been traced at the depth of 450 meters. They are
being identified. The objects were found by a hydro-radar system
of the Kalmar apparatus operated from the Zaliv towboat,” Sergei
Biryukov, Executive Director of the company Tetis Pro that designed
the apparatus, told Itar-Tass.

Flight recorders used on aircraft of the Airbus-320 type withstand
the depth of up to 6,000 meters for 30 days, experts from the French
air crash investigation bureau said on Sunday.

They said that flight recorders’ radio beacons keep working during
the 30-day period.

One of the flight recorders registers flight parameters, including the
speed, height and direction of the flight and the autopilot operation,
each second. The other gadget records conversations in the cockpit.

Each flight recorder weighs 10 kilograms, including a seven-kilogram
armoured casing for the gadget. The casing can withstand water pressure
at a depth of 6,000 meters, the temperature of 1,100 degrees Celsius,
and the compression of 2.2 tonnes.

The French experts think that flight recorders from the Armenian
Airbus-320 are lying at a depth of 680 meters.

The bureau retrieved flight recorders from the depth of over 1,000
meters in the Red Sea in January 2004, when an Egyptian plane crashed
near the Sharm-el-Sheikh resort. The rescuers were using a Scorpio
deep-water apparatus.

A technical commission investigating the Sochi air crash, which is
led by the CIS Interstate Aviation Committee, has asked French experts
to help find A-320 flight recorders.

Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin said, “The Frenchmen have
appropriate equipment and they are ready to quickly bring it to the
crash scene.”

Of 113 people who were abroad the plane, 51 bodies have been found
so far. On the fifth day after the crash, specialists say chances
that the others will be found are quite small.

The Airbus A-320 of the Armenian airline Armavia plunged into the
Black Sea as it was making a landing manoeuvre in the early hours of
May 3. The accident claimed the lives of 113 people.

Hamlet Gasparyan Appointed Envoy Extraordinary And MinisterPlenipote

HAMLET GASPARYAN APPOINTED ENVOY EXTRAORDINARY AND MINISTER PLENIPOTENTIARY TO FRANCE

ArmRadio.am
10.05.2006 15:17

Press Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Hamlet Gasparyan
has been appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary
to France.

1999-2002 he worked as Advisor at RA Embassy in France. Since fall
2003 Hamlet Gasparyan was working as Press Secretary of the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs.

Head of the Media Relations Department of the Press and Information
Agency of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Vladimir Karapetyan will
temporarily act as MFA Press Secretary.

Commentary: Literature matters in Turkey

New Statesman
May 8, 2006

Commentary

BYLINE: Alev Adil

Literature matters in Turkey – really matters. Just about every
Turkish writer with an international reputation has been persecuted
by the state, from the nation’s greatest poet, Nazim Hikmet, who died
in exile in Moscow, to Orhan Pamuk. Even the prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, did time for misquoting poetry.

So perhaps it’s no surprise that the controversial columnist and
novelist Perihan Magden is to be prosecuted, too. Magden’s
bestselling latest novel Two Girls, the story of an intense lesbian
affair, was recently published in the UK to acclaim. Writers such as
Pamuk and Magden are among Turkey’s most convincing ambassadors as
the country bids to join the EU, not because they peddle any
political agenda, but because they articulate the complex and
compelling hybridity of modern Turkey. You’d think they would be
lauded for providing a fresh vision of their homeland, but instead
Turkey seems intent on prosecuting its writers.

Magden will stand trial on 7 June, charged with “alienating the
people from military service”. In a column in Aktuel in December last
year, she drew attention to the case of Mehmet Tarhan, a
conscientious objector imprisoned for refusing to do military
service. Magden suggested that a modern country with ambitions to
enter the EU should respect the rights of conscientious objectors and
provide non-violent options such as community service. For this she
faces three years’ imprisonment.

Magden isn’t alone. Around 60 writers, publishers and journalists
have been before the courts in Turkey in the past year, many charged
under Article 301 of the penal code, which states that “a person who
explicitly insults being a Turk, the Republic or Turkish Grand
National Assembly, shall be imposed a penalty of imprisonment for a
term of six months to three years”. Recent cases include Hrant Dink,
editor of the Armenian-Turkish-language weekly Agos; the publishers
Ragip Zarakolu and Fatih Tas; and the journalists Ismet Berkan, Murat
Belge, Haluk Sahin, Hasan Cemal and Erol Katircioglu. Turkey amended
its penal code last year, in an attempt to remove human-rights
anomalies from its law. But the EU’s enlargement commissioner, Olli
Rehn, has said that such trials have cast a shadow over Turkey’s
application. Perhaps that’s just what Magden’s prosecutors want.

