Ramkavar Liberal Party Of Armenia Points To An Error In Armenian Gen

RAMKAVAR LIBERAL PARTY OF ARMENIA POINTS TO AN ERROR IN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.03.2010 16:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On March 9, the leader of the Ramkavar Liberal Party
of Armenia Harutyun Arakelyan thanked in a letter the Chairman of the
U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs Howard
Berman, in connection with the adoption of the Armenian Genocide
Resolution on March 4.

According to the letter, the text of the resolution had a mistake. In
particular, it says that as a result of the Genocide Armenians
were deprived of the alleged 2.500-year-old homeland. According to
Harutyun Arakelyan, probably, people who worked on the document, used
dubious sources, distorting the Armenian history. There are many other
sources indicating that the Armenians live more than 4500 years in the
Armenian highlands, and in this case it would be correct in general,
not to mention in the resolution the origin of the Armenians at all.

Arakelyan also expressed hope that the committee, led by Howard Berman
will only use only the services of Armenia’s academic institutions.

Use of Incirlik air base at risk

ANSAmed – Italy
March 5, 2010 Friday 11:50 AM CET

USE OF INCIRLIK AIR BASE AT RISK

(ANSAmed) In reaction to the approval yesterday evening by the Foreign
Affairs Committee of the US House of Representatives on a resolution
in which the Armenian massacres that took place during the Ottoman
empire are defined as "genocide", Ankara could prohibit the US from
using the Incirlik air base (southern Turkey) which is currently used
by the US military to supply their troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The news was reported by daily newspapers Zaman and Hurriyet.

The Turkish threat to not allow the US to use Incirlik is not new. The
same threat was made in October 2007 after the Foreign Affairs
Committee of Congress approved a similar motion to the one approved
yesterday evening. Again at that time Ankara recalled their then
ambassador, Nabi Sensoy, back to Turkey for consultations. All the
Turkish daily newspapers today headline on yesterday evening’s vote in
Washington and underline how the US President Barack Obama "did not do
enough" to block the resolution. Daily newspaper Vatan, in particular,
highlights the "hardly orthodox" methods which it says the Committee
head, Democrat Howard Berman, is said to have used to get his more
rebellious colleagues to vote. For his part, Murat Mercan, Chairman of
the Turkish Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee, who is currently
in Washington, has described yesterday’s vote as "a comedy".

Acquisition of expensive real estate in Dubai – questions re Aliyev

Acquisition of expensive real estate in Dubai raises questions to the
President of Azerbaijan

15:55:08 – 05/03/2010
hos17062.html

The Washington Post: Even by the standards of a city that celebrates
extravagance, it was a spectacular shopping spree: In just two weeks
early last year, an 11-year-old boy from Azerbaijan became the owner
of nine waterfront mansions.

The total price tag: about $44 million — or roughly 10,000 years’
worth of salary for the average citizen of Azerbaijan. But the preteen
who owns a big chunk of some of Dubai’s priciest real estate seems to
be anything but average.

His name, according to Dubai Land Department records, is Heydar
Aliyev, which just happens to be the same name as that of the son of
Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev. The owner’s date of birth,
listed in property records, is also the same as that of the
president’s son.

Officials in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, declined to comment on
how the president’s son — or at least an Azerbaijani schoolboy with
the same birth date and the same name as the son’s — came to own
mansions on Palm Jumeirah, a luxury real estate development popular
with multimillionaire British soccer stars and others with cash to
burn. Ilham Aliyev’s annual salary as president is the equivalent of
$228,000, far short of what is needed to buy even the smallest Palm
property.

Azer Gasimov, the president’s spokesman, declined to discuss the Dubai
real estate purchases. ‘I have no comment on anything. I am stopping
this talk. Goodbye,’ he said when contacted by telephone and told
about the names on the property records. Gasimov did not respond to
requests for further comment sent by fax, e-mail and cellphone text
message.

Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic blessed with plentiful oil and
gas reserves yet blighted by widespread poverty outside its glitzy
capital, has long had a reputation for corruption. But the Dubai
purchases, which have not been reported before, could provide a rare
concrete example of just how much money the country’s governing elite
has amassed and of the ways in which at least part of this wealth has
been stashed overseas.

Problem for Washington

The transactions sharpen a dilemma that has shadowed Washington’s
relations with Azerbaijan for years: how to reconcile the United
States’ security and energy interests in the oil-rich Caspian Sea
nation with what the State Department, in a report last year on human
rights around the world, described as the ‘pervasive corruption’ of
its increasingly authoritarian regime.