The plight of Turkey’s writers reflects clashes in the wider culture.
The country’s identity is in flux as it moves into the 21st century,
with capitalism, minority rights, feminism, Islam, secularism,
socialism and multiculturalism coexisting uneasily. Magden is a
feisty and courageous woman. She’s a playful writer, but that doesn’t
mean she isn’t serious. When it comes to freedom of expression,
there’s everything to play for in modern Turkey, but the stakes are
high and the game is a dangerous one. Without international pressure,
Magden could end up in jail.

Power games in the Caucasus

Power games in the Caucasus

By Kieran Cooke
In Dgvari village, Georgia

BBC News
8 May 2006

Roman Gogoladze, a farmer living in the village of Dgvari, high up in the
mountains of Georgia in the Caucasus, points at the foot wide cracks in the
walls of his house.
The whole structure looks as though it will soon collapse and slide down the
valley.

“Big powers – the oil companies and the government – are destroying our
homes and our land,” he says.

“They are playing their money games and ignore people like us.”

The anger of Mr Gogoladze and other villagers in Dgvari is mainly directed
at BP, the energy giant leading a consortium which recently completed the
world’s longest pipeline project, stretching 1,767kms from Baku in
Azerbaijan via Tbilisi in Georgia to the port of Ceyhan on Turkey’s
Mediterranean coast.

The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline and an associated South Caucasus gas
supply line are sunk into the mountainside less than one kilometre above
Dgvari.

Villagers say pipeline excavations have seriously destabilised surrounding
lands and allege that promised amounts of compensation have not been paid.

BP insists work on the BTC is not to blame for Dgvari’s landslide problems.

It says it has offered $1m (£550,000) of humanitarian aid to the government
to help resettle the villagers elsewhere.

Foreign investment

Georgia, one of the richest republics in the old USSR, went into sharp
economic decline following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the
country’s independence in the early 1990s.

As Russia’s economy went into free-fall, Georgia lost its key export market,
particularly for its food produce and wine.

More than a million of the country’s 5m people were forced to emigrate in
search of jobs.

Though there have been limited signs of economic improvement recently, the
country – with much of its infrastructure in a state of near collapse, most
of its industry at a standstill and estimates of unemployment varying
between 30% and 50% – is in desperate need of investment.

The Georgian government says the BTC project will play a central role in
rejuvenating the country’s economy.

According to government statistics, more than 60% of total foreign
investment over the past two years has been associated with the project.

“I have no illusions that this pipeline will solve all our problems, but
this is a start,” says Georgia’s president, Mikhail Saakashvili.

Seismic zone

However, many farmers along the route of the BTC, plus local environmental
groups, have voiced strong opposition.

The oil and gas pipelines go near the source of the country’s famed Borjumi
spring water, a principal export.
Georgia is in a seismic zone: the BTC’s critics say any earthquake activity
could cause massive environmental and economic damage.

The $3.6bn BTC project, strongly backed by the US and British governments,
plays a key role in an increasingly frenzied battle for control of vital
energy sources in the Caspian region and Central Asia, with Washington and
London viewing the presence of the pipeline as a vital counterbalance to
Russia’s growing control over the area’s energy supplies.

The Georgian government not only hopes to gain much needed funds from
charging for the transit of oil and gas through its territory.

With much of its own energy sources, including a network of hydro stations,
in a state of severe disrepair, the country is heavily dependent on imports,
particularly of gas, supplied by Russia.

Moscow, which has military bases in Georgia, has watched with concern as its
former republic has turned to the West: US military advisors are training
the Georgian army – President Bush visited Tbilisi last year, describing the
country as “a beacon of freedom.”

At the beginning of this year Russia doubled the price of gas it supplies to
Georgia.

In late January, in the middle of one of the coldest winters on record, an
as yet unexplained explosion severed the pipeline carrying Russian gas to
Georgia, leaving a large part of the country without power for a week.

President Saakashvili was quick to point the finger at Moscow, alleging his
country was the victim of “outrageous blackmail.”

Power and influence

Georgia is seeking to diversify energy supplies, though a gas import
agreement with Iran met with Washington’s disapproval and was quickly
terminated.

The government is now negotiating terms for a gas supply from the BTC
associated South Caucasus Pipeline project.

Yet while the government says it’s trying to escape from Moscow’s shadow,
there are indications powerful political factions are pressing for the
sell-off of the country’s power sector to Russian interests.