Azerbaijan has sent troops to support U.S. democracy-building efforts
in Afghanistan and Iraq but at home has retreated steadily from
democratic practices, according to diplomats and experts on the
region. Transparency International, in a 2009 survey of global
corruption, ranked Azerbaijan among the worst at 143 out of 180
nations.

In addition to recording nine properties owned by Heydar Aliyev, the
now-12-year-old schoolboy, Dubai’s Land Department also has files in
the names of Leyla and Arzu Aliyeva. President Aliyev has two
daughters with the same names and roughly the same ages. Their exact
dates of birth could not be established, but various reports indicate
Leyla’s birthday is the same as that of the Azerbaijani woman who
figures in the Land Department records.

In all, Azerbaijanis with the same names as the president’s three
children own real estate in Dubai worth about $75 million, property
data indicate. Dubai real estate dealers with knowledge of some of the
transactions said the purchases were made by a buyer representing
Azerbaijan’s ruling family. The dealers said the properties were paid
for upfront.

Ali Kerimli, chairman of the Azerbaijani Popular Front, an opposition
party, said in a telephone interview, ‘We all know that our country is
one of the most corrupt.’ But when told about the Dubai purchases, he
added that he was surprised at the apparent lack of effort to conceal
them.

Azerbaijan’s leaders, Kerimli said, ‘face no danger’ because the
judiciary, anti-corruption bodies and most of the country’s media
outlets are firmly under their control.

The rush to move assets overseas, often with scant regard for returns,
is a common feature of many oil-producing nations, where corrupt
elites seek to ensure that their wealth is safe just in case political
winds at home change. The phenomenon is part of the ‘resource curse,’
an ailment that has deformed the economies and politics of
corruption-addled, oil-producing nations from Nigeria to Venezuela.

Kerimli said Washington paid too much attention to security and energy
issues and thus ‘sent a signal to our country that democratic reform
is not important.’ When Richard B. Cheney visited Baku as vice
president in 2008, he not only held talks with President Aliyev
focused on energy but also met with executives of BP and the U.S. oil
company Chevron, both of which have operations in Azerbaijan, as do
Exxon and other foreign oil companies. Azerbaijan and the United
States, Cheney said, ‘have many interests in common.’

The Obama administration has also focused on strategic issues in its
relations with Azerbaijan. On a visit to Baku two weeks ago, William
J. Burns, undersecretary of state for political affairs, praised
Azerbaijan for supporting the United States in Afghanistan and
trumpeted the role of a U.S.-backed oil pipeline from Baku to Turkey
that broke Russia’s stranglehold on energy exports from the Caspian
Sea.

In a speech, Burns avoided direct criticism of Azerbaijan, noting
only: ‘We also believe that the strengthening of democratic
institutions, rule of law and respect for human rights will have a
positive effect on the future of this country.’

The Aliyev government and its supporters, meanwhile, have tried to
burnish Azerbaijan’s image, sponsoring trips to Baku by prominent
foreigners and hiring lobbyists to trumpet the country’s achievements.
David Plouffe, President Obama’s former election campaign manager,
visited Baku last year to deliver a paid-for speech; a few months
later came former British prime minister Tony Blair, who also received
a fee to speak. Plouffe declined to comment about his trip.

All in the family

Azerbaijan, which became an independent nation with the collapse of
the Soviet Union in 1991, has been ruled almost continuously by the
same family. Aliyev took over from his father, Heydar Aliyev, who was
president from 1993 until his death in 2003.

The Aliyev family’s long grip on power has provided a measure of
stability and robust, energy-fueled economic growth in a country that
shares borders with Iran and Russia. But it has also left Azerbaijan
riddled with graft and a culture of impunity.

The role played by the Aliyev family at the center of this system
figured prominently in the New York trial last year of Frederic A.
Bourke Jr., an American millionaire convicted of violating the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act as a result of bribes paid in Azerbaijan. Bourke
has appealed his conviction.

The case related to an abortive attempt in the 1990s to buy
Azerbaijan’s state oil company, SOCAR, where Aliyev, now the country’s
president, was then a senior executive. In courtroom testimony and an
affidavit filed with the court, Thomas Farrell, a Virginia businessman
involved in the failed scheme, told of large illicit payments that he
thought were destined for ‘the family.’