“Strange games are going on here,” says Mrs Salome Zourabichvili, the
country’s former foreign minister, sacked by Mr Saakashvili last year.

“There’s a lot of infighting in government with a pro-Moscow faction seeming
to get the upper hand.

“What is white is black and vice versa. As everywhere else in the
territories of the old Soviet Union, Russia is using its power as an energy
producer to further its influence.”

Empty promises

The complexities of local politics, big power rivalries and the energy
business mean little to Roman Gogoladze and his fellow farmers in the
village of Dgvari.

The government says there’s a growing danger of landslides and has told the
village’s 500 inhabitants they must leave.

“The Russians, BP, the government – they’re all the same,” says Mr
Gogoladze.

“All sorts of promises are made but nothing ever happens.

“When we protested against the pipelines, the police came and beat people
up. Not one person in the village was given work on the project. Indians and
Columbians were brought in instead and we were left with nothing – but we
are never going to leave our lands.”

UNDP Armenia press release

From: Aramazd Ghalamkaryan <[email protected]>
Subject: UNDP Armenia press release

United Nations Development Programme Country Office in Armenia

14, Petros Adamyan Street, Yerevan 0010, Armenia
Contact: Aramazd Ghalamkaryan
Tel: (374 10) 56 60 73, ext. 121
Fax: (374 10) 54 38 11
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

UNDP COUNTRY OFFICE IN ARMENIA
May 4, 2006

Helping Communities Help Themselves

UNDP’s new project starts with an honest discussion of local problems
with the heads of fifteen villages in Armavir province

Baghramyan village, Armenia – Today, two project teams of United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP) visited Armavir province in
Southwestern Armenia to meet with heads of fifteen villages – future
stakeholders of the projects – and to present the initiative. UNDP
Armenia’s projects on Community Development and Performance Budgeting
joined their minds and funds to achieve a breakthrough in the district
of Baghramyan.

What the projects aim to achieve is to meet the immediate social needs
in communities, resolving certain long-term economic issues, such as
lack of employment and incomes, sharing goals for their communities and
the district as a whole.

The project teams were recently strengthened by well-known local experts
working in the field of community development. Through application of
new methods of budgeting (results-based), involvement of the local
self-governance bodies and the local citizens in the discussion and
prioritization of needs, decision making, elaboration of village
development plans, joint implementation, as well as joint monitoring of
all the processes, a new and advanced level of community development, of
citizens being engaged in their own development will be achieved.

Mr. Vrej Jijian, UNDP project manager, addressed the participants of the
meeting: “Your voice is and will be vital for us and for this
initiative: we will base the projects’ ideas on this. Every step forward
will need not only your consent but active participation and shared
responsibility.”

“How can we bring about a sense of consolidation? What are your own
long-term visions of your respective villages? All in all, renovation of
buildings is far less important than change in the people’s attitudes
and behaviours: this is what we ultimately aim for,” – noted Ms.
Hripsime Manukyan, project expert.

The gap between the capital city Yerevan and provinces of Armenia, in
terms of access to social and health care services, education, economic
conditions and benefits of the high economic growth, has widened during
the recent five years. The level of participation of citizens at the
local level is also very weak. While the economy grows rapidly, the
challenge for the country is to distribute this wealth in an equitable
way, especially outside Yerevan, and achieve a balanced situation in the
country for all the communities to benefit from the growth, in line with
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

In 2000, leaders of 191 countries, including Armenia, signed the
Millennium Declaration, thus pledging to reach the eight Millennium
Development Goals by 2015. The goals cover poverty, HIV/AIDS and other
diseases, maternal and child health, environment, education, women’s
empowerment and global partnership.

Since 2004, UNDP Armenia has successfully implemented a community
development programme in Karakert village in the same Baghramyan
district. Based on this experience UNDP has launched a new phase of
community development projects in 2006.

* * *

UNDP is the UN’s global development network. It advocates for change
and connects countries to knowledge, experience and resources to help
people build a better life. We operate in 166 countries, working with
them on their own solutions to global and national development
challenges. As they develop local capacity, they draw on the people of
UNDP and our wide range of partners.

* * *

For additional information, please contact Mr. Aramazd Ghalamkaryan,
tel.: +374 10 56 60 73, ext. 121, +374 91 436 312, e-mail:
[email protected].

http://www.undp.am

Lucy Mardian, wife of former mayor of Phoenix, dies

Arizona Republic, AZ
May 6 2006

Lucy Mardian, wife of former mayor of Phoenix, dies

85-year-old called ‘ultimate lady,’ recognized for community
activities

Brent Whiting
The Arizona Republic
May. 6, 2006 12:00 AM

Lucy Mardian, wife of a former Phoenix mayor and a member of an
influential Arizona family, died Friday.