Farrell, in his affidavit, related how Heydar Aliyev, the father, ‘had
directed that we wire transfer sums of money into bank accounts held
for the benefit of relatives of Heydar Aliyev.’ Farrell also told that
he had been ‘instructed that money be sent to members of Heydar
Aliyev’s family for ‘shopping sprees.’ Typically the amount of money
requested was $1 million.’

These alleged payments, however, are dwarfed by the amounts invested
in a series of Dubai real estate deals that, according to property
records, began in 2008 and reached their climax in January and
February last year.

The Dubai properties registered in the names of three people with the
same names as President Aliyev’s children cost roughly 330 times his
annual salary.

Some members of the family, however, do have money. The president’s
older daughter, Leyla, is married to Emin Agalarov, a wealthy Russian
businessman, and relatives of the first lady, Mehriban, have lucrative
business interests in Azerbaijan. Agalarov declined to comment when
asked whether he had helped buy Dubai properties for his wife or
Aliyev’s other children. He said he had ‘joined businesses and
properties’ with his wife but did not elaborate, saying in an e-mail:
‘We wish not to comment on that.’

Sabit Bagirov, a former head of SOCAR, the oil company, said that he
did not know whether the Aliyevs own property in Dubai but that it
would be highly unusual for them to register any such property
purchases under their real names. ‘They would not do this so openly.
It could be a provocation,’ he said, suggesting that the regime’s
enemies may have staged the Dubai deals to embarrass Aliyev. Bagirov
declined to elaborate.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society-lra

Turks warn Obama on genocide

Boston Herald, MA
March 6 2010

Turks warn Obama on genocide

AP Saturday, March 6, 2010 – Added 16h ago

ANKARA, Turkey – Turkey warned the Obama administration yesterday of
diplomatic consequences if it doesn’t quash a congressional resolution
that would brand the World War I-era killing of Armenians genocide.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkey, a key Muslim ally of the
United States, would assess what measures it would take, saying the
issue is a matter of `honor.’

A senior Obama administration official said there was an understanding
with the Democratic leadership in Congress the resolution would not go
to a floor vote.

A House committee approved the measure Thursday 23-22. Minutes after
the vote, Turkey withdrew its ambassador to the U.S.

Turquie: Tension avec Washington

Sympatico, Canada
5 Mars 2010

Turquie: Tension avec Washington

2010-03-05 08:40:45

(Source: Radio-Canada) La Turquie rappelle son ambassadeur aux
�tats-Unis après la reconnaissance du génocide arménien par une
commission de la Chambre des représentants américaine.

Ankara se fâche contre Washington. Le premier ministre Recep Tayyip
Erdogan a annoncé dans un communiqué le rappel de l’ambassadeur turc Ã
Washington pour consultations.

Le chef du gouvernement s’inquiète des conséquences de cette décision
non contraignante sur les relations entre la Turquie et les Ã?tats-Unis
et sur le processus de réconciliation avec l’Arménie.

Par ailleurs, le ministre turc des Affaires étrangères a demandé Ã
Washington de bloquer le projet de résolution qualifiant de génocide
les massacres d’Arméniens sous l’Empire ottoman, voté par une
commission de la Chambre des représentants.

La résolution a été votée par 23 voix contre 22.

L’adoption de cette résolution prouve que l’administration américaine
« n’a pas suffisamment pesé » pour empêcher ce résultat, a estimé le
chef de la diplomatie turque Davutoglu, ajoutant qu’Ankara était «
sérieusement gêné » par le vote.

Le vote intervient après la signature, en octobre, entre la Turquie et
l’Arménie de deux protocoles prévoyant l’établissement de relations
diplomatiques et l’ouverture de la frontière entre les deux pays, mais
que leurs Parlements respectifs tardent à ratifier.

La Turquie reconnaît qu’entre 300 000 et 500 000 personnes ont péri,
non pas victimes d’une campagne d’extermination, mais selon elle dans
le chaos des dernières années de l’Empire ottoman.

Elle récuse la notion de génocide reconnue par la France, le Canada ou
le Parlement européen.

Radio-Canada.ca avec Associated Press et Reuters

ntPosting_SRC_monde?newsitemid=465738&feedname ËC_WORLD_V3_FR&show=False&number=0&am p;showbyline=True&subtitle=&detect=&ab c=abc&date=True

http://nouvelles.sympatico.ca/Monde/Conte

ANKARA: The rough cowboy

Hurriyet, Turkey
March 5 2010

The rough cowboy

Friday, March 5, 2010
YUSUF KANLI

The pertinent habit of resurrecting the `Armenian genocide’ resolution
in the U.S. Congress might be taken as a good example of American
blackmail politics on the one hand and badly played Russian roulette
on the other.

One way or the other, it comes up again near every April 24, the
anniversary of the alleged 1915 killings in the then-dissolving
Ottoman Empire.

The U.S. Congress is very much like the rough cowboy with only one
bullet in his revolver, poised at the communal conscience of the
Turkish nation, playing Russian roulette. So far the trigger of the
revolver has always fallen on one of the empty bullet slots, but
sooner or later, it will fall on the bullet ` and once and for all,
whatever may happen will happen. Indeed, the constant scare may be
worse than death itself.

This time, the rough cowboy at the U.S. House of Representatives was
Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Howard Berman. Once again, in a
farcical vote spanning for almost two hours ` in order to garner
sufficient support to approve and dispatch the draft to the House
floor ` the committee decided to make a historical assessment and
condemn the Turkish nation for undertaking an act of genocide against
the Armenian population of Anatolia between 1915 and 1923.

U.S. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
made some last-minute face-saving gestures, as if they were against
the committee’s approval of the draft. But in effect, their
intervention was too little, too late and apparently had no further
meaning than arming themselves with an excuse: `We have requested the
draft not to be adopted, but that was what we could, we cannot dictate
to the Congress what it should or should not do.’

Indeed, both Obama and Clinton, as well as most of the members of the
House committee, share almost the same opinion with the committee
chairman, who extended the voting period three times in order to help
supporters of the motion find and bring into the session sufficient
affirmative representatives and thus get the draft approved. They
differed, however, on the timing and opposed the move out of concern
over the possible fallout of such a development on both bilateral
Turkish-American relations and the Swiss-mediated Turkish-Armenian
protocols for better relations ` awaiting parliamentary approval in
both countries.

Indeed, Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu, who minutes after Thursday’s
vote angrily recalled the Turkish Ambassador to Washington `for
consultations,’ complained at a news conference Friday that the Obama
administration had not sufficiently put its weight behind efforts to
block the vote. The minister called the issue a matter of `honor’ for
his country and said Turkey would assess next week what other measures
to take.

In 2007, when a congressional committee passed a similar resolution,
Turkey briefly recalled its ambassador to Washington as well. But the
chill in Turkish-American relations was left behind after former
President George W. Bush, concerned about Ankara’s stopping its
collaboration with the U.S. and blocking access to the Ä°ncirlik Air
Base ` considered to be of key importance for the Iraq and Afghanistan
operations of the U.S. military ` intervened and persuaded the House
speaker to keep the resolution from going to the full House.

Now, Ankara is expecting a similar attitude from the Obama
administration and Turkish leaders have started warning that the
adoption of such a resolution, though not binding on the U.S.
administration, by the full House might not only derail
Turkish-American bilateral and allied relations, but also seriously
impair the prospects of improved Turkish relations with Armenia.

Indeed, the U.S. still needs Turkey’s collaboration and cooperation in
many key areas. The importance of Turkey’s cooperation to U.S.
military operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan is no less than what
it was in 2007. Besides, the U.S. will soon need the support of
Turkey, a United Nations Security Council member, for a set of
sanctions to be imposed on Iran. The billions of dollars’ worth of
American companies’ defense contracts with Turkey must have been of
precious value in view of the situation of the American economy
passing through a very serious global financial crisis.

`We expect the U.S. administration to, as of now, display more
effective efforts. Otherwise the picture ahead will not be a positive
one,’ DavutoÄ?lu said Thursday. What will be the meaning if the U.S.
administration intervenes and stops this resolution also? Will the
bullet in the revolver be removed? Will not someone in the U.S.
legislature point the same revolver at our head next spring?

I am fed up with this persistent American blackmail. Let them fire
that sole bullet and see what will happen then, see who will suffer
more.