Friends said the 85-year-old Mardian will be remembered for her years
of service to Phoenix in a number of civic and charitable ventures.

“She was the ultimate lady, absolutely,” said Anne Walsh, widow of
Mason Walsh, a former publisher of The Arizona Republic.
advertisement

“She was the type of woman everybody would like to have as a sister,”
she added.

Her husband, Sam Mardian Jr., 86, served as mayor from 1960-64. The
Mardians celebrated their 63rd wedding anniversary on Dec. 1.

“She was totally devoted to her children,” said Sam Mardian III, 62,
oldest of the couples’ five children, when reached at his father’s
Phoenix home.

Dennis Mitchem, director of corporate relations for Northern Arizona
University, described Lucy as a warm and friendly person.

“She could laugh at herself and at things going on around her,”
Mitchem said. “She could lighten up things when political things
would sometimes get tense.”

He described her death as a true loss to the community and to her
family.

Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon said, “Our thoughts and prayers are with
Mayor Mardian and his family for the loss of his wife.”

Lucy served with the Phoenix Symphony Guild, Phoenix Art Museum
League and hospital, charitable and Kiwanis Club auxiliaries.

She had been in failing health for a number of months, said the Rev.
Peter K. Perry, senior pastor of First United Methodist Church.

It was always a joy to meet with the Mardians and hear them reflect
on the years he was active in politics, he said.

The Mardians moved to Phoenix in 1947 from Pasadena, Calif., to join
his brothers in the construction business.

Lucy Mardian, formerly Lucy Keshishian, was born in Cyprus on Oct. 6,
1920. Her family and the Mardians came from Hadjin, a small village
in Armenia.

Her parents and her husband’s parents knew each other in Armenia but
went separate ways.

Lucy and Sam met in 1939 after the Keshishians traveled across the
country from New York to attend an Armenian picnic in California.

She is survived by her husband and five children, Sam III of Meyer;
Jim of Paradise Valley; Carol Pickens and Doug, both of Phoenix, and
Steve of Scottsdale, and five grandchildren.

Funeral services are set for 10 a.m. Thursday at the First United
Methodist Church, 5510 N. Central Ave.

Honor Is Cheap

HONOR IS CHEAP
Aram Abrahamian

Aravot.am
05 may 06

The circumstance that Arthur Baghdasarian’s some standpoints will raise
the desire of revenge of the authorities is quite predictable. And
as the god of our ruling clique, so called”Alfa and omega” is money
we should wait that the main direction of punishment will deprivation
of ”OEP” of material sources.

For that reason the ”OEP” member businessmen are ”ordered” and
according to some information some statements about leaving that party
are already put on the table of the RA President’s chief of personnel
Armen Gevorgian who performs the operation. If they don’t leave the
party they will have serious problems in their business. Businessmen
and oligarchs are powerful and strong from the first sight.

And I think, who is uglier; the President’s personnel, which not only
revenge for “dissent” but also prepares for the coming parliamentary
elections or the businessmen who are ready for everything for their
property. Perhaps the second.

A very respectful intellectual after saying some criticizing words
felt that the authority could damage his relative who is engaged in
business and then went to that official for giving explanations. The
official was satisfied and declared; ”He is afraid of me”. As if
there is some merit in fear. But here, I’m inclined to accuse that
intellectual in first.

Or the famous art specialist Henrik Igitian who slandered the brother
of the RA first president for pleasing the current authority. A great
bravery and civil strength is needed for criticizing the died brother
of the dismissed president. Maybe Igitian gets some more “stores”
from the authority.

Let’s not forget our dignity before slandering the authority and
“regime”.

There were people in the strongest regime of the Soviet period who
were decent and who were ready to please the ruling clique. But it
wasn’t necessary to be dissent. Even that system allowed remaining
humans without heroic efforts.

Nowadays system allows more.

–Boundary_(ID_L04tlgAwLP7GTnNx1QOijw)–

11 Million 900 Thousand AMD Gathered

11 MILLION 900 THOUSAND AMD GATHERED

A1+
[02:57 pm] 06 May, 2006

The Ministry of Finance and Economy informs that by 11 AM today the
special account opened in order to help the families of the victims
of the A-320 crash has already gathered 12 900 000 AMD.

Yesterday evening there was 12 599 000 AMD on the account, that is
to day 310 000 less than now. The Ministry of Finance promised to
give fresh information about new sums after 04:00 PM.