La maison Blanche embetee par la resolution sur `genocide’ armenien

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La maison Blanche embêtée par la résolution sur le `génocide’ arménien

La Journal de Montreal

Guatemala ( AFP) La secrétaire de `Etat américaine Hillary Clinton a
déclare hier que l’administration de Barack Obama allait
« travailler très dur » pour bloquer le vote au Congres d’une
résolution qualifiant de « génocide » les massacres d’Arméniens sur
l’Empire Ottoman en 1915.
« Nous allons travailler très dur pour faire en sorte
d’être certains que cela n’arrive pas » a la Chambre des
représentants, a dit Mme Clinton a des journalistes, au lendemain du
vote de la résolution par une commission du Congres.
Ankara avait appelée plus tôt Washington à bloquer la
résolution, affirmant que le texte pouvait nuire aux efforts turcs de
réconciliation avec l’Armenie. L’adoption de la résolution par la
commission des Affaires étrangers de la Chambre des représentants
prouve
que l’administration américaine « n’a pas suffisamment peser »
pour empêcher ce résultat, a estime le chef de la diplomatie turque.
La Turquie a rappelé jeudi son ambassadeur a Washington après le vote
en commission de la résolution, par 23 voix contre 22. Le
texte, qui n’a pas force de loi, appelle le président américain a «
qualifier de façon précise l’extermination systématique et deliberee
de l.500.000 Arméniens de génocide.
La résolution peut désormais faire l’objecte d’un vote
devant la chambre.

www.lajournaldemontreal.com

Commentary: Armenian Genocide Should Be Recognized

COMMENTARY: ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SHOULD BE RECOGNIZED

McClatchy Washington Bureau
/commentary-armenian-genocide-should.html
March 4 2010

The Armenian genocide resolution is back before Congress, and it
faces an uphill battle for reasons having nothing to do with whether
a genocide occurred almost 100 years ago. Turkey is opposed to the
resolution and that makes Congress nervous because of that nation’s
strategic importance in the Middle East.

As we have said many times: The facts are clear. About 1.5 million
Armenians were deported, starved and murdered by the Ottoman Empire
in the 20th century’s first genocide. The modern Turkish republic is
not guilty of those crimes, nor are today’s Turkish people. Yet they
reject the idea that this history is formally recognized.

The House Foreign Affairs Committee is set to vote today on a
resolution declaring that "the Armenian Genocide was conceived and
carried out by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923." That measure
is expected to pass the committee, but will have difficulty when it
reaches the House floor.

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/03/04/89836

Not Right Time To Vote On Genocide Resolution?

NOT RIGHT TIME TO VOTE ON GENOCIDE RESOLUTION?

news.am
March 4 2010
Armenia

Armenians were displaced and exterminated in the Ottoman Empire, which
is considered a crime not only against Armenians, but entire humanity,
the Congressman Dana Rohrabacher stated at the March 4 hearing of
the Armenian Genocide Resolution by the U.S. House Committee on
Foreign Affairs.

Rohrabacher also called on the Committee members to vote for the
resolution. Addressing the committee members, Congressman Jeff
Fortenberry said that he admits the Genocide took place. He added,
however, that it is not right time to pass a relevant resolution. He
also stressed that Armenia-Turkey reconciliation process is underway
and passing the resolution might hamper the process. The initiative
should be suspended until Armenia and Turkey reach an accord.

Fortenberry stated that approving the resolution will jeopardize U.S.

troops in Afghanistan and Iraq. He wonders what he should tell his
voters. Should he say that their sons have problems in the mentioned
countries as he personally voted for the Genocide Resolution?

Commenting on this remark, Howard Berman emphasized that he, a
Congressman with a 27-year experience, does not remember a moment that
was considered right for approving an Armenian Genocide resolution.

Sumgait Not A Eurocities Member

SUMGAIT NOT A EUROCITIES MEMBER

Panorama.am
15:22 04/03/2010

Politics

Azerbaijan’s city of Sumgait is not a Eurocities member, Eurocities
Secretary General Paul Bevan said, responding to a Panorama.am
reader’s letter.

Several Azerbaijani media, citing Sumgait municipal authorities,
spread information stating Sumgait was offered Eurocities membership.

After the information was spread, a Panorama.am reader Mark Bearman
addressed an open letter to the Eurocities expressing amazement over
the opportunity provided for a city where mass killings of Armenians
were carried out and the authorities of which reject the actual events.

"I completely disagree with your decision, welcoming to Eurocities
a city called a "murderer-city", Mark Bearman writes, providing some
internet citations evidencing Sumgait massacres.

In response to the letter, the Secretary General of the network
rejected Sumgait’s membership to Eurocities.

Note that Eurocities is a network of major European cities with a
population of over 250 thousand. It has 130 member cities from 30
European states. Non-European cities may integrate into the network
as associate cities. Only the Georgian capital of Tbilisi has such
status in the South-Caucasus